Make a New Year's Resolution to Help Others

29 December 2020
Giulio Prisco

It's time for good resolutions for the new year. Psychologists at the University of Rochester suggest that we should set goals that aim to help others. Working toward such goals will also add to our own well-being.

“If you want to make a New Year’s resolution that really makes you happy, think about the ways in which you can contribute to the world,” says professor emeritus Richard Ryan.

“We found that when people are focused on giving to others they experience deeper satisfactions than when their goals are more self-oriented,” adds Ryan. “For example, experiments show that doing something benevolent for others, even when you will never meet the beneficiary, increases your positive mood and energy. Most recently, we published a study about what we call people’s ‘integrative span.’”

The study is published in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

“We discovered that your happiness increases as your focus of concern and care gets wider,” continues Ryan. “If your main concerns and cares are narrow and selfish - just about ‘me and the people very close to me,’ versus about ‘my family and my community,’ versus about ‘the larger world and everything in it’ - the less happy you are prone to be. A broader scope of caring and concern for others, in contrast, predicts a higher well-being.”

So, go ahead and make New Year’s resolutions that aim to help others and contribute to the world in small (or big) ways. And don’t be too harsh on yourself when you encounter the inevitable setbacks, lapses, and failures. Ryan’s final advice is, “remember to be a compassionate self-coach.”

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A study is published in EMBO Molecular Medicine. It describes how the researchers created a harmless synthetic virus and used it to deliver genetic material (a normal version of a defective mutated gene) to the inner ear of laboratory mice. The treated mice developed normal hearing, with sensitivity almost identical to that of healthy mice without the mutation.

According to the researchers, this novel therapy could lead to a breakthrough in treating children born with various mutations that eventually cause deafness.

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Glioblastoma is a very aggressive and lethal type of cancer in children and adults. And it responds poorly to chemotherapy.

A research paper is published in Autophagy. It indicates that loperamide triggers a mechanism, known as autophagy-dependent cell death, that drives cancer cells to “digest themselves.”

The scientists are persuaded that the loperamide-induced death of glioblastoma cells could help in the development of new therapeutic approaches for the treatment of this severe form of cancer.

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