The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘My Miserable Week in the “Happiest Country on Earth’’’
Episode Date: May 11, 2025For eight years running, Finland has been rated the happiest country in the world by a peculiar United Nations-backed project called the World Happiness Report, started in 2012. Soon after Finland sho...t to the top of the list, its government set up a “happiness tourism” initiative, which now offers itineraries highlighting the cultural elements that ostensibly contribute to its status: foraging, fresh air, trees, lakes, sustainably produced meals and, perhaps above all else, saunas.Instead of adhering to one of these optimal itineraries or visiting Finland at the rosiest time of year (any time except the dead of winter), Molly Young arrived with few plans at all during one of the bleakest months. Would the happiest country on earth still be so mirthful at its gloomiest? Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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Hi, my name is Molly Young.
I'm a book critic at the New York Times.
Since 2012, the UN-backed World Happiness Report has put out an annual ranking of countries.
For the past eight years, Finland has been at the top of the leaderboard, sitting at
number one.
In fact, Nordic countries dominate all the top spots, which makes Finland's victory
streak even more remarkable.
The U.S. came in at number 24 in the most recent report released in March of this year,
ranking just below the U.K.
I'd already been to Iceland, number three, and Costa Rica, number six, as well as a few
of the other countries that beat out the U.S. on this year's ranking.
And when I found out that the New York Times magazine was going to put out an issue devoted
to happiness, I pitched going to Finland to see how the Finns define happiness, and of
course, how they achieve it.
But I wanted to test Finland in the dead of winter at what I presume to be its lowest
point.
I would test Finland on hard mode.
So here's my article, read by Julia Whalen. Our audio producer today is Tali Abakasis,
and the music you'll hear was written and performed by Erin Esposito. Thanks for listening.
Coming to Helsinki in February is an objectively weird choice, said a man named Mikko Tyrönen.
During this time, we don't have, he paused, colors.
I was sitting in a coffee shop with Tyrönen, a web developer and writer, after flying to
Helsinki to think about happiness.
For eight years running, Finland has been rated the happiest country in the world by
a peculiar United Nations-backed project called the World Happiness Report, started in 2012.
Soon after Finland shot to the top of the list, its government set up a happiness tourism
initiative which now offers itineraries highlighting
the cultural elements that ostensibly contribute
to its status.
Foraging, fresh air, trees, lakes,
sustainably produced meals,
and perhaps above all else, saunas.
Instead of adhering to one of these optimal itineraries
or visiting Finland at the rosiest time of
year, anytime except the dead of winter, I'd come to Tyrnyn's bafflement with few plans
at all during one of the bleakest months. Would the happiest country on earth still
be so mirthful at its gloomiest?
When I explained this, Tyrnyn recalled a quote by the Finnish author Jokka Vikkila that goes,
Finland is a land where children play in darkness.
The quote was both a metaphor and a descriptive statement, he suggested.
Because of the country's global coordinates, Finnish kids do indeed play in the dark a
lot.
To avoid being struck by vehicles, they clip decorative reflectors called
hejasteen to their coats.
The reflectors come in all shapes, lemon, poodle, swan, hedgehog, soccer ball.
Adults wear them too.
I joke that going outside without my reflector is a way of inviting suicide,
Tironen said.
If it happens, it happens. We were both drinking from small coffee
cups, which are prevalent in Finland. Anyone wanting more than a thimble full of coffee
had to pursue refills relentlessly. Tyrannin took a sip, emptying his cup.
My partner does not like this joke.
My own happiness experiment was off to a poor start.
I arrived the day before, a Sunday afternoon, in a capsule of germs, a packed plane vibrating
with the sounds of coughing and phlegm management.
Monday dawned in sickness and jet lag.
I dressed and left my icy little hotel room, stopping at a chain store called Normal, completely normal goods at
fixed low prices for a bag of the region's signature treat, salty licorice.
Helsinki wore a hat of fog, you could see roughly 30 feet in the air before all was
concealed behind a pearly scrimm.
After coffee with Tirunen, I went for an evening walk to the harbor, where black slicks of water twinkled between frozen flows.
The stands that sold salmon soup and hot dogs during the day were closed. It was frosty and sparse.
Families walked together and ate in dimly lit restaurants. Helsinki's famous Esplanade was empty.
In spring, the central walkway becomes a riot of flowering
crab apples and bear shoulders, I had been told, but now the kiosks were shuttered, the
trees skeletal, the paths plowed but untrodden.
I stopped at a bar for a drink, and felt worse after finishing it, as I knew I would, given
alcohol's peerless capacity to italicize whatever mood the drinker is already in.
On the way back to the hotel, I thought about something Tironen mentioned earlier.
Outside his apartment, he said, there stood a hideous mound of dirty snow streaked in mud and
gravel. He and his partner had joked about sending me a photograph of the mound as a pre-souvenir, a sardonic welcome to Finland.
There are obvious problems with measuring happiness. Despite thousands of years of inquiry,
nobody from Confucius to Aristotle to Jeremy Bentham to Richardlin, to Oprah Winfrey, can agree on what happiness is.
Is it a quantum of pleasure?
The absence of pain?
A perception of purpose?
Hope?
Community?
How does it relate to health or wealth or income?
Is happiness a mood?
A neurotransmitter?
The first World Happiness Report was a 170-page PDF with a chart that ranked countries by
happiness.
Denmark came in first, Finland second, Norway third.
The United States was number 11.
Since then, a new scorecard has been issued nearly every year.
The rankings are based on a single question from which a huge amount, an insane amount,
is extrapolated.
The question is called the Cantril Ladder.
Here it is.
Please imagine a ladder, with steps numbered from zero at the bottom to ten at the top.
The top of the ladder represents the best possible life for you, and the bottom of the
ladder represents the worst possible life for you, and the bottom of the ladder represents the worst possible life for you. On which step of the ladder would you say you personally feel you stand at this time?
If, like me, your instinct upon reading the above is to draw a ladder and number the wrongs as
suggested, you will end up with an 11-wrong ladder, which is confusing. The originator of
the Cantrill ladder, a psychologist
named Dr. Hadley Cantrill, included a diagram of the ladder when he proposed the device
in 1965. The diagram clarifies that zero is not actually a step, but refers to the space
beneath the lowest rung. Cantrill also indicates that interviewers ought to move a finger rapidly up and down
the ladder while posing the question.
Every year, representatives from Gallup contact approximately 1,000 people per country, either
by phone or face-to-face, and ask them to identify their location on the ladder.
The authors of the World Happiness Report then take those answers and combine them with the answers from the previous two years, for a sample size of around 3,000 people.
Nordic countries consistently dominate the top of the list.
Finland has its well-publicized eight-year streak of happiness supremacy.
Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Norway are reliably in the top ten.
The most miserable countries tend, not surprisingly, to be those stricken with poverty, Sweden, and Norway are reliably in the top ten. The most miserable countries tend,
not surprisingly, to be those stricken with poverty, conflict, corruption, and human rights
violations. Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Yemen, Haiti. Between these two
poles, you can see the shifting fates of nations. Poland and Portugal, for example, have each ascended nearly one full ladder rung since
the survey began.
The United States peaked at number 11 in the year 2012 and has tumbled since then.
In mid-March, the 2025 World Happiness Report was released.
It was the longest one to date, a 260-page PDF bursting with data. The United
States had dropped one spot since the previous year to 24th place. Finland sustained its
winning streak. The report was pounced upon with various levels of rigor by media outlets,
including this one.
The most surprising parts of the report slipped beneath notice.
Would you have guessed, for example,
that Italy, number 40, is apparently less happy
than El Salvador, number 37?
Or that Saudi Arabia, number 32,
is happier than France, number 33?
Or that Israel is in the top 10?
Or that Bhutan, the country whose own gross National Happiness Index gave rise to the
report, has been absent from the list since 2019, when it limped in at number 95?
And then there are the raw figures.
Each country is ranked according to a score derived from the Cantro ladder responses. Finland's current score is 7.736,
while the United States measures 6.724, about a ladder-wrong lower. If you look at it another
way, Americans are 87% as happy as Finns. That's not bad. What seems to bother American
readers about the report is that it's a game we're not
winning.
Indeed, it's a game we're losing to our closest neighbors, Mexico, number 10, and
Canada, number 18.
Year after year, the PDFs track our downward trajectory past Lithuania and Slovenia and
the United Arab Emirates.
If Americans are exceptional in our approach to happiness,
it may have to do with an insistence on treating the matter as a glittering mystery,
a thing requiring pilgrimage or a course at Harvard or Yale. Both schools have offered
happiness classes to understand. It's a quandary we're tasked with solving, as with many Quandaries in this country, like taxes and health insurance and self-defense, on our own.
In a land of maximal freedom, where the coffee cups are huge, we can just as easily imagine
ourselves becoming billionaires or dying on a street corner.
The span of the latter is as wide as our imaginations allow.
All government buildings in Finland have a sauna on site. Nationwide, there is more than one sauna for every two Finns. For obvious reasons, the sauna is somewhat over-indexed in happiness tourism literature.
There is a specific phrase for the blissful drowsiness associated with time spent in a heated box,
Saunen jalkenen raokus, and a specific elf, Sauna tontu,
thought to live between a sauna's wall and heating apparatus.
The elf becomes angry if a sauna door is slammed.
On my second day, I visited a place called Lola.
It was my first and least representative sauna, in that it requires visitors to wear a swimsuit
– irregular, costs 26 euros – expensive, and is an architectural marvel.
A building that resembles a heap of rocks with weathered
pine planks arranged in faceted planes and concluding in a jagged terrace. From the terrace,
it was possible to walk down a set of stairs to the sea, where someone had carved a mushy
circular hole through the top layer of ice, allowing visitors to dip in the frigid water.
Avantooni is the word for this tradition, as I had learned from Finnish influencers on
YouTube.
I watched the sea-dippers from inside and outside the sauna, knowing what lay ahead
of me.
It was necessary to submerge.
If I did not, the next two hours would be ruined by wondering whether or not I was
capable of it.
The evening air was 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
What was the temperature of the sea? I don't know, but aside from the sauna dug glory hole,
it plateaued as solid ice into the near distance. Some people leaped from the stairs without
hesitation and abided for twenty or thirty seconds, giggling and gasping and treading water.
Others lowered themselves from a ladder, wincing all the way.
Padding down the stairs, I manually shut off my brain and jumped.
There was a bitter taste in my mouth, as though I'd been struck by lightning, followed by
a sense that my cells were being rearranged.
A sonnagoer down the deck clapped.
The lone note of approval inflated me with enough pride that I floated a few seconds
before climbing back up the ladder.
Upon ascending the stairs, I passed a man edging his way down, and we grinned at each
other, one person emerging from pointless triumph, one on his way there.
I watched the man dunk and gave a clap in turn, then hurried back indoors
to the hot sauna, which made my skin feel as though it were outlined in a neon pen.
There's a line in Martin Amis' novel London Fields where the narrator reflects that,
"'We are all poets or babies in the middle of the night, struggling with being.' So
too in a frozen sea. But warm to the core in the sauna,
you relax and have piercing thoughts such as, how wonderful it is to be hot, then cold, then hot,
then cold. The day after lowly, I visited a more typical sauna called Koti Harayun,
which had a neon red sign
and two plastic chairs out front, one of them empty and the other occupied by a melancholy
seeming man in a towel.
The man gleamed in silence, emitting heat.
Through the door was a cramped vestibule with a communal freezer for guests to store beer.
An employee collected the entry fee, 16 euros, and pointed up a creaky staircase that led
to the women's locker room, which a friend had described to me as a scene.
It was, if quietly.
A dozen women, recently or imminently cleansed, talked softly and retrieved items from wooden
lockers beside windows with sheer burgundy
curtains.
There were tables and board games and a fake orchid and copies of a magazine called Sauna
and industrial-sized hubs of hand sanitizer.
Koti Harun had an air of utility, like a car wash or dry cleaning service, and a faded charm.
The only sign of touristic infiltration was a sauna
etiquette plaque mounted on the locker room wall, outlining the basics. Bathe before entering,
stay hydrated, don't wear perfume, don't have loud conversations, don't compete to
see who can stay in the sauna longest, feel free to whisk yourself and others with bundles
of leafy twigs.
No other foreigners were visible in the locker room, yet everyone who knew I was going to Finland had urged me to visit
Koti Harjun. With its beer freezer and neon sign, the sauna sat on a knife's edge between authentic and
authentic. The territory between these points of awareness and overexposure is infamously narrow.
And Koti Harjun seemed to have been granted long-term residency in that
slender DMZ.
Unlike many Finnish treasures, heyaustin, cloudberry juice,
the sauna is well known beyond its borders.
America has fans, including famous ones like Joe Rogan, LeBron James, and Lady Gaga.
Avant Aouni, or some version of it, has become de rigueur among fitness enthusiasts and
fans of the vitalist lifestyle.
Though the cold plunging in the United States is typically done solo, in a garage, possibly
while you film yourself. What we lack is a sauna culture, or perhaps any culture that unites us so fully.
An artist I met earlier told me that her family's summer cottage had no hot water and no shower,
but it did have a sauna.
Everybody has sauna, yeah.
Another Finn, an official at the Tourism Bureau, said that she herself wasn't a heavy sauna goer,
only two times a week, but that, if you don't have your own sauna,
you will for sure have one in your building. A taxi driver named Karam told me that he had a
private sauna in his apartment, but that, I use it only if I'm tired or sore. So every day. Ha ha. In Finland, sauna is not a means to an end.
It will not make a person richer or more attractive or more focused. The point is not to sweat out
toxins, though that may occur. I'm not a scientist. The point seems to be the act itself, sitting in nude serenity among family, friends, and
strangers, safe in the bone-deep sense of trust that such an idol both requires and
reinforces.
The first World Happiness Report, summarizing the state of its research, drew a distinction
between two concepts, affective happiness and evaluative happiness.
Affective happiness captures emotions, immediate responses to events, whether we are experiencing
joy or sadness at one moment or another. Evaluative happiness is a more contemplative or systemic
matter, mapping a person's overall appraisal of life and whether they
are satisfied with theirs.
Effective happiness is the realm of laughter, fun, picnics, parties, sex.
Evaluative happiness is tied to good health, sufficient income, social cohesion, safety.
A crude synonym for evaluative happiness, and so much of this research flounders on
the crudeness of synonyms, would be contentment.
That is what the Cantor Ladder measures, and it should surprise no one that the Nordic
countries, with their long life expectancies, highly redistributive tax regimens, functional
governance, low corruption, and shared norms, land at the top of the charts.
The type of happiness that tourists go to Finland to find isn't even the sort of happiness
the country is accused of possessing.
A second area of confusion is that the two concepts of happiness, affective and evaluative,
can operate independent of each other.
A woman in the midst of extruding a baby might suffer from labor pains, low effective happiness,
but feel profoundly satisfied or purposeful, high evaluative happiness.
The happiest country in the world label seems to imprint on the American mind as a never-ending
carousel of delights, but in Finland's February chill, the reality is more modest.
One morning I boarded a trolley and closed my eyes, partly in sleepiness and partly to
listen.
Finnish belongs to the Finno-Yugrik family, to which Hungarian and Estonian also belong.
It has an undulant sound.
On the trolley I thought of ocean waves
cresting and crystalline droplets wending down stalactites. This interpretation may have been
flavored by the nation's abundance of water features—lakes, rivers, sea—or perhaps the
language itself had somehow been flavored by the water features. Or the association might have owed to Finnish intonation patterns, which cascade from high
to low pitch over the course of a sentence.
Because the stress is always on a word's first syllable, the language also has a cozy
regularity, like a horse clopping down a road.
I got off at the city center and walked to Helsinki's main library, which looks like
a ship made of carrot cake.
It is called ODI.
The name was selected from 2,600 entries in a competition held a couple years before the
library opened in 2018.
The jury sought a library name that was short, easy to pronounce, and not dedicated to a
single person.
Odie is Finnish for Ode.
A visitor enters through the prow of the enormous carrot cake ship and is prompted to remove her ice cleats, if she is wearing them.
It was thronged but quiet on the morning I arrived, and the disorienting combination
of visual traffic with hushedness made me feel as though I were wearing noise-cancelling headphones.
Hey, an employee said in greeting.
Hey, I said, what is the cost of a ticket?
What?
Shall I buy a ticket to enter?
Ha ha ha, the employee said.
No, we don't have tickets.
Ha ha, no ticket, of course.
One does not need a ticket to enter a public library.
The fanciness of the building had tripped some reflex
to sacrifice cash, which itself caused
an inner ripple of gloom.
On the ground floor of the library
was a cinema, a cafeteria serving beet lasagna and carrot
soup, and 22 children playing games of chess
at windowside tables.
I escalated to the second floor, which featured a 3D printing station, a laser cutter, a large
format printer, an engraving machine, conference rooms for anyone to use, and rocking chairs
in which to sit and read.
There were electric and acoustic guitars, nice ones to borrow, as well as a drum kit
and multiple zithers, a podcast studio, an electronic music studio, classrooms, a kitchen
space that could be reserved for cooking with friends.
All of this was enchanting, but it was a piece of signage that took my breath away.
At home in Brooklyn, the library is papered with reminders to, please keep your voice
down.
In contra distinction, the signs at Odie said, please let others work in peace.
The two commands are almost, but meaningfully not, synonymous.
The Brooklyn version is a plea for self-control.
The Finnish version is a request to acknowledge the existence of other people.
You see the difference.
On the top floor were books, games, and sheet music from composers like Edvard Grieg and
Jani.
There was a second café, more salmon soup, pink domed princess cakes,
and glass jars of fresh flowers at every table.
Bucida bucerus trees grew indoors, sunshine pressed gently through curved glass walls.
Beyond the walls stood the House of Parliament with its mighty grey facade.
The Odie balcony was designed to rest at precisely the same level as the entrance
to the house, to symbolize democracy and dialogue, according to a library brochure.
Children in stocking feet rolled down a sloping spruce floor as though it were a grassy hill.
Pause to contemplate the far-fetchedness of a public library in a major U.S. city that is clean
enough for floor rolling. Watching them frolic beneath a wavy egg of ceiling, I became, once
again, very sad. Here was a vision of human flourishing that was simultaneously simple
and inconceivable. As a kid in San Francisco, I remember walking into a public library and overhearing a man
crack the following joke,
"'For a homeless shelter, this place sure has a lot of books!'
It would be a mistake not to mention that Odie performed a shelter function, too.
There were people with an unusual volume of possessions using the space as a temperature-controlled
sleeping enclosure. It was allowed. The sleepers weren't confined to any particular section. They were
neither avoided nor harassed. If that was a Finn's idea of the floor, zero on the cantril,
or close to it, how much did it matter that the ceiling was also, along certain axes,
rather low.
Did any of these tall, thick-haired Finnish people look around their library and
think, what my country lacks is Jeff Bezos or
the delusion of the opportunity to become him?
Perhaps the absence of that thought alone moves you one step up the ladder.
In the course of a text conversation with a friend,
I mentioned that I was exceedingly
glum.
She called, and kept calling until I called back, which is what a good friend does, and
I rambled about my sorrow at watching the Finnish children rove and play, and told her
about how mothers of all ages gathered spontaneously in the library to chat or rest or idly massage
their feet. I explained that one of these mothers had placed her baby, a child of no more than nine months, in a high chair at a
library cafe table and handed him a vegetable puree to consider, then left for 20 minutes to fetch books.
When she came back, we exchanged smiles. She asked where I was visiting from.
When she came back, we exchanged smiles. She asked where I was visiting from.
New York, I said. I have a little girl about your son's age. Ah, I haven't been to New York yet. I would like to go.
We talked about children and libraries and the relative safety of our nations.
Every few years there's a crisis where a baby is stolen, but then it is returned or found fifteen minutes later, she said of Finland.
Nothing severe.
Her son finished his puree, and they waved goodbye, off to explore the fairy-tale wall.
Travel has the effect of defamiliarizing one's home, and there were many things I learned
about Finland only by comparing them with the status quo back home.
From afar, actions I had considered annoying but unrelated in New York congealed into a
category betraying a mixture of selfishness and cynicism.
Littering, blocking subway doors, taking up two parking spaces, ignoring a mother struggling
to hoist her kid's stroller up or down a flight of stairs.
People behave antisocially for all kinds of reasons.
I could not, in the space of a week, discover why Finns did not rebel against their tiny
coffee cups or litter or cut in line or carry out loud cell phone conversations in public places,
or why there was no visible dog waste, although some one in five of them owns a dog, or why,
if a crosswalk light is red, a fin will wait until the light blinks green to cross, even
if there is zero oncoming traffic in either direction.
On and on I complained to my friend on the phone,
wretched about the idea that my daughter would never eat vegetables alone in
a library or paint northern lights on a fairy tale wall beneath an indoor tree.
True, said my friend, but there are worse places to raise a kid than in
the United States.
She was correct, Romania, Kosovo and Estonia among them, at least according to the World Happiness Report,
a week long fixation on the Cantril ladder was warping any sense of proportion.
The next day, I departed the most life satisfied country on earth in
a thin air plane that hiccuped queasily until it reached cruising altitude.
What awaited me back in New York? First, there would be the airport taxi line, plane that hiccuped queasily until it reached cruising altitude.
What awaited me back in New York?
First, there would be the airport taxi line, a reliable case study in misanthropy, then
a slow journey home on potholed expressways to an apartment with holes in the floor, medical
bills, daycare bills, on the other hand, large coffee cups.
All tourism starts out as happiness tourism.
There are other words we use when we travel to visit family, conduct business, or elude
capture, even if it mutates into a voyage of morbid introspection.
During that first meeting with Mikko Tyrinen, I posed to him the Cantro Ladder question.
Like every Finn I would go on to ask, he refused to indulge its premise.
How would I know the answer, Tyrannin said?
I'm only having this one life.
No ladder, no top, and no bottom.
There was darkness, now something is happening, and I'm confused, and then there will be
darkness again.