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A lot of people are successful and exhausted, connected, but lonely, comfortable and still
not happy.
So what exactly are we chasing?
We've been told happiness comes from achievement, more success, more money, more optimization.
But what if that formula is incomplete, or even backwards?
Today's S.Y.S.K. trending topic is how to successfully pursue happiness.
My guest, Stephanie Harrison, author of the book New Happy, says many of us have been
sold the wrong definition of happiness, and that constantly focusing on ourselves may
actually be the problem.
She'll explain why shifting outward, not upward, could be the key to more lasting joy.
Listen and you may just find this conversation changes how you define a happy life, and
we'll get to it right after this.
You know, I'm a sucker for a good mystery.
Like in the 1950s, a flight from New York to Minneapolis just disappeared over Lake
Michigan.
No wreckage?
No answers.
Or the dear love pass incident, a group of experienced hikers found dead under circumstances
so strange people still debate what really happened.
There's a podcast called Expedition Unknown from Discovery, hosted by Josh Gates, and
this is what he does.
He doesn't just tell these stories.
He goes there.
He's hunted for priceless artifacts stolen by the Nazis in World War II.
He's traced the final flight of a pilot who vanished mid-mission and searched the great
lakes for a ship that disappeared without a trace.
If you love the unanswered questions of history, you know, the stuff that makes you lean
in, you're going to love this.
Travel the globe with Josh Gates as he investigates humanity's greatest feats and most iconic
legends.
Listen to Expedition Unknown wherever you get your podcasts.
In the quest for happiness, it just may be possible that we misunderstand what it means
to be happy.
No one is happy all the time.
Happiness is not a momentary feeling.
Happiness is so much more than that and it appears we often get it wrong.
As you are about to hear the secret to your happiness may lie with other people.
Meet Stephanie Harrison, she is creator of the new happy philosophy.
Her work has been featured in publications like Fast Company Forbes and the Harvard Business
Review and the new happy's art newsletter podcast and programs reach millions of people
around the world.
Stephanie is also author of the book new happy getting happiness right in a world that's
got it wrong.
Hi Stephanie, welcome to something you should know.
Thank you.
I'm so excited to be here.
There does seem to be lately a big focus on happiness in popular culture, in the media
books, podcasts and yet you say that we get it wrong sometimes or even a lot of the
time.
So explain what that's all about.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
The premise of my work is that our society has conditioned us into believing all of the
wrong things about happiness and in fact, those beliefs are not only failing to make
us happy, but they're actually leading us towards greater misery and suffering in our
lives.
Well, that's not good.
I mean, here we are trying to make ourselves happy and if you are right, then we're making
ourselves miserable in the process.
So explain how that works.
We have been conditioned into these these three core beliefs that one, we need to be perfect
because there's something wrong with us and we have to prove that we're good enough.
And we can do that through what we achieved by doing more and more and more and that we
have to do everything by ourselves.
And these three beliefs come together into something that I call old happy, which is
our societal definition of happiness and all three of these beliefs actually end up contributing
to outcomes like mental illness, loneliness, disconnection from our relationships and
our communities, a lack of a sense of purpose, essentially everything that we don't want
in our lives.
And so what is happiness then to you?
What is define it for me?
To me, after doing all of this research and scouring through everything that I could
ever get my hands on written about happiness, I have come to believe that it has two components,
true happiness comes from being who you really are and then using yourself to help other
people.
And it's the integration of both your unique gifts and strengths and then how you offer
it up to others that ultimately contributes to a lasting sense of well-being.
And not doing those things is what makes you unhappy.
Yes, or pursuing things like potentially trying to change who you are or denying who you
are, ignoring the gifts that you have that are important and meaningful to you or becoming
obsessed with external achievement and extrinsic goals or thinking that you should separate
yourself from other people and be totally independent in the world.
If that's all true, why do people seem to go the other way?
What you would think that we would naturally be inclined to do what you're suggesting because
that would lead to being happier?
Yeah, that's a really good question.
I think it's because happiness is the greatest goal of a human being's life, right?
It drives everything that we do and all of the choices that we make.
And so if you have an idea of happiness that's flawed or incorrect, then it's almost like
you have punched in the wrong destination into your GPS, right?
And you don't actually know until you get to your destination that you're going to end
up somewhere that you didn't want to go, but it's persistent and it's pervasive.
We continually are driven towards these old happy beliefs simply because they're so
ingrained within us from the time that we were born.
We were conditioned into this set of ideas about what we need to do in order to be happy.
And so part of the problem is that we haven't been able to name this issue.
We haven't been able to isolate it and point it out and say, hey, that's something that's
affecting us.
It doesn't mean that it's true and it doesn't mean that it's me.
I can take a step back and move away from that experience and decide, is this actually
working for me or might there be a better way to do this?
So do you think when you feel happy, when you are happy, what is that?
Is it a feeling?
Is it a thought?
What is it?
I think that you can think about happiness in a number of different ways.
The first is the feeling, right?
That sense of perhaps it's like a warm glow that you have that signifies contentment
or the joy and brightness that comes with achieving something meaningful in your life
or spending time with your loved ones or families.
There's all these different feelings that fall under the sense of happiness that we can
have.
But then more broadly, it's also an evaluation of your life, how you believe that your
life is going and what you would say to somebody if they asked you, would you do these things
all over again?
Do you feel satisfied with the way that your life has gone and where you're going in
the future?
So it has both an emotional and a cognitive element to it.
But nobody, I don't think, feels that their life has gone 100% perfectly.
It just doesn't work.
That life throws things at you that make you unhappy, that are unhappy, that make you
go in a direction that you had no intention of going in because that's what life has
dished up.
Absolutely.
And I think that really happy people are those who learn how to navigate those challenges
because, as you said, they are inevitable and they learn not only how to get through
them, but even to turn them into experiences that might provide them with meaning and
purpose or help them to develop their empathy and compassion.
So they find a way to take those difficult, raw ingredients of life and turn them into
something else.
This idea of happiness comes as the result of something else.
So you'll be happy when you get married, when you get that job, when you have so much
money in the bank, that seems to be those things that, you know, that it never seems to work
out that way.
No, it doesn't.
I think once you've experienced that a few times and you have a couple of those big
life events that you thought would make you happy under your belt, you can start to
look around and go, yeah, this doesn't seem to be a good strategy.
And I think that the idea that I'll be happy when is really the source of so much misery
because not only does it lead us to do things that make us miserable in the moment, thinking
they'll bring us happiness in the future, but it also distracts us from all of the goodness
that we already have in our lives and all of the beauty and the joy that's available
right here.
And we're so distracted by thinking about the future that we fail to attend to it, which
is a profound source of happiness that exists that's right in front of us.
So help me understand the difference or how they intersect happiness and pleasure and
joy because pleasure is not happiness, but pleasure seems to be somehow tied to it.
And same thing for joy.
Happiness, pleasure and joy are, I would call them related, but as you're saying, they
do have important differences.
And so pleasure is most often described as hedonistic in nature.
It's the satisfaction of one of your needs or your wants.
And so you could find deep pleasure from, let's say, a glass of water on a really hot
day.
It's a feeling of pleasure, but that's not going to make you lastingly happy.
And then there's joy.
My favorite understanding of joy comes from the scientific research and it argues that
joy is the result of connection of being connected to others to oneself or even to something
transcendent like your relationship with a God or with a spiritual presence.
And that sense of connection provides us with a deeper experience of well-being.
But again, it's more of an emotion, so it has a rise in a fall and fades away.
So it will last for longer than pleasure, but not as long as happiness, which is much
more of, in my, in my belief, it's much more of this sense of contentment that lasts,
that pervades your life, that allows you to live a happy life amidst those ups and downs
that we're talking about, the experiences of both joy and pleasure, but also of grief
or sadness or anger and all of the other emotions that we experience.
Don't you think, though, and isn't there research that you can talk about that?
It really depends in part on your ability to handle those down moments.
Some people can handle them and, you know, it's water off a duck's back or maybe it's
not that easy, but still it's not so, whereas other people just take it and absorb it and
it's really hard to overcome it, whereas other people just, eh, you know, life's ups
and downs.
Well, for some people, those downs really take a toll.
Yeah, they do.
And those people, I think, just were never taught the skills that they needed to process
it.
And, you know, I think one of the most common ways that we actually make this worse for
ourselves is when we experience a painful emotion like sadness or grief, we beat ourselves
up for it.
And tell ourselves that we're bad or there's something wrong with us for experiencing
that emotion.
And ultimately, all that does is makes it even harder to bounce back for it.
So what I often counsel is to practice self-compassion and treat yourself with kindness when you are
experiencing those difficult moments.
It's not weak.
It's not letting yourself off the hook.
It's not, you know, wallowing in your pain.
It's actually what helps you to transcend it and to move on.
But because we've been told that you just need to kind of practice a stiff upper lip and
pretend that nothing affects you, a lot of people silently suffer.
And as you're describing, they further absorb those emotions and they ultimately end up
really weighing them down.
Because it seems that there's plenty of happiness to be had if you know how to find it.
But there are a lot of people that they don't know where that path is.
And so they take the hard knocks of life and use that to define their happiness, which
is, you know, not much.
You know, I'm sure you know this, but the brain has a negativity bias, right?
So we're always inclined to focus on the things that are going wrong.
And that's a part of our biology.
And as you're saying, we have to practice what it means to shift our attention away from,
you know, the achy bag or the difficult meeting you had with your boss or the worry about
a certain thing on the horizon.
And instead learn to focus our attention on something else that's more generative for
our well-being.
Talk about because we've all heard this idea that, you know, happiness can come from,
there's something in human beings that when you do something for other people, when you
help other people, that brings you probably more happiness than the person you're helping
often.
And I don't think a lot of people get that or know exactly like, what is that?
How does that work?
I think that this is the secret to happiness, really, is if you want to be happy, help other
people to be happy.
And it works because we're not disconnected from one another as, as we're talking about,
you know, you're, you're connected to other people in ways that you can't even observe.
And when you contribute to another person, you get these powerful benefits unfolding within
you and around you from even, you know, something that's known as the helpers high, which
is the release of hormones and endorphins when you help other people all the way through
to the sense of fulfillment and purpose that you get to a better relationship and a better
connection with that person to increasing yourself a steam and your sense of well-being.
The benefits, as you're saying, are absolutely huge.
And unfortunately, we're missing them, we're neglecting them because we're so distracted
by our society's understanding of happiness that we're actually ignoring the opportunity
for well-being that's right in front of us by reaching out to help another person in
whatever way you can, no matter how small it is, you still will benefit.
And hopefully so will they.
Yes, exactly.
And so together that action ends up making the world a happier place.
You're not just, you're not just focusing on your own happiness anymore.
You're actually helping to make other people happy and that adds up to create a world
of greater well-being.
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So Stephanie, I love this conversation because I'm one of those people who learned a long
time ago that there is so much joy in helping other people.
And I can just tell you a quick story because this just happened very recently.
There's a woman at my gym.
I don't know her well, but she's struggling financially.
She's a single mom.
She has a teenage son who's in a wheelchair.
I mean, she's been dealt a pretty lousy hand.
But we speak at the gym sometimes.
We have a mutual acquaintance.
And I know that going to the gym is her refuge.
It allows her to get away from the trouble in her life to go to the gym, but she didn't
have the money to continue her membership and she was going to have to stop coming.
So I just paid it.
I paid her membership for the next year.
And it wasn't a lot of money and it made her happy.
And that made me feel so great for helping.
And I'm not looking for a pat on the back or anything, but I find it interesting that
I know there were many other people in the gym who were aware of the situation.
But nobody else jumped on this.
Nobody else volunteered to pitch in.
And that's fine.
And maybe it's because it's hard to know how to insert yourself into a situation like
that if you're not involved.
It helped her out and it made me feel great.
Yeah.
Thank you for sharing.
What a beautiful story.
I have goosebumps listening to it.
And I think you're pointing out something that's so important, which is that there are
opportunities to help people that are all around us.
But we have to one notice them and then two take advantage of them, right?
And what you're describing is people who noticed it, but didn't hop on it the way that you
did to actually jump in and help in a way that they were likely equipped to do.
And if it was just a contribute of small portion of the gym membership for that woman, which
I can only imagine how much that meant to her and how grateful she is to have that space
for herself and for her own well-being.
And I think that, you know, too often we think of helping as this nice to have thing
that will do when we're successful or when we have enough money, whatever that looks
like, or when we figured our own lives out.
There is no point in time where we are going to have our lives all figured out or we're
going to have enough and feel like we have everything that we need or, you know, have
the sense that our lives are complete.
And then we can help.
It's never going to happen.
We're always going to have this experience of being a work in progress and needing to
try for more and grow and all of that.
So the only solution is to help now help anyways, don't wait to help other people.
And it's really admirable that you were somebody who jumped in to do that.
Well, you know that the phrase I hate is the phrase, well, you can't save the world.
Yeah.
Yes, you can.
I mean, you may not save the whole world, but if everybody, there was a great quote that
supposedly came from Mother Teresa, but I've never found any reference that she ever said
this, but somebody said that she had said this, that if we all took care of our own little
corner of the world, the world would be a better place.
And you define what your own little corner of the world is.
It's it's your family, your neighborhood, your school, your church, whatever.
But if everybody did that, the world would be a better place.
And I've just, I thought that was so, even though she's barely never said it, it's such
a beautiful thought because you can define what that means to you.
And you can save the world.
You may not save everybody today, but if everybody tried to do a little bit, we could save
the world or a good portion of it.
But people use that as like, well, since I can't save everybody, screw it, I'm not going
to save anybody.
Exactly.
People give up before they even get started.
And then they miss the chance to actually find the happiness that they want as well, right?
It's this terrible situation that we find ourselves in because we've been so misled.
And I, I adore the sentiment behind that quote, and I couldn't agree more with it.
Nobody has a corner of the world, and all of us have not only the opportunity, but also
I would argue the responsibility to nurture and to care for our corners and to do what
we can.
And the benefit is your happiness, your well-being, and isn't that what you want the most?
So my hope is that through this new understanding, people will come together to help one another
in ways that might not have been visible or possible for them in the past.
Right.
And because the benefit to you is so great that it's not a big sacrifice, which I guess
that's how people often look at it, but there's a huge benefit that, you know, whether it's
the helper's hire, whatever it is, but it feels good to help people.
I mean, everybody knows that.
But especially when it comes to money, people are very like, well, no, we can't really
do that.
Yeah.
I think you're completely right.
And, you know, sometimes I think that people think, oh, like, you know, helping is, it's
sweet.
It's nice, but it's not the be-all-end-all of my happiness.
You know, if I can just get more for myself or achieve more or strive to perfect myself,
then I'll experience the real type of happiness, right?
Like there's this other more powerful, more pervasive experience of happiness out there.
Once you get to a certain place, and I think what I would want to say to those people is,
there isn't.
That doesn't exist, you know, the happiness that's possible for you when you help others,
and especially when you help others in the ways that you're uniquely positioned to do.
That is the purest, greatest form of happiness there is.
There isn't anything else out there.
So take advantage of what's possible right here and now, because there are, as you've
so beautifully described, opportunities to help people all around you.
We sort of talked about this when we were talking about the whole concept of I'll be happy
when, that something else has to happen first, and then I'll be happy.
And I think the two, that there are people who believe that happiness is the result of
sacrifice, that first you have to do something noble or that, you know, happiness can only
come from sacrifice.
You do not have to punish yourself and you can't hurt yourself into a state of greater happiness.
So many people believe that, you know, they have to punish themselves for being who they
are or for not doing enough or for struggling with something.
And it couldn't be further from the truth.
If you want to experience greater happiness in your life, you're going to have much better
luck if you treat yourself with love and actually love yourself into more happiness.
Well, I'm sure you've noticed there are a lot of books and podcasts and people's influencers
who talk about happiness.
So I'm wondering, like, are we, are we getting happier or overall, is it all working?
The World Happiness Report came out, which is a study of all of the countries in the world
led by a number of scholars to look at the happiest countries and the factors that contribute
to it.
And for the first time, the US has dropped out of the top 20.
And that's the first, the first time that's ever happened in the history of the report.
And I think it speaks to the growing sense of unhappiness and dissatisfaction that so many
people feel and the desire that they have to learn more is not potentially being satisfied
by the tools and information that we have available right now.
Well, I like your new happy philosophy because it gives people something really concrete
to follow, to achieve happiness as opposed to, you know, cheer up and be happy.
I've been talking to Stephanie Harrison.
She's creator of the new happy philosophy.
And I encourage you to check out her website, which there is a link to that website in
the show notes.
And the name of her book is new happy, getting happiness right in a world that's got
it wrong.
And there's a link to the book at Amazon in the show notes.
I appreciate you coming on and talking about this, Stephanie.
It was fun.
Thank you so much, Michael, so lovely to talk to you.
Something You Should Know
