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Happiness

5 Shortcuts for a Happier Life

How you face hardships determines if they will defeat or strengthen you. 

Key points

  • Self-destructive behaviors are the greatest generator of your unhappiness.
  • Targeting your self-destructive behaviors is good, replacing them with healthier habits is even better.
  • Shortcuts to a happier life include identifying sustainable activities that bring lasting happiness.
Sean Grover
Source: Sean Grover

If you’re reading this article, you’re probably facing an unhappy situation. Maybe you're confronting a personal crisis, such as heartbreak or loss. Maybe you feel stuck in a job or relationship that seems to be going nowhere. Or maybe you’ve got a bad case of the blues.

Don’t sweat it. Everyone experiences ups and downs; obstacles and hardships are a part of life. No matter how happy someone appears on social media, don’t be fooled: everyone experiences difficulties eventually. Ultimately, how you face hardships determines whether they defeat or propel you forward.

When faced with your current unhappy situation, you may wonder: Are there shortcuts to a happier life? (See my new book "Shortcuts To A Happier Life: Essays on Life, Love & Parenting")

Habits that breed unhappiness

The painful truth is that sometimes, like many people, you may be the most significant generator of your unhappiness. You engage in self-destructive behaviors that undermine lasting happiness. Sure, you may know these behaviors are bad for you, but too often, that’s not enough to stop you.

Caught in a battle with your impulses, you're engaged in a wrestling match with your desires. This battle often comes down to quick-fix relief vs. long-term solutions.

The tricky thing about quick-fix relief is simple—it works in the short term. Drugs and alcohol, high-calorie foods, credit card abuse, hypersexuality, compulsive shopping—such activities give you a refreshing burst of feel-good chemicals, such as dopamine or endorphins. However, an overreliance on them sabotages sustainable happiness and breeds addictive behaviors.

Ironically, as feel-good chemicals run out and short-term happiness expires, stress hormones are triggered, causing you to return to self-destructive behaviors for relief again. And so the cycle continues.

Shortcuts to a Happier Life

Targeting your self-destructive behaviors is a good idea, but replacing them with healthier habits is even better.

Start by identifying activities that bring you peace of mind and contribute to long-term happiness—activities that refresh and inspire you. Such activities are the building blocks of sustainable happiness and are more effective than simply illuminating bad habits.

Here are a few shortcuts to dig yourself out of your current unhappy situation:

  1. Identify a sustainable activity that brings you happiness: Long walks, hiking, book clubs, and creative hobbies are great ways to get started
  2. Reclaim an abandoned activity that brought you happiness: Sadly, as we age and our schedules become more demanding, we tend to abandon things that make us happy. Take that violin or guitar out of storage. Start journaling again. Reboot those happiness-producing activities.
  3. Come up with a schedule: Schedules and routines keep us focused and remind us to stay on task. Getting up regularly and designing times to work on your happiness will inspire you to keep going.
  4. Find a happiness buddy: One of the great benefits of friendship is that true friends hold each other accountable. Identify someone you can check in with. If friends are few, find a support group, a therapist, or a coach. Establishing long-term happiness is a mighty battle; you need troops.
  5. Accept problems and setbacks as part of the process: The sun doesn’t shine every day. There’s no reason to let a slip-up define you. Stay focused, turn to your support team, and redetermine to start again tomorrow.

Don’t sell yourself short! Sustained effort pays off. A happier life is closer than you think.

To find a therapist near you, visit the Psychology Today Therapy Directory.

References

Still hungry for happiness? See:

A Warrior Approach To Happiness

6 Habits That Undermine Happiness

3 Keys to Sustainable Joy

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