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The Pursuit Of Happiness

…Maybe that’s the problem.

Pursuing happiness is like chasing a rainbow. The faster we go, the harder we try, the farther off it becomes.

I have learned that happiness is not a pursuit— it’s a choice. Happiness is a state of mind, obtainable at any time, in any moment of your choosing.

Licking a cone of creamy vanilla Häagen-Dazs makes me happy. But if someone knocks the cone out of my hand, I’m no longer happy. Happiness can be fleeting and unstable, like that ice cream cone. It’s really just a temporary sensation of pleasure, like entertainment, shopping, eating or sex.

Our beliefs about what will make us happy are heavily influenced by other people, Hollywood or commercial media. We race along this “hedonic treadmill” perpetually feeling like something is missing, like happiness is one toy, one trinket or one promotion away, but always just beyond our reach.

And still no rainbow. Disappointing career choices, heartbreaking relationships and midlife crises indicate that our assumptions about happiness and the pursuit of it often miss the mark.

It’s not the pursuit of happiness we should concern ourselves with, but rather the pursuit of fulfillment, purpose and significance.

If I have created a life of meaning in which I have a deep sense of purpose and value, that won’t change because someone knocks my ice cream cone over. Fulfillment is a state of existence, not a fleeting emotion.

What then creates a fulfilling life?

That’s the all-important question you have to answer for yourself. In fact, it’s the subject of the classic tome Man’s Search for Meaning (which I recommend!) by psychiatrist and concentration camp survivor Viktor Frankl. Typically a life of meaning requires deep relationships, a connection to a community, a sense of well-being, contribution to others and continual challenge, growth, learning and progress. Now those are some virtues worth pursuing. And once you start out on this pursuit, you will realize that crossing the finish line is not what’s most rewarding; the journey itself and the anticipation of achieving your goal is what’s so exhilarating and wonderful.

So what about being happy?

There are two ways you can choose to be happy at any moment.
One: Think about all you have to be grateful for. Some of the happiest people I have ever met are those who have comparatively few accoutrements to be happy about. When you feel gratitude, you cannot feel fear or worry at the same time. Gratitude washes it all away. If you are reading this, you’re breathing and above ground, so you have many blessings to be grateful for—just remind yourself at any moment you want to feel happy.

The second way to choose happiness—the best way, in my opinion—is to do something to make someone else happy. The person who bestows happiness always gets much more of it in return.

Article by Darren Hardy

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Secrets Of Happy People

Want to know what makes some people smile more than others? It’s all about picking the right strategy.

The Happiness Institute’s founder and “chief happiness officer”, Dr Tim Sharp, says it is vital to develop strategies for looking after your happiness because it will impact on so many aspects of your life.

“Happy people are healthier, they live longer, they’re more successful at work and have better-quality relationships. Happy people perform better in pretty much every realm when compared with those who are depressed or not as happy,” he says.

Different strategies work for different people, Dr Sharp says. There are general principles, including being clear about your goals, living healthily, being positive but realistic, fostering key relationships, using your strengths and enjoying the moment, but people should try them out and choose what works best for them.

“If I’m feeling down – and yes, Dr Happy does feel down at times – then I find the following things really help me: taking the advice of those I trust (particularly my wife), listening to music, doing some form of exercise and/or meditation, a change of scenery, practising appreciation and gratitude.

“It’s important to note that accepting a degree of negative emotion is essential,” Dr Sharp adds, “but these strategies help me work my way back to happiness as quickly as possible.”

And as more people shift towards happiness as a measure of their success, a recent study by the University of Melbourne’s Associate Professor Bruce Headey has found relationships are more important than material success in influencing a person’s happiness.

“It appears that prioritising success and material goals is actually harmful to life satisfaction,” he wrote in the journal Proceedings Of The National Academy of Sciences.

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