Monday 21 December 2020

How to Use a Norwegian Mindset to Get Through the Long, Dark Winter

Norwegian Cold Season 

 

Research explains why Norwegian people don’t suffer as much as expected given their tough winters.

Zulie Rane

Dec 19 · 5 min read


Photo by Samuel Scrimshaw

The Science Behind the Norwegian Wintertime Mindset

When Leibowitz wanted to create a survey to test attitudes towards winter, she quickly ran into her problem, as well as her eureka moment: no surveys existed that had questions asking about more positive mindsets to winter. That conventional wisdom is so strong in our culture that even unbiased, balanced psychological surveys are predisposed to think of winter as bad for humans. Seasonal Affective Disorder and other psychological questionnaires, when they referenced winter attitudes at all, were resoundingly negative.

How You Can Learn to Love Your Own Wintertime

The good news is it’s not that Tromsøians and Svalbardians just have a special gene that lets them look forward to winter — they have, intentionally or not, cultivated a positive winter mindset. The further north people live, the more active they have to be about this mindset, which is why Leibowitz discovered the positive correlation between latitude and positive winter mindset.

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