New Hope and Happiness,
I agree with you. It is more complicated than that. A nurse on minimum wage can have a more meaningful life than someone earning obscene money. No argument there.
A nurse making minimum wage can also live longer than someone earning lots of money too.
But the statistics in the Time magazine survey say that on average, that is simply not likely.
I have to keep pointing back to the statistical averages in the survey. Not the exceptions. If you or your loved ones are the exceptions, then congratulations. The survey shows thre are people in that exception category. But that doesn't mean that on average the more you make the happier you are is not accurate. It just means you've beaten the odds.
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I bring up all this because I want to shatter the Jehovah's Witness notion that going out in service, going to meetings, praying, studying the Bible, etc. alone makes for happiness. But this simple survey shows that on average, happiness and longer life come from other things. The Bible isn't even in the equation. For example, making money was tied education.. I don't know how, it just is. I realize that correlation is not causation, but that doesn't mean they are not related.
Higher education, longer life, less drug use, less criminal involvement.... these things are all related to more money and greater happiness somehow. Again, I don't know how, they just are.
Many, many years ago I left Bethel because I wanted a more fulfilling life than just churning out lots of Bibles and books. I wanted to go to college, stretch my brain on other things. Yes, I wanted to make more money too and buy a house, buy a car or two, have a retirement account. Invest. Start a small business, etc. I have found that by doing these things, I not only have more money, I am more happy. In my particular case, when I was a broke pioneer or a broke Bethelite I was not happy at all. Those unloving jerks made me feel like crap because I wanted to leave Bethel and do more with my life. But to me, when I read a survey like this, it vindicates the suspicision I have held all along.
Now that I have taken hold of my own career, financial life, pursued higher education and all those other things, I am one of those people in the survey that would say "I am very happy"...
I wouldn't have said that if I had stayed a Jehovah's Witness doing the things that were supposedly "spiritually meaningful" in my life.
Brock Talon