Finding Happiness in the Brain
[Excerpted from You, Happier: The 7 Neuroscience Secrets of Feeling Good Based on Your Brain Type by Daniel G. Amen, MD]
You, Happier: The 7 Neuroscience Secrets of Feeling Good Based on Your Brain Type is written by psychiatrist, neuroscientist, and brain health expert Daniel G. Amen, MD. In this book, he reveals how to discover your brain type and tailor happiness strategies best suited to your brain type. This book also shows how to improve your overall brain health to consistently enhance your mood, protect your happiness by distancing yourself from the “noise” in your head, and make 7 simple decisions and ask 7 daily questions to boost your happiness.
Your brain is the organ of happiness. Your brain is the organ of liking, wanting, and learning—all essential ingredients that go into happiness. Your brain is also the organ of sadness, anxiety, panic, anger, and storing past emotional trauma—the enemies of happiness. Deciding to assess and optimize the 3 pounds of tissue between your ears is the first foundational decision to a happier life. Yet most people never think about their brains, which is a huge mistake, because success and happiness start in the physical functioning of the brain.
Your brain is the organ of happiness. Deciding to assess and optimize the 3 pounds of tissue between your ears is the first foundational decision to a happier life.
YOUR BRAIN ON HAPPINESS
Research shows that happiness seems to stem from an interaction of 3 important brain areas:- Orbitofrontal cortex, located in the front, underside part of the cerebral cortex
- Basal ganglia, especially in the front half of the nucleus accumbens, which responds to rewards and the anticipation of rewards, in the limbic area
- Brain stem, which is where the neurotransmitters dopamine, serotonin, and phenylethylamines are produced; part of the reptilian brain




