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Struggling with envy? Here are some science-backed ways to help

A reader dealing with jealousy of a friend is given a host of scientifically sourced ways to help from our advice columnist David Robson
E06NGF An upper class Bolivian girl sits in her very fancy toy remote controlled car that is admired by a poorer boy in Sucre, Bolivia.
“I just can’t help feeling bitter about what they’ve achieved”
David Litschel/Alamy

It is all too human to feel a little jealous of others’ success, but what can we do when those feelings threaten to overcome us? One reader this month describes some serious resentment at a friend’s promotion: “I just can’t help feeling bitter about what they’ve achieved.”

The obvious solution to envy would be to avoid comparing ourselves to the people around us, but that is easier said than done. Humans are social creatures who evolved in hierarchies, and our standing within a group would have had serious consequences for our welfare. As a result, we inevitably use others as a measure of our own success – a habit that can quickly kill any satisfaction we might have gleaned from our own achievements.

We can see this in people’s perceptions of their income. Research by at the University of Stirling, UK, and his colleagues has shown that of people’s earnings, compared with that of others within their social group, is a better predictor of life satisfaction than total take-home pay. can also influence perceptions of personal attributes like education or intelligence: it’s how we match up to others that shapes how good we feel about ourselves, rather than our standalone performance.

Envy may be exacerbated by a “focusing illusion”, which describes our tendency to become fixated on a single facet of someone’s life. We imagine that our successful friend is living in a constant state of joy, and forget that they have to face everyday difficulties like an argument with their spouse or the death of a pet.

In one study, at the University of Chicago and his colleagues asked participants to imagine a peer with a desirable life. Simply reminding them of the “small annoyances” this person regularly confronted the participants’ envy. We can never know what emotional baggage someone may be carrying, and recognising this fact should make us think twice about wishing ourselves in another’s shoes, while also urging us to treat them with a bit more kindness.

When we are feeling bitter, we might also reframe another’s success as proof that our own ambitions are achievable. , try remembering all the things within your control to improve your lot, and make a step-by-step plan of how you might achieve that.

Why not involve the person themselves, and ask them about the challenges they faced and how they overcame them? about those difficulties will probably reduce your feelings of resentment and increase your motivation to take positive action.

We may never escape social comparison. When life gives us sour grapes, however, we can choose to make wine from those momentarily bitter fruits.

Further reading

If you are interested in learning other strategies for emotional regulation, I would thoroughly recommend psychologist Shift: How to manage your emotions so they don’t manage you (Vermilion)

David Robson is an award-winning science writer andauthor of The Laws of Connection: 13 social strategies that will transform your life

For other projects visit newscientist.com/maker

Topics: Mind / Psychology