When you reach for your pair of everyday jeans, what are they like? Mine are soft and feel lived in. I love this comfy go to pair because when I slip into them, I know I’m home. Yes, they are commonplace, nothing special about them anymore after hundreds of washes. Some irregularities are now showing up in the fabric, but I don’t care.
I use this example to explain what everyday happiness can be. Instead of fabric with zippers, snaps, or pockets, it’s a feeling. It’s commonplace and comfortable. It doesn’t need a huge dump of dopamine to happen. It doesn’t need an event or a dollar amount. It’s a go to emotion that I choose to slip into, and you can choose it too.
Here’s a definition of the word everyday, “…something which happens or is used every day or forms a regular and basic part of your life, so it is not especially interesting or unusual.”
Why have we made happiness so hard to find? Does there have to be a rush of excitement, or a special party, or someone else providing something outstanding for happiness to happen? Does it need to be especially interesting or unusual? Is it possible that the pursuit of happiness, chasing it down like an elusive goal that we never quite meet, leaves us empty?
What if we stopped all that and settled into an everyday emotion of being, OK? If you rate yourself on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being that crazy mountaintop extreme joy (happiness), where are you right now? My answer is that I’m a solid 5. I’m not lower and I’m not higher, and that feels comfy and right.
If your answer is that you’re a 3 or an 8, is that comfy for you? Everyone has a different answer. The point is that everyday happiness is absolutely great. It’s where we live, and where we do our daily life.
I ran across this quote from Mike Dooley in his Notes from the Universe. Does this resonate with you? “…step one for changing the entire world is falling in love with it as it already is. Same for changing yourself. And best of all, with this approach, there is no step two.
Settle in to being OK with where you generally are on that happiness scale. Once you put the constant push of obtaining more happiness on the back burner, you can be comfy and live in the regular habitual place of everyday happiness. The trick here is to remind yourself of what makes the answer a 3 or 5, instead of a 1 or 2.
For me, it’s that I have a warm home, a cat that seeks my lap to cuddle in every time I sit down, and sometimes a cup of coffee from my old espresso machine. It’s the common things that bring joy and contentment to me. I’ve made that so. I used to seek the thrill of something better, bigger, sparkly, and edgy to bring the same feeling. It was elusive and when I finally got that thing, the happy feeling that went with it didn’t last long. Not an everyday thing for sure.
Don’t get me wrong, when the out-of-ordinary, wonderful thing shows up, my happiness scale will take a big leap. For example, when my son sent me flowers for Mother’s Day. This has never happened before, and he’s in his late 30s! That was a huge leap! I was content and happy with him, without the flowers. But when a leap in the scale comes, it’s just a delight. After that, I settle in to the ordinary, commonplace, routine, everyday gratefulness for the small stuff in life, that brings me immense joy. Can you do this too?
One of the definitions of the word routine is regular, unvarying, habitual, unimaginative, or rote procedure. Is there anything wrong with that? Happiness can be rote. It doesn’t have to be extraordinary.
I love what this super smart person, Dr. Glenn Williams, Senior Lecturer in Psychology at Nottingham Trent University, said about the topic, “…. it is the small, and often unexpected, pleasures in life that can make us smile each and every day to help us build happier and more meaningful lives for ourselves and for others.”
I’m not minimizing problems, heartaches, or sadness that life brings to shoot your happiness average all to heck. Those days happen. Please remember when you are miserable and trying to breathe through the day, you will once again get to your normal everyday feeling sometime in the future. You’ll bounce back, you’ll be resilient, you’ll win. It’s going to be ok. Look for the everyday. Pull on your lived-in jeans and grab your cup of espresso.
I’m interested in your comments. Please share your tips for living in a common routine of everyday happiness. What has helped you live there? What is standing in your way? Do you think we have made being happy too hard to find?
Tags Finding Happiness
Thank you for this article. I have been retired almost 10 months. I live by myself and have found that I find peace and happiness in things I haven’t had time for-like going to the library in the middle of the day. Being with my stuff…lol. I liked the 40 tips article also. I realize aging gracefully is all about allowing happiness and blessings to be the focus of my life.
I’ve enjoyed reading your suggestions that have made me conscious of the pleasure I have every day from my gardening,reading,art & exercise classes, cup of coffee at lunchtime, lunch with the grandchildren , phoning and texting with friends and family near and far, and that immeasurable feeling of being happy and content in the here and now.
I recently lost my mother. I have been very low energy and I am prone to Seasonal Affective Disorder, but I read a book about wintering. The concept is not to fight it. Kean into it. Rest and recover. I felt it was very helpful. I am a little worried about spring. Will I have the energy or spirit to engage in the things I love like gardening and spending countless hours outside? I do hope so, but I know I have to go through this to come out the otherside.
Happiness, or possibly contentment, is every delicious drop of peace and freedom throughout the day. My rallying cry is “Own the morning!” The first part of my day is for me. If I do that (exceptions when necessary), everything else falls into place.
There is so much value in this article, so much value in the”everyday” appreciation of the simple forms of happiness.