By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
We frequently talk on Lovefraud about finding healing and being “happy” again. We discuss the words “forgiveness” and other emotionally charged words that have individual meanings and try to come to some conclusion that we have a definition of these words for ourselves.
I got to thinking about the meaning of “happiness,” and how I will know when I have reached it. What is happiness to me? For me?
After my husband died, there was a period of time when in my profound sadness and grief, that I thought “happiness” could be found in finding another mate and husband. I went seeking that “happiness,” and instead of a life mate and loving relationship with a new man, I found a psychopath who was seeking a new “respectable wife” to cheat on. My feeling of “happiness” was very short lived when I realized he was still “carrying on” with his former mistresses, which essentially amounted to a harem of needy women hoping he would “choose me.”
I elected to get out of that relationship. I found a great deal of sadness in my life at that time, but the “happiness” I had sought was not in view. I later realized that it could not be provided to me by someone else, but was something I had to provide for myself.
Wanting to be happier
Recently I read a great article entitled, The dark side of happiness, by Gareth Cook. A couple of short paragraphs in particular of this long article stuck out:
It is not so unreasonable to want to be happier. Are we really just supposed to stand by and let life have its way with us?
Well, yes and no. One of the most powerful ways to boost happiness ironically is to learn acceptance. Instead of viewing negative emotions as a failure, learn to see them as a healthy, natural part of the human drama. Negative feelings are often there to tell us something, an invitation to reflect, to make a new plan, or examine an issue more slowly and carefully. This basic notion can play an important role not just in therapy, but also in a balanced and meaningful life.
Who among us doesn’t want to be “happier?” But what is going to “make me happy?” That is the big question.
I hear people say, “I will be so happy when I get out of college and can get a real job.” I’ve said such things myself. When I do, I remember my grandmother telling me, “Don’t wish you life away, child,” to remind me to savor the todays of my life, not live in the future when thus and such may happen to “make me happy.” I’ve found that when things happening are the things that “make me happy,” the feeling of “happiness” it engenders doesn’t last long, but is a fleeting joy.
Today I dropped a heavy glass lid out of the top of my cabinet when I was trying to rearrange it and broke a glass canister that sits on the counter and held my oatmeal as well as a glass of water I had sitting there ready to drink. It made quite a sound as it broke. My son helped me clean up the mess and he said, “Well at least it wasn’t your grandmother’s serving dish.” I laughed and said, “Honey, I broke those a long time ago, but it wouldn’t matter if it was my grandma’s serving dish, because things are not that important to me any more. I’m not going to be unhappy because something is lost or broken.” (Though I admit I recently got angry when I realized that a former friend had also stolen an emergency stove I had stored in my barn!)
Joy and happiness
I also look at the difference between Joy and Happiness. Joy to me is getting a new puppy or a new car, or making a great dish for my friends and me to enjoy. Joy seeing the pleasure in someone when I give him or her a gift. It isn’t “happiness,” but the accumulation of joy builds to create happiness.
What is the difference though in “happiness” and in “joy?” The definitions below may give us some guidance.
From the Free Dictionary
joy (joi) n.
1. a. Intense and especially ecstatic or exultant happiness.
b. The expression or manifestation of such feeling.
2. A source or an object of pleasure or satisfaction: their only child, their pride and joy.
v.joyed, joy·ing, joys
v.intr.
To take great pleasure; rejoice.
v.tr.Archaic
1. To fill with ecstatic happiness, pleasure, or satisfaction.
2. To enjoy.
According to Dictionary.com the definition of happiness is:
1. the quality or state of being happy.
2. good fortune; pleasure; contentment; joy.
Don’t know about you, but I can’t say I totally agree with these definitions! Let’s see what others think. A definition of happiness, actually several definitions, are listed on the web site Happy Life.
What the sages say
“Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony.” Mahatma Gandhi
“Happiness is not a goal; it is a by-product.” Eleanor Roosevelt
“Getting what you go after is success; but liking it while you are getting it is happiness.” Bertha Damon
“Happiness does not depend on outward things, but on the way we see them.” Leo Tolstoy
The “definition” of happiness in the dictionary is sort of a self-defining word, “happiness is being happy” and still leaves us wondering what it means. The above website’s quotes from several sages seem more to define what “happiness” is, though I think each of us can and should define what “happiness” is to us as individuals, how we can build that happiness with the smaller joys of life, while realizing that our feelings of sadness at times, or remorse, guilt, or even shame, are signs that we might need to reflect inwardly for guidance in our lives.
I personally agree with Eleanor Roosevelt’s definition: “Happiness is not a goal; it is a by-product.” To me, happiness is the culmination of the smaller joys of life, from the enjoyment of a well cooked meal, to sharing a laugh with a friend. The personal satisfaction I experience at the end of a day when I have done my best and lay my head down on my pillow in peace.
Coping, thanks so much for your well wishes. I’m actually very proud of myself for facing down my fears, as hard as it was. I consider it an act of self love. However, I am going to complete this process before I attempt to date again. It just seems like what is necessary in my life right now. I don’t see self-love as an all-or-nothing achievement. To me, it is ongoing.
Hugs,
Star
What! Is Johny Depp single? He broke up with Vanessa Paradis? Where’s his phone number!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :p
Update: just goodled those two… while the rumours were strong, Paradis said yesterday the rumours are ‘false’.
Oxy
What a lovely piece of writing. I especially liked the last paragraph as it pretty much sums it up for me.
On the odd occasion through the week when I have all kids under my roof sleeping-either they are at friends or boyfriends overnight at different times, I get a sense of peace and happiness. Sometimes I get the opposite whereas the boyfriend and friends are all at mines all at the one time overnight. I feel so blessed.
We have a saying here ‘wake up and smell the roses’. It is a saying to take stock of what you have and appreciate in the present moment.
You are an inspiration of what the human spirit can survive.
Keep writing.
STJ
xxx
P.S For all people new who are reading. The above applies to further on in my healing. When I first ran-this would have made no sense to me as I was too busy dealing with the emotional, mental and physical difficulties. It takes time.
tobehappy –
You poor love!!! xxx My heart goes out to you. Take the good advice and listen to those who have gone before you; if it’s just a “phase” or a “rough patch” then a bit of “tough love” wont hurt but will only serve to sort it out more quickly.
If it’s the other – the thing that you are afraid of – then better to know and face up to it sooner rather than later. You have other kids to consider/protect and yourSELF to consider/protect. Prioritise.
Put the right things first and the rest will fall into whatever lines they were going to fall into anyhow.
I wish you peace and resolution. xx
Coping,
I really like that: “imagine if we loved ourselves the way we loved the spaths in our lives.”
“happiness is being happy” This says it very well. Happiness is not a by product of our actions or of someone else’s actions it is an “attitude.” The way it was first described to me is “If you have to move one inch to BE HAPPY then you will never be happy.” To be happy is what is going on inside us. How we choose to see ourselves, others and the world around us. It’s not about the things that have happened in our lives or the event of the day nor is it what tomorrow may bring. “To be” is present tense meaning in the moment. So happiness is what we bring to the events. It comes from inside us and gets displayed in the outside world. Most unhappy people look to try and get it from the outside world and bring it in. But this just leaves us looking for our next fix. So in this case we’ll be happy when they do this or I get the new job or win the lottery. But as long as we place “happiness” in the future as in “I’ll be happy when…..” Then we’ll never ever really be happy.
So it brings me back to “If you have to move one inch to BE HAPPY then you’ll never be happy.” Happiness is a choice.
My 2 cents
T
Welcome Spoon and I agree with you, Happiness is an attitude, and comes from inside us, of the joy we take in what we are and whatever blessings that we have regardless of how meager they are.
I just finished reading a book about the lower caste Indians who are ship breakers, working under the most horrible and most dangerous conditions imaginable….living literally on a toxic waste dump, expending more calories for their work each day than they can buy with their wages to replace them, so ultimately, slowly starving to death. Yet on the one mandated day per week that they have off work, they dress in their best, and sing and seem to have happiness where none would be expected in the “concentration camp” atmosphere in which they live and work under such horrible and dangerous conditions. So I can only conclude that the happiness comes from inside them.
Your point is well taken. Dr. Viktor Frankl’s book, “Man’s search for meaning” which he wrote about his emotional experiences in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany also I think bears this out. We choose happiness.
Thanks for the welcome Ox Drover. Another old saying. “People are just as happy as they want to be.”
Dr. Viktor Frankl was put to the real test. That would have been a tough one to hold up under. Same for the lower caste Indians you mentioned.
T
Spoon, I spent some time in third-world countries, seeing babies to death, people without anything…and have read much about prisoner of war camps, the Batan Death March etc. (my egg donor knew a man who had been on that death march) and I have known a few people who were in the Nazi camps (though I did not discuss this part of their lives with them) but I do know how BLESSED each of us here are with the share of worldly goods that we have over so many people that are in the world today.
If ytou haven’t read Frankl’s book, please do, I think it will be enlightening.
Gratitude for what we do have is also an important part in our happiness I think. Starting with having gratitude for having clean water to drink, enough food, a bed, clothing, medical care, a computer to correspond with LF….education…and I could go on and make a much longer list of things I have to be grateful for.
Sure there are things in my life I can biatch about….but many more I can say “Thank you God for this….”
Glad you are at lovefraud, Spoon, there’s lots to learn, lots to discuss and it is a community of caring!
Amen.