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You are here : home > Values > Helpfulness > How can being helpful improve health and wellbeing?

How can being helpful improve health and wellbeing?


Well-being is defined as the harmony of positive feelings and efficient functioning in a person. Well-being ensures a person experiences positive emotions such as contentment, satisfaction and happiness. It also encourages the development of one's potential. Having some semblance of control over one's life, attain a sense of purpose, and cultivating positive relationships are all a part of well being.

Helpfulness is a trait we greatly appreciate in others, hence it only makes sense that being helpful makes others appreciate us as well. While being helpful has a host of pros in its favour to encourage you to adopt the attitude of being helpful, an extra bonus to it is that it also counts as self-care. Being helpful, as much as it helps the people you are being helpful towards, also helps you be healthier and contributes to your all round well being. And is that not the ideal situation? A situation where you benefit yourself but others as well? It is a win-win situation, this means we have nothing to lose by being helpful to others, only to gain.

When you’re a person that is looking for ways to help others and people can rely on you to help when they need it, you are likely to foster more friendships than when you’re not a particularly kind person. When you offer help, you tend to receive a helping hand back, as well and this is what creates such friendships and bonds. These reasons contribute to your well being and mental and emotional health.

We may understand the social and personal positive impacts of being helpful towards others well, but surprisingly (which is not too surprising honestly, given the symbiotic relationship our mind and body have) being kind and helpful towards others also has very observable health benefits too! Did you know being helpful towards others actively leads to lower inflammation?

Science is always finding more and more ways our mental health affects our physical health and vice versa. So, here are a few benefits observed by the science of being helpful towards others that are tried and tested.

Helpfulness boosts your immune system.

Inflammation occurs when your body perceives a ‘threat’ to your body and its health i.e inflammation is the result of your body going into defence mode at the possibility of a pathogen that may harm your body. But sometimes inflammation can happen without a valid cause. Inflammation contributes in some way or the other to all kinds of ailments we may face, including cancer, obesity, diabetes, migraines, and chronic pain

Oxytocin, a neurotransmitter also dubbed as our brain’s “feel-good hormone”, helps reduce inflammation. The thing about being helpful towards others is that it makes us feel good about ourselves, releasing oxytocin that then enters our bloodstream and helps reduce inflammation. Reduce inflammation means you are less likely to feel the discomfort caused by such ailments.

Helping helps the heart.

Making others feel understood and helping them can “warm” your heart, yes—but helping others helps the heart, both metaphorically and literally. Helping others also affects the actual chemical balance and functioning of your heart.

As we have established before, being helpful towards others helps release oxytocin which in turn reduces inflammation. Inflammation can congest our blood vessels, which can put pressure on our heart as it is responsible for circulating blood. But when oxytocin reduces inflammation, it expands our blood vessels which makes it easier for blood to flow through that reduces the pressure on our heart as well.

This is why oxytocin is sometimes called the cardioprotective hormone.

Once our body figures out an activity that triggers the release of oxytocin, it files it away and remembers it the next time to encourage more of it. This means each subsequent act of helpfulness gets easier and easier. Helpfulness, then, is one addictive habit you can latch on to, and your heart will appreciate it as much as the people around you!

On a side note, since helping others strengthens your heart physically and emotionally, is that why they say nice, helpful and caring people have really big hearts?

Helpfulness helps you better cope with anxiety.

We all face anxiety in the face of social interaction at some level, but for people with social anxiety, it can be debilitating to initiate interaction with someone. And anxiety has a tendency to bleed into overthinking, and we end up scrutinizing and overanalysing everything we do in a said social situation. Learning social skills and learning to catch such spiralling thoughts helps, but sometimes we can be blindsided by our anxiety at the last moment, and we may momentarily freeze.

Anxiety, be it mild nervousness or a more severe state of panic, is a totally common human experience that everyone faces. While there are several ways to reduce anxiety in anxiety-inducing scenarios - such as exercise, meditation, medication prescribed by your doctor/therapist, and/or natural remedies, it seems that carrying out actions of helping others can be one of the simplest and most inexpensive ways to keep our anxiety in check.

In such situations where you feel your anxiety creep in, trying to put yourself in the other person’s shoes might help. And being helpful urges you to do just that, you think about how to help the other person, and in your preoccupation with that thought, you are distracted from overthinking about yourself and getting anxious. When you fall into the habit of thinking of others, you will also continue to think of both of you, redirecting the focus just you to everyone involved, which will help reduce some of the anxiety.

Another way that being helpful can help with social anxiety is that people will express their gratitude to you and you will be reassured of the fact that they like you. This will give you confidence, and you are also less likely to get anxious about your actions because you already know that people are more likely to like you.

The next time you start feeling a little anxious, try and look for opportunities to help others, which I assure you are plenty. It doesn’t have to be something elaborate, it could as simple as smiling at someone or calling a friend to catch up after a long time and checking in with them. It could also be as abstract as volunteering or lending your time to an organization that aims towards the betterment of people less privileged than us. Even a small gesture can make a big difference to others, as well as you.

Being helpful helps you build a robust support system.

People appreciate kind people, and when you are helpful, others feel like you are a person worthy of being in their life. People who may have been strangers quickly become friends and kindness is almost always met with kindness in return. When you are a helpful person, you are likely to attract other helpful people into your social circle as they will relate to and identify with you, and you will feel the same. They become your support system. We all face challenges in life and have rough periods. Having a support system, a group of people that stand by you and give you moral support and in some cases other ways to support you too, these rough patches get significantly easier to see through. Even your everyday levels of stress drop when you feel secure in the relationships you share with people.

It also affects your life span, as you’re at a greater risk of contracting heart disease if you lack a strong network of people or a support system family and friends. So being helpful helps you gain a social circle that is there for you, is willing to shoulder the burdens life gives you, and this also prevents diseases!

Helpfulness provides you with a sense of control.

We attribute control in our lives to two things, either an internal source of control which is the thinking that we are responsible and have the ability to control what we experience to a considerable extent, or an external source of control where we believe other people and things determine how life plays out for us. We feel more secure when we believe we have the power to change what happens to us, and being helpful to others helps us regain that sense of control when we see how actively taking initiative (helping others) leads to the results we want (making someone’s day better, making someone like us) in real-time.

 

 

Helpfulness gives you a break.

 

I’m sure whenever you have faced a particularly difficult decision in life, or have had a situation where you really struggled to find a solution to the problem you were facing, you must have had someone advise you to just ‘not think about it for a while. And that is advice that actually works, and not just with decisions and challenges. A break from something not only helps us ease for a while but stepping away from something also gives us a fresh perspective when we come back to it.

When you help someone you are focused on the task itself and how to best help them. When you redirect your focus from your problems and stresses to someone else’s situation, you forget about your own issues for a while. And let’s be honest, sometimes it is so much easier to soles someone else’s problems compared to our own. And when you come back to your own problem, you come back with a sense of self-assurance at having helped someone else solve theirs, which will help you persevere until you have solved yours.

 

Helping feels good.

 

Just as being helped makes us feel better at not having to worry about whatever we have been helped with, helping others also makes us feel accomplished and feel better at having had a positive influence in someone’s life. Helpfulness releases feel-good hormones, as we have discussed before.

If you ever observe your mood, you will realise that when you do something nice for someone else, it improves your mood too. But this isn’t something that just happens randomly—it is rooted in the way your brain functions. Scientifically monitoring our brains has revealed that when we help someone the pleasure centres of our brain are activated i.e helping others does make you happy.

 

Doing things that help others also boosts your serotonin, another neurotransmitter that is responsible for feelings of satisfaction and by extension well-being. Like exercise, which gives you a rush of these neurotransmitters after an intense workout or sprint aka a “runner’s high”, acts of helpfulness also release endorphins, and though much less intense they are enough to mimic a “helper’s high.” So if you are feeling down or lethargic, go and help someone, no matter how small the task is, and you will feel much better.

 

So what we learn from all of these points is that having a helping nature only helps.

It helps in both personal and social life. It helps in social life by making you likeable and helps project a positive image of you to others. This leads to better relationships, a valuable social circle, and in many ways also helps you further your professional life and career. It helps you improve your personal life in many ways as well, helps you grow into a well-rounded person, and helps you improve your personality by helping you with your anxiety as well giving you the confidence to be the person you are unapologetically.

It helps you take care of yourself and your health, both physical and mental-emotional. It improves your physical health by preventing and reducing inflammation which protects you from a host of health issues and also strengthens your heart, which also lowers your blood pressure levels. Being helpful also ensures the upkeep of your mental and emotional health as it helps with self-esteem issues, also helps lower the stress levels that tend to shoot up thanks to the daily hassles of life. Helping others is also a good way to connect with yourself as helping others and assessing other’s situations urges you to introspect as well.

 

The bottom line is, being helpful to others is also self-care and helps others around us lead better lives too. This fulfilling-dual-purpose nature is enough justification as to why we should try our best to be helpful.



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