I think most cultures have beliefs/norms for the suppression of emotion that influence our health more than we may realize. If we want to optimize for happiness, how do we do so without feeling sadness? Or fear? Anger? If I feel very happy with something, I will probably feel very sad if it is gone, afraid it will leave, angry if it gets taken away.
So I think more than physical health, there are hidden cultural forces that interfere with our desire for emotional health. Heck, we even call it mental health more than emotional health probably because of cultural dislike of "emotion." I won't even go into how attitudes in favor of monogamy may contribute lol.
Maybe it's the opposite though? The past century in the west was an age of relinquishing many of the "hidden cultural forces", including in particular "beliefs/norms for the suppression of emotion". Are we better off for it? Could it be the case that those older cultures had some of this stuff figured out right, or at least better than we have today.
So I think more than physical health, there are hidden cultural forces that interfere with our desire for emotional health. Heck, we even call it mental health more than emotional health probably because of cultural dislike of "emotion." I won't even go into how attitudes in favor of monogamy may contribute lol.