April 3, 2006
POLL: Just Over Half of Americans Say They Are ‘Very Happy’ with Their Lives
By Thomas Hargrove and Guido H. Stempel III
Scripps Howard News Service
The keys to happiness are simple -- grow up, get married, have children, go
to church and try to forget about the wilder days of youth.
Only 52 percent of Americans say they are "very happy" with their lives,
according to a Scripps Howard/Ohio University survey of 1,007 adult
residents of the United States. Forty-three percent said they are "fairly
happy," 3 percent said they are "not too happy" and 2 percent are undecided.
That might not seem sufficiently ebullient for a nation that embraces the
pursuit of happiness as an inalienable right. But the survey found Americans
with particular lifestyles -- especially those having a family and planting
roots in a community -- are much more likely to say they have found
contentment.
While wealth has a modest impact on well-being, other social factors appear
to have greater influence.
"It's a lot of fun to see what the correlations are for happiness," said
Glenn Van Ekeren, an elder care executive in Omaha, Neb., who has published
three books on the secrets to happiness. "There are some real affirmations
of life in this poll."
One of the most important things Americans can do to improve the odds of
being happy, the survey found, is to get married. Sixty percent of married
people are very happy, compared to 41 percent of singles.
"Of course, it's unclear whether happy people are more prone to marriage or
whether marriage makes people happy," Florida State historian Darrin
McMahon, author of "Happiness, A History," said after reviewing the poll
results. "But, certainly, it's an old idea that community and close
friendships have a bearing on our happiness. It stands to reason. We are
social beings."
The survey found that young adults, 18 to 24, are especially likely to be
unhappy. Only 37 percent of this age group said they are happy. A clear
majority of all other age groups report contentment.
McMahon said he takes "a great deal of comfort" from the statistics.
"Here at Florida State I can assure you that, for these kids anyway,
happiness is essentially a hedonistic search for intense pleasure. It's
'Girls Gone Wild' and Spring Break madness," McMahon said. "But from
everything we've learned about life, the pursuit of hedonism and pleasure
for pleasure's sake won't make us happy."
Most people who have children say they are very happy in life, while most
people who have never been parents say they are only "fairly happy" or "not
too happy." Even among single people, having children in their lives
increases the odds they will be happy.
An even stronger factor is the power of organized religion -- any religion
-- on a sense of well-being.
Although their numbers were small, Jewish participants in the poll were the
most likely of any group to say they are very happy. Protestants --
especially self-identified "born again" evangelicals -- also report a high
rate of contentment.
Sixty percent of people who have recently attended worship services at a
church, synagogue or mosque say they are very happy, compared to 46 percent
of people who have not publicly worshiped and 44 percent who have no
religious preferences.
"Look at the Book of Ecclesiastes which says, 'Go eat your bread with
enjoyment and drink your wine with a merry heart, for God long ago approved
of what you do,' " McMahon said. "Taking pleasure in the gifts of God
whenever you can, that is the Jewish tradition and in the Christian
tradition as well."
The survey found that people of different races, regions and urban settings
are about equally likely to be happy.
There was a link between wealth and joy, with the happiest group in the
middle brackets of $60,000 to $80,000 annual household income. People in
disadvantaged homes were less likely to report contentment, but the level of
joy does not steadily increase with rising income.
"If you are not happy with what you have, you never will be happy with what
you will get," said Van Ekeren. "The core things that are really important
are not influenced by dollars. When my wife and I first got married, we were
so poor we couldn't even pay attention. But we were happy."
The survey was conducted by the Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio
University, Athens, OH, from Feb. 19 to March 3, 2006. The study was
sponsored by a grant from the Scripps Howard Foundation.
The poll generally has a margin of error of 4 percentage points, although
the margin rises considerably among subgroups.
Thomas Hargrove is a reporter for Scripps Howard News Service. Guido H.
Stempel III is director of the Scripps Survey Research Center.






