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Positive Emotions and Your Health

Developing a Brighter Outlook

Do you tend to look on the sunny side, or do you see a future filled with dark, stormy skies? A growing body of research suggests that having a positive outlook can benefit your physical health. National Institutes of Health (NIH)–funded scientists are working to better understand the links between your attitude and your body.1 They're finding some evidence that emotional wellness can be improved by developing certain skills.

Having a positive outlook doesn't mean you never feel negative emotions, such as sadness or anger, says Dr. Barbara L. Fredrickson, a psychologist and expert on emotional wellness at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "All emotions—whether positive or negative—are adaptive in the right circumstances. The key seems to be finding a balance between the two," she says.2

"Positive emotions expand our awareness and open us up to new ideas, so we can grow and add to our toolkit for survival," Fredrickson explains. "But people need negative emotions to move through difficult situations and respond to them appropriately in the short term. Negative emotions can get us into trouble, though, if they're based on too much rumination about the past or excessive worry about the future, and they're not really related to what's happening in the here and now."

People who are emotionally well, experts say, have fewer negative emotions and are able to bounce back from difficulties faster. This quality is called resilience. Another sign of emotional wellness is being able to hold on to positive emotions longer and appreciate the good times. Developing a sense of meaning and purpose in life—and focusing on what's important to you—also contributes to emotional wellness.

Research has found a link between an upbeat mental state and improved health, including lower blood pressure, reduced risk for heart disease, healthier weight, better blood sugar levels, and longer life. However, many studies can't determine whether positive emotions lead to better health, if being healthy causes positive emotions, or if other factors are involved.3

"While earlier research suggests an association between positive emotions and health, it doesn't reveal the underlying mechanisms," says Dr. Richard J. Davidson, a neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "To understand the mechanisms, I think it will be crucial to understand the underlying brain circuits."

By using brain imaging, Davidson and others have found that positive emotions can trigger "reward" pathways located deep within the brain, including in an area known as the ventral striatum.

"Individuals who are able to savor positive emotions have lasting activation in the ventral striatum," Davidson says. "The longer the activation lasts, the greater his or her feelings of wellbeing." Continued activation of this part of the brain has been linked to healthful changes in the body, including lower levels of a stress hormone.

Negative emotions, in contrast, can activate a brain region known as the amygdala, which plays a role in fear and anxiety. "We've shown that there are big differences among people in how rapidly or slowly the amygdala recovers following a threat," Davidson says. "Those who recover more slowly may be more at risk for a variety of health conditions compared to those who recover more quickly."

Among those who appear more resilient and better able to hold on to positive emotions are people who've practiced various forms of meditation. In fact, growing evidence suggests that several techniques—including meditation, cognitive therapy (a type of psychotherapy), and self-reflection (thinking about the things you find important)—can help people develop the skills needed to make positive, healthful changes.

"Research points to the importance of certain kinds of training that can alter brain circuits in a way that will promote positive responses," Davidson says. "It's led us to conclude that wellbeing can be considered as a life skill. If you practice, you can actually get better at it."

In one study, Davidson and his colleagues found changes in reward-related brain circuits after people had two weeks of training in a simple form of meditation that focuses on compassion and kindness. These changes, in turn, were linked to an increase in positive social behaviors, such as increased generosity.4

Fredrickson and her colleagues are also studying meditation. They found that after six weeks of training in compassion and kindness meditation, people reported increased positive emotions and social connectedness compared to an untrained group. The meditation group also had improved functioning in a nerve that helps to control heart rate. "The results suggest that taking time to learn the skills to self-generate positive emotions can help us become healthier, more social, more resilient versions of ourselves," Fredrickson says.2

Dr. Emily Falk, a neuroscientist at the University of Pennsylvania, is taking a different approach. Falk is exploring how self-affirmation—that is, thinking about what's most important to you—can affect your brain and lead to positive, healthful behaviors. Her team found that when people are asked to think about things that they find meaningful, a brain region that recognizes personally relevant information becomes activated. This brain activity can change how people respond to health advice.

"In general, if you tell people that they sit too much and they need to change their behavior, they can become defensive. They'll come up with reasons why the message doesn't apply to them," Falk says. However, if people reflect on the things they value before the health message, the brain's reward pathways are activated.

This type of self-affirmation, Falk's research shows, can help physically inactive "couch potatoes" get more active. In a recent study, inactive adults received typical health advice about the importance of moving more and sitting less. Before the advice, about half of the participants were asked to think about things that they value most.5

The "self-affirmation" group became more physically active during the month-long study period that followed compared to the group that hadn't engaged in self-affirmation. "The study shows one way that we can open the brain to positive change and help people achieve their goals," Falk says.5

Being open to positive change is a key to emotional wellness. "Sometimes people think that emotions just happen, kind of like the weather," Fredrickson says. "But research suggests that we can have some control over which emotions we experience." As mounting research suggests, having a positive mindset might help to improve your physical health as well.6

Wise Choices: Enhance your emotional wellness!

Follow these tips to develop a more positive mindset:

  • Remember your good deeds. Give yourself credit for the good things you do for others each day.
  • Forgive yourself. Everyone makes mistakes. Learn from what went wrong, but don't dwell on it.
  • Spend more time with your friends. Surround yourself with positive, healthy people.
  • Explore your beliefs about the meaning and purpose of life. Think about how to guide your life by the principles that are important to you.
  • Develop healthy physical habits. Healthy eating, physical activity, and regular sleep can improve your physical and mental health.

References

  1. Weng, H.Y., Fox, A.S., Shackman, A.J., Stodola, D.E., Caldwell, J.Z., Olson, M.C., et al. (2013, July 1). Compassion training alters altruism and neural responses to suffering. Psychological Science, 24(7), 1171–1180. doi: 10.1177/0956797612469537
  2. Cohn, M.A., Fredrickson, B.L., Brown, S.L., Mikels, J.A., & Conway, A.M. (2009, June). Happiness unpacked: Positive emotions increase life satisfaction by building resilience. Emotion, 9(3), 361–368. doi: 10.1037/a0015952
  3. Kok, B.E., Coffey, K.A., Cohn, M.A., Catalino, L.I., Vacharkulksemsuk, T., Algoe, S.B., et al. (2013, July 1). How positive emotions build physical health: Perceived positive social connections account for the upward spiral between positive emotions and vagal tone. Psychological Science, 24(7), 1123–1132. doi: 10.1177/0956797612470827
  4. Ricard, M., Lutz, A., & Davidson, R.J. (2014, November). Mind of the meditator. Scientific American, 311(5), 38–45.
  5. Falk, E.B., O'Donnell, M.B., Cascio, C.N., Tinney, F., Kang, Y., Lieberman, M.D., et al. (2015, February 17). Self-affirmation alters the brain's response to health messages and subsequent behavior change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(7), 1977–1982. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1500247112
  6. Berkman, E.T., & Falk, E.B. (2013, February). Beyond brain mapping: Using neural measures to predict real-world outcomes. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 22(1), 45–50.

Wein, H. (Ed.). (2015, August). Positive emotions and your health: Developing a brighter outlook. NIH News in Health. Bethesda, MD: U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH). Retrieved June 19, 2024, from https://newsinhealth.nih.gov

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Other Topics

    • Supporting Your Child at a Time of Conflict and Crisis (Texas School Shooting)
    • Lighten Up With Laughter
    • Being an Upstander
    • Addressing Anxiety
    • Emotional Wellness: Building Better Mental Health
    • Older Adults and Depression (Part 1)
    • Help for Survivors in the Aftermath of Disasters and Mass Violence
    • Panic Disorder: When Fear Overwhelms—Part 1
    • Stress and Aging
    • Coping with Grief After Community Violence
    • Connecting the dots on wellness
    • Pinpointing Your Sleep Problem
    • Recognizing an eating disorder
    • Don't Worry, Breathe Happy
    • Recognizing depression