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Why Happiness Might Be Overrated and What to Aim for Instead
Manage episode 482907987 series 2998452
Have you ever felt like youâre supposed to be happy all the time? Like lifeâs one big Instagram reel of sunny beaches, perfect coffee, and nonstop smilesâand youâre somehow failing if youâre not there yet? I get it. Iâve been there, staring at my phone, wondering why my Tuesday night takeout doesnât feel like a victory lap. Weâre told happiness is the ultimate prizeâchase it, grab it, hold it tight. But what if thatâs the wrong target? What if chasing happiness is like chasing a mirageâshimmery, tempting, but always just out of reach?
Hereâs a thought that might shake things up: happiness isnât the goal. Itâs a fleeting guest, not a permanent roommate. And honestly, thatâs okay. Two thinkers from way backâAristotle from ancient Greece and Lao Tzu from ancient Chinaâhad some ideas that cut through the noise. They didnât chase fleeting joy; they aimed for something deeper: balance and self-awareness. This isnât about slapping on a fake smile or buying into the âgood vibes onlyâ trap. Itâs about building a life that feels real, grounded, and worth living, even when the dishes are piling up or life throws a curveball.
So, letâs unpack this. Grab a coffee, a tea, or just a quiet corner, and letâs talk about why happiness might be overratedâand what to aim for instead.
The Happiness Mirage: Why It Keeps Slipping Away
Think about the last time you got something you really wantedâa new gadget, a raise, maybe a killer vacation. Felt amazing, right? For a minute, youâre on top of the world. But then the shine wears off. The phoneâs just a phone. The raise comes with more emails. The vacation tan fades, and youâre back to traffic jams and laundry. What gives?
Psychologists call this the hedonic treadmill. Itâs the idea that no matter how big the winâor the lossâyou tend to slide back to your usual mood pretty fast. Studies show lottery winners are thrilled at first, but within a year, most are about as happy as they were before the jackpot. Same with tough stuffâpeople adapt, even after major setbacks. Itâs like our brains are wired to reset, keeping us hungry for the next âhappyâ hit.
Whyâs this a problem? Because weâve been sold a story that happiness is out there, waiting in the next purchase, job, or relationship. Ever bought something online, thinking, âThis is gonna make me feel awesomeââonly to realize itâs just⌠stuff? Or maybe youâve scrolled social media, seeing everyoneâs highlight reelâweddings, promotions, avocado toastâand felt like youâre missing out. Thatâs the mirage in action. It looks real, but itâs not built to last.
And hereâs the kicker: when you expect to be happy all the time, every off day feels like a personal failure. You start wondering, âWhatâs wrong with me?â Iâve been there, beating myself up because I wasnât grinning through a stressful week at work. Itâs exhausting, and it can make you feel like youâre doing life wrong.
Thanks for reading Paragon Legacies! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
Aristotleâs Big Idea: Flourish, Donât Just Chase Feelings
Letâs take a trip back to ancient Greece and sit with Aristotle for a minute. This guy wasnât into chasing warm fuzzies. He talked about something called eudaimonia, which gets translated as âhappinessâ but is really about flourishingâliving your fullest, truest life. Itâs not about feeling good every second; itâs about being a person you respect, even when lifeâs messy.
How do you get there? Aristotleâs got a plan: virtue and the golden mean. Virtueâs about building characterâthink honesty, courage, kindness. But the golden mean is where it gets practical. Itâs about balanceâfinding the sweet spot between too much and too little. Take courage: charging into every argument is reckless, but dodging every tough talk is cowardly. The middle ground? Knowing when to speak up, like telling a friend theyâve hurt you, and when to let it slide.
Or think about work-life balance. Ever gone all-in on a job, staying late, skipping workouts, only to crash and burn? I have. I used to pull 12-hour days, thinking itâd make me âsuccessfulâ (and yeah, happy). Spoiler: I was a zombie. Then I started setting boundariesâleaving at 6 p.m., taking walks, saying no to extra projects. I wasnât bouncing with joy, but I felt solid, like I was building something real. Thatâs the golden meanâstretching yourself without snapping.
Whatâs cool about Aristotleâs idea is itâs not about quick fixes. Itâs about asking, âWho do I want to be?â Maybe you want to be patient. Next time youâre stuck in traffic, instead of cursing, try breathing and letting it go. Small moves like that add up, making you feel like youâre steering your life, not just riding the waves.
Lao Tzuâs Wisdom: Flow Like Water, Donât Fight the Current
Now, letâs hop over to ancient China and chill with Lao Tzu, the master of Taoism. His big idea is the Taoâthe natural flow of life. Instead of wrestling with every twist and turn, he says to roll with it. His secret? Wu wei, or âeffortless action.â Itâs not about being lazy; itâs about moving with lifeâs rhythm, like a river carving its path without forcing it.
For Lao Tzu, chasing happiness is like trying to grab waterâit slips through your fingers. The more you fight for it, the more stressed you get. Instead, heâd say, âLet go.â Stop obsessing over the perfect plan or outcome. When youâre in tune with yourself and the moment, peace shows up on its own.
Ever had a day where you stopped stressing and things just clicked? I remember planning an outdoor program down to the last detailâsnacks, playlist, weather checks. Then it poured. I was pissed, ready to cancel. But my friend said, âLetâs just go.â We got soaked, slipped in mud, laughed like idiots. It wasnât the âhappyâ day Iâd pictured, but it felt right. Thatâs wu weiâletting life happen and finding the magic in it.
Or think about a time you over planned somethingâa dinner, a projectâand it flopped. Now imagine just going with the flow, like cooking whateverâs in the fridge or tackling work one step at a time. Itâs not about giving up; itâs about trusting that life doesnât need to be forced into a box. Lao Tzuâs vibe is freedomâless control, more ease.
The Dark Side of Chasing Happiness
Letâs face it: the chase for happiness can feel like a never-ending hamster wheel that only leaves you more exhausted, frustrated, and convinced that something is wrong with you. Everywhere you turn, youâre told to visualize your dream life, fill gratitude journals first thing in the morning, and recite affirmations until the mirror cracksâbut when you inevitably wake up tired, grumpy, or simply âoff,â that relentless messaging makes you wonder whether youâre defective. Iâve been there: dragging myself through a day of back-to back calls, feeling the familiar knot of anxiety tightening in my chest, and thinking, âWhy canât I just be happy?â The guilt that follows is a cruel irony feeling broken for what is, at its core, a perfectly normal emotional experience.
Then thereâs the seductive promise that a new car, a promotion, or that ârightâ person will finally unlock lasting joy. I once landed what I thought was my dream job prestigious title, hefty paycheck, the worksâand for about ten glorious minutes I floated on genuine excitement. But as the novelty wore off, the email avalanche began, deadlines piled up, and I realized I still felt hollow. It wasnât the jobâs fault no job can fill the gaps youâre trying to fill but pinning your happiness on those external markers is like building your emotional house on stilts: one wobble and youâre left scrambling to stay upright.
And letâs talk about toxic positivity. After a brutal breakup, a chorus of well-meaning voices urged me to âjust stay positiveâ or âyou deserve someone better.â Those platitudes felt as useful as a band aid on a broken leg. What I needed was space to sit with the ache, to curse the ceiling at 2 a.m., to learn what the pain was teaching me about my own boundaries and needs. Science tells us that processing grief, anger, and doubt is what builds resilience; stuffing those feelings down only plants the seeds of burnout and disconnection.
Of course, many of us respond by diving headfirst into the next self-help craze meditation apps, vision boards, dopamine detoxes as if unchecked enthusiasm for âhappiness hacksâ will break the cycle. In reality, you end up policing your every thought did I meditate long enough today? Am I journaling deeply enough? until joy becomes another item on a to do list. Itâs ironic that in the frantic pursuit of euphoria, we often lose sight of the present moment where contentment actually lives.
True well-being, Iâve learned, isnât a destination you arrive at by ticking off an Instagram-approved checklist. Itâs the byproduct of a life lived honestly: wrestling with hard truths, investing in relationships without guarantee of perfection, showing up for work and play regardless of the outcome, and granting yourself permission to feel, fully and without apology. When you stop hunting for happiness and instead cultivate curiosity about your own messy, beautiful interior world, contentment begins to emergeânot as a forced performance, but as the quiet accompaniment to a life fully embraced. A gentle reminder, then: itâs okay to be human. Embrace the whole spectrum of your experience, and youâll find that joy is far more resilientâand far more surprisingâthan you ever imagined.
The Better Path: Balance and Self-Awareness
So, if happiness is a flaky friend, whatâs the move? Aristotle and Lao Tzu point to balance and self-awareness. Itâs not about confetti or viral momentsâitâs about building a life that feels steady and true. Hereâs how to make it work:
* Focus on who you are, not how you feel. Pick a trait you admireâmaybe kindness or gritâand lean into it. Next time someone cuts you off in traffic, try a small act of patience, like letting it go instead of honking. Itâs not about feeling happy; itâs about liking who youâre becoming.
* Find the middle ground. Extremes burn you out. All work? Youâre a husk. All play? Youâre broke. Ask yourself, âWhere am I overdoing it?â If youâre glued to your desk, carve out an hour for a walk. If youâre binge-watching life away, set one goal for the day. Balance feels like a deep breath.
* Know yourself. Take a minute to ask, âWhat lights me up? What drags me down?â I did this after a soul-sucking jobârealized I love creating but hate micromanaging. So I shifted gears, took on projects I cared about. Not glamorous, but grounding. Try it: jot down one thing you love doing and one thing you dread. Start small.
* Roll with lifeâs punches. Plans flop? Adapt. Someone cancels? Enjoy the quiet. I learned this when a big presentation tankedâinstead of spiraling, I asked for feedback and moved on. Flexibility is power.
* Let happiness sneak in. Stop hunting it. Build a life aligned with your values, and joy will crash the party. I started saying no to stuff that drained meâlike endless social obligationsâand yes to quiet nights writing. Happiness showed up without me chasing it.
Try This: Small Steps to a Bigger Life
Ready to give it a go? Hereâs a starter kitâsimple, doable, no overhaul needed:
* Write a gratitude note. Each night, jot down three things that went okay: a good meal, a kind word, making it through a tough day. I started this when life felt heavyâit didnât fix everything, but it shifted my focus to whatâs already good.
* Breathe for five. Inhale for four seconds, exhale for four. Do it when stress hits. I use it when my inbox is a nightmareâcalms the storm in my head.
* Flex a virtue. Pick one, like generosity. Today, share a coffee with a coworker. Tomorrow, listen to a friend without interrupting. Small wins feel big over time.
* Drop a âshould.â Skip that guilt-trip gym session or extra chore. I ditched a âproductiveâ Sunday once, watched a movie instead. The world kept spinning.
* Dig deeper. Curious? Check out The Happiness Trap by Russ Harris for a modern take, or Lao Tzuâs Tao Te Ching for timeless wisdom. Audiobook it while you cookâinsights with your tacos.
The Bottom Line: Build a Life That Lasts
Happiness is a sparkler bright, fun, gone fast. Balance and self-awareness? Thatâs a campfire warm, steady, built to last. You wonât be grinning ear-to-ear every day, and thatâs fine. Lifeâs not a highlight reel; itâs a mix of grit, growth, and quiet wins.
Next time youâre tempted to chase that âhappyâ fixânew shoes, a viral post, whateverâpause. Ask yourself, âWhatâs deeper? Whatâs true for me?â Start small: say no to one thing, breathe through a tough moment, write down a win. Fulfillmentâs a slow burn, not a microwave meal. And trust me, itâs worth it.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fulfillmentobi.substack.com
71 episodes
Manage episode 482907987 series 2998452
Have you ever felt like youâre supposed to be happy all the time? Like lifeâs one big Instagram reel of sunny beaches, perfect coffee, and nonstop smilesâand youâre somehow failing if youâre not there yet? I get it. Iâve been there, staring at my phone, wondering why my Tuesday night takeout doesnât feel like a victory lap. Weâre told happiness is the ultimate prizeâchase it, grab it, hold it tight. But what if thatâs the wrong target? What if chasing happiness is like chasing a mirageâshimmery, tempting, but always just out of reach?
Hereâs a thought that might shake things up: happiness isnât the goal. Itâs a fleeting guest, not a permanent roommate. And honestly, thatâs okay. Two thinkers from way backâAristotle from ancient Greece and Lao Tzu from ancient Chinaâhad some ideas that cut through the noise. They didnât chase fleeting joy; they aimed for something deeper: balance and self-awareness. This isnât about slapping on a fake smile or buying into the âgood vibes onlyâ trap. Itâs about building a life that feels real, grounded, and worth living, even when the dishes are piling up or life throws a curveball.
So, letâs unpack this. Grab a coffee, a tea, or just a quiet corner, and letâs talk about why happiness might be overratedâand what to aim for instead.
The Happiness Mirage: Why It Keeps Slipping Away
Think about the last time you got something you really wantedâa new gadget, a raise, maybe a killer vacation. Felt amazing, right? For a minute, youâre on top of the world. But then the shine wears off. The phoneâs just a phone. The raise comes with more emails. The vacation tan fades, and youâre back to traffic jams and laundry. What gives?
Psychologists call this the hedonic treadmill. Itâs the idea that no matter how big the winâor the lossâyou tend to slide back to your usual mood pretty fast. Studies show lottery winners are thrilled at first, but within a year, most are about as happy as they were before the jackpot. Same with tough stuffâpeople adapt, even after major setbacks. Itâs like our brains are wired to reset, keeping us hungry for the next âhappyâ hit.
Whyâs this a problem? Because weâve been sold a story that happiness is out there, waiting in the next purchase, job, or relationship. Ever bought something online, thinking, âThis is gonna make me feel awesomeââonly to realize itâs just⌠stuff? Or maybe youâve scrolled social media, seeing everyoneâs highlight reelâweddings, promotions, avocado toastâand felt like youâre missing out. Thatâs the mirage in action. It looks real, but itâs not built to last.
And hereâs the kicker: when you expect to be happy all the time, every off day feels like a personal failure. You start wondering, âWhatâs wrong with me?â Iâve been there, beating myself up because I wasnât grinning through a stressful week at work. Itâs exhausting, and it can make you feel like youâre doing life wrong.
Thanks for reading Paragon Legacies! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
Aristotleâs Big Idea: Flourish, Donât Just Chase Feelings
Letâs take a trip back to ancient Greece and sit with Aristotle for a minute. This guy wasnât into chasing warm fuzzies. He talked about something called eudaimonia, which gets translated as âhappinessâ but is really about flourishingâliving your fullest, truest life. Itâs not about feeling good every second; itâs about being a person you respect, even when lifeâs messy.
How do you get there? Aristotleâs got a plan: virtue and the golden mean. Virtueâs about building characterâthink honesty, courage, kindness. But the golden mean is where it gets practical. Itâs about balanceâfinding the sweet spot between too much and too little. Take courage: charging into every argument is reckless, but dodging every tough talk is cowardly. The middle ground? Knowing when to speak up, like telling a friend theyâve hurt you, and when to let it slide.
Or think about work-life balance. Ever gone all-in on a job, staying late, skipping workouts, only to crash and burn? I have. I used to pull 12-hour days, thinking itâd make me âsuccessfulâ (and yeah, happy). Spoiler: I was a zombie. Then I started setting boundariesâleaving at 6 p.m., taking walks, saying no to extra projects. I wasnât bouncing with joy, but I felt solid, like I was building something real. Thatâs the golden meanâstretching yourself without snapping.
Whatâs cool about Aristotleâs idea is itâs not about quick fixes. Itâs about asking, âWho do I want to be?â Maybe you want to be patient. Next time youâre stuck in traffic, instead of cursing, try breathing and letting it go. Small moves like that add up, making you feel like youâre steering your life, not just riding the waves.
Lao Tzuâs Wisdom: Flow Like Water, Donât Fight the Current
Now, letâs hop over to ancient China and chill with Lao Tzu, the master of Taoism. His big idea is the Taoâthe natural flow of life. Instead of wrestling with every twist and turn, he says to roll with it. His secret? Wu wei, or âeffortless action.â Itâs not about being lazy; itâs about moving with lifeâs rhythm, like a river carving its path without forcing it.
For Lao Tzu, chasing happiness is like trying to grab waterâit slips through your fingers. The more you fight for it, the more stressed you get. Instead, heâd say, âLet go.â Stop obsessing over the perfect plan or outcome. When youâre in tune with yourself and the moment, peace shows up on its own.
Ever had a day where you stopped stressing and things just clicked? I remember planning an outdoor program down to the last detailâsnacks, playlist, weather checks. Then it poured. I was pissed, ready to cancel. But my friend said, âLetâs just go.â We got soaked, slipped in mud, laughed like idiots. It wasnât the âhappyâ day Iâd pictured, but it felt right. Thatâs wu weiâletting life happen and finding the magic in it.
Or think about a time you over planned somethingâa dinner, a projectâand it flopped. Now imagine just going with the flow, like cooking whateverâs in the fridge or tackling work one step at a time. Itâs not about giving up; itâs about trusting that life doesnât need to be forced into a box. Lao Tzuâs vibe is freedomâless control, more ease.
The Dark Side of Chasing Happiness
Letâs face it: the chase for happiness can feel like a never-ending hamster wheel that only leaves you more exhausted, frustrated, and convinced that something is wrong with you. Everywhere you turn, youâre told to visualize your dream life, fill gratitude journals first thing in the morning, and recite affirmations until the mirror cracksâbut when you inevitably wake up tired, grumpy, or simply âoff,â that relentless messaging makes you wonder whether youâre defective. Iâve been there: dragging myself through a day of back-to back calls, feeling the familiar knot of anxiety tightening in my chest, and thinking, âWhy canât I just be happy?â The guilt that follows is a cruel irony feeling broken for what is, at its core, a perfectly normal emotional experience.
Then thereâs the seductive promise that a new car, a promotion, or that ârightâ person will finally unlock lasting joy. I once landed what I thought was my dream job prestigious title, hefty paycheck, the worksâand for about ten glorious minutes I floated on genuine excitement. But as the novelty wore off, the email avalanche began, deadlines piled up, and I realized I still felt hollow. It wasnât the jobâs fault no job can fill the gaps youâre trying to fill but pinning your happiness on those external markers is like building your emotional house on stilts: one wobble and youâre left scrambling to stay upright.
And letâs talk about toxic positivity. After a brutal breakup, a chorus of well-meaning voices urged me to âjust stay positiveâ or âyou deserve someone better.â Those platitudes felt as useful as a band aid on a broken leg. What I needed was space to sit with the ache, to curse the ceiling at 2 a.m., to learn what the pain was teaching me about my own boundaries and needs. Science tells us that processing grief, anger, and doubt is what builds resilience; stuffing those feelings down only plants the seeds of burnout and disconnection.
Of course, many of us respond by diving headfirst into the next self-help craze meditation apps, vision boards, dopamine detoxes as if unchecked enthusiasm for âhappiness hacksâ will break the cycle. In reality, you end up policing your every thought did I meditate long enough today? Am I journaling deeply enough? until joy becomes another item on a to do list. Itâs ironic that in the frantic pursuit of euphoria, we often lose sight of the present moment where contentment actually lives.
True well-being, Iâve learned, isnât a destination you arrive at by ticking off an Instagram-approved checklist. Itâs the byproduct of a life lived honestly: wrestling with hard truths, investing in relationships without guarantee of perfection, showing up for work and play regardless of the outcome, and granting yourself permission to feel, fully and without apology. When you stop hunting for happiness and instead cultivate curiosity about your own messy, beautiful interior world, contentment begins to emergeânot as a forced performance, but as the quiet accompaniment to a life fully embraced. A gentle reminder, then: itâs okay to be human. Embrace the whole spectrum of your experience, and youâll find that joy is far more resilientâand far more surprisingâthan you ever imagined.
The Better Path: Balance and Self-Awareness
So, if happiness is a flaky friend, whatâs the move? Aristotle and Lao Tzu point to balance and self-awareness. Itâs not about confetti or viral momentsâitâs about building a life that feels steady and true. Hereâs how to make it work:
* Focus on who you are, not how you feel. Pick a trait you admireâmaybe kindness or gritâand lean into it. Next time someone cuts you off in traffic, try a small act of patience, like letting it go instead of honking. Itâs not about feeling happy; itâs about liking who youâre becoming.
* Find the middle ground. Extremes burn you out. All work? Youâre a husk. All play? Youâre broke. Ask yourself, âWhere am I overdoing it?â If youâre glued to your desk, carve out an hour for a walk. If youâre binge-watching life away, set one goal for the day. Balance feels like a deep breath.
* Know yourself. Take a minute to ask, âWhat lights me up? What drags me down?â I did this after a soul-sucking jobârealized I love creating but hate micromanaging. So I shifted gears, took on projects I cared about. Not glamorous, but grounding. Try it: jot down one thing you love doing and one thing you dread. Start small.
* Roll with lifeâs punches. Plans flop? Adapt. Someone cancels? Enjoy the quiet. I learned this when a big presentation tankedâinstead of spiraling, I asked for feedback and moved on. Flexibility is power.
* Let happiness sneak in. Stop hunting it. Build a life aligned with your values, and joy will crash the party. I started saying no to stuff that drained meâlike endless social obligationsâand yes to quiet nights writing. Happiness showed up without me chasing it.
Try This: Small Steps to a Bigger Life
Ready to give it a go? Hereâs a starter kitâsimple, doable, no overhaul needed:
* Write a gratitude note. Each night, jot down three things that went okay: a good meal, a kind word, making it through a tough day. I started this when life felt heavyâit didnât fix everything, but it shifted my focus to whatâs already good.
* Breathe for five. Inhale for four seconds, exhale for four. Do it when stress hits. I use it when my inbox is a nightmareâcalms the storm in my head.
* Flex a virtue. Pick one, like generosity. Today, share a coffee with a coworker. Tomorrow, listen to a friend without interrupting. Small wins feel big over time.
* Drop a âshould.â Skip that guilt-trip gym session or extra chore. I ditched a âproductiveâ Sunday once, watched a movie instead. The world kept spinning.
* Dig deeper. Curious? Check out The Happiness Trap by Russ Harris for a modern take, or Lao Tzuâs Tao Te Ching for timeless wisdom. Audiobook it while you cookâinsights with your tacos.
The Bottom Line: Build a Life That Lasts
Happiness is a sparkler bright, fun, gone fast. Balance and self-awareness? Thatâs a campfire warm, steady, built to last. You wonât be grinning ear-to-ear every day, and thatâs fine. Lifeâs not a highlight reel; itâs a mix of grit, growth, and quiet wins.
Next time youâre tempted to chase that âhappyâ fixânew shoes, a viral post, whateverâpause. Ask yourself, âWhatâs deeper? Whatâs true for me?â Start small: say no to one thing, breathe through a tough moment, write down a win. Fulfillmentâs a slow burn, not a microwave meal. And trust me, itâs worth it.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fulfillmentobi.substack.com
71 episodes
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