To “Happens to Danish Youth

Denmark is constantly ranked at the top of the rankings as the happiest country in the world. Its stable government, the rich benefits of social insurance, and relatively low income inequality are those that outline the image of perfection, attached to the Nordic country. But recently, young Danish people have felt pressure [...]
But young Danish people have finally felt an unusual pressure on them - the need to be even happier.
Danish author Splace Brinkmann argues that the best thing young people can do in this case is to try to resist pressure to be happy and happy all the time and even practice “Jo” because it's good for them.
Being all happy, he says, paradoxically it can make you miserable.
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Denmark has become a symbol of happiness and peace. But Brickmann brings another angle.
And it turns out that this way, he says, but we also have a kind of pressure to say, because if we complain about all these good things, what should others say then?”
Along with Finland, Norway, and Iceland, the country again took the rankings of the World Happiness Report for 2018, where Sweden took ninth.
However, a report by the Copenhagen Institute of Research showed that in all five Nordic countries, an average of 12.3% of the population is in trouble or experience suffering, which is observed mostly among young people.












