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Family Relationships Key to Happiness for Poor in Bangladesh

Submitted by tonyplant on April 5, 2006 - 13:22.

I was in Tower Hamlets yesterday, talking with some of the community health and well-being team (not the actual title but a reasonable description). We talked about the role of healthy breathing in relieving some of the distressing symptoms of chronic illnesses. We also discussed the importance of happiness, resilience and having a Happystance.

One of the most vigorously discussed topics was that the western concept of happiness seems to promote individualism and independence above social interdependence and group obligations. A research group recently published a working paper that reported eight out of ten people in Bangladesh describe themselves as happy: they say that their relationships with their loved ones is the key to their happiness.

Whilst achievement of individual goals and personal wealth remain the most significant contributors to happiness in Europe and North America, in Bangladesh and other parts of South and East Asia it seems to depend more on the quality of social relationships.

This finding could provide a partial explanation for the lack of success of development interventions in recent years, many of which are based on assumptions about the initiatives likely to bring the greatest benefit to individuals.

The researchers summarised the key characteristics about good relationships that were identified by the Bangladeshi people whom they interviewed. They found that:

Dr. McGregor commented on the report's findings:

Some of the older people we spoke to strongly valued close and harmonious relationships with family members, to the extent that they even enabled them to ignore physical hardship. Even though at times they don’t get enough food to eat, these people were still happy because they have good relationships with the rest of their family.

Now, I think that this working paper is a fascinating social description of happiness in the context of extreme poverty. However, I do not see Happystance as part of the hedonic or individualist view of happiness. I have repeatedly argued that Happystance is about resilience and that there is a lot of fine research that shows that we have greater physical and emotional resilience when we have rich social networks - otherwise known as friends and family. In good relationships, resilience and support flow back and forth over time. There is not always an equitable exchange between any one pair of friends, but over a set of relationships, these exchanges do seem to even out.

read more | add new comment | social networks | resilience | relationships | happystance | happiness | cross-cultural | allostasis


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