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TED Talks - Most Popular - The happy secret to better work

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We believe we should work hard in order to be happy, but could we be thinking about things backwards? In this fast-moving and very funny talk, psychologist Shawn Achor argues that, actually, happiness inspires us to be more productive.

When
I
was
seven
years
old
and
my
sister
was
just
five
years
old,
we
were
playing
on
top
of
a
bunk
bed.
I
was
two
years
older
than
my
sister
at
the
time
--
I
mean,
I'm
two
years
older
than
her
now
--
but
at
the
time
it
meant
she
had
to
do
everything
that
I
wanted
to
do,
and
I
wanted
to
play
war.
So
we
were
up
on
top
of
our
bunk
beds.
And
on
one
side
of
the
bunk
bed,
I
had
put
out
all
of
my
G.I.
Joe
soldiers
and
weaponry.
And
on
the
other
side
were
all
my
sister's
My
Little
Ponies
ready
for
a
cavalry
charge.
There
are
differing
accounts
of
what
actually
happened
that
afternoon,
but
since
my
sister
is
not
here
with
us
today,
let
me
tell
you
the
true
story
--
(Laughter)
which
is
my
sister's
a
little
on
the
clumsy
side.
Somehow,
without
any
help
or
push
from
her
older
brother
at
all,
Amy
disappeared
off
of
the
top
of
the
bunk
bed
and
landed
with
this
crash
on
the
floor.
I
nervously
peered
over
the
side
of
the
bed
to
see
what
had
befallen
my
fallen
sister
and
saw
that
she
had
landed
painfully
on
her
hands
and
knees
on
all
fours
on
the
ground.
I
was
nervous
because
my
parents
had
charged
me
with
making
sure
that
my
sister
and
I
played
as
safely
and
as
quietly
as
possible.
And
seeing
as
how
I
had
accidentally
broken
Amy's
arm
just
one
week
before
--
(Laughter)
(Laughter
ends)
heroically
pushing
her
out
of
the
way
of
an
oncoming
imaginary
sniper
bullet,
(Laughter)
for
which
I
have
yet
to
be
thanked,
I
was
trying
as
hard
as
I
could
--
she
didn't
even
see
it
coming
--
I
was
trying
hard
to
be
on
my
best
behavior.
And
I
saw
my
sister's
face,
this
wail
of
pain
and
suffering
and
surprise
threatening
to
erupt
from
her
mouth
and
wake
my
parents
from
the
long
winter's
nap
for
which
they
had
settled.
So
I
did
the
only
thing
my
frantic
seven
year-old
brain
could
think
to
do
to
avert
this
tragedy.
And
if
you
have
children,
you've
seen
this
hundreds
of
times.
I
said,
"Amy,
wait.
Don't
cry.
Did
you
see
how
you
landed?
No
human
lands
on
all
fours
like
that.
Amy,
I
think
this
means
you're
a
unicorn."
(Laughter)
Now,
that
was
cheating,
because
there
was
nothing
she
would
want
more
than
not
to
be
Amy
the
hurt
five
year-old
little
sister,
but
Amy
the
special
unicorn.
Of
course,
this
option
was
open
to
her
brain
at
no
point
in
the
past.
And
you
could
see
how
my
poor,
manipulated
sister
faced
conflict,
as
her
little
brain
attempted
to
devote
resources
to
feeling
the
pain
and
suffering
and
surprise
she
just
experienced,
or
contemplating
her
new-found
identity
as
a
unicorn.
And
the
latter
won.
Instead
of
crying
or
ceasing
our
play,
instead
of
waking
my
parents,
with
all
the
negative
consequences
for
me,
a
smile
spread
across
her
face
and
she
scrambled
back
up
onto
the
bunk
bed
with
all
the
grace
of
a
baby
unicorn
--
(Laughter)
with
one
broken
leg.
What
we
stumbled
across
at
this
tender
age
of
just
five
and
seven
--
we
had
no
idea
at
the
time
--
was
was
going
be
at
the
vanguard
of
a
scientific
revolution
occurring
two
decades
later
in
the
way
that
we
look
at
the
human
brain.
We
had
stumbled
across
something
called
positive
psychology,
which
is
the
reason
I'm
here
today
and
the
reason
that
I
wake
up
every
morning.
When
I
started
talking
about
this
research
outside
of
academia,
with
companies
and
schools,
the
first
thing
they
said
to
never
do
is
to
start
with
a
graph.
The
first
thing
I
want
to
do
is
start
with
a
graph.
This
graph
looks
boring,
but
it
is
the
reason
I
get
excited
and
wake
up
every
morning.
And
this
graph
doesn't
even
mean
anything;
it's
fake
data.
What
we
found
is
--
(Laughter)
If
I
got
this
data
studying
you,
I
would
be
thrilled,
because
there's
a
trend
there,
and
that
means
that
I
can
get
published,
which
is
all
that
really
matters.
There
is
one
weird
red
dot
above
the
curve,
there's
one
weirdo
in
the
room
--
I
know
who
you
are,
I
saw
you
earlier
--
that's
no
problem.
That's
no
problem,
as
most
of
you
know,
because
I
can
just
delete
that
dot.
I
can
delete
that
dot
because
that's
clearly
a
measurement
error.
And
we
know
that's
a
measurement
error
because
it's
messing
up
my
data.
(Laughter)
So
one
of
the
first
things
we
teach
people
in
economics,
statistics,
business
and
psychology
courses
is
how,
in
a
statistically
valid
way,
do
we
eliminate
the
weirdos.
How
do
we
eliminate
the
outliers
so
we
can
find
the
line
of
best
fit?
Which
is
fantastic
if
I'm
trying
to
find
out
how
many
Advil
the
average
person
should
be
taking
--
two.
But
if
I'm
interested
in
your
potential,
or
for
happiness
or
productivity
or
energy
or
creativity,
we're
creating
the
cult
of
the
average
with
science.
If
I
asked
a
question
like,
"How
fast
can
a
child
learn
how
to
read
in
a
classroom?"
scientists
change
the
answer
to
"How
fast
does
the
average
child
learn
how
to
read
in
that
classroom?"
and
we
tailor
the
class
towards
the
average.
If
you
fall
below
the
average,
then
psychologists
get
thrilled,
because
that
means
you're
depressed
or
have
a
disorder,
or
hopefully
both.
We're
hoping
for
both
because
our
business
model
is,
if
you
come
into
a
therapy
session
with
one
problem,
we
want
to
make
sure
you
leave
knowing
you
have
ten,
so
you
keep
coming
back.
We'll
go
back
into
your
childhood
if
necessary,
but
eventually
we
want
to
make
you
normal
again.
But
normal
is
merely
average.
And
positive
psychology
posits
that
if
we
study
what
is
merely
average,
we
will
remain
merely
average.
Then
instead
of
deleting
those
positive
outliers,
what
I
intentionally
do
is
come
into
a
population
like
this
one
and
say,
why?
Why
are
some
of
you
high
above
the
curve
in
terms
of
intellectual,
athletic,
musical
ability,
creativity,
energy
levels,
resiliency
in
the
face
of
challenge,
sense
of
humor?
Whatever
it
is,
instead
of
deleting
you,
what
I
want
to
do
is
study
you.
Because
maybe
we
can
glean
information,
not
just
how
to
move
people
up
to
the
average,
but
move
the
entire
average
up
in
our
companies
and
schools
worldwide.
The
reason
this
graph
is
important
to
me
is,
on
the
news,
the
majority
of
the
information
is
not
positive.
in
fact
it's
negative.
Most
of
it's
about
murder,
corruption,
diseases,
natural
disasters.
And
very
quickly,
my
brain
starts
to
think
that's
the
accurate
ratio
of
negative
to
positive
in
the
world.
This
creates
"the
medical
school
syndrome."
During
the
first
year
of
medical
training,
as
you
read
through
a
list
of
all
the
symptoms
and
diseases,
suddenly
you
realize
you
have
all
of
them.
(Laughter)
I
have
a
brother
in-law
named
Bobo,
which
is
a
whole
other
story.
Bobo
married
Amy
the
unicorn.
Bobo
called
me
on
the
phone
--
(Laughter)
from
Yale
Medical
School,
and
Bobo
said,
"Shawn,
I
have
leprosy."
(Laughter)
Which,
even
at
Yale,
is
extraordinarily
rare.
But
I
had
no
idea
how
to
console
poor
Bobo
because
he
had
just
gotten
over
an
entire
week
of
menopause.
(Laughter)
We're
finding
it's
not
necessarily
the
reality
that
shapes
us,
but
the
lens
through
which
your
brain
views
the
world
that
shapes
your
reality.
And
if
we
can
change
the
lens,
not
only
can
we
change
your
happiness,
we
can
change
every
single
educational
and
business
outcome
at
the
same
time.
I
applied
to
Harvard
on
a
dare.
I
didn't
expect
to
get
in,
and
my
family
had
no
money
for
college.
When
I
got
a
military
scholarship
two
weeks
later,
they
let
me
go.
Something
that
wasn't
even
a
possibility
became
a
reality.
I
assumed
everyone
there
would
see
it
as
a
privilege
as
well,
that
they'd
be
excited
to
be
there.
Even
in
a
classroom
full
of
people
smarter
than
you,
I
felt
you'd
be
happy
just
to
be
in
that
classroom.
But
what
I
found
is,
while
some
people
experience
that,
when
I
graduated
after
my
four
years
and
then
spent
the
next
eight
years
living
in
the
dorms
with
the
students
--
Harvard
asked
me
to;
I
wasn't
that
guy.
(Laughter)
I
was
an
officer
to
counsel
students
through
the
difficult
four
years.
And
in
my
research
and
my
teaching,
I
found
that
these
students,
no
matter
how
happy
they
were
with
their
original
success
of
getting
into
the
school,
two
weeks
later
their
brains
were
focused,
not
on
the
privilege
of
being
there,
nor
on
their
philosophy
or
physics,
but
on
the
competition,
the
workload,
the
hassles,
stresses,
complaints.
When
I
first
went
in
there,
I
walked
into
the
freshmen
dining
hall,
which
is
where
my
friends
from
Waco,
Texas,
which
is
where
I
grew
up
--
I
know
some
of
you
know
this.
When
they'd
visit,
they'd
look
around,
and
say,
"This
dining
hall
looks
like
something
out
of
Hogwart's."
It
does,
because
that
was
Hogwart's
and
that's
Harvard.
And
when
they
see
this,
they
say,
"Why
do
you
waste
your
time
studying
happiness
at
Harvard?
What
does
a
Harvard
student
possibly
have
to
be
unhappy
about?"
Embedded
within
that
question
is
the
key
to
understanding
the
science
of
happiness.
Because
what
that
question
assumes
is
that
our
external
world
is
predictive
of
our
happiness
levels,
when
in
reality,
if
I
know
everything
about
your
external
world,
I
can
only
predict
10%
of
your
long-term
happiness.
90
percent
of
your
long-term
happiness
is
predicted
not
by
the
external
world,
but
by
the
way
your
brain
processes
the
world.
And
if
we
change
it,
if
we
change
our
formula
for
happiness
and
success,
we
can
change
the
way
that
we
can
then
affect
reality.
What
we
found
is
that
only
25%
of
job
successes
are
predicted
by
IQ,
75
percent
of
job
successes
are
predicted
by
your
optimism
levels,
your
social
support
and
your
ability
to
see
stress
as
a
challenge
instead
of
as
a
threat.
I
talked
to
a
New
England
boarding
school,
probably
the
most
prestigious
one,
and
they
said,
"We
already
know
that.
So
every
year,
instead
of
just
teaching
our
students,
we
have
a
wellness
week.
And
we're
so
excited.
Monday
night
we
have
the
world's
leading
expert
will
speak
about
adolescent
depression.
Tuesday
night
it's
school
violence
and
bullying.
Wednesday
night
is
eating
disorders.
Thursday
night
is
illicit
drug
use.
And
Friday
night
we're
trying
to
decide
between
risky
sex
or
happiness."
(Laughter)
I
said,
"That's
most
people's
Friday
nights."
(Laughter)
(Applause)
Which
I'm
glad
you
liked,
but
they
did
not
like
that
at
all.
Silence
on
the
phone.
And
into
the
silence,
I
said,
"I'd
be
happy
to
speak
at
your
school,
but
that's
not
a
wellness
week,
that's
a
sickness
week.
You've
outlined
all
the
negative
things
that
can
happen,
but
not
talked
about
the
positive."
The
absence
of
disease
is
not
health.
Here's
how
we
get
to
health:
We
need
to
reverse
the
formula
for
happiness
and
success.
In
the
last
three
years,
I've
traveled
to
45
countries,
working
with
schools
and
companies
in
the
midst
of
an
economic
downturn.
And
I
found
that
most
companies
and
schools
follow
a
formula
for
success,
which
is
this:
If
I
work
harder,
I'll
be
more
successful.
And
if
I'm
more
successful,
then
I'll
be
happier.
That
undergirds
most
of
our
parenting
and
managing
styles,
the
way
that
we
motivate
our
behavior.
And
the
problem
is
it's
scientifically
broken
and
backwards
for
two
reasons.
Every
time
your
brain
has
a
success,
you
just
changed
the
goalpost
of
what
success
looked
like.
You
got
good
grades,
now
you
have
to
get
better
grades,
you
got
into
a
good
school
and
after
you
get
into
a
better
one,
you
got
a
good
job,
now
you
have
to
get
a
better
job,
you
hit
your
sales
target,
we're
going
to
change
it.
And
if
happiness
is
on
the
opposite
side
of
success,
your
brain
never
gets
there.
We've
pushed
happiness
over
the
cognitive
horizon,
as
a
society.
And
that's
because
we
think
we
have
to
be
successful,
then
we'll
be
happier.
But
our
brains
work
in
the
opposite
order.
If
you
can
raise
somebody's
level
of
positivity
in
the
present,
then
their
brain
experiences
what
we
now
call
a
happiness
advantage,
which
is
your
brain
at
positive
performs
significantly
better
than
at
negative,
neutral
or
stressed.
Your
intelligence
rises,
your
creativity
rises,
your
energy
levels
rise.
In
fact,
we've
found
that
every
single
business
outcome
improves.
Your
brain
at
positive
is
31%
more
productive
than
your
brain
at
negative,
neutral
or
stressed.
You're
37%
better
at
sales.
Doctors
are
19
percent
faster,
more
accurate
at
coming
up
with
the
correct
diagnosis
when
positive
instead
of
negative,
neutral
or
stressed.
Which
means
we
can
reverse
the
formula.
If
we
can
find
a
way
of
becoming
positive
in
the
present,
then
our
brains
work
even
more
successfully
as
we're
able
to
work
harder,
faster
and
more
intelligently.
We
need
to
be
able
to
reverse
this
formula
so
we
can
start
to
see
what
our
brains
are
actually
capable
of.
Because
dopamine,
which
floods
into
your
system
when
you're
positive,
has
two
functions.
Not
only
does
it
make
you
happier,
it
turns
on
all
of
the
learning
centers
in
your
brain
allowing
you
to
adapt
to
the
world
in
a
different
way.
We've
found
there
are
ways
that
you
can
train
your
brain
to
be
able
to
become
more
positive.
In
just
a
two-minute
span
of
time
done
for
21
days
in
a
row,
we
can
actually
rewire
your
brain,
allowing
your
brain
to
actually
work
more
optimistically
and
more
successfully.
We've
done
these
things
in
research
now
in
every
company
that
I've
worked
with,
getting
them
to
write
down
three
new
things
that
they're
grateful
for
for
21
days
in
a
row,
three
new
things
each
day.
And
at
the
end
of
that,
their
brain
starts
to
retain
a
pattern
of
scanning
the
world
not
for
the
negative,
but
for
the
positive
first.
Journaling
about
one
positive
experience
you've
had
over
the
past
24
hours
allows
your
brain
to
relive
it.
Exercise
teaches
your
brain
that
your
behavior
matters.
We
find
that
meditation
allows
your
brain
to
get
over
the
cultural
ADHD
that
we've
been
creating
by
trying
to
do
multiple
tasks
at
once
and
allows
our
brains
to
focus
on
the
task
at
hand.
And
finally,
random
acts
of
kindness
are
conscious
acts
of
kindness.
We
get
people,
when
they
open
up
their
inbox,
to
write
one
positive
email
praising
or
thanking
somebody
in
their
support
network.
And
by
doing
these
activities
and
by
training
your
brain
just
like
we
train
our
bodies,
what
we've
found
is
we
can
reverse
the
formula
for
happiness
and
success,
and
in
doing
so,
not
only
create
ripples
of
positivity,
but
a
real
revolution.
Thank
you
very
much.
(Applause)
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See below for the full transcript

When I was seven years old and my sister was just five years old, we were playing on top of a bunk bed. I was two years older than my sister at the time -- I mean, I'm two years older than her now -- but at the time it meant she had to do everything that I wanted to do, and I wanted to play war. So we were up on top of our bunk beds. And on one side of the bunk bed, I had put out all of my G.I. Joe soldiers and weaponry. And on the other side were all my sister's My Little Ponies ready for a cavalry charge. There are differing accounts of what actually happened that afternoon, but since my sister is not here with us today, let me tell you the true story -- (Laughter) which is my sister's a little on the clumsy side. Somehow, without any help or push from her older brother at all, Amy disappeared off of the top of the bunk bed and landed with this crash on the floor. I nervously peered over the side of the bed to see what had befallen my fallen sister and saw that she had landed painfully on her hands and knees on all fours on the ground. I was nervous because my parents had charged me with making sure that my sister and I played as safely and as quietly as possible. And seeing as how I had accidentally broken Amy's arm just one week before -- (Laughter) (Laughter ends) heroically pushing her out of the way of an oncoming imaginary sniper bullet, (Laughter) for which I have yet to be thanked, I was trying as hard as I could -- she didn't even see it coming -- I was trying hard to be on my best behavior. And I saw my sister's face, this wail of pain and suffering and surprise threatening to erupt from her mouth and wake my parents from the long winter's nap for which they had settled. So I did the only thing my frantic seven year-old brain could think to do to avert this tragedy. And if you have children, you've seen this hundreds of times. I said, "Amy, wait. Don't cry. Did you see how you landed? No human lands on all fours like that. Amy, I think this means you're a unicorn." (Laughter) Now, that was cheating, because there was nothing she would want more than not to be Amy the hurt five year-old little sister, but Amy the special unicorn. Of course, this option was open to her brain at no point in the past. And you could see how my poor, manipulated sister faced conflict, as her little brain attempted to devote resources to feeling the pain and suffering and surprise she just experienced, or contemplating her new-found identity as a unicorn. And the latter won. Instead of crying or ceasing our play, instead of waking my parents, with all the negative consequences for me, a smile spread across her face and she scrambled back up onto the bunk bed with all the grace of a baby unicorn -- (Laughter) with one broken leg. What we stumbled across at this tender age of just five and seven -- we had no idea at the time -- was was going be at the vanguard of a scientific revolution occurring two decades later in the way that we look at the human brain. We had stumbled across something called positive psychology, which is the reason I'm here today and the reason that I wake up every morning. When I started talking about this research outside of academia, with companies and schools, the first thing they said to never do is to start with a graph. The first thing I want to do is start with a graph. This graph looks boring, but it is the reason I get excited and wake up every morning. And this graph doesn't even mean anything; it's fake data. What we found is -- (Laughter) If I got this data studying you, I would be thrilled, because there's a trend there, and that means that I can get published, which is all that really matters. There is one weird red dot above the curve, there's one weirdo in the room -- I know who you are, I saw you earlier -- that's no problem. That's no problem, as most of you know, because I can just delete that dot. I can delete that dot because that's clearly a measurement error. And we know that's a measurement error because it's messing up my data. (Laughter) So one of the first things we teach people in economics, statistics, business and psychology courses is how, in a statistically valid way, do we eliminate the weirdos. How do we eliminate the outliers so we can find the line of best fit? Which is fantastic if I'm trying to find out how many Advil the average person should be taking -- two. But if I'm interested in your potential, or for happiness or productivity or energy or creativity, we're creating the cult of the average with science. If I asked a question like, "How fast can a child learn how to read in a classroom?" scientists change the answer to "How fast does the average child learn how to read in that classroom?" and we tailor the class towards the average. If you fall below the average, then psychologists get thrilled, because that means you're depressed or have a disorder, or hopefully both. We're hoping for both because our business model is, if you come into a therapy session with one problem, we want to make sure you leave knowing you have ten, so you keep coming back. We'll go back into your childhood if necessary, but eventually we want to make you normal again. But normal is merely average. And positive psychology posits that if we study what is merely average, we will remain merely average. Then instead of deleting those positive outliers, what I intentionally do is come into a population like this one and say, why? Why are some of you high above the curve in terms of intellectual, athletic, musical ability, creativity, energy levels, resiliency in the face of challenge, sense of humor? Whatever it is, instead of deleting you, what I want to do is study you. Because maybe we can glean information, not just how to move people up to the average, but move the entire average up in our companies and schools worldwide. The reason this graph is important to me is, on the news, the majority of the information is not positive. in fact it's negative. Most of it's about murder, corruption, diseases, natural disasters. And very quickly, my brain starts to think that's the accurate ratio of negative to positive in the world. This creates "the medical school syndrome." During the first year of medical training, as you read through a list of all the symptoms and diseases, suddenly you realize you have all of them. (Laughter) I have a brother in-law named Bobo, which is a whole other story. Bobo married Amy the unicorn. Bobo called me on the phone -- (Laughter) from Yale Medical School, and Bobo said, "Shawn, I have leprosy." (Laughter) Which, even at Yale, is extraordinarily rare. But I had no idea how to console poor Bobo because he had just gotten over an entire week of menopause. (Laughter) We're finding it's not necessarily the reality that shapes us, but the lens through which your brain views the world that shapes your reality. And if we can change the lens, not only can we change your happiness, we can change every single educational and business outcome at the same time. I applied to Harvard on a dare. I didn't expect to get in, and my family had no money for college. When I got a military scholarship two weeks later, they let me go. Something that wasn't even a possibility became a reality. I assumed everyone there would see it as a privilege as well, that they'd be excited to be there. Even in a classroom full of people smarter than you, I felt you'd be happy just to be in that classroom. But what I found is, while some people experience that, when I graduated after my four years and then spent the next eight years living in the dorms with the students -- Harvard asked me to; I wasn't that guy. (Laughter) I was an officer to counsel students through the difficult four years. And in my research and my teaching, I found that these students, no matter how happy they were with their original success of getting into the school, two weeks later their brains were focused, not on the privilege of being there, nor on their philosophy or physics, but on the competition, the workload, the hassles, stresses, complaints. When I first went in there, I walked into the freshmen dining hall, which is where my friends from Waco, Texas, which is where I grew up -- I know some of you know this. When they'd visit, they'd look around, and say, "This dining hall looks like something out of Hogwart's." It does, because that was Hogwart's and that's Harvard. And when they see this, they say, "Why do you waste your time studying happiness at Harvard? What does a Harvard student possibly have to be unhappy about?" Embedded within that question is the key to understanding the science of happiness. Because what that question assumes is that our external world is predictive of our happiness levels, when in reality, if I know everything about your external world, I can only predict 10% of your long-term happiness. 90 percent of your long-term happiness is predicted not by the external world, but by the way your brain processes the world. And if we change it, if we change our formula for happiness and success, we can change the way that we can then affect reality. What we found is that only 25% of job successes are predicted by IQ, 75 percent of job successes are predicted by your optimism levels, your social support and your ability to see stress as a challenge instead of as a threat. I talked to a New England boarding school, probably the most prestigious one, and they said, "We already know that. So every year, instead of just teaching our students, we have a wellness week. And we're so excited. Monday night we have the world's leading expert will speak about adolescent depression. Tuesday night it's school violence and bullying. Wednesday night is eating disorders. Thursday night is illicit drug use. And Friday night we're trying to decide between risky sex or happiness." (Laughter) I said, "That's most people's Friday nights." (Laughter) (Applause) Which I'm glad you liked, but they did not like that at all. Silence on the phone. And into the silence, I said, "I'd be happy to speak at your school, but that's not a wellness week, that's a sickness week. You've outlined all the negative things that can happen, but not talked about the positive." The absence of disease is not health. Here's how we get to health: We need to reverse the formula for happiness and success. In the last three years, I've traveled to 45 countries, working with schools and companies in the midst of an economic downturn. And I found that most companies and schools follow a formula for success, which is this: If I work harder, I'll be more successful. And if I'm more successful, then I'll be happier. That undergirds most of our parenting and managing styles, the way that we motivate our behavior. And the problem is it's scientifically broken and backwards for two reasons. Every time your brain has a success, you just changed the goalpost of what success looked like. You got good grades, now you have to get better grades, you got into a good school and after you get into a better one, you got a good job, now you have to get a better job, you hit your sales target, we're going to change it. And if happiness is on the opposite side of success, your brain never gets there. We've pushed happiness over the cognitive horizon, as a society. And that's because we think we have to be successful, then we'll be happier. But our brains work in the opposite order. If you can raise somebody's level of positivity in the present, then their brain experiences what we now call a happiness advantage, which is your brain at positive performs significantly better than at negative, neutral or stressed. Your intelligence rises, your creativity rises, your energy levels rise. In fact, we've found that every single business outcome improves. Your brain at positive is 31% more productive than your brain at negative, neutral or stressed. You're 37% better at sales. Doctors are 19 percent faster, more accurate at coming up with the correct diagnosis when positive instead of negative, neutral or stressed. Which means we can reverse the formula. If we can find a way of becoming positive in the present, then our brains work even more successfully as we're able to work harder, faster and more intelligently. We need to be able to reverse this formula so we can start to see what our brains are actually capable of. Because dopamine, which floods into your system when you're positive, has two functions. Not only does it make you happier, it turns on all of the learning centers in your brain allowing you to adapt to the world in a different way. We've found there are ways that you can train your brain to be able to become more positive. In just a two-minute span of time done for 21 days in a row, we can actually rewire your brain, allowing your brain to actually work more optimistically and more successfully. We've done these things in research now in every company that I've worked with, getting them to write down three new things that they're grateful for for 21 days in a row, three new things each day. And at the end of that, their brain starts to retain a pattern of scanning the world not for the negative, but for the positive first. Journaling about one positive experience you've had over the past 24 hours allows your brain to relive it. Exercise teaches your brain that your behavior matters. We find that meditation allows your brain to get over the cultural ADHD that we've been creating by trying to do multiple tasks at once and allows our brains to focus on the task at hand. And finally, random acts of kindness are conscious acts of kindness. We get people, when they open up their inbox, to write one positive email praising or thanking somebody in their support network. And by doing these activities and by training your brain just like we train our bodies, what we've found is we can reverse the formula for happiness and success, and in doing so, not only create ripples of positivity, but a real revolution. Thank you very much. (Applause)

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