Happiness is, by nature, a subjective quality with a definition like a  moving target. There is scant evidence — qualitative or quantitative —  to lend convincing support to those life variables most critical in  determining individual happiness, which is likely why past researchers  committed to the scientific method rarely tried to tackle the subject.
This is changing. Take, for example, the World Database of Happiness  in Rotterdam, self-described as a, “continuous register of scientific  research on subjective appreciation of life.” Also, take the positive  psychologists, a movement whose “members” perform scientific research  into the nature of happiness and who published Character Strengths and  Virtues: A Handbook and Classification, an 800-page behemoth that  outlines all the characteristics, behaviors and conditions that lead to  happiness.
While we’re not entirely convinced of this marriage between science  and subjectivity, we can still offer up a top 10 of things that  determine human happiness, as supported by this growing body of  research.
No.10 – Having a short memory
Are you one to hold grudges? Do you need the jaws of life to pry  forgiveness out of you? Well, don’t expect these attributes to  contribute to your happiness or to your overall health for that matter.  This ability to forgive and forget, to go with the flow, is frequently  cited by researchers of centenarians as being a key factor in their  ability to live to see their 100th birthday.
No.9 – Exacting fairness
According to a recently published study in the prestigious journal Nature,  people derive more happiness from scenarios and situations that result  in a perceived fairness for everyone involved, even when this fairness  goes against self-interest or comes at some personal cost. In short,  researchers at Rutgers found that the reward centers in the brain light  up in situations in which people are treated equally.
No.8 – Having lots of friendships
Extroverts are happier than introverts and they live longer lives, in  part because they can spend time in the company of friends and family  or they can spend time alone, according to happiness researcher Ed  Diener. Like letting go of grudges and going with the flow, being  extroverted and having a wide social circle is a major factor in whether  someone considers themselves happy or not, as well as an often-cited  reason to explain how some people live to be 100 or older. At any rate,  it’s a reason to justify spending a little time at work on social  networking sites.
No.7 – Being spiritual
The results of a collaborative, multinational study that involved  over 166,000 people showed a clear correlation between a person’s  “strength of religious affiliation and frequency of attendance at  worship services” and their self-reported levels of happiness and  satisfaction with their lives. How is this correlation explained?  Researchers postulate that this increased involvement in a spiritual  circle means more friends, a wider support network and a higher degree  of hopefulness.
No.6 – Thinking ahead
In his book Stumbling on Happiness, Harvard psychologist  Daniel Gilbert argues that happiness is derived from the ability to  accurately project what will in the future make us happy — not those  things that actually do. He notes that we are the only species that  truly considers the future, and this ability to think ahead and to  imagine the future is “the defining aspect of our humanity.”
According to Gilbert, studies support the idea that we enjoy thinking  into the future because more often than not, it’s something of a  daydream, and in daydreams we are at our most successful. Furthermore,  because imagining the future and what actually happens in that future  are often at odds, many people derive far more happiness from the  anticipation of a future event than the actual event.
No.5 – Developing a skill
According to psychology professor Dr. Timothy A. Pychyl, the route to  happiness is simple enough, “Live it, don’t buy it.” This is especially  relevant in the modern world, where instant gratification can be  purchased — but only to a point, before it hits a wall.
He quotes a professional base jumper, who says, “You’ve got to have  the passion to do your time. If you haven’t done the time, you just  can’t get there.” He goes on to argue that only by paying one’s dues  through time, effort, devotion, and experience can we, “develop the rich  experiences that make life meaningful.”
No.4 – Having personal control over one’s life
Where might you find unhappy people with low morale? Those places  where people no longer feel in personal control of their lives, whether  it’s a nursing home or a prison, because control equates to happiness.  In his book Satisfaction, Emory University psychiatrist Gregory  Berns makes the point by distinguishing between pleasure and  satisfaction, “While you might find pleasure by happenstance,  satisfaction can arise only by the conscious decision to do something.  And this makes all the difference in the world, because it is only your  own actions for which you may take responsibility and credit.”
No.3 – Defining success 
There’s a saying that no matter how talented or successful you think  you are, there’s always someone who’s got a leg up on you. People who  compare themselves against those people will always come out the loser,  even when the comparison is neither appropriate nor consequential. A  skilled dentist with a thriving practice can’t reasonably compare his  level of success to Robert De Niro and expect to feel good. If he made  comparisons within his own peer group or against his own expectations,  however, he’ll not only come out more favorably, but he’ll be happier  too.
As Gallup psychologist Shane Lopez explained to Psychology Today writer Abby Ellin, “Self-referential people see themselves as the  marker. They care about their own performance, not how they measure up  compared to that guy over there…. The only competitor is the self.”
No.2 – Good genes
According to “The Science of Lasting Happiness,” an article by Marina Krakovsky published by Scientific American in 2007, “studies of twins and adoptees have shown that about 50% of  each person’s happiness is determined from birth”, what’s loosely termed  as a “genetic set point.” The weight of this variable on determining  our happiness is supported by hedonic adaptation; according to this  theory, even if we win the lottery, within a year or so of coming into  this kind of material good fortune, we adapt to it and revert back to  whatever level of happiness we were at before.
No.1 – Liking yourself
Liking oneself is arguably the principal characteristic of happy  people. It’s been revealed in study after study after study: happy  people like themselves. They think they’re pretty great people. They  have high self-esteem, meaning they think highly of their own  intelligence, they consider themselves to have strong ethical standards  and to have far fewer prejudices than others.

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