July 31, 2012
Simply Smiling Can Actually Reduce Stress
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Researchers discovered that simply smiling can reduce stress and increase well-being. Photo via Wikimedia Commons/Zitona Qatar
It sounds like the most useless advice imaginable: Just put on a happy face. Conventional wisdom is that smiling is an effect of feeling happy, rather than the other way around. Simply smiling in stressful situations can’t possibly make you feel any better, right?
Wrong. A fascinating new study by University of Kansas psychologists that will soon be published in the journal Psychological Science indicates that, in some circumstances, smiling can actually reduce stress and help us feel better.
“Age old adages, such as ‘grin and bear it,’ have suggested smiling to be not only an important nonverbal indicator of happiness but also wishfully promotes smiling as a panacea for life’s stressful events,” said researcher Tara Kraft. “We wanted to examine whether these adages had scientific merit; whether smiling could have real health-relevant benefits.”
To investigate the claim, the researchers recruited 169 willing college students for a hands-on experiment. But they had to engage in a bit of deception. Actually telling the participants that they were testing whether smiling would make them happier would have distorted the results, so the students were told that the experiment was about multi-tasking.
First, the participants were instructed on how to perform an unusual task: holding chopsticks in their mouths in particular ways that prompted various facial expressions. They were divided into three groups, one that was taught how to form a neutral expression, one that learned how to form a normal smile, and one that was instructed to form a Duchenne smile (also known as a genuine smile), which involves the use of eye muscles, as well as those around the mouth. Additionally, only half of the smilers actually heard the world “smile” during the learning phase; the others were simply taught how to hold the chopsticks in a way that produced smiles, without the expression being identified as such.
Next, the students were put in “multi-tasking situations” that were intentionally designed to be stressful. In the first one, they were asked to trace a star shape with their non-dominant hand while looking only at a mirror image of it, and were misled about the average person’s accuracy in completing the task. While attempting to execute the maneuver with as few errors as possible to win a reward (a chocolate), they were continually reminded to hold the chopsticks in their mouths to maintain the intended facial expression. Afterward, they were instructed to do the same as their hands were submerged in ice water.
During and after each of these tasks, the participants’ heart rates were continuously monitored, and at regular intervals, they were asked to report their levels of stress.
The experiment’s findings were startling. As a whole, the smilers had lower heart rates while recovering from the stressful tasks than those who had assumed neutral expressions, and those with Duchenne smiles had lower heart rates yet. Even those who were smiling only due to their instructed chopstick position—without explicitly being told to smile—showed the same effect. Since heart rate is an indicator of the body’s stress response, it seems as though the act of smiling actually reduced the participants’ overall stress level.
Most intriguingly, a small difference was noted in the self-reported stress levels of the groups after the ice water task. Although the amount of positive feelings declined for all participants after putting their hands in ice water, the decline was slightly smaller for smilers than for those with neutral expressions.
Researchers are baffled regarding why this might happen. The connection between facial expressions and underlying mental states is still largely unexplored, but some have suggested that smiling could reduce levels of cortisol, a stress-related hormone. This study flips our traditional understanding of emotion and appearance on its head: Feeling good could sometimes be a consequence of smiling, not just the other way around.
What does this mean for your daily life? When feeling stressed, try forcing a smile on your face. If you can manage a genuine, Duchenne smile—what people often refer to as “smiling with your eyes,” not just your mouth—that’s even better. For whatever reason, forcing yourself to look happier could actually end up helping you feel happier.
“The next time you are stuck in traffic or are experiencing some other type of stress you might try to hold your face in a smile for a moment,” said Sarah Pressman, one of the researchers. “Not only will it help you ‘grin and bear it’ psychologically, but it might actually help your heart health as well.”
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I think I have must have always have known this. I look for humor in everyday things; love puns; and subscribe to receive humorous postcards in the mail!
Very thanks for your post its refreshing.
This is such a wonderful article that I had to print it out and share it with the rest of my office at Dish. I’ve been preaching for years about the effects a smile can have on stress levels. Now, I have something to back me up! Whenever I feel the pangs of stress, I always take a break and catch a few jokes from a funny video or show to make me smile. If I’m not at home, I use my Dish Remote Access app to connect my tablet to my home TV through the sling adapter, so I can smile and giggle along to an episode of 30 Rock from anywhere. I didn’t realize there was an actual science to it though!
This is another example of research being used to prove the obvious. I have always been aware of the power of the smile, not only to make yourself feel good but to make others feel good. Even smiling while talking on the phone is effective. The smile is always “transmitted” just as the words are. Smiling and laughing are among the greatest health remedies.
If you are fairly introspective you can easily observe the effect of smiling on emotions. Sit quietly (with a comfortably relaxed body and face) while feeling emotionally neutral or slightly “negative” (bored, anxious, depressed, etc.). Then “do a smile”. If you are anything like me, you will feel a positive emotional shift. Relaxing the face “out of” the smile will shift the emotional state back toward the neutral or negative.
This is hardly surprising, given the importance of psychological association, fire-together-wire-together and similar phenomena. When we “do a smile” our brains receive feedback from the face that is associated with or “wired with” a positive emotional valence. It seems plausible that this feedback either *causes* the positive emotional bias or perhaps even partially *constitutes* it. But that is for psychologists to figure out. Interesting indeed!
This phenomenon is discussed in “Blink”, by Malcolm Gladwell, and in the TED video by Ron Gutman (http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/ron_gutman_the_hidden_power_of_smiling.html).
During and after extensive treatment , operations, radiation, etc for cancer I used this as therapy many times a day. It worked immediately and constantly through the ordeal. I attributed it to a release of endorphins. I also avoided people who were known to be negative. Whatever, it got me through some very stressful and fearful times. That was 15 yrs. ago.
Thanks for this article! I have been under much stress at work for a couple of years and I know it showed in my countenance. Then a stranger came up to me at an outdoor concert recently and out of the blue said I looked angry. It was a wakeup call. I immediately knew right then that I had to start smiling and do it often and everywhere. It has made a huge difference in my life even just the short time I have been consciously smiling everywhere I go.
I read about a similar experiment done with Harvard students possibly over 20 years ago. It made complete sense to me. I tried to encourage my severely depressed daughter to read the article – the corners of her mouth were always down and her eyes were dead looking. As daughters will, she did not follow my suggestion.
As I viewed your article I caught myself smiling…just looking at the smiling picture! And I tried relaxing from a smile to a negative face…and felt the come-down. Maybe that is why I am almost always smiling! I keep happy. When stress happens I know it is temporary. Because I know I have God within me, my life is a perpetual smile. I never thought about it before the article, so thank you. It makes me realize why people I don’t know well greet me enthusiastically and mention the smile: they smile too when they see mine, and the atmosphere changes. Sniles are important to the chain-reactions that bring about joy.
MY ADRENAL GLANDS DO NOT PRODUCE CORTISOL. PEOPLE TELL ME THAT I SMILE A LOT IN STRESSFUL SITUATIONS. THEY FEEL IT ISN’T A NORMAL RESPONSE TO STRESS. MAYBE THAT IS BECAUSE MY ADRENAL GLANDS DON’T PRODUCE ANY CORTISOL. HAVING NO CORTISOL, MIGHT PRODUCE A Duchenne SMILE IN STRESSFUL SITUATIONS. THIS WOULD MEAN THE SMILING IS EASIER WHEN YOU DON’T HAVE ANY CORTSOL.
FROM THE ARTICLE: Researchers are baffled regarding why this might happen. The connection between facial expressions and underlying mental states is still largely unexplored, but some have suggested that smiling could reduce levels of cortisol, a stress-related hormone. This study flips our traditional understanding of emotion and appearance on its head: Feeling good could sometimes be a consequence of smiling, not just the other way around.
Yet another argument for the benefits of Laughter Yoga. :-)
Most plausible bit of research I’ve seen reported today!
-dlj.
I have often observed people who work with children say things such as, “Get that smile off your face! This isn’t funny.” I wish those people could have read this article sixty years ago. It might have saved many an innocent child from unnecessary tirades. Some people responsible for children,simply rant at the first child they see after something has gone wrong. The first child they see may simply be the one who didn’t run away fast enough-perhaps didn’t know that there was anything to run away from.
When my 17 year old son, Paul, was dying of Lymphoma in his own bed with a home hospice supported by Denver’s Childrens Hospital Paul reached his hand up from his bed as I leaned over him to touch the corner of my mouth saying: “Mom, would you please smile that great smile of yours. It will help alot.” I have tried these 31 years since his young death to keep on smiling.
Yes, actually it does. Smiling can reduce a bit stress. And even in work, if you really do like your job and you are happy doing it, then it can also reduces your stress that you might get from your hardwork.
_Tim