By William R. Mattox Jr.
Most people
stay current by reading the morning paper, watching the evening news, or surfing the World
Wide Web. But for procrastinators like me, the best way to stay current is to read back
issues of the Futurist magazine.
Ive been doing that a lot recently. And I am happy to report that a growing
number of scholars are beginning to take seriously the study of happiness, joy, and life
satisfaction. Or so the Futurist observes in a recent feature on "the science of
happiness."
Now, it might be tempting to view the pursuit of happiness within academia as a
sign that todays scholars have run out of problems to consider. But the scientific
interest in happiness is actually being driven in part by what University of Pennsylvania
psychology professor Martin Seligman calls an "epidemic" of clinical depression.
According to Seligman, who was recently named president of the American
Psychological Association, an Americans odds of suffering clinical depression at
some point in his or her lifetime is now significantly higher than at any other time in
this century. For example, only 1 percent of women born around the time of World War I
experienced severe depression at some point in their lives. But with each succeeding
generation, this percentage has risen steadily to the point that 12 to 15 percent of
Americans born in the mid-1970s, the cohort now in the high-depression years of late
adolescence and early adulthood, have already experienced at least one bout of serious
depression.
That America is now in the throes of a Great (Clinical) Depression seems
completely at odds with our material well-being. As Sir John Templeton notes in his latest
book, Is Progress Speeding Up? Our Multiplying Multitudes of Blessings,
"People today are better fed, better clothed, better housed, and better educated than
at any previous time in history." Moreover, in nearly every material domain,
including working conditions, food production, housing standards, quality of health care,
life expectancy, environmental safety, and computer technology, Templeton says, the rate
of progress is accelerating. In other words, things arent just getting better, they
are getting better and better at a faster and faster rate.
So, if weve got it so good, why do so many Americans feel so bad? Most
research on depression approaches this question from a nonhistorical "micro"
perspective. That is, in seeking to identify causes of depression, factors like "loss
of a loved one," "job loss," "serious health problems," or other
adversities are commonly cited. While these correlations may explain why certain
individuals in any historical period fall into depression, they do little to explain why
other individuals facing the same adversities do not fall into depression. Nor do they
explain why "macro" rates of depression vary over time in seemingly inexplicable
ways. For example, why are rates of severe depression so much higher today than say,
during the Great (Economic) Depression of the 1930s, when adversity was seemingly so much
more common? Both Seligman and Templeton believe the historical rise in depression is
partly attributable to the growth in a mass media culture that is tilted toward gloom and
pessimism. "There is no denying that ills exist," Templeton acknowledges, but in
their zeal to cover pain and conflict, the news media often overlook stories of triumph,
success, and human progress.
Ironically, this bias towards bad news has been magnified by the accelerating
progress in mass communications. "There is nothing particularly new about this very
human tendency to focus on bad news," Templeton notes. "What has changed is that
today the opportunity to read or see or hear the news is unprecedented."
So is the opportunity to read or see or hear advertising messages that encourage
people to focus on what they lack rather than what they have. This is significant, because
Seligman says that much of the clinical depression he sees today "is a disorder of
individual thwarting" that arises when people arrive at a sorrowful resignation that
theyll never fulfill their most cherished hopes and dreams.
"Hopelessness is a disorder of the eye," Seligman told a recent academic
conference in Philadelphia. And it is a disorder to which many psychologists have
contributed. Indeed, Seligman believes the field of psychology has become too much like
grunge rock: obsessed with despair, hopelessness, and depression. For example, a recent
research survey by Ed Diener of the University of Illinois and David Myers of Hope College
found that, over the last 30 years, research studies dealing with anger, anxiety, or
depression have outnumbered studies examining joy, happiness, or life satisfaction by a
ratio of 21 to 1.
"Modern psychology has become preoccupied with the negative side of
life," Seligman says. "It has understood human functioning in a
disease model that is consumed with unresolved conflicts from childhood, with
childhood trauma, and with viewing individuals as helpless victims of oppressive cultural
and economic forces."
Failure Without Furniture
Seligman is not attempting to pooh-pooh human sorrow and suffering. Nor is he
trying to delegitimize all "negative side" psychology. But Seligman says
psychologys preoccupation with the morose has contributed to the rise of "an
ideology of victimology" in our culture that sees "human beings as puppets of
their environment" and offers little more than "coping skills" to those
facing adversity.
This, Seligman says, is very different from the prevailing cultural mindset that
existed earlier in this century. For example, he points out that "the emblematic
childrens book" in America used to be a story about overcoming adversity called
The Little Engine That Could. Today, Seligman says, children are more apt to read
books that seek to help them cope with negative events or books that offer a hollow
"I am special" message that promotes what Seligman calls "unwarranted
self-esteem." As a consequence, Seligman says, many Americans today grow up with a
predisposition to abandon hope easily in the face of adversity and to pursue a life of
narcissistic individualism that is often cut off from the social support networks and
transcendent beliefs that previous generations found so valuable in overcoming lifes
inevitable hardships.
"Our grandparents had their relationship to God, their belief in a nation,
their belief in a communityand they had large extended families," Seligman
says. "This is the spiritual furniture that our parents and grandparents sat in when
they failed."
Today, of course, many Americans suffer alone. And the more alone they are, the
more likely they are to suffer. According to the National Institute for Heathcare Research
(NIHR), depression is significantly more common among people living by themselves than
among those residing in families. And it is more common still among "Eleanor
Rigbys" living apart from a larger affinity group than among singles enmeshed in a
community of supportive relationships.
Yet the solution to our problem isnt quite as simple as agreeing with Dean
Martin that "everybody needs somebody sometimes." When it comes to depression,
not all household arrangements and civic associations are equal. For example,
never-married individuals living alone are actually less likely to experience depression
than adults who have been married and divorced or who cohabitate. Children whose parents
divorce are far more likely to experience a bout of severe depression than those from
intact homes. Moreover, NIHR reports that people who belong to a local religious
congregation are far less apt to experience depression than those who are non-religious.
And a recent Duke University study shows that those who attend worship services also
recover from bouts of depression far more quickly than do others.
A leading psychologist believes
it is time his profession learned
to cultivate certain virtues, such as
courage, hope, optimism,
and perseverance.
Linda George of Duke University says that "greater social support"
explains only part of the relationship between frequent religious participation and better
mental health. In other words, religious involvement appears to offer certain intrinsic
benefits that are not typically available from participating in a bowling league, joining
a garden club, or frequenting a pub, as the Cheers theme has it, "where
everybody knows your name."
Sharing the Warmth
The rise in clinical depression, then, is directly related to the decline in civil
societymost especially, the breakdown of family life and the demise of
community-based organizations that promote civic virtue. While this means that efforts to
reverse historical trends in depression must give attention to restoring these
institutions, Seligman believes it is also critically important for the field of
psychology to recognize and seek to cultivate certain virtues, such as courage, hope,
optimism, perseverance, and honesty, that serve as "buffers against mental illness in
vulnerable people."
Indeed, Seligman has devoted much of his professional life to showing that
patterns of thinking do affect certain outcomeswhich is why, for example, sports
teams that "play to win" tend to experience greater success than those that play
"not to lose." At the same time, Seligman is quick to say that pessimism and
optimism are not fixed, inborn traits, but are instead "explanatory styles" or
habitual ways in which people interpret and respond to failure. "One of the most
significant findings in psychology in the last 20 years is that individuals can choose the
way they think," Seligman says. "Habits of thinking need not be forever."
Accordingly, Seligman believes psychologists can and should devote themselves to
helping individuals renew their minds and break out of self-destructive patterns of
thinking and behaving. Rather than operating as detached technocrats content to merely
measure human suffering or as morose pessimists who view human weakness as more
"authentic" than human strengths, Seligman believes psychologists can and should
work to help those who see the proverbial glass as half-empty to view it as half-full. And
he says social scientists can promote virtues like resilience and tenacity without
compromising their intellectual honesty, objectivity, or academic credibility.
"My vision for psychology and social science in the 21st century is that it
will move from being muckraking and remedial to becoming a positive force," Seligman
says. His vision is increasingly being embraced by others frustrated by the "Im
dysfunctional, youre dysfunctional" mindset of todays psychology. Indeed,
a growing number of scholars (including those studying happiness and life satisfaction)
are discovering that studying success may not only be more socially constructive than
studying failure, but may also be more interesting.
"Researchers in the field of depression have focused understandably on trying
to find out what makes people depressed," observes psychologist Lyn Abramson of the
University of Wisconsin. "But it is equally important to try and understand what
allows people to not become depressed in the face of adversity."
To illustrate, Abramson draws on an analogy to winter temperatures and home
heating. "Its kind of obvious that a house could lose its warmth in sub-zero
temperatures," she says. "What we need to understand is, why is it that some
houses can stay warm despite the cold climate outside?"
Dont Worry, Be Happy?
Lest there be any doubt, Seligman isnt interested in promoting a simplistic,
Pollyannaish outlook on life. Nor does he want the field of psychology to turn into the
academic equivalent of a feel-good God & Country pep rallylike those say, that
the 1988 Bush for President campaign staged to the tune of Bobby McFerrins anthem,
"Dont Worry, Be Happy."
But, Seligman says, psychologists should not be afraid to acknowledge the role
that transcendent beliefs (in God, country, community, family, virtue) play in giving
people hope and in helping them overcome adversity.
This last point is important. For much of our nations "epidemic"
in clinical depression is undoubtedly linked to nihilistic thinking. And it may very well
be that one of the reasons we are witnessing a Great (Clinical) Depression in the midst of
unprecedented peace and prosperity is because many Americans are gaining the whole world,
but losing their soul.