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Paul B. Schlosberg's Blog
Tuesday, 29 January 2008
Positive Psychology and Happiness

This website is influenced by a relatively new movement, called Positive Psychology.   Positive Psychology was started by Martin Seligman, who is former President of the APA (American Psychological Assn).  Seligman was himself admittedly a stuffed shirt intellectual researcher.  He spent most of his time researching helplessness and how people natually learned helplessness.   One day he woke up and realized that the whole field of psychology and healthcare was focused in this negative direction.  That's when Seligman decided to shift his focus to studying and practicing wellness and psychology from a positive standpoint.  Seligman's books have influenced multitudes of people to embrace mental and physical health from this new enlightened perspective.

Another important figure in this movement, Ruut Veenhoven from Rotterdam, has been labelled the "godfather of happiness research."  Veenhoven has created something called the global happiness database with a worldwide happiness map rating each nation on a number of criteria to come up with a happiness idex.  The results may seem quite surprising, even shocking to some people.   For example, some not so wealthy nations like India, or Iceland, are considered high on the happiness scale.

The Geography of Bliss is an interesting book written by Eric Weiner a former National Public Radio foreign correspondant.  Weiner went on a global pilgrimage to explore happiness in different countries and was surprised to find out some startling truths about happiness.


Posted by healthpsych0 at 12:07 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 8 February 2008 12:04 AM EST
Monday, 28 January 2008
Happiness and The Blues
Eric G. Wilson of the Philadelpha Arts and Culture...  puts an interesting spin on happiness:  Wilson believes that we - meaning Americans - are too happy.  Too happy!  That is a shock.  Most of the literature on happiness is about how we need to learn new techniques about happiness, but Wilson says that the self-help culture is ruining our creative impulses.  We are obsessed with happiness,  and in fact, until reading this, I never thought of it quite like that, and now after his help to reframe, I see it from a different light.  Wison writes "surely all this happiness can't be for real.  How can so many people be happy in the midst of problems that beset our globe"
link to Wilson's article

Posted by healthpsych0 at 11:57 PM EST
Friday, 9 June 2006

Just rambling....
Some idle thoughts about the healthcare system; in fact, these thoughts stem from the fact that more often than not I receive stories about people who have been put through the ringer by it (the healthcare system). Treatment of this sort tends to happen very often to the poor but in fact also happens in middle class and upper middle class communities. A case in point, just the other day a friend told me about his father‘s recent reaction to the pain-killer he received for knee surgery, I think morphine – it was nothing to take lightly, a severe reaction. He was hallucinating for a few days after taking the morphine, which is not an experience I would wish upon anyone...read more...

Posted by healthpsych0 at 10:27 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 7 July 2007 1:50 PM EDT

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