SFO to GVA: A Tale of Two Cities
writing separate pages of the same book
Thursday, November 7, 2013
we're getting married!
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Just some good ole happiness reading
One of my latest hobbies has been reading books on happiness. I just finished The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt and am now starting The Geography of Bliss by Eric Weiner. This hobby is certainly not motivated by a lack of happiness on my part. In fact, I would say I am happier than your average person (although The Happiness Hypothesis has informed me that most people feel this way). Most countries, in fact, average a happiness rating of 6 to 8 (on a scale of 1 to 10), according to The Geography of Bliss.
I find these books fascinating. There might be some life-learning-about-self here. Granted, I was a math and philosophy major. My mathematical interests lie in social statistics- where numbers meet people. And philosophy is constantly striving for answers to what is good and what constitutes the good life. So my interest in scientific, numerical data on happiness and the good life and various factors leading to the good life? Right up my alley!
I’ve only started The Geography of Bliss, but the process of writing this book would probably be my dream life. Eric Weiner goes on a search to find the happiest place in the world. He starts in the Netherlands, where the World Database of Happiness is located. Lots and lots of data on happiness. Have I found my happiest place in the world? Probably! (Ironically enough, this chapter mentions only two universities, one being Claremont Graduate University for their MA and PhD program in positive psychology! Sign? I think so!)
At this database, Eric is able to find factors correlated with happiness. However, it is unclear whether these things make people happy or if happier people do these things. Various factors towards happiness include being married, being an extrovert, being an optimist, being a Republican, or attending religious services. There is no difference in happiness between having children and not or being male or female (well, females have a larger emotional range but the average is the same). Interestingly, people with advanced degrees are less happy than people with just a bachelors (but people with bachelors degrees are happier than people with no college education). [Possible argument for Jon to return home??? J]
But the really exciting chapter that motivated this blog post (and my extreme jealousy of Jon in his current location) was chapter two, on Switzerland. Here are some interesting tidbits and quotes about Switzerland and happiness (but just Switzerland in some cases). Jon will have to let us know how much truth there is to these facts!
· “Susan [the author’s friend who lives in Geneva but is from NY] complains that the Swiss are ‘culturally constipated’ and ‘stingy with information.’ Even if that information is vital, such as ‘your train is leaving now’ or ‘your clothing is on fire,’ the Swiss will say nothing. To speak out would be considered insulting, since it assumes ignorance on the part of another person.”· “Geneva has been called a great place to live, but you wouldn’t want to visit. There is some truth to that. The Swiss consider Geneva boring, and if the Swiss consider someplace boring, you know it is very boring indeed.”
· “Everything works. Switzerland is a highly functional society, and while that may not be a source of joy or even happiness, it eliminates a lot of the reasons to be unhappy.”
· “Dieter [Swiss man, married to an American woman] tells me that ‘if a train is twenty minute slate, people get very anxious.’ A few years ago, he says, the entire rail system broke down for eighteen hours, hurling the nation into a period of deep existential doubt.” [I think I’ve found my people. A world that RELIES on schedules for individual’s sanity and feelings of self worth? Please, please, please send me there.]
· Swiss find envy to be very problematic and do anything to avoid provoking it. Swiss will not talk about money (many will try to even avoid saying the word). Showing over your wealth (le nouveau riche) is extremely abhorrent in Switzerland. But, your neighbors know everything about you, so they know how wealthy you are. “The Swiss hate to talk about money. They would rather talk about their genital warts than reveal how much they earn.”
· On boredom/contentment with doing nothing: “The Swiss have done for boredom what the French did for wine and the Germans for peer: perfected it, mass-perfected it.” [Possibly not my people then… I suck at boredom]
· “A Swiss would never describe something as awesome or super, but only c’est pas mal, not bad…The Swiss are on to something. Better to live in this middle range than to constantly swing between great highs and terrible lows.”
· “The Swiss are as fond of rules as the Dutch are of marijuana and prostitution.” [Okay… maybe they are my people? It’s very confusing.]
· A British woman living in Switzerland told the author how she once had people over for a few drinks. The next morning, she found a note on her door- “Please, no laughing after midnight.”
· Similarly, “Leave your car dirty in Switzerland and someone will pin a note to it saying ‘Please wash your car.’ Not a cute ‘Wash me’ sign that an American might scrawl on it. The Swiss, lacking any detectable sense of irony, mean what they say…This isn’t just a nanny state. It’s a supernanny state.”
· Supposedly, in the 17th century, Basel made laughing illegal. Supposedly it is still illegal to mow the lawn on Sundays or hang laundry from your balcony. Also, it seems to be illegal to flush your toilet after 10 PM. [Jon, you may want to look into this one. I don’t want you getting your visa revoked because you flushed a toilet too late!]
· “Everything is regimented in Switzerland, even anarchy. Once a year, on the May Day holiday, the anarchists break a few shop windows, but it’s always exactly at the same time.”
· Swiss people are very connected with nature. The author hypothesizes that this is one cause of why the Swiss are so happy. There was also a study done in a hospital with patients recovering from gallbladder surgery where some had windows facing trees and others had windows facing brick walls. The patients facing trees recovered significantly faster than those facing brick walls. The tree-facing patients also had fewer complications. Interesting… strong argument for living someplace with nature nearby!
· Switzerland also has a very liberal euthanasia law.
· In the US, the “cocktail-party question” is “What do you do?” In Switzerland, it is “Where are you from?” Swiss passports also show the name of an individual’s ancestral town (even if the person has never been there). Swiss feel more tied to their local area than their country.
· Swiss are also very trusting. You can book a hotel room without providing a credit card. You can pump gas before paying. Trust has a strong correlation with happiness.
· Bern is described as “quaint in the extreme.” Einstein lived there. The author hypothesizes that the “boredom” that permeates Swiss life helped give Einstein the time and ability to come up with his famous theories.
· Quote from Bertrand Russell (a mathematician and philosopher I studied in college)- “A certain amount of boredom is…essential to a happy life.” The author also pointed out that boredom is a decision. You don’t like the way things are and they aren’t interesting enough for you so you decide you are bored. True and very interesting.
· “The Swiss are wealthy and patient, a rare combination. They know how to linger. Indeed, I’ve been in Switzerland for two weeks now and not a single person has looked at his or her watch—that perfectly synchronized, gold-plated Swiss watch—and said ‘I have to go’ or ‘I really should be getting back to work.’” [Maybe not my people. Not looking at a watch? Not feeling like I have to get somewhere? I’m too American for that!]
· Chocolate consumption is correlated with happiness and the Swiss consume a lot of chocolate. However, experts estimate that you would have to consume “several kilos” of chocolate to feel this effect.
· Swiss people vote six to seven times a year, as it is a direct democracy. Sometimes this does not have the best decisions- Switzerland didn’t give women the right to vote until 1971, with one canton not granting women voting rights until 1991.
· In true hilariousness of this direct democracy though, one member of Swiss parliament put forth a vote on not having a Swiss army in 1989- it received 35% approval, shocking Switzerland. The army was thus cut significantly. The author also points out that this sort of person in the US would be considered someone crazy from Berkeley but in Switzerland he’s a “distinguished parliamentarian who nearly abolished the entire Swiss army. More proof that the Swiss aren’t so boring after all.”
· The question was posed to people from the US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland about choosing between two ice cream parlors- one with 10 flavors and one with 51 flavors. Only the Americans preferred the ice cream parlors with more flavors. Seems Americans have a different opinion than Europeans on choice, which is interesting in relation to Switzerland’s direct democracy.
· The author ultimate conclusion is that the Swiss are more than content but less than full-on joy. He calls it “conjoyment.”
· “I go to the [train] dining car. This is not Amtrak. The menu, in four languages, informs me of my choices: penne with fresh mushrooms or a risotto with fresh asparagus. I am in heaven.” [Okay, definitive answer, these are my people.]
My conclusion? I’m insanely jealous. Switzerland definitely is very “me.” There are so many elements of the country that make it seem like the sort of place that I would greatly enjoy spending significant amounts of time in. Really, the only thing I don’t like about Switzerland is their visa laws.
Well, I’m sure I’ll end up with some other interesting tidbits on happiness- I still have Bhutan, Qatar, Iceland, Moldova, Thailand, Great Britain, India, and the US ahead of me. But for now, keep smiling!
Friday, September 3, 2010
When life gives you lemons
There have been a few other bright spots, too, in my short time here. For one, I've bonded with one of my roommates, Vincent. It's really nice having a friend already. I had forgotten that the thing I enjoyed most about my first several weeks in Budapest was having an immediate friend in a roommate, Yuan. Vince and I have eaten several meals together, watched lots of dubbed-over CSI together, and tried to help each other with English/French. We haven't taken any epic trips or anything, but we've each enjoyed these last few weeks a lot. (However, he *may* have failed out of his first year and may be leaving UNIL for good. Which would send me back to square one.)
I've also started running again. Almost every day, in fact. I'm slow and fat now, but I'm committed to keeping up the good effort. The thought of running a 10K or half-marathon somewhere in Europe has even crossed my mind. Who knows? It'd be kind of cool to take a trip to, say, Paris to run an event.
And with that, I've been trying to eat less. Which hasn't been quite as easy - the bread here is so good! But I'm trying.
My point in all this is, even when you abandon your girlfriend and head to a foreign place where you have absolutely nothing to do all day, every day, you can make the best of it. Sure, I still have a ton of downtime, and I wish I had the extra cash to spend on an afternoon at a café or a train ride to Geneva, but at least I'm not losing my mind. When I'm not running or hanging with Vince, I sometimes do math, read a book, study for the GRE. It's not all bad. And knowing that time's winding down to both the start of school and Rachael's visit, my (mostly) lonely days become progressively easier.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Fabulous Foodie Day at the Eat Real Festival!
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Ode to Communication Technology
- call my phone through gchat or Skype
- text my phone through AIM
- IM my phone through the gchat app
- Email my gmail account or my work email address
- The obvious one- Skype. Being able to hear Jon's voice and see his face is so important to me while we're apart. His smile is contagious to me and Skype allows me to continue to see it! I've heard of some long distance couples that don't use Skype; this is unfathomable to me!
- Smartphones. These are of course not always a possibility as they are not free, like most of my other favorite communication tools. I happen to have one through my job and will never go back to a regular old feature phone! Through my phone, I am able to communicate with Jon anywhere I am. Thanks to Skype's app and gchat's new calling feature, Jon and I can even talk on the phone for free anywhere. One problem with long distance, particularly with a huge time difference, can be a feeling like you are tied to being home and free at a certain time to be able to talk. But with my phone, if I'm out and about but that's when Jon can talk, I can call him for 20 minutes no problem. I can talk with him on Skype while I'm walking or driving to work (with a hands-free headset, of course!).
- An oldie (for me anyways) but a goodie- email. The great benefit of email for me actually comes due to the time difference. Jon is asleep from around 3 or 4 until 10 or 11 my time. Sometimes, I think of things I want to tell him or get myself freaked out about something. Being able to email him makes me feel like he's still around and I can still communicate with him. Even though he won't reply until hours later, it makes me feel closer to him. The time difference becomes slightly less relevant since I can always email him.