We all want to be happy. But how, exactly, do you go about it?
Happiness is a state of ineffable well-being and contentment that results from achieving what you consider "good." Here's how to find your purpose, move into self-acceptance, and follow your path to true, lasting happiness.
Do you think the happiness is money ,election , promotion , romance , pass exam ?
Most of us probably don’t believe we need a formal definition of happiness; we know it when we feel it, and we often use the term to describe a range of positive emotions, including joy, pride, contentment, and gratitude.
But to understand the causes and effects of happiness, researchers first need to define it. Many of them use the term interchangeably with “subjective well-being,” which they measure by simply asking people to report how satisfied they feel with their own lives and how much positive and negative emotion they’re experiencing. In her 2007 book The How of Happiness, positive psychology researcher Sonja Lyubomirsky elaborates, describing happiness as “the experience of joy, contentment, or positive well-being, combined with a sense that one’s life is good, meaningful, and worthwhile.”
That definition resonates with us here at Greater Good: It captures the fleeting positive emotions that come with happiness, along with a deeper sense of meaning and purpose in life—and suggests how these emotions and sense of meaning reinforce one another.
"I am the happiest man alive. I have that in me that can convert poverty to riches , adversity to prosperity , and I am more invulnerable than Achilles ; fortune hath not one place to hit me "
Sir Thomas Browne Religio medici 1642
for example :
Jim Wright , disgraced congressman "I am so much better off, physically , financially , mentally ,and in almost every way "
he resigned in disgrace when this young republican name Newt Gingrich . he lost every thing his power , money every thing
what does he have to say all these years later ?
"I'm so much better off physically , financially , mentally and in almost every other way"
Research shows that happiness is not the result of bouncing from one joy to the next; achieving happiness typically involves times of considerable discomfort. Money is important to happiness, but only to a certain point. Money buys freedom from worry about the basics in life—housing, food, clothing. Genetic makeup, life circumstances, achievements, marital status, social relationships, even your neighbors—all influence how happy you are. Or can be.
So do individual ways of thinking and expressing feeling. Researchers estimate that much of happiness is under personal control. Regularly indulging in small pleasures (such as warm baths!), getting absorbed in challenging activities, setting and meeting goals, maintaining close social ties, and finding purpose beyond oneself are all actions that increase life satisfaction.
The secret of happiness is a concern of growing importance in the modern era, as increased financial security has given many the time to focus on self-growth. No longer hunter-gatherers concerned with where to find the next kill, we worry instead about how to live our best lives. Happiness books have become a cottage industry; personal-development trainings are a bigger business than ever.
The pursuit of happiness is not uniquely American either—in a study of more than 10,000 participants from 48 countries, psychologists Ed Diener of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Shigehiro Oishi of the University of Virginia discovered that people from every corner of the globe rated happiness as being more important than other highly desirable personal outcomes, such as having meaning in life, becoming rich, and getting into heaven.
The fever for happiness is spurred on, in part, by a growing body of research suggesting that happiness does not just feel good but is good for you—it's been linked to all sorts of benefits, from higher earnings and better immune-system functioning to boosts in creativity.
Most people accept that true happiness is more than a jumble of intensely positive feelings—it's probably better described as a sense of "peace" or "contentedness." Regardless of how it's defined, happiness is partly emotional—and therefore tethered to the truth that each individual's feelings have a natural set point, like a thermostat, which genetic baggage and personality play a role in establishing. Yes, positive events give you a boost, but before long you swing back toward your natural set point.
True happiness lasts longer than a burst of dopamine, however, so it's important to think of it as something more than just emotion. Your sense of happiness also includes cognitive reflections, such as when you give a mental thumbs-up or thumbs-down to your best friend's sense of humor, the shape of your nose, or the quality of your marriage. Only a bit of this sense has to do with how you feel; the rest is the product of mental arithmetic, when you compute your expectations, your ideals, your acceptance of what you can't change—and countless other factors. That is, happiness is a state of mind, and as such, can be intentional and strategic.
Regardless of your emotional set point, your everyday habits and choices—from the way you operate in a friendship to how you reflect on your life decisions—can push the needle on your well-being. Recent scholarship documenting the unique habits of those who are happiest in life even provides something of an instruction manual for emulating them. It turns out that activities that lead us to feel uncertainty, discomfort, and even a dash of guilt are associated with some of the most memorable and enjoyable experiences of people's lives. Happy people, it seems, engage in a wide range of counterintuitive habits that seem, well, downright unhappy.
So Happiness not money happiness to do what you love to do in your life any time you need :)
Happiness is love. Sharing. Making the world better. Following your passions.
Money can be a good start-up though, as lots of money can prevent you from having to work much too much to focus on the important parts of life.
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I agree with you but people now the first concern in the money .
How to gain money ? and if we think like this is this case we will fell unhappy :)
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I agree. I currently have three forms of passive income. See my post:
https://steemit.com/cryptocurrency/@ericwoelk/everybody-including-you-can-have-passive-income-starting-today
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@ericwoelk I'm not so sure about your site I have bad experience before with similar sites so good luck
I'm trying to be happy be doing what I like and
Thanks
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This post received a 4.5% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @ericwoelk! For more information, click here!
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This post received a 3.1% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @ericwoelk! For more information, click here!
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Love the end part most memorable enjoyable experiences from being naughty lol ..food for thought... 😇
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LOL thanks for your reply :)
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Nice Post!Follow you
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thanks I appreciate that
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