Every day, we hear about problems that divide people. We hear about stress, burnout, loneliness, and conflict. Those challenges deserve attention, but they can also make us forget something equally important: human beings are built to experience joy together.
Shared joy isn't just a nice feeling. It's a practical tool that strengthens relationships, builds trust, and helps communities recover from difficult times. Whether it's thousands of people singing the same chorus at a concert, coworkers celebrating a milestone, or neighbors gathering for a local event, moments of collective happiness create bonds that last much longer than the event itself.
As a performer who has spent decades bringing people together through live music,
Michael Franti has watched this happen from the stage thousands of times. Audiences may arrive as strangers, but they often leave feeling connected through an experience they created together.
Science supports what many people instinctively feel. Joy is more than an emotion. It's an investment in stronger relationships.
Joy Creates Stronger Communities
People often think resilience comes from toughness. In reality, resilience usually comes from connection.
Research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that shared positive experiences increase cooperation and strengthen social bonds. Even brief moments of collective celebration can improve trust and make people more willing to support one another in the future.
That makes perfect sense to me.
I've played concerts where people from completely different backgrounds stood shoulder to shoulder singing the same song. They arrived with different opinions, different jobs, different life stories, and different reasons for buying a ticket. For a few minutes, none of those differences mattered.
"I remember looking out at one festival crowd and seeing a grandfather dancing with his granddaughter while a group of college students joined them without saying a word," I've said. "Nobody planned that moment. It just happened because everyone gave themselves permission to enjoy it together."
That memory has stayed with me far longer than any review of the show.
Joy Is Often Treated Like a Luxury
Modern culture rewards productivity.
Calendars fill up. Meetings multiply. Notifications compete for attention. Rest often feels like something that has to be earned.
Joy gets pushed to the bottom of the priority list.
That's a mistake.
The World Happiness Report consistently finds that people with stronger social connections report higher levels of life satisfaction and better overall well-being. Those relationships don't develop through endless work. They develop through shared experiences that make people feel connected.
Joy isn't the opposite of productivity.
It's one of the things that makes sustained productivity possible.
People who feel connected tend to collaborate better, recover faster from setbacks, and stay engaged longer.
Why Shared Experiences Matter More Than Ever
Think about the moments you remember most from the past few years.
There's a good chance they involve other people.
You probably remember laughing until your stomach hurt with friends. You remember celebrating a birthday, attending a concert, watching your favorite team win, or sharing a meal with family.
You probably don't remember answering your forty-third email on a Tuesday afternoon.
That's because our brains naturally assign greater emotional value to shared experiences.
Researchers at Cornell University found that experiences generally create more lasting happiness than material purchases because they become part of our identity and our personal stories.
I've seen that firsthand.
People rarely walk up to me after a concert and talk about the sound system.
They tell me about proposing during a song.
They tell me about bringing their parents to their first live show.
They tell me they met someone who later became their spouse.
The concert became the setting.
The shared joy became the memory.
Joy Requires Participation
One thing I've learned after years of performing is that audiences don't want to simply watch.
They want to belong.
The biggest moments in a concert usually aren't the complicated guitar solos or perfectly timed lighting cues. They're the moments when thousands of people sing together without anyone asking them twice.
"I've had nights where I stopped singing because the audience had completely taken over," I've said. "Standing there listening to thousands of voices finish the song reminded me that music works best when it belongs to everyone in the room."
That lesson applies far beyond music.
People become more invested when they help create the experience.
Businesses can encourage employees to celebrate wins together instead of quietly moving to the next task. Community organizations can create local events that encourage participation instead of passive observation. Families can establish traditions that give everyone a role to play.
Participation transforms spectators into contributors.
Small Moments Matter More Than Big Productions
Shared joy doesn't require expensive events or elaborate planning.
Some of the strongest memories come from surprisingly simple moments.
I remember a small outdoor show where the power briefly went out. Instead of stopping, everyone started clapping in rhythm while the band played acoustically. For nearly ten minutes there were no lights, no amplifiers, and no production.
Just people.
Afterward, dozens of fans told me it was their favorite part of the night.
The mistake had become the memory.
That experience reminded me that connection doesn't depend on perfection.
It depends on presence.
The same principle works anywhere.
A manager who celebrates a team's accomplishment with genuine appreciation. A neighborhood block party. A family game night. A volunteer event that ends with everyone sharing a meal.
These moments don't require huge budgets.
They require intention.
Practical Ways to Create More Shared Joy
Building stronger communities doesn't require waiting for special occasions. It starts with creating opportunities for people to connect regularly.
Here are a few simple ways to make shared joy part of everyday life:
● Celebrate progress, not just major milestones. Small victories deserve recognition because they build momentum.
● Create recurring traditions. Weekly dinners, community events, team celebrations, or annual gatherings give people something to anticipate.
● Invite participation. People remember experiences they help create far more than experiences they simply observe.
● Protect time for connection. Don't allow every free moment to become another work obligation.
● Lead with enthusiasm. Energy spreads quickly. One person's willingness to participate often gives others permission to join.
These aren't complicated strategies.
They're habits.
Over time, those habits create stronger relationships.
Joy Is a Form of Leadership
One of the biggest surprises of my career has been realizing that creating joyful moments is a form of leadership.
Leaders don't just solve problems.
They shape emotional environments.
They decide whether people feel hopeful or discouraged, connected or isolated, energized or exhausted.
Optimism becomes much easier when people experience moments of genuine joy together.
That's why celebrations matter.
That's why traditions matter.
That's why shared experiences matter.
They remind people they're part of something bigger than themselves.
The Communities We Remember
Years from now, most people won't remember every meeting they attended or every task they completed.
They'll remember the moments that made them laugh, sing, celebrate, and connect with others.
Those experiences become the stories we tell.
They become the glue that holds communities together during difficult times.
Shared joy isn't a distraction from meaningful work.
It helps make meaningful work possible.
The strongest communities aren't built only by solving problems. They're built by creating reasons for people to come together, celebrate progress, and leave feeling better than when they arrived.
That may be one of the most practical investments any leader, organization, or community can make.