Did you wake up today feeling down? Do you think you need to do something quickly to overcome that feeling and get your emotions back on the happiness track? Does your husband or friend try to cheer you up? Do you feel like a failure if you don’t feel happy?
Consider this quote:
“When people place a great deal of pressure on themselves to feel happy, or think that others around them do, they are more likely to see their negative emotions and experiences as signals of failure. This will only drive more unhappiness.” —Brock Bastian
I realized in my 20s that I was consistently waiting for the next thing to happen for me to feel happy. In my research for this article, I found out this way of thinking has a name, Deferred Happiness Syndrome. I wanted and needed to finish my degree, to meet the perfect partner, to purchase a home, and start my family, then I would be happy.
When I achieved one thing, there was always the next thing. I wasted years waiting and putting my trust in the next thing that would help me feel complete and happy. Is this you? Are you waiting for something to happen to feel happiness?
Focusing on achieving or getting “the thing,” caused me to miss the best parts of every day, right in the moment. Plus, trying so hard to find happiness made me sad and confirmed to myself I was lacking in some way.
I took a quote from a fiction book I was reading, After She Left by Claire Amarti:
“I think, maybe there’s too much pressure to be happy… People make it sound like we’re supposed to feel that way all the time, unless there’s something wrong. But I don’t think happiness is a default setting. I think most of the time, we’re just normal.”
Try rating your day on a happiness scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being over-the-moon happy. Where do you come in on that scale today? Realize that a 10 is very infrequent and happens only a few times in our lifetime!
My 10 days include my wedding day, the birth of my child, and the few days after my boss told me I achieved the salary I worked for all my life. Basically, I exist around a 5. Right in the middle, a normal 5. I call this ‘everyday happiness.’ If some days slip below a 5, well, so be it.
Whatever went on to slide that scale down may well be worth the slide. If I failed to help a friend in need, or my cat companion that I’ve had for 20 years is sick (you fill in the blank here), there’s a slide! I realize how normal it is to slide down to a 3. I just know that it will go back to the 5.
I’ve decided it’s ok to allow myself the time needed to get back to my everyday normal happiness. Feeling unhappy is part of being normal. Let it be. Then, when you are ready, shuck it off like taking off a heavy winter coat.
It’s also true that somedays I may come in at an 8. The sun is shining, my heart is full of love, and I feel great to be alive. Isn’t it normal that the range of happy emotions register differently on different days?
If ready, there’s a few things we can do to help us shake off the heavy coat of sadness:
Focus on something small yet enjoyable. Try to see the good in something happening right now, without delaying it for a later acquisition or timing. Don’t make happiness too hard to find. It can be in the smallest of things. A flower, a sunrise, a warm shower. Keep it simple, small, and ordinary.
When thrift shopping one day, I spotted and bought a small pillow that says, “I’m happy, don’t ruin it.” I love this little pillow, but the truth is, happiness is a choice that I make, not what someone wants for me or does to make it so.
You can accept how you feel, try to change it, ignore it, but your feelings are yours. Give yourself permission to be whatever it is that you are today. If you decide you’ve had enough of sadness, then it’s up to you to change it, slowly, carefully, and in your own timing.
Who we surround ourselves with makes a huge difference in how we view life. I let go of some of my friendships that brought me down. This was not done lightly, but after realizing that hanging out with this downer person was seriously rubbing off on me. If you need a little boost to your day, spend some time with someone who sees the glass half-full.
Are you being too hard on yourself? Are you thinking the worst about every situation you’re in? Are you excessively thinking you’re bad, look bad, and the world is bad? Give yourself a break. Stop it! You can change your self-talk. I’ve done this over time, so I know you can too.
Start to reverse your negative self-talk loop by allowing yourself to find something (even if it’s small) that’s good about you.
I recently asked a client to tell me her strengths. It took her time to come up with them, but once she did, we were able to emphasize them in helping her make choices for her life. You have strengths, and you have a specific place in this world. Find your own strengths and use them for your happiness.
Need more ideas on how to achieve simple everyday happiness? Try the ideas in my book, Crazy Simple Steps to Feeling Happier.
Disclaimer: This article is not addressing the clinical diagnosis of depression. There’s a difference between depression and feeling sad or down. You can read about it here.
Have you felt guilty for not being happy? Do others want you to “get over it,” and feel happy before you are ready? Have you tried simple ways to feel happy inside? Can you share what works for you?
Tags Finding Happiness
Happiness is wonderful, but I think being content is more important. 🇦🇺
Can the font on the comments please be made a little bigger and darker?
Thank you.
This article really resonated with me because my husband and I recently separated, because my husband is physically and mentally ill, and it was so toxic, continuing to live with him. He is now in a facility, but struggling. I keep wishing we could go back to the way things were so we can enjoy our retirement like we thought we would. This is something I definitely need to work on. I’m living in the past and waiting for a miracle. I am always waiting for something to happen, otherwise I’m crying all the time.
This is the best article I have read so far on this subject. Happiness is in the moment, being grateful for what you have, and how you respond to different situations. It isn’t a destination after all.