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Do less become happier says Yale cognitive scientist | Laurie Santos

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This interview is an episode from @TheWell, our publication about ideas that inspire a life welllived, created with the @JohnTempletonFoundation.

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Watch Laurie Santos' next interview ►    • Why humans are surprisingly bad at be...  

What if our incessant drive for selfimprovement isn't always conducive to happiness?

Cognitive scientist Laurie Santos proposes this intriguing question. She notes that while evolution has wired us for relentless selfenhancement, our modern environment, ripe with comparisons and demands for excellence, amplifies this instinct, often to our detriment. The incessant push for "more" and "better" can lead to societal harm, fostering a competitive, individualistic society rather than one rooted in collective harmony and goodwill. Moreover, it can compromise personal happiness. Genuine wellbeing, Santos suggests, arises from extending compassion towards others and ourselves.

Selfcompassion, defined as mindfulness, recognition of common humanity, and selfkindness, can surprisingly enhance performance and resilience without a drillsergeant approach. Breaking free from the pervasive "hustle culture" requires acknowledging its illusory nature, prioritizing kindness towards oneself, orienting towards others, and practicing gratitude to appreciate one's journey.

0:00 The drive for perfection
1:48 2 consequences of pushing too hard
2:38 3 parts of selfcompassion
4:15 Why hustle culture is toxic
4:59 Happiness comes from otheroriented behavior

Read the video transcript ► hhttps://bigthink.com/thewell/howhus...



About Laurie Santos:
Dr. Laurie Santos is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Yale University. Her research provides an interface between evolutionary biology, developmental psychology, and cognitive neuroscience, exploring the evolutionary origins of the human mind by comparing the cognitive abilities of human and nonhuman primates. Her experiments focus on nonhuman primates (in captivity and in the field), incorporating methodologies from cognitive development, animal learning psychology, and cognitive neuroscience.



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