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Why You're Not Happy
Six common barriers to personal happiness and
fulfillment and how to overcome them.
By Annie Stuart
WebMD Feature
Happiness can be a paradox: The more you reach
for it, the more it seems to slip through your
fingers. “Ask yourself if you’re happy, and you
cease to be so,” says Darrin McMahon, PhD,
author of Happiness: A History.
How could this be true? Could it be you’re
looking for happiness in all the wrong places?
Do you think happiness is what you get when you
get what you want? Some say happiness is a
little like falling in love, that you can’t make
it happen. If that’s the case, then how can you
become happier?
At the 2008 Happiness & Its Causes Conference in
San Francisco, a wide range of people -- from
scientists, doctors, and psychologists to
artists, philosophers, and Tibetan Buddhists --
offered their thoughts on the topic. Here are a
few of their tips for overcoming six common
barriers to happiness.
Happiness Barrier No. 1:
Complexity
Solution: Simplify
Schooled in Buddhist monasteries since
childhood, Thupten Jinpa, PhD, knows a thing or
two about the benefits of simplicity. Why do you
think monks and nuns shave their heads, he asks?
For one, it simplifies their lives.
A principal English translator to the Dalai
Lama, Jinpa is no longer a monk. But he still
holds on to some of the lifestyle's spartan
values. “My family has a one-car policy,” he
says, pointing out the hassles of owning more
than one -- the costs, the maintenance, and the
time managing the details. Multiple credit
cards? They don’t create freedom or happiness,
he argues -- although, these days, he might get
less of an argument about that.
Modern life has elevated individual choice to
the highest level, he says, but these choices
come at a big price. “We often conflate quality
of life with standard of life,” Jinpa says, “but
after a point, the connection [between the two]
disappears.”
If you simplify your life, you create more space
in your day, making it possible to reflect on
your life.
Happiness Barrier No. 2: A
Breakneck Pace
Solution: Take a Pause
The same culture that entangles you in a web of
complexity may also have you on the constant
chase, Jinpa says. “That kind of tension takes a
toll on your soul and your psyche.” Whether you
call it meditation, silence, or prayer, taking a
“pause” just a few minutes a day can help you
“recharge your batteries” and make you feel
happier. A good time to do this is in the
morning. Without it, your life may feel out of
control.
Venerable Robina Courtin, a Buddhist nun and
organizer of the Happiness & Its Causes
Conference, recommends spending these minutes
practicing mindful meditation. “During the day,
we’re completely absorbed by our senses,” she
says, “so we don’t pay attention to our minds.”
Sit in a quiet place and simply anchor your mind
on your breathing. When your mind wanders, bring
it back to your breath. Through this process,
you learn to observe what your mind is saying.
Happiness Barrier No. 3:
Negativity
Solution: Let go
“Your prison is nothing in comparison with the
inner prison of ordinary people: the prison of
attachment, the prison of anger, the prison of
depression, the prison of pride.” wrote Lama
Zopa Rinpoche to a California prisoner, a
student of the Liberation Prison Project, which
offers Buddhist teachings to people in prison.
Some might view this statement as a bit of an
exaggeration. But negative, compulsive thoughts
do have a quality of stickiness to them, Jinpa
says. How you see things and the way you
experience the world are strongly linked, making
it critical to adopt a positive outlook. “You
interact with the world through your senses and
mind,” he says. “If you can find a way to stand
at the doorway of your senses, you can have a
say in how you experience the world.”
In our culture, though, we take it as natural
that people are angry, depressed, or dejected,
Courtin says. “No wonder we get depressed --
it’s a depressing world view. It says you can’t
do anything about it.” If you believe your
abusive boss, father, or partner is the main
cause of your suffering, for example, then
you’ve tied your own hands and risk becoming
imprisoned by toxic thoughts.
The Buddhist view, by contrast, is that
happiness is what you get when you give up a
neurotic state of mind, Courtin says. It’s
empowering, she says, because knowing you can
change it gives you the courage to look inside,
pay attention, and take responsibility for your
thoughts. Rather than judging negative thoughts,
Courtin advises observing them with compassion.
Then ask yourself, “What can I do about this?”
Techniques like mindful meditation can help with
this, but may not be for everyone, especially
those experiencing severe depression, says
Philippe R. Goldin, PhD, research associate in
the department of psychology at Stanford
University.
But there are other simple steps you can take to
counteract negativity and enhance your
happiness. Practicing gratitude is one. People
appear to have a certain set point for
happiness, a range that’s influenced by
genetics. But those who regularly practice
gratitude can enhance this set point by as much
as 25%, reports Robert Emmons, PhD in his book,
Thanks!: How Practicing Gratitude Can Make You
Happier. Through his research, Emmons found that
people who kept gratitude journals felt better
about their lives, exercised more, and were more
optimistic.
Happiness Barrier No. 4: Despair
Solution: Stay hopeful
Did a parent attempt to protect you as a child
by saying, “Don’t get your hopes up”? There’s no
evidence that hope is hurtful, says David B.
Feldman, PhD, assistant professor of counseling
psychology at Santa Clara University in
California. Instead, hope can greatly enhance
happiness in people.
But genuine hope isn’t a yellow smiley face or
the denial of death at the bedside of a loved
one in hospice, says Feldman, who’s pursued
research and clinical work addressing the
question: “How do people maintain hope and
meaning in the face of adversity?
Three components are essential for hope to
thrive, Feldman says. They are having goals, as
well as a plan and the motivation to achieve
them. “Those who succeed don’t internalize the
blame game, either internally or externally,” he
says, “They ask, ‘what now?’”
In addition to reaching goals, these people
perform better in sports and school, Feldman
says. They have a greater tolerance for pain.
They use health-promoting behaviors. They also
have a lower risk for depression, anxiety, and
heart disease.
Feldman advises setting personally meaningful
goals and checking to see where your hope
falters -- is it with the plan or the
motivation? Allow yourself to daydream, he says.
It’s a wonderful source of hope and, therefore,
happiness.
Happiness Barrier No. 5:
Suppressing sadness
Solution: Feel the real
Having a positive outlook doesn’t mean you never
allow yourself to feel sadness. The parents who
try to protect their children from dashed hopes
-- or any kind of sadness -- may actually
produce the opposite effect than is intended,
says James R. Doty, MD, director of the Center
for Compassion and Altruism Research and
Education at Stanford University. Some
suffering, he says, makes you a whole person and
allows you to acclimate and move forward in your
life. Doty speaks from experience. He had an
alcoholic father and invalid mother. He lived on
public assistance for much of his youth.
“Happiness is not the absence of sadness,” says
David Spiegel, MD, medical director of the
Center for Integrative Medicine at Stanford
University School of Medicine. It is not a stiff
upper lip or the pop psychology mantra, intoning
“always stay upbeat” in the face of cancer.
“Phony happiness is not good.” By suppressing
sadness, you suppress other, more positive
emotions, as well, he says, so people who try to
suppress emotions actually become more anxious
and depressed.
By finding outlets for sadness and frustration,
you gain some measure of control, Spiegel says.
Using others as a sounding board -- not as a
toxic dumping ground -- can help convert
generalized anxiety and depression into targeted
feelings you can address with specific
solutions.
Happiness Barrier No. 6: Navel-gazing
Solution: Connect with others
How important are social networks to your
happiness? Perhaps even more important than you
realized. A recent 20-year study of more than
4,000 people showed that happiness is influenced
not just by your immediate friends and family.
The happiness of a friend of a friend of a
friend -- someone you’ve never even met -- can
also influence your happiness. It turns out that
happiness can spread through social networks,
like a virus.
Unfortunately, many people spend so much time by
themselves navel gazing, they don’t benefit from
this positive “contagion.”
The more self-absorbed you are, the more your
world closes in, and the less realistic you
become, all of which produces a vicious circle.
“You become oblivious to the needs of others,
and the world shrinks still more, making you
less able to see outside yourself.” If asked,
‘Why are your problems so special?” says Jinpa,
you might respond, “Because they’re mine!”
“If you have such a huge ego, you’re setting
yourself up as a huge target, which can easily
get hit,” Jinpa says. But using a “wide-angle
lens” instead helps you see connections you
wouldn’t otherwise see, such as the universality
of suffering. All it may take is having a loved
one diagnosed with a serious disease to realize
how many people are grappling with similar
challenges. Feeling joined by others on this
journey provides some comfort and happiness.
The straightest path to making connections like
these? Compassion and caring for others.
Even primates seem to understand this, says
Robert M. Sapolsky, PhD, author of Why Zebras
Don’t Get Ulcers and research associate with the
Institute of Primate Research at the National
Museum of Kenya. Primates that groom each other
after a stressful event experience a reduction
in blood pressure. The clincher? Grooming others
has a greater impact than getting groomed, says
Sapolsky.
Compassion engages us with others, removes
isolation, builds resilience, and leads to deep
fulfillment, says Doty. “Without compassion,
happiness is simply short-lived pleasure.”
Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, may have
said it best: “If you want others to be happy,
practice compassion; if you want to be happy,
practice compassion.”
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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“If you want others to be happy,
practice compassion; if you want to be happy,
practice compassion.” |
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