HAPPINESS

Happiness is the design and object of our existence, and will be the end thereof if we pursue the path that leads to it.” –Joseph Smith

People are about as happy as they make up their mind to be.” –Abraham Lincoln

People worry a lot about happiness. If they’d quit worrying about it and get on with doing what they need to be doing, they’d be a whole lot less unhappy”. -RC

 

20/20 News Program, January 2008

Determinants of Happiness

  1. 50% is in the genes, e.g. some people just seem to be “born happy”
  2. 10% is circumstances, e.g. childhood, looks, health, social status, where live
  3. 40% is intentional attitudes and choices, particularly:

Goals and their pursuit

Relationships, which requires the ability and effort to develop and maintain them

Positive meditation: Kind thoughts, compassion, counting blessings

Half hour each day can make the change in 2 weeks!

Fundamentals of Happiness

  1. Certain activities create feelings of happiness, e.g. socializing, praying, sex

Happiness is not a “state”; it comes a moment at a time, from things engaged in

Having kids was not shown necessarily to give happiness

  1. Money: Have enough, not too much [a little more than friends], and spend it well
  2. All happiness has some social basis: Not what you do, but who you do it with

The happiest people have a rich social life

  1. Have a life “calling”, or use sheer will to turn your work into one
  2. Develop “flow”. Easy to do with something you love; follow your bliss

Happiest places on earth [US is 23d]*

Denmark is the happiest country, despite 63% tax rate

Homogeneous society: 9 of 10 are full-blood Danes, 8 of 10 are Lutheran

All jobs have similar pay and status, and there is strong trust of each other

Everyone is well provided for, and there are few rich and little desire for it

As Muslims, and conflict, increase in the population, happiness is declining

92% of Danes belong to one or more gov’t-sponsored social clubs

Singapore has the happiest people in Asia

This despite the fact it has extremely strict laws and high taxes

E.g. beaten with a cane for spitting in public

Believe US has too much freedom!

The country is clean, safe, stable, and economically secure

Corruption is discouraged by paying top gov’t officials $1mm per year

The people are more materialistic than the Danes, and somewhat less content

There are some rich people, but they feel least secure, and want even more

Unhappiest places are where there is extreme poverty, instability, or insecurity

E. g. starving countries in Africa

Italians are least happy in Europe, because of total corruption

 

THE EFFECTS OF SUCCESS ON HAPPINESS

ABC News program, circa 1992

Americans who were interviewed expressed several expectations re happiness:

Most believe money is the key, but studies proved newly rich are only happy for about a year

Then, no matter how much they have, it is not enough and they want more

Many may spend compulsively to maintain their “happiness”, till bankrupt

Those who seek fame, as might be expected, are happy only as long as fame continues

Those who are ambitious are happy only as long as they continue to climb upward

Must continue to exceed the apparent success of others

All these things fail to bring real or lasting happiness

Contrary to these beliefs, several principles are conducive to continued real happiness:

Need to believe we have substantial control in our life

Found even among babies a few months old

Most important factor, ahead of money, for employees

Cannot feel in control unless accept responsibility for the things that happen to you

Need to be basically optimistic. Provides confidence one can deal with inevitable problems

With optimism, defeat spurs us on, rather than beating us down, and achievement follows

Need to work. Leisure is a curse to happiness; need meaningful activity

Need to get caught up in and experience challenge and the opportunity for achievement

While working in pursuit of other things, happiness happens

Need to have close relationships to which we are committed

Relationships, e.g. marriage, often break up when success occurs. Unhappiness follows

Need to believe something is more important than ourselves

Faith in God, and service to him, is a usual underpinning to all the other criteria for happiness

Gives sense of purpose and of commitment to something greater

MISCELLANY

Jean Chatsky, Money Magazine, polled 1,500 people. The finding:

Annual income over $50,000 makes no difference to happiness

Simmons and Chatsky: Purposeful work, religion, and family make people happy

Many have negative mental tapes that say, “You’re not happy, shouldn’t be happy, don’t deserve to be happy”. Those tapes need to be fought

Dr John Izzo, who studies happiness,interviewed 250 people age of 60-106. They all agreed there are five true secrets to happiness: Be True to Yourself, Leave No Regrets, Become Love, Live the Moment, and Give More Than You Take.

CONCLUSIONS

  • Achieving happiness can be accomplished, and it is therefore worth the effort!

Circumstances [10%] can be worked on to a degree; attitude and activities [40%] a lot

  • Look for something greater than self: e.g. God, a cause, community, service, etc
  • Spend time each day reading “feel-good” stories, and displace the negative tapes
  • Maintain many social contacts and close relationships, e.g. family, and make them good
  • Have short- and long-term goals: career, hobbies, travel, etc, and work regularly toward them
  • Avoid materialism, but work on having enough to comfortably meet needs
  • Deal with and resolve the problems in your life

 

This is a terrible world, filled with violence, misery, and hate

This is a wonderful world, filled with kindness, happiness, and love

Which world do you choose to see?

Which world do you choose to live in?

– RC

*Suicide rates/100,000: Russia: 34.3. Japan: 24. Denmark: 13.6. Sweden: 13.2. Iceland: 12.6. Canada: 11.9. Norway: 11.5. U.S: 11. Singapore: 9.5. Italy: 7.1. U.K: 7. Jamaica: 0.1.

 

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