fbpx JOIN LOGIN JOIN

Is Hobbying the Key to Happiness? This Study Says YES!

By Rob Baer | July 27th, 2016 | Categories: Editorials

WEBJAM_MileyCyrus_lrg

Even though the internet can be a negative place sometimes, one study says the key to happiness may just be having a hobby!

The Guardian turned the spotlight on an a study recently that says a lot about what we do in our free time.

New research published by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (and not the Institute of the Completely Obvious, as you may have expected), says that valuing your time more than the pursuit of money leads to feelings of greater wellbeing. And by valuing your time, they mean spending it wisely on hobbies, exercising or being with your family.

So sure it’s not 100% about having a hobby, BUT you get the idea right? Just doing something that ISN’T your job helps you feel better apparently. It explains why the shoemaker’s shoes are always busted, why I never get to paint my own stuff any more, and perhaps to a lesser extent why some folks just follow one hobby but play another.

dotcom-006-Blood_Angels_Space_Marine_at_Games_Workshop_2013

Here’s how the study worked:

The researchers even invented two characters, “Tina” and “Maggie”, and asked people who they preferred – money-grubbing sociopath Maggie, who would rather work more hours and make more money, or workshy hippy Tina who wanted to work fewer hours and make less cash. The option of working less and making more money was strangely absent, although that is of course the obvious answer, as evidenced by the hordes of people who bought lottery tickets this weekend.

After that the author kinda goes off track trying to figure out what hobbies even are, comparing notes from her boyfriend and looking back to being in the Girl Scouts. But I think for folks in the table top wargaming hobby, well we know what it’s like to spend hour and hours just putting ONE figure together.

Now some people make that big leap from hobbyist to artist that charges for their time performing hobby tasks, or even to the highly romantic idea of a Game Store owner. Both have a high turn over rate as it’s hard to charge for something that one loves to do, but to pay the bills the sad reality is that time BECOMES money at that point.

So at the end of the day, maybe it’s good to have a hobby that keeps us happy – just don’t over complicate it!

Whats in your hobby room?

About the Author: Rob Baer

Virginia Restless, Miniature Painter & Cat Dad. I blame LEGOs. There was something about those little-colored blocks that started it all... Twitter @catdaddymbg