You don’t need another pep talk—you need a plan built for real days. This book turns cutting-edge findings from positive psychology into a positive psychology daily practice you can trust, using the neuroscience of joy to design small inputs that compound. Inside, you’ll craft durable happiness habits, layer in micro joys that travel with you, and install gratitude rituals that work instead of wilting after a week. You’ll protect attention, schedule flow states at home and work, and build social connections through simple, warm rituals that don’t feel forced. Each chapter helps you test and personalise an evidence based happiness routine—sleep, light, movement, and conversation—until it fits. No heavy journaling, no perfectionism: just experiments, feedback, and upgrades. By the end, you’ll have a living personal happiness formula and mindfulness you will keep—a practical rhythm that steadies your mood, sharpens your focus, and makes ordinary hours reliably good. This isn’t about chasing peaks; it’s about building a life that quietly works.
The Joy Prescription
SKU: 9789374127377
$44.99 Regular Price
$27.23Sale Price
- Elena Marceau writes for readers who want their days to feel steadier, warmer, and more alive. A lifelong observer of ordinary moments, she blends the neuroscience of joy with humane storytelling to turn big ideas into happiness habits you can actually keep. Her work sits where research meets ritual—evidence based happiness translated into small, repeatable actions: micro joys, gratitude rituals that work, and ways to build social connections without performative wellness. Influenced by Montaigne and the practical Stoics, Elena rejects hacks in favour of craft: attention that deepens, boundaries that protect, and a personal happiness formula that adapts to real life. Readers describe her pages as clear, companionable, and quietly catalytic—tools for Tuesdays, not just Sundays. When she isn’t writing, she’s mapping flow states at home and work, testing mindfulness you will keep, and proving that better feelings come from better systems, not wishful thinking.


















