Want to be Happy? Breaks this 13 Habbits
“Happiness depends upon ourselves.” – Aristotle
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All of wants to be happy in life. But attaining it seems like a very difficult task.
Psychologists at the University of California have
discovered some fascinating things about happiness that could change
your life.
Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky is a psychology professor at the
Riverside campus. She began studying happiness as a grad student and never
stopped, devoting her career to the subject.
One of her main
discoveries is that we all have a happiness “set point.” When extremely
positive or negative events happen -- such as buying a bigger house or
losing a job -- they temporarily increase or decrease our happiness, but
we eventually drift back to our set point.
The breakthrough in
Dr. Lyubomirsky’s research is that you can make yourself happier permanently.
Lyubomirsky and others have found that our genetic set
point is responsible for only about 50 percent of our happiness, life
circumstances affect about 10 percent, and a whopping 40 percent is
completely up to us. The large portion of your happiness that you
control is determined by your habits, attitude, and outlook on life.
Even
when you accomplish something great, that high won’t last. It won’t
make you happy on its own; you have to work to make and keep yourself
happy.
Your
happiness, or lack thereof, is rooted in your habits. Permanently
adopting new habits - especially those that involve intangibles, such
as how you see the world - is hard, but breaking the habits that make
you unhappy is much easier.
There are numerous bad habits that
tend to make us unhappy. Eradicating these bad habits can move your
happiness set point in short order.
1. Immunity to awe.
Amazing
things happen around you every day if you only know where to look.
Technology has exposed us to so much and made the world so much smaller.
Yet, there’s a downside that isn’t spoken of much: exposure raises the
bar on what it takes to be awestricken. And that’s a shame, because few
things are as uplifting as experiencing true awe. True awe is humbling.
It reminds us that we’re not the center of the universe. Awe is also
inspiring and full of wonder, underscoring the richness of life and our
ability to both contribute to it and be captivated by it. It’s hard to
be happy when you just shrug your shoulders every time you see something
new.
2. Isolating yourself.
Isolating yourself from
social contact is a pretty common response to feeling unhappy, but
there’s a large body of research that says it’s the worst thing you can
do. This is a huge mistake, as socializing, even when you don’t enjoy
it, is great for your mood. We all have those days when we just want to
pull the covers over our heads and refuse to talk to anybody, but the
moment this becomes a tendency, it destroys your mood. Recognize that
when unhappiness is making you antisocial, you need to force yourself to
get out there and mingle. You’ll notice the difference right away.
3. Blaming.
We
need to feel in control of our lives in order to be happy, which is why
blaming is so incompatible with happiness. When you blame other people
or circumstances for the bad things that happen to you, you’ve decided
that you have no control over your life, which is terrible for your
mood.
4. Controlling.
It’s hard to be happy without
feeling in control of your life, but you can take this too far in the
other direction by making yourself unhappy through trying to control too
much. This is especially true with people. The only person you can
control in your life is you. When you feel that nagging desire to
dictate other people’s behavior, this will inevitably blow up in your
face and make you unhappy. Even if you can control someone in the short
term, it usually requires pressure in the form of force or fear, and
treating people this way won’t leave you feeling good about yourself.
5. Criticizing.
Judging
other people and speaking poorly of them is a lot like overindulging in
a decadent dessert; it feels good while you’re doing it, but
afterwards, you feel guilty and sick. Sociopaths find real pleasure in
being mean. For the rest of us, criticizing other people (even privately
or to ourselves) is just a bad habit that’s intended to make us feel
better about ourselves. Unfortunately, it doesn’t. It just creates a
spiral of negativity.
6. Complaining.
Complaining is
troubling, as well as the attitude that precedes it. Complaining is a
self-reinforcing behavior. By constantly talking -- and therefore
thinking -- about how bad things are, you reaffirm your negative
beliefs. While talking about what bothers you can help you feel better,
there’s a fine line between complaining being therapeutic and it fueling
unhappiness. Beyond making you unhappy, complaining drives other people
away.
7. Impressing.
People will like your clothes, your
car, and your fancy job, but that doesn’t mean they like you. Trying to
impress other people is a source of unhappiness, because it doesn’t get
to the source of what makes you happy -- finding people who like you
and accept you for who you are. All the things you acquire in the quest
to impress people won’t make you happy either. There’s an ocean of
research that shows that material things don’t make you happy. When you
make a habit of chasing things, you are likely to become unhappy
because, beyond the disappointment you experience once you get them, you
discover that you’ve gained them at the expense of the real things that
can make you happy, such as friends, family, and taking good care of
yourself.
8. Negativity.
Life won’t always go the way you
want it to, but when it comes down to it, you have the same 24 hours in
the day as everyone else. Happy people make their time count. Instead
of complaining about how things could have been or should have been,
they reflect on everything they have to be grateful for. Then they find
the best solution available to the problem, tackle it, and move on.
Nothing fuels unhappiness quite like pessimism. The problem with a
pessimistic attitude, apart from the damage it does to your mood, is
that it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy: if you expect bad things,
you’re more likely to get bad things. Pessimistic thoughts are hard to
shake off until you recognize how illogical they are. Force yourself to
look at the facts, and you’ll see that things are not nearly as bad as
they seem.
9. Hanging around negative people.
Complainers
and negative people are bad news because they wallow in their problems
and fail to focus on solutions. They want people to join their pity
party so that they can feel better about themselves. People often feel
pressure to listen to complainers because they don’t want to be seen as
callous or rude, but there’s a fine line between lending a sympathetic
ear and getting sucked into their negative emotional spirals. You can
avoid getting drawn in only by setting limits and distancing yourself
when necessary.
Think of it this way: If a person were smoking, would
you sit there all afternoon inhaling the second-hand smoke? You’d
distance yourself, and you should do the same with negative people. A
great way to set limits is to ask them how they intend to fix their
problems. The complainer will then either quiet down or redirect the
conversation in a productive direction.
You should strive to
surround yourself with people who inspire you, people who make you want
to be better, and you probably do. But what about the people who drag
you down? Why do you allow them to be a part of your life? Anyone who
makes you feel worthless, anxious, or uninspired is wasting your time
and, quite possibly, making you more like them. Life is too short to
associate with people like this. Cut them loose.
10. Comparing your own life to the lives people portray on social media.
The
Happiness Research Institute conducted the Facebook Experiment to find
out how our social media habits affect our happiness. Half of the
study’s participants kept using Facebook as they normally would, while
the other half stayed off Facebook for a week. The results were
striking. At the end of the week, the participants who stayed off
Facebook reported a significantly higher degree of satisfaction with
their lives and lower levels of sadness and loneliness. The researchers
also concluded that people on Facebook were 55% more likely to feel
stress as a result.
The thing to remember about Facebook and
social media in general is that they rarely represent reality. Social
media provides an airbrushed, color-enhanced look at the lives people
want to portray. I’m not suggesting that you give up social media; just
take it sparingly and with a grain of salt.
11. Neglecting to set goals.
Having
goals gives you hope and the ability to look forward to a better
future, and working towards those goals makes you feel good about
yourself and your abilities. It’s important to set goals that are
challenging, specific (and measurable), and driven by your personal
values. Without goals, instead of learning and improving yourself, you
just plod along wondering why things never change.
12. Giving in to fear.
Fear
is nothing more than a lingering emotion that’s fueled by your
imagination.Danger is real. It’s the uncomfortable rush of adrenaline
you get when you almost step in front of a bus. Fear is a choice. Happy
people know this better than anyone does, so they flip fear on its head.
They are addicted to the euphoric feeling they get from conquering
their fears.
When all is said and done, you will lament the
chances you didn’t take far more than you will your failures. Don’t be
afraid to take risks. I often hear people say, “What’s the worst thing
that can happen to you? Will it kill you?” Yet, death isn’t the worst
thing that can happen to you. The worst thing that can happen to you is
allowing yourself to die inside while you’re still alive.
13. Leaving the present.
Like
fear, the past and the future are products of your mind. No amount of
guilt can change the past, and no amount of anxiety can change the
future. Happy people know this, so they focus on living in the present
moment. It’s impossible to reach your full potential if you’re
constantly somewhere else, unable to fully embrace the reality (good or
bad) of the very moment. To live in the moment, you must do two things:
1)
Accept your past. If you don’t make peace with your past, it will never
leave you and it will create your future. Happy people know that the
only good reason to look at the past is to see how far you’ve come.
2)
Accept the uncertainty of the future, and don’t place unnecessary
expectations upon yourself. Worry has no place in the here and now. As
Mark Twain once said, “Worrying is like paying a debt you don’t owe.”
Bringing It All Together
We
can’t control our genes, and we can’t control all of our circumstances,
but we can rid ourselves of habits that serve no purpose other than to
make us miserable.
Source : https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/274438
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