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By Kelly Main

And no, it doesn’t involve yoga, meditation, diet, or exercise.

Happiness is a universal desire. Yet it’s something most people struggle to find, never mind sustain, says Dr. Nathaniel Daw, a professor in neuroscience at Princeton University. According to his research, published by Medical News Today, humans are wired for unhappiness. But this predisposition is anything but a prognosis.

As elusive as happiness may be, it doesn’t have to feel like a lifelong rabbit hunt where happiness springs up from nowhere as quickly as it disappears. The secret to finding happiness isn’t as much about knowing where to look for it, as it is knowing how to look at it, says AngelList co-founder, Naval Ravikant.

According to Ravikant, it was his ability to find happiness that helped him build a successful startup and become the billionaire he is today. Because success isn’t a path to happiness. Happiness is a path to success. And research proves it.

Time and time again, studies show that happiness increases your odds of success. It helps explain how Elon Musk notoriously works 120 hours per week–becoming one of the most successful entrepreneurs of our time and the richest person in the world.

In other words, the happier you are, the more likely you are to be successful. Ravikant says there are a few simple things anyone can do to hack happiness–no matter how pessimistic you might naturally be.

Desire is suffering

While there is a benefit to innate unhappiness and dissatisfaction that is derived from a desire for more, Dr. Daw says this also “comes at the expense of constantly devaluing what we already have achieved, which the authors suggest might, taken to extremes, relate to depression.”

In other words, our desires serve as conditions for happiness. And we have all of these conditions for happiness that we have constructed.

Maybe we want more money, a nicer car, five-star vacations, a boss that recognizes our talents, an endlessly doting partner, a family that effortlessly gets along, or in-laws that don’t get on our nerves. But as long as we have these external gatekeepers to happiness, we’ll be hard-pressed to find happiness within ourselves.

Focus on one desire at a time

The problem then becomes, Ravikant says, that we have too many desires.

Limit your focus to one desire in order to achieve it. In this case, that one desire is happiness. So the question becomes, “does this ultimately lead me toward happiness?” When we field everything we do through a lens of whether or not our actions or thoughts help us or hinder us in the pursuit of our utmost desire, we set ourselves up for success.

Take for example a very mundane task such as taking out the garbage. No one enjoys doing it, but it does lend to our overall happiness as the alternative would ultimately lead to living in squalor–something no one truly enjoys.

Make happiness a priority

To quote Confucius: “The healthy man has 10,000 desires, but the sick man has just one.”

It illustrates that when things get difficult, we are able to eliminate the noise and clearly focus on what is important. In a dire position, priorities become obvious. But we don’t have to wait for an illness or a grim prognosis to prioritize happiness.

Entrepreneurs often fall prey to prioritization mismanagement. With so many (big) ideas, they are often left thinly spread. By doing a little of everything, like a jack of all trades, they turn into a master of none–goals and happiness included.

It’s this lack of prioritizing what matters most that drives many startups (and founders) into the ground.

Increase happiness through framing

There are two ways of seeing just about anything. This means that we can choose happiness by framing it the right way.

For example, consider a colleague who forwards you a number of emails you don’t need. You could think it’s obnoxious and that they don’t have any discernment (or even respect for your time). But you could frame it as though they are being considerate and keeping you in the loop, or that they are kindly giving you the power to decide which of the emails are of value to you.

It’s a process that eliminates negative judgment. It may not come as second nature in concept, but in practice it can. Soon we begin to look at the world through a positive lens, rather than a negative one, which shapes our experiences and our overall happiness.

Every entrepreneur seeks massive success, and yet to amass success, you need to amass happiness. The two go hand in hand, because while success does not equate to happiness, happiness is, by and large, success.

Feature Image Credit: Getty Images

By Kelly Main

Sourced from Inc.

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As counterintuitive as it might sound, chasing happiness so closely could be making us miserable.

t’s a reasonable guess that most people want to be happy. “The pursuit of happiness” is even enshrined as a basic right in the Declaration of Independence, suggesting that whatever road gets you to “happy” — whether it’s daily morning runs, reading with the kids, dinner and drinks with friends or a simple five minutes of silence — is a road you’re entitled to take.

But in the midst of a global pandemic, with hundreds of thousands of lives lost, rampant unemployment and a general lingering air of uncertainty, many no doubt find it harder than ever to grasp even glimmers of happiness, an already elusive state. Even before COVID-19 disrupted everything, levels of happiness had been dropping, indicators suggested. Self-reported happiness in the US, for example, has been declining since the 1990s, according to 2019’s General Social Survey, which gathers data on how Americans feel about a range of topics.

Perhaps more so now, it’s easy to get dialled in — maybe too dialled in — to questions of whether you’re happy, why you’re not and how you could be.

“It almost feels a little bit like a burden,” says Iris Mauss, a psychology professor at UC Berkeley. “Each person, as we’re able to pursue happiness — there’s the baggage associated with that. We’re also then responsible for our own happiness and making that happen.”

Somewhere in there lies a tipping point. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to be happy. But a body of research also shows that chasing happiness, whatever that means to you, might actually be making you miserable.

What even is happiness?

Going at least as far back as the Greeks, defining happiness has been something of a million-dollar question.

Greek philosopher Democritus (460 BC–370 BC) thought happiness had to do with a “man’s cast of mind.” Plato thought it was the “enjoyment of what is good and beautiful,” while Aristotle thought it had to do with living in accordance with virtue.

More recently, Eleanor Roosevelt said “happiness is not a goal, it is a by product.”

And putting it simply, Peanuts creator Charles M. Schulz said happiness is a warm puppy.

In the past, “people associated happiness more with what fate bestows on you, and that changed across time as people mastered their environments more and had more say in their circumstances,” says Pelin Kesebir, assistant scientist at the Center for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, “Especially in the West, in more developed countries, we see happiness as something that is probably more under our control.”

For researchers, happiness breaks down into two categories: hedonic and eudaimonic. Hedonic, explains Brock Bastain, social psychologist at the Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences in Australia, refers to pleasure and the concept that the more pleasure we have, the happier we are. Eudaimonic is a broader idea of happiness, or well being. It’s the notion that happiness is experienced through social connections, or the meaningful pursuit of goals or activities.

Scientists don’t even agree on the function of happiness. For some of them, happiness promotes social bonds that build communities, and drives people toward their goals and even makes them more creative. For others, it’s uncertain whether emotions as a whole are the result of some evolutionary mechanism or are a psychological construct, says Maya Tamir, professor of psychology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Happiness for the sake of happiness

The idea that longing for happiness could make you unhappy sounds counterintuitive.

But as Mauss explains, there’s a point at which placing too much value on being happy creates an expectation that’s too high. The unmet expectation leads to disappointment.

“If … our goal is to feel happy all the time, we have set ourselves up for failure from the outset,” says Kesebir.

If this chain were applied to a goal, like making more money or getting a better grade on a test, the disappointment could serve as a motivator. But being happy isn’t a concrete, objective goal like getting an A. There’s a lot more room to fall short of the expectation.

Consider the impact advertising can have on how happy people think they feel. It’s the ads that suggest a new car with a quiet interior, or a phone with the latest features, will unlock a happy life with smiling friends and fluffy dogs. Or the carefully curated social media posts from joyful friends on sunny beaches that make it seem like life should always be a vacation

Researchers at the University of Warwick looked at life satisfaction survey data from 27 countries in Europe from 1980 through 2011, as well as advertising spending, and found that when ad spending in a country went up, so did dissatisfaction within a year or two.

While the findings were correlational, researcher Andrew Oswald told the Harvard Business Review in 2019, “exposing people to a lot of advertising raises their aspirations — and makes them feel that their own lives, achievements, belongings, and experiences are inadequate.”

Mauss believes that when people are too single-minded about their own happiness, they can often neglect relationships with others. Perhaps chasing that big promotion at work will yield a new swimming pool, but it could also come at the expense of family time. Not only that, but the more people single-mindedly focus on something, such as questions around their own happiness, the more they risk a “watched kettle never boils” situation.

“As we ask and judge our experiences, that also might interfere with actually being happy,” she says. “The happiest experiences we have are actually those, in retrospect, when we didn’t even think about it.”

Research suggests those who accept their emotions, even if those emotions are negative, end up feeling happier overall, Tamir says. For some, negative emotions can feel like failure, and even create a dread and avoidance of unhappiness, when in reality it’s just part of being human.

In a paper Mauss co-authored in 2017, researchers found that “individuals who accept rather than judge their mental experiences may attain better psychological health,” because they had less negative emotion in response to stressors.

“In the West if you don’t feel happy enough, you say to yourself, ‘Hey, there’s something wrong with me’ and then you end up feeling worse,” Tamir says.

Feeling bad is normal, unavoidable. Feeling bad about feeling bad is where things can get dicey.

A healthy pursuit

None of this is to say that happiness, or wanting to be happy, is bad, or will ultimately lead to unhappiness.

Research conducted in 2015 by Mauss, Tamir and others suggest that the desire for happiness was universal. People in the US aren’t more or less focused on achieving happiness compared with, say, people in Japan. But they pursue happiness differently.

In Western countries, the pursuit is more individualistic. Americans’ definition of happiness has less to do with relationships and spending time with friends, family or helping others. They are less social in their pursuit of happiness, Mauss says. They run into a paradox: finding disappointment when chasing happiness.

Bastain says that in societies that place more of a premium on individualism, the pursuit of happiness has become more central to people’s lives.

“[The] idea that we are responsible for our own well being and our own happiness, and therefore our happiness and our well being is an indicator of our personal success, has become prominent,” he says.

Japanese and Taiwanese participants, however, operated differently.

“They could be obsessed with happiness all they wanted, presumably because they understood happiness as a social thing,” she says.

In that way, research suggests that focusing on relationships, hobbies and goals is what yields happiness as a by product.

“If I focus on things in life which I know are likely to lead to happiness, but don’t make happiness itself a goal — focusing on connecting with others, contributing well to society, to other people’s lives, engaging in meaningful pursuits, those things will bring happiness,” Bastain says.

Editors’ note: This story is part of a CNET special report on the science of happiness. For more, read about what science teaches us about happinesshow to boost your happiness hormones; and how a range of people are finding moments of happiness during the pandemic

The information contained in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as health or medical advice. Always consult a physician or other qualified health provider regarding any questions you may have about a medical condition or health objectives.

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