When the pandemic first started, I figured
out what would make me happy and get me through it...
having a car.
And then I got the car and as I drove home,
sat in traffic, searched for parking, my happiness
faded…fast.
The car didn’t actually make me as I'd expected,
because the greener grass came with parking
problems, toll booth tags, and car insurance.
Sure, I was getting more freedom to get out
safely, but at what cost?
I think I wanted a car because I thought it
would allow me to have a lot more fun?
To do cooler things, to see places, just to
get out.
It would be better for my mental health, and
it would make me happier.
I thought it would make me happier.
This got me thinking about our collective
pursuit of happiness and all the books and
movies that ask us: What Makes Us Happy?
How many want to know what the secret to happiness
is?
But what if we’re asking the wrong question?
What if the pursuit of happiness is a road
that leads to nowhere?
[This episode is sponsored by Brilliant]
Let’s start off by defining happiness, it's
a state of pleasure and joy that we tend to
strive for to improve our well-being and satisfaction.
We often relate it to things that happen to
us – like buying a new car or winning the
lotto or going on an all-expenses-paid holiday.
It’s the pursuit of the perfect moment,
often mused upon by self-help gurus or Instagram
Influencers offering the secret recipe for
achieving happiness.
Well, in 2005, researchers published a pie
chart of three things that determine your
well-being and this became known as the “happiness
pie.”
They estimated that 50% of our happiness is
based on genetics, 10% on our circumstances,
and 40% on our actions, so things under our
control.
The simplicity of this pie was delicious and
it was gobbled up by pop-science sites and
authors of self-help books.
But as if often the case with things that
seem too good to be true, this happiness pie
has a lot of flaws.
For starters, the researchers looked at how
circumstance affects happiness at the population
level, looking at the big picture.
But that can be really different at an individual
level.
For example, let's imagine a study finds people
who are rich are 10% happier than those who
are living in poverty.
Well, if people who are living in poverty
come into money it doesn't necessarily mean
that they would then become 10% happier.
Maybe, they were already happier than the
people who were rich at a baseline level.
Maybe they think about happiness completely
differently or maybe they would actually be
more than 10% happier.
There’s also a lot of disagreement about
how much of our happiness is controlled by
genes – some studies say it's 40%, some
studies say it's 80%.
Which is a pretty huge difference.
And, our genes, circumstances, and choices
aren’t all independent of each other – they
all interact.
So it doesn’t really make sense to separate
them into different slices of pie.
But even if the happiness pie isn’t totally
correct, the important point remains that
we still do have some control over how we
feel.
And It's not just about what we have or what
we don't have, it's about how we look at it…
In the pursuit of happiness, we put a lot
of our focus on goals and achievements.
Of course, it’s good to have goals, but
not when our well-being depends on us achieving
those goals.
Because a lot of things – like getting a
promotion at work or getting married – depends
on other people or systems and it's not fully
within our control.
And by tying happiness to your goals, you
run the risk of ending up on the hedonic treadmill.
This is the tendency to return to your baseline
emotional state pretty soon after good things
happen to you, so you end up right back where
you are waiting for the next thing that's
going to make you happy.
So is there a way to find real, long term
well-being?
Psychologists say the answer may be contentment,
learning to find peace and acceptance in the
present moment.
And this is a fundamental difference between
eastern and western philosophies on happiness.
While traditions such as Buddhism or Hinduism
focus on happiness as an inside job, western
thought has made it about something to pursue
or attain, even promoting it in governing
like America’s Declaration of Independence.
So if you, like myself, need some help on
finding peace and acceptance in the present
moment, there's a couple of things that can
help.
One, is learning to be more mindful.
And mindfulness as a term gets thrown around
a lot, but it’s the practice of noticing
your thoughts and your feelings and sensations
and your environment in the present moment.
And accepting them without judgment or without
thinking if they’re good or bad.
I’ll link to some more resources on how
to do that down in the doobly do.
Meditation is one of the most popular ones
but I know that's not for everyone, so please
check out those resources.
Another thing is practicing gratitude, which
like mindfulness gets thrown around a lot,
but gratitude actually has a lot of benefits
for your happiness and well-being.
And a common practice is to keep a gratitude
journal, so you start off or finish your day
by writing down three things that you're grateful
for.
When I do this, I always find that it comes
back to me being grateful for my health and
my family and very simple things, which is
basically being content.
And another thing you can do is lean into
what you're grateful for and the things that
make you content.
So if you are writing down that you're grateful
for your health and your family, spend more
time focusing on your health.
Go for long walks.
Spend more time with your family, unplug and
actually do grounding activities with them
like gardening, playing board games, love
a bit of Scrabble.
The question of “What Makes Us Happy”
is incredibly complicated.
But the question of “What Makes Us Content”
is a lot easier to answer and accept.
Happiness can be a lofty goal that you can
keep climbing for and climbing for, and never
quite achieve – like your dream job, which
I assure you after you get after a certain
amount of time you'll just want a new job
or want to do something different.
Or maybe it's your ideal car and once you
buy that you'll want to replace it soon enough.
Or it could be having the perfect amount of
YouTube subscribers, beautiful YouTube subscribers.
And it doesn't matter however many you have,
you always want more because you always want
to grow.
But if we shift our expectations and pursue
contentment, that is actually more likely
to make us happy.
You can have your happiness pie and eat it
too.
