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š 5 Fibs we tell ourselves about being happy
Time to let go of these false notions and limiting beliefs.
We're a funny lot, us humans. We claim to prize happiness, only to frequently postpone, trivialise, and altogether misunderstand it. What's going on? Why do we deceive ourselves?
We all have a tendency toward self-deception when it comes to what we think will make us happy. Our most widely-held ā but nonetheless faulty ā beliefs are handed down to us from the systems that shape our society. We confuse happiness with a reward for productivity (thanks capitalism!), we put our own well-being last (thanks patriarchy!), and we engage in unhealthy coping mechanisms (Thanks *gestures wildly towards everything*).
Todayās Happiness Letter addresses the five lies we most commonly tell ourselves about happiness. And provides some guidance on how to climb out of these mindset traps.
1. šāPursuing happiness results in happinessā
āThe relentless pursuit of happiness is actually a fairly good way of producing its opposite,ā warns psychologist Randy J Paterson in How To Be Miserable:
āIf you believe that you can be unfailingly, unremittingly happy all of the time, reality will smack you in the face with the fact that you are simply not wired for good cheer. The disappointment will, instead, propel your mood in the opposite direction.ā
Psychologist Susan David agrees: āPeople who have a goal to be happy become less and less happy over time because happiness is not borne out of chasing some ideal,ā she says.
Oh dear! So, if we desire happiness but its pursuit makes us unhappy, what should we do?
David believes that the secret to happiness is living a life that aligns with oneās personal values: āHappiness is borne out of living life in ways that feel concordant with what you value.ā
2. šāIāll be happy when I⦠lose weight/get a promotion/move houseā¦ā
āIāll be happy whenā¦ā or āIād be happy ifā¦ā are examples of conditional happiness, the belief that one needs to satisfy a condition in order to be happy. But we often misjudge what will make us happy, or overestimate how much happier weāll be once we achieve a goal. This concept is known as āArrival Fallacyā.
āArrival Fallacy is this illusion that once we make it, once we attain our goal or reach our destination, we will reach lasting happiness,ā says happiness expert Tal Ben-Shahar.
But in reality, Ben-Shahar says, we derive greater happiness from setting goals than from achieving goals. This is because setting goals provides us with purpose and meaning, which generate greater satisfaction. Ben-Shahar recommends choosing multiple concurrent goals so we donāt fixate on one thing. And he says one of our goals should be to spend time with loved ones:
āThe No. 1 predictor of happiness,ā he says, is the āquality time we spend with people we care about and who care about us. In other words, relationships.ā
3. āOnce Iām on top of things Iāll have time for what really mattersā
āMerely to be alive on the planet today is to be haunted by the feeling of having ātoo much to doā,ā writes Oliver Burkeman in Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals.
āThereās no reason to believe youāll ever feel āon top of thingsā, or make time for everything that matters, simply by getting more done,ā he continues. āIf you succeed in fitting more in, youāll find the goalposts start to shift: more things will begin to seem important, meaningful or obligatory.ā
So, whatās the solution? If weāre never to catch up on everything, are we never to have time for what matters?
It turns out the solution is putting joy, rest, and fun at the top of our to-do list, rather than making them rewards for completing it. Because happiness doesn't have to be a prize for productivity. And rest doesnāt need to be earned. Who knew?!
4. āTo be happy, I need less stress in my lifeā
We dream of a life with less stress. Less work stress. Less family stress. Less *gestures wildly towards everything* stress. But wellness researcher Emily Nagoski maintains that stress is not the problem; the strategies we use to deal with stress are the problem.
Rather than eliminating all stressors from our lives, which isnāt a realistic option, Nagoski says we need to develop healthier strategies for coping with stress. āStress is not bad for you; being stuck [feeling stressed] is bad for you,ā she writes in her book Burnout.
Nagoski recommends swapping unhealthy coping mechanisms for healthy ones. Unhealthy copy mechanisms ā like drinking alcohol, zoning out on devices, etc. ā only provide a temporary distraction from stress and ultimately make us feel worse, while healthy strategies genuinely relieve stress and make us feel better.
Nagoski recommends trying one of these proven stress relievers next time youāre feeling overwhelmed:
30 minutes of physical activity
Breathing exercises
Positive social interaction
Laughter
Affection
Creative expression
A good olā cry
5. āTo be happy, I need to avoid feeling sadā
I can see how someone might mistake me, the writer of the Happiness Letter, for an upholder of #GoodVibesOnly. But nothing could be further from the truth. Iām here for all the vibes; good, bad, and otherwise. Awkward vibes are actually my specialty, but Iām down for wallowing in a bad vibe when the occasion calls for it.
But still, I sometimes fall into the trap of hiding my negative emotions so others donāt feel uncomfortable. Science shows that suppressing negative emotions or isolating ourselves when weāre feeling down makes us feel worse, though. When we avoid talking to others about our everyday sorrows, we miss opportunities for authentic social connection ā the very thing thatās been proven to brighten our mood.
So next time youāre feeling low, remember that bad vibes are welcome too. Acknowledge your feelings and have a good olā cry! š
š 5 Fibs we tell ourselves about being happy
Set a goal to spend time with loved ones and get happy? Who knew? š I look forward to your newsletter each week!
I absolutely loved this. Thank you!