

Three Lessons from Happiness Research | Emma Seppälä
Mar 29, 2021
Emma Seppälä, a Lecturer at Yale and Science Director at Stanford’s Center for Compassion and Altruism, discusses fascinating insights from happiness research. She highlights how breathing exercises can balance emotions and improve resilience, especially during stressful times. The conversation also delves into the powerful effects of nature on creativity and mental health, and emphasizes the importance of social connections for well-being, turning isolation into purposeful engagement.
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Emotion Suppression
- Suppressing emotions worsens their physiological impact and negatively affects relationships.
- Others sense inauthenticity as a threat, increasing their heart rate and discomfort.
Breathing for Emotion Regulation
- Use breathing exercises to regulate strong emotions when reasoning fails.
- Lengthening exhales calms physiology, regaining access to clear thinking.
Jake's Story
- Emma Seppälä's husband's friend, Jake, a Marine, used a breathing exercise after an IED explosion.
- It helped him regain composure, give orders, and apply tourniquets, saving his life.