Holidays do not make you any happier: Study
September 7th, 2010 - 6:38 pm ICT by ANILondon, Sept 7 (ANI): A scientific study has found that those who go on holidays are not usually happy when they come back.
Dutch academic Jeroen Nawijn, of Erasmus University, Rotterdam, investigated the link between holidays and happiness in 1,530 men and women, of an average age of 50 last summer.
On questioning, he found that approximately two-thirds had been on holiday, and that people who had been back from their holidays for more than a few days were no happier than they had been a month or two before they went away.
“The maximum benefit of a holiday is two weeks after coming home. After that, people are not any happier than they were beforehand,” the Daily Mail quoted Nawijn as saying.
He also found that people who have holidays booked but had not yet travelled tend to be happier than people who had not gone on holiday.
“People who have a great holiday may start to remember why they’re alive, only to be thrown back into the living death known as working life,” clinical psychologist, Oliver James, said.
Felicia Huppert, professor of psychology at Cambridge University, says the results of the Dutch study may be misleading as true happiness extends beyond someone’s current mood.
“The way they’ve measured happiness relates to how you feel at the time. If you are going to measure something fleeting, you’re going to find it goes back to its normal level,” she said.
“Nowadays, psychologists are interested in another kind of happiness - to do with whether there’s purpose in your life, as well as such self-esteem and your relationships with people,” she stated.
The answer, says Nawijn, is to maximise your happiness by not booking one long holiday, but several shorter ones.
“The length of the after-effect of a holiday does not seem to be associated with the length of that holiday,” he added. (ANI)
- Simple act of planning a vacation gives us happiness - Feb 19, 2010
- Cheerful kids make for happy adults - Feb 27, 2011
- Why today is the happiest day of the year - Jan 31, 2011
- Happy teenagers are prone to get divorced: Study - Feb 28, 2011
- 'Mindfulness' mediation improves mental health in teen boys - Sep 02, 2010
- Pursuit of happiness can backfire - May 17, 2011
- Thinking past is past could make you happier - May 03, 2011
- Office boredom drives men to flirt - Apr 22, 2012
- A good holiday makes us happier than material possessions - Apr 12, 2010
- Camping makes people happier than five-star holidays! - Apr 25, 2011
- Parenting leads to greater happiness - May 18, 2012
- Cough syrup may help predict breast cancer drug's effectiveness - Nov 20, 2010
- Thinking of positives from your past will keep you happier! - May 03, 2011
- Geneticists seek ban on mail-order DNA testing kits - May 31, 2011
- Fracture prone? Blame your genes - Apr 22, 2012
Tags: cambridge university, clinical psychologist, coming home, daily mail, dutch study, erasmus university rotterdam, felicia, few days, holidays, huppert, living death, long holiday, maximum benefit, men and women, oliver james, psychologists, psychology, self esteem, true happiness, two thirds