Category Archives: Core Values

How Can I Be Happy?

How can I be happy? Wow – that’s a big one… Just asking this question means you’re on the right path, you’re examining your life, so good job! It’s also a question without a simple answer. In the end, each of us must unravel this riddle for ourselves, but know that happiness can be practiced and developed. It is absolutely possible to become a happier person.

First, how do you define happiness? There’s a misperception that happiness is feeling wonderful all the time, some kind of bliss. But that’s not true. I sometimes think of it as what it isn’t. An absence of fear, anger, anxiety… The state where things are good simply because there is an absence of bad. Some call it spiritual happiness where we feel at peace and content with ourselves and our lives. Others believe that living a life with purpose is the real key to “happiness.”

A good place to start is understanding the difference between what we can change and what we can’t. What we have influence over and what we do not. Time is our most valuable commodity and is spent with attention. Qui-Gon Jinn was spot on when he said, “your focus determines your reality.” Jedi wisdom for sure. Our attention has a huge impact on how we experience the world.

Next, focus on what you control. The biggest thing we control is our response. While we don’t have a lot of impact over what happens to us, we have a real choice over how we respond. You can choose to take a few breaths before you respond since it may allow your initial emotions to subside, especially if feeling angry or frustrated.

So, what deserves your focus and attention? One option is to begin with gratitude – for both the big and small things. It’s an easy and effective way to become happier. Simply spend your attention on the good things. And what even makes something “bad?” Perhaps it’s actually an opportunity to learn, grow and become stronger. Maybe that “bad” event turns out to be the best thing which ever happened to you. It all depends on how you respond…

As we dig deeper, it makes sense that to enjoy the present, we actually need to be IN the present. Most of us are constantly engaged in self chat, where we are stuck in a discussion with ourselves, often thinking about the past or the future and just drifting through the present. Sure, it’s important to learn from the past and prepare for the future, but we only live in the present. You may be anxious about an upcoming trip or upset about past performance, which means you’re not in the present. Worrying too much about something which hasn’t happened is volunteering to be miserable.

The present is a continuous string of events – it’s impossible to hold on to them as they are like grains of sand flowing through your fingertips. But if you slow down and focus your attention and awareness, you can catch a glimpse of something wonderful. A perfect pitch. The sweet sound of a barreled ball. The comfort of a hug, joy in a smile, beauty of a sunset… And then you feel it. You’re at peace. Even if just for a moment. Connecting with the present. And you’re content – you’re happy.

Happiness can be learned and practiced. Build good routines and habits. And cut yourself some slack. Don’t be so hard on yourself. Forgive others, but more importantly, forgive yourself and keep trying. We are human and imperfect, with good days and bad. Sometimes we just need to get through the day knowing that tomorrow always brings something new. And if all else fails, just smile. Really, try it. 😊

Things to try, find something that works for you:

  1. Deep breathing
  2. Meditation
  3. Stoicism
  4. Gratitude practice
  5. Journal
  6. Exercise
  7. Friends
  8. Sleep
  9. Time outside
  10. Screen limits
  11. Spirituality
  12. Stop judging
  13. Work hard and with a purpose

Links:

  1. TED Talk – How to Be Happy Every Day
  2. Dalai Lama’s Guide to Happiness
  3. Tim Ferriss – Happiness
  4. Naval Ravikant – Happiness

Stoicism – life philosophy

We can’t control what happens to us, but we can control how we respond. Someone cuts you off in traffic – you can choose how to respond. Do you get angry? Do you view things from a different perspective? Do you just blow it off and not give it a 2nd thought? You can choose how to respond. Don’t get picked for an all-star team? Didn’t get the job you desperately wanted? How do you respond? Do you view things as unfair and unjust, rage and get angry? Or do you focus on what you control, get motivated to practice more, try harder, look for other opportunities?

OK – easier said than done. A few tips: Take a breath after the initial event. Slow down. Consider different perspectives. Don’t take things personally. View life through the lens of gratitude and opportunity. It’s generally draining an unproductive to feel angry. Remind yourself that no one makes you feel a certain way. You can choose differently. And just keep trying…


Ryan Holiday states it clearly, “the single most important practice in Stoic philosophy is differentiating between what we can change and what we can’t. What we have influence over and what we do not.” The more we are aware of this key difference, the better we can use our time, focus our attention, control our worry and anxiety, etc. Our minds are an endless stream of self talk, chatter, noise. Stoicism helps filter through the mass of useless, counterproductive thoughts and hone in on what’s truly important. Attention is a valuable and limited commodity – spend it deliberately.

One of the most iconic stoics is the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius. He journaled constantly in Meditations. These were his private thoughts. He didn’t write them down for anyone else, but for himself. To remind himself of what was important. What he could influence. What deserved his attention. This stuff’s hard – that’s why we practice.

Finally, Tim Ferriss explained stoicism as an operating system for thriving in high stress situations. It’s worth exploring.


Pale Blue Dot – Perspective

pale-blue-dot

There are more stars in our Universe than there are grains of sand on all the beaches of Earth.  And conversely, a single grain of sand has more atoms than there are stars in the Universe…  How can we process our own insignificance in the backdrop of these perspective shattering facts?

As many of us struggle with the greater questions on the meaning of life, the pursuit of happiness and purpose, this question is both meaningless and our road to salvation.

When we examine the profound statements of Carl Sagan, he eloquently reflects on how “[o]ur planet is a lonely spec in the great enveloping cosmic dark.”  He challenges us to:

“Look again at that dot.  That’s here. That’s home.  That’s us.  On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives.  The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every “superstar,” every “supreme leader,” every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there-on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.”

I’m not really sure how to process something which so completely obliterates my limited perspective…  But it seems there is some kind of grace in pushing forward exactly because of this truth.  Continuing to strive for decency, to practice compassion and empathy with the complete understanding that it both doesn’t matter and is the only thing which matters.  It matters for the same reason that one should strive to do the right thing when no one is looking.

So, what’s the practical lesson?  Well, at a minimum, it’s a tool to help us “get a grip” the next time we are quick to anger or frustration over what is guaranteed to be something insignificant, because it’s all insignificant.  And it’s a reminder that striving to do the right thing must be it’s own reward.  To quiet the internal voices of discord and bring some level of inner calm.  So, even from a purely self interested perspective,  one should embrace our own insignificance.

 

Additional Reading

Align your time with your values – live deliberately.

There can be no confusion, time is our most valuable currency.  This non renewable commodity can be exchanged for almost anything, but curiously is most commonly traded for money.

People often say they would have done things differently in hindsight, but we ignore the power of foresight.  Time must be spent in furtherance of our goals.  Bill Gates is reported to have said that “[m]ost people overestimate what they can do in one year and underestimate what they can do in ten years.”  Just imagine what you can accomplish in a lifetime…

Don’t fritter away your precious few grains of sand, but spend them deliberately, in furtherance and alignment with your values.

Additional Reading