Happiness- by
Dr. Srikumar Rao
We seek it here,
we seek it there. We seek happiness everywhere.
Yet it eludes
us. All of our activities -- our pursuit of fame
and fortune, our quest for meaningful relationships,
our drive to build or change things -- are directed
searches for this ephemeral state. We get there,
but we can never heave a lasting sigh of relief
because the feeling is gone almost immediately.
Can happiness
be a permanent member of our household rather
than an occasional and erratic visitor?
Think on this
parable from psychotherapist and Jesuit priest
Anthony de Mello:
"A group
of tourists sits in a bus that is passing through
gorgeously beautiful country; lakes and mountains
and green fields and rivers. But the shades of
the bus are pulled down. They do not have the
slightest idea of what lies beyond the windows
of the bus. And all the time of their journey
is spent in squabbling over who will have the
seat of honor in the bus, who will be applauded,
who will be well considered. And so they remain
till the journey's end."
Too many of us
are like those tourists, engaged in petty power
struggles while the true beauty of life lies all
round us, unobserved and unappreciated.
I see this all
the time in the seminars I conduct. I have the
participants call out things that would make them
happy, and I write them on a flip chart. The list
grows to 50 or 100 items in minutes.
Wealth is a common
desire. Not run-of-the-mill, garden-variety wealth
but a fabulous fortune. A trophy spouse is also
popular, though people rarely label it as such.
Instead the ideal spouse is described as extraordinarily
good-looking and, as a self-justifying afterthought,
intelligent to boot.
Lots of other
items come up, too, including travel, good health,
great sex, friends, loving relatives, and interesting
work.
The truth is,
none of those things is necessary for happiness.
None of them.
This is an extremely
important point. Because all of those things are
dependent on outside circumstances that will never
be in your control. And doesn't that make the
quest for them an extremely frail reed to lean
on?
Don't confuse
true happiness and soul-satisfying joy with the
temporary satisfaction you get when you gratify
your ego. Your happiness is not dependent on your
wealth, your intelligence, or your abilities.
Your happiness is not even contingent on your
continued good health or having loving friends,
relatives, or significant others.
In fact, happiness
is already a part of your nature. There is nothing
you have to get in order to be happy. All you
have to do is allow your inner happiness to surface.
When I get to
this point in my seminars, I generally have a
revolution on my hands. How can people be happy
if they live in extreme poverty? Or if they are
afflicted with a painful disease? Or if they have
no friends or loved ones? Or if they're in any
other hypothetical situation along those lines?
Yet the statement
holds. There is nothing you have to get in order
to be happy.
One question remains.
If happiness is our nature, why do we not experience
it more often? Why are our lives filled with angst
and sorrow?
The answer is
simple: We have constructed mental models for
ourselves in which happiness comes as a result
of getting something -- money, power, fame, etc.
In the reality that we have created and that we
live in, our achievements define us. We are "better" if
we are "successful."
The media reinforces
those beliefs, subtly painting pictures of what
successful and happy people have and look like.
Your parents reinforced them too, imprinting on
your mind that what they found valuable was what
you should value. In all probability, they got
their beliefs from their parents and accepted
them without question. Your friends, relatives,
teachers, classmates, and coaches all played a
role. So did the movies and TV programs you watched,
the books and magazines you read, the music you
listened to, and what you observed in the world
around you.
They all contributed
to your mental model. And they succeeded because
you did not question the beliefs and values they
presented to you. But now, in your quest for happiness
and freedom, you must question them.
When you want
something -- and you get it -- there is a brief
moment when you are content, when you are not
your habitual wanting self. And in that moment,
you experience the happiness that is always a
part of you. You are content. And full. But the
very next moment, some other desire raises its
ugly head and you are off on another fruitless
quest for happiness. It is a never-ending cycle.
The problem is
that you do not realize why you experience that
moment of happiness. You do not recognize that
it is because, at that moment, you are free from
want. The happiness springs from an acceptance
of the Universe as it is. It is your innate nature
bubbling forth in the absence of the bonds you
put on it with your incessant demands.
Instead, you attribute
the happiness you briefly felt to the acquisition
of whatever it was that you got. And so you try
to get the next thing, and the next thing, and
the next thing.
If you go barreling
through life, desperately doing things to make
yourself "happy," happiness will elude
you. It is like a puppy that runs away when you
try to entice it to come to you. But as soon as
you ignore it and start reading your newspaper,
you feel its cold nose in your hand.
It really does
work that way. You are bound by the things you
own as long as you need them emotionally. The
moment you sever this psychological link, you
will experience freedom, a marvelous sense of
liberation that cannot be described.
Think back to
your life 10 years ago. You had a list of wants
at that time, things you thought would bring you
lasting happiness. Odds are, you now have many
of them. Have they made you happier than you were
back then? Probably not.
Pick any item
you currently desire. Now imagine yourself as
a 95-year-old person about to leave this world.
From that perspective, does having that item really
matter? Again, probably not.
Enjoy, truly enjoy,
what you have. Strive for what you do not have
but want. But strive joyfully, knowing that the
pleasure is in the doing, not in the getting.
If you succeed, wonderful. If you do not, still
wonderful.
P.S. Finding true
happiness won't happen overnight. With my Personal
Mastery Success Program, you'll get all the tools
you need to make a break with negativity, sadness,
and disappointment. Soon you'll be living your
life to its true potential.
Dr Rao is Professor
of Creativity and Personal Mastery and owner of
areyoureadytosucceed.com and can be contacted
via his face
book
page.
For more personal
development, visit Divorce Recovery Suite
Top
of page | Back
to Articles | Home
|