That's because he
participated in part of a 12-year brain study on meditation and
compassion led by University of Wisconsin neuroscientist Richard
Davidson. And Davidson found his brain waves and activity to be off the
happiness charts.
In 2008, Davidson had a group of expert meditators (including Ricard)
and a group of controls (people who were not experienced in
meditation) meditate on compassion, he reported in Scientific American.
Then he had them listen to the
sounds of several stressed-out voices. Davidson found that two brain
areas known to be involved in empathy showed more activity for the
meditators than for the non-meditators, suggesting that people like
Ricard have an enhanced ability to respond to the feelings of others and
empathize without feeling overwhelmed.
He also noted that when he exposed Ricard to an outside stimulus meant to startle him
— like an alarm going off unexpectedly or a stranger accosting you in
the street — while he was meditating, he was far less put-off by the
stimulus compared with someone who was not meditating.
So, how does the "world's happiest man" feel happy all the time and get rid of anger and stress?
We spoke with Ricard at the
World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland last Thursday. He says
feeling happy comes down to being altruistic and benevolent. He also
believes the mind can be trained to be happy through meditation.
And as for dealing with stress? Ricard says the key is let things go.
Most things you think are problems aren't actually problems
Ricard admits that sometimes,
feeling stressed is warranted. "Sometimes there's legitimate stress,
like if a rhinoceros is running behind you, it is maximum stress," he
says.
Sometimes there's legitimate stress, like if a rhinoceros is running behind you, it is maximum stress."Or if you are in a situation that is really oppressing and there's a sense you can't move out of that and you feel so powerless — mentally and physically it's not very pleasant."
Most other kinds of stress — ones that don't cause actual physical or mental harm, Ricard says — should be shrugged off.
"This
idea of constantly feeling like there's a rhinoceros running behind you
is very unhealthy," Ricard explains. "It will destroy your neurons, it
destroys your immune system. Basically it happens when we put too much
emphasis on our outer condition. 'If I don't have that I can't be
happy.' 'If that thing remains, it's just like hell breaking on me.' So
it's underestimating that we can say to those things, 'Oh, you know,
okay — no big deal.'"
Living a stress-free life just comes down to the way you deal with perceived problems.
Don't worry about things you can't change or control
Ricard
admits that of course, problems pop up in life. The trick is to not
worry about the ones you can't control, and to focus on solutions for
the ones you can.
"Having some
kind of inner resources to deal with the ups and downs of life, whether
that's resilience or inner strength — that's a huge advantage against
stress," Ricard says.
"If
something unpleasant happens, just say: 'First, it won't last. Second, I
can deal with that because I know I can keep my balance. And after all,
it's not such a big deal so okay, no problem.' Or if people criticize
you just say, 'So what? Why is this going to prevent me from being
healthy and from sleeping?'
"The
stress doubles the problem. First you have the worry, then you have to
worry about the problem, which is totally unnecessary because if there
is a solution then just do it. If there is no solution, then why worry?
That's just adding to your problems."
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