Happiness is often studied through lenses like success, gratitude, or positive emotions — but a recent review points to a surprisingly underrated ingredient: trust.
1. Trust Lightens Mental Burdens
Living with constant doubt about others or systems burdens your mind. Trust eases that background noise of suspicion. People who report higher levels of trust—whether in individuals, institutions, or their own communities—also tend to report greater life satisfaction.
Importantly, this link holds true across ages, cultures, and types of trust. In other words, trusting isn’t just a personality trait — it’s a universal foundation of well-being.
Adopting a trusting stance doesn’t mean being naive. Rather, it means freeing up mental energy from perpetual vigilance so that you can lean into presence, gratitude, and meaningful connection.
2. Happiness and Trust Feed Each Other
The relationship between trust and happiness isn’t one-way. Feeling happy makes us more willing to give others the benefit of the doubt. As trust deepens, it strengthens our social bonds — and that in turn supports further happiness.
Because trust is expressed in relationships and communities, its strongest effects show up in the social dimension of well-being. In essence: happier people tend to trust more, and trusting more contributes to being happier.