Is kindness really contagious? Does the science back that up?
Yes and yes, said psychologist and 麻豆原创 alumna in an appearance last week on of NBC鈥檚 鈥淭ODAY鈥 titled 鈥淚n Search of Kindness.鈥
鈥淲e have changes in our brain when we do a kind act,鈥 Atkins (M.A. 鈥72), coauthor with Amanda Salzhauer of (2018, Health Communications, Inc.), told co-hosts Willie Geist and Whitney Cummings. 鈥淲e鈥檙e flooded with endorphins, these wonderful feel-good chemicals that are actually pain killers,鈥 and so is the recipient of our kindness. In fact, even witnessing or reading about a kind act can produce the same effect.
Atkins added that 鈥測ou don鈥檛 have to start a nonprofit to be kind.鈥 Engaging in one small act of kindness every day can be life-changing, she said, and being kind is something that everyone has the capacity to do 鈥 even babies (鈥渆xcept when they鈥檙e on airplanes,鈥 joked Cummings).
"You don't have to start a nonprofit to be kind," Atkins says. In fact, engaging in one small act of kindness each day can be life-changing.
鈥淎s young as three months, we see children with the capacity for empathy,鈥 Atkins said. 鈥淭hey respond when they hear someone in distress, and when they鈥檙e a little bit older, they prefer to give treats rather than get them.鈥 The takeaway: We need to think about how we can 鈥渘ourish and nurture what鈥檚 in every one of us.鈥