Abstract

Background: Physical activity is associated with higher levels of subjective well-being. However, little research has been conducted in naturalistic conditions with a longitudinal design. In the current study, we aimed to examine whether regular activity initiation can impact happiness, life satisfaction, and self-esteem 4 weeks later.Methods: The sample (N = 217, 124 women) was divided into three groups based on level of physical activity (active people, beginners, and inactive people). The participants completed measures of happiness, satisfaction with life, self-esteem, and a survey on physical activity. Ninety-five of participants who completed the same set of measures sent by email after 4 weeks were included in the analyses.Results: The study showed a strong relationship between subjective well-being and physical activity. Active people showed higher levels of happiness and self-esteem compared to beginners and inactive people and a higher level of life satisfaction than inactive people. Furthermore, after 4 weeks of exercising, beginners revealed greater life satisfaction and happiness compared to the baseline.Conclusion: These findings confirm that regular physical activity leads to higher levels of well-being. It seems that even a short engagement in physical activity (4 weeks) may contribute to an increase in subjective well-being.

Highlights

  • Sport is considered to be the foundation of a healthy life

  • We investigate whether commencing physical activity positively affects happiness, life satisfaction, and self-esteem after 4 weeks of exercising

  • Life satisfaction was associated with self-esteem (r = 0.59, p < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Sport is considered to be the foundation of a healthy life. More and more studies have shown that physical activity is necessary for physical (Blair et al, 2004; Penedo and Dahn, 2005; Warburton and Bredin, 2017) and for mental health (Paluska and Schwenk, 2000; Biddle and Asare, 2011; White et al, 2017). A healthy lifestyle is becoming more and more popular and desirable worldwide, especially among younger generations (Park and Kang, 2008; Cypryańska and Nezlek, 2019). Adults present a decreasingly healthy lifestyle over the years (King et al, 2009). Existing research findings are not conclusive because a healthy lifestyle plays a significant role among the elderly. A healthy lifestyle is more common among women, more educated people, those who are less focused on sensation seeking, those who have a tendency to plan ahead, and those who perform fewer social roles (Divine and Lepisto, 2005). We aimed to examine whether regular activity initiation can impact happiness, life satisfaction, and self-esteem 4 weeks later

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