What Flourishing Actually Is
The word “flourishing” can sound abstract — or worse, like something reserved for people who have already solved their problems.
It isn’t.
This path begins with the research itself: what psychologists, neuroscientists, and philosophers have actually found when they studied not just what makes people suffer less, but what makes life feel genuinely meaningful, connected, and worth living.
The findings are more grounded than the language often suggests — and more available than most people assume.
What you’ll find in this path:
- What flourishing means — and what it doesn’t mean
- What the science of wellbeing actually studies, and how seriously to take it
- The difference between feeling good and living well
- What meaning, connection, engagement, and purpose actually contribute — and how
- What the research says about resilience — how people genuinely recover and grow
- Where this science has limits, and what it cannot answer
This path has 15 articles. They have a suggested order, but you can begin anywhere.
- What Is Flourishing?
- The Difference Between Pleasure and Meaning
- What Positive Psychology Actually Studies
- Connection and Belonging — The Evidence
- Engagement and Flow
- Purpose — What It Is and How It Works
- Self-Compassion and Its Role in Wellbeing
- Resilience — What the Research Actually Shows
- Post-Traumatic Growth — What It Is and What It Isn’t
- The Body and Flourishing
- Gratitude — Beyond the Cliché
- Autonomy, Mastery, and Growth
- The Role of Community in Flourishing
- Meaning in the Face of Suffering
- What a Good Life Looks Like — Across Traditions and Research
A quiet note:
Some of these articles introduce ideas that may sit uncomfortably alongside how you’ve learned to think about your own life — particularly if suffering has been a long companion.
That discomfort is worth staying with. This path doesn’t ask you to feel better about your past. It asks a different question: what is possible from here?
You are in control of your pace here.