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<div>&nbsp;</div>
<div>&nbsp;yeah definetly, send it to me. its interesting the idea that happiness and cheerfullness may and should come before u achive what ever ur looking for... not after...</div>
<div>&nbsp;ei pai, comprei 4 livros na <a href="http://amazon.com">amazon.com</a> pra universidade. dois dos quais digitais... to estudando aki... remotely... not bad</div>
<div>&nbsp;The Growth of the International Economy</div>
<div>&nbsp;Globalization</div>
<div>&nbsp;Sociology</div>
<div>&nbsp;The Problem of Sociology</div>
<div>&nbsp;bjs</div>
<div>&nbsp;M<br><br>&nbsp;</div>
<div><span class="gmail_quote">On 1/2/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Premise Checker</b> &lt;<a href="mailto:checker@panix.com">checker@panix.com</a>&gt; wrote:</span>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid"><a href="http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article333972.ece">http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article333972.ece
</a><br>19 December 2005 10:27<br><br>By Lyndsay Moss<br>Published: 19 December 2005<br><br>The key to success may be &quot;chronic happiness&quot; rather than simply hard<br>work and the right contacts, psychologists have found.
<br><br>Many assume a successful career and personal life leads to happiness.<br>But psychologists in the US say happiness can bring success.<br><br>Researchers from the universities of California, Missouri and Illinois<br>
examined connections between desirable characteristics, life success and<br>well-being in more than 275,000 people.<br><br>They found that happy individuals were predisposed to seek out new goals<br>in life, leading to success, which also reinforced their already
<br>positive emotions.<br><br>The psychologists addressed questions such as whether happy people were<br>more successful than unhappy people, and whether happiness came before<br>or after a perceived success.<br><br>Writing in Psychological Bulletin, published by the American
<br>Psychological Association, they concluded that &quot;chronically happy<br>people&quot; were generally more successful in many areas of life than less<br>happy people.<br><br>The key to success may be &quot;chronic happiness&quot; rather than simply hard
<br>work and the right contacts, psychologists have found.<br><br>Many assume a successful career and personal life leads to happiness.<br>But psychologists in the US say happiness can bring success.<br><br>Researchers from the universities of California, Missouri and Illinois
<br>examined connections between desirable characteristics, life success and<br>well-being in more than 275,000 people.<br><br>They found that happy individuals were predisposed to seek out new goals<br>in life, leading to success, which also reinforced their already
<br>positive emotions.<br><br>The psychologists addressed questions such as whether happy people were<br>more successful than unhappy people, and whether happiness came before<br>or after a perceived success.<br><br>Writing in Psychological Bulletin, published by the American
<br>Psychological Association, they concluded that &quot;chronically happy<br>people&quot; were generally more successful in many areas of life than less<br>happy people.<br>_______________________________________________
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</a><br></blockquote></div><br>