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Tuesday, April 22, 2025

T&T ranked No 5 in world for people with positive attitudes

by

20121220

T&T is the land of sea and sun, pan and ca­lyp­so, home to many eth­nic groups co­ex­ist­ing in one lo­ca­tion. And the mec­ca of Car­ni­val. Now add to that a No 5 rank­ing in the world for hav­ing peo­ple with the most pos­i­tive at­ti­tudes- the hap­pi­est peo­ple, ac­cord­ing to a Gallup re­port. Gallup Inc is a US­based or­gan­i­sa­tion which pro­vides da­ta-dri­ven news based on US and world polls, dai­ly track­ing and pub­lic opin­ion re­search.

The poll showed sev­en of the ten coun­tries with the most up­beat at­ti­tudes were in Latin Amer­i­ca. Oth­er than T&T, the coun­tries mak­ing it in­to the top ten were Guatemala, Pana­ma, Paraguay, El Sal­vador, Venezuela, Ecuador, Cos­ta Ri­ca, Thai­land and the Philip­pines. Gallup asked about 1,000 peo­ple in each of 148 coun­tries last year about their state of mind as it re­lates to the is­sues of every day life and their cop­ing mech­a­nisms.

A great ma­jor­i­ty in what are con­sid­ered un­der­de­vel­oped or un­de­vel­oped ter­ri­to­ries found ways to keep them­selves hap­py amidst so­cial or per­son­al prob­lems. The peo­ple least like­ly to re­port pos­i­tive emo­tions came from the more wealthy and de­vel­oped coun­tries.

These coun­tries ranked the low­est on the Gallup poll. The ex­perts voic­es Sec­re­tary of the Psy­chi­atric As­so­ci­a­tion of T&T Dr Var­ma Deyals­ingh said near­ness to recre­ation­al fa­cil­i­ties is a ma­jor rea­son why the peo­ple of T&T seem to be more re­laxed. "The nice thing about it is that we are on an is­land sur­round­ed by wa­ter. It is easy for us to go to the beach­es and oth­er recre­ation­al spots to re­lax," he said.

Deyals­ingh said the weath­er al­so had a psy­cho­log­i­cal ef­fect on peo­ple. He said the mere fact of liv­ing in the trop­ics, where it is most­ly sun­ny, posed a more pos­i­tive out­look on life. "With our cli­mate, peo­ple can spend more time out­doors and get much more done," he said.

Deyals­ingh said in oth­er coun­tries with four sea­sons peo­ple suf­fer what is termed sea­son­al af­fec­tive dis­or­der- a type of de­pres­sion with a sea­son­al pat­tern. He said the peo­ple of T&T do not wor­ry very much or fuss over things that should be tak­en se­ri­ous­ly.

"Take cus­tomer ser­vice for in­stance. It's not at its best at all in this coun­try. Peo­ple have grown so used to that, it is high­ly un­like­ly some­one will get an aneurysm over it," said Deyals­ingh. He said T&T's cul­tur­al land­scape al­so had a lot to do with how well peo­ple here cope re­gard­less of the sit­u­a­tion.

"Look at our cop­ing mech­a­nisms. We are very dif­fer­ent from many coun­tries in the world. We have the most hol­i­days list­ed and many leave their home­land to vis­it us dur­ing the Car­ni­val sea­son. More than that we are lucky to live in a place where mul­ti­ple cul­tures ex­ist be­cause of the mul­ti­ple eth­nic groups. There­fore, we have a high­er tol­er­ance lev­el than many in oth­er parts of the world. " I tru­ly be­lieve our unique­ness is what re­al­ly keeps us hap­py," said Deyals­ingh.


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