The Key to Happiness: Share Your Opinion

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In summary, the key to happiness in today's world is finding a sense of satisfaction in life, whether it be through achieving goals, helping others, or finding fulfillment in one's passions. While external factors such as money and genetics can play a role, ultimately, happiness is an internal quality that is not solely dependent on these factors. Each individual may have a different definition of happiness and what brings them true satisfaction in life.
  • #1
modulus
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3
A simple question: What is the key to happiness in today's world.

I found my answer in a very inspiring and practical quote I read somewhere. I would like to hear what everyone else has to say on the topic. I'll disclose my opinion in the end.

Please give as much of your opinions as you can on this topic.

Thank you.
 
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  • #2
I don't know the recipe for happiness but i do know that ignorance helps a lot.
 
  • #3
That's a big one, but honestly - your happiness (and misery) is in your own hands. A lot more that what we would like to think is in our control, and even when we can not change existing facts - we can change what we do with them.

I have to add my favorite quote right now : "Getting mad is a way to punish yourself for someone else's stupidity".

:biggrin:
 
  • #4
I really like what Victor Frankl says about happiness:

"If there is a reason for happiness, happiness ensues, automatically and spontaneously, as it were. And that is why one need not pursue happiness, one need not care for it once there is a reason for it. But, even more, one cannot pursue it. To the extent that one makes happiness the object of his motivation, he necessarily makes it the object of his attention. But precisely by doing so, he loses sight of the reason for happiness, and happiness itself fades away."

Happiness is a function of meaning, the result of fulfillment of a goal. Seeking happiness for its own sake is chasing a chimera.
 
  • #5
I liked that quote of Victor Frankl- if there is a reason for happiness, it will come to you itself.
But, what is that reason for happiness? That is the bigger question. What is the one biggest reason for a human being to be happy in the world as it is today?
I feel the answer is satisfaction, as buddha has said. But, how do you achieve that satisfaction in life... in a world like our's?
I haven't disclosed the quote that really inspired me yet, I still want to hear more from you.
 
  • #6
modulus said:
I feel the answer is satisfaction...
This is a non-answer. You've simply defined the unmeasurable word 'happiness' in terms of another equally unmeasurable word 'satisfaction'.
 
  • #7
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  • #8
NEW YORK - Unhappy? Blame biology. Then cheer yourself up by finding a job with a shorter commute.

As economists, psychologists and biologists try to determine what makes a person happy or unhappy, one factor stands out as especially powerful. To a large degree, it seems, happiness is inherited...
http://www.forbes.com/2004/09/23/cx_mh_0923happiness.html
 
  • #9
the key to your happiness is by helping the others to be happy.
 
  • #10
In todays world happiness is found in money.
 
  • #11
Willowz said:
In todays world happiness is found in money.
No. I think money can mask unhappiness for a duration. But I think peoples' happiness is an internal quality. An unhappy person who wins the lottery may feel happy for a while (even a long while) but once their life stabilizes, they will revert to the same level of happiness. Likewise, those with very little money who are happy internally, will be happy regardless.

This does not mean people cannot find happiness, or lose it. But the money is a catalyst, not a determinant.


Then again, I cannot claim impartiality. I have not suffered grinding poverty in my life except for the kind and extent that builds character.
 
  • #12
Doing.

"My formula for happiness: a Yes, a No, a straight line, a goal."
F. Nietzsche
 
  • #13
For me, happiness is the satisfaction that I feel when I have done something well.

For years, I got feedback from crowds while playing music. There isn't much better feedback than getting cheers and applause from people who are spending their hard-earned money to listen to you play and sing. That was easy, when I was able to be in the presence of people wearing colognes, perfumes, and scented laundry products. Those days are over.

Nowadays, things are a bit more subjective, and I have to measure my performance against my expectations. I look at my home, kitchen, wood-pile, garden, etc, and think of what I have done to get this stuff up to snuff and what I have done to help my neighbors with their projects. I spent the entire weekend helping a neighbor and his son tear down and rebuild an old Ford 250. We did seals, gaskets, water pump, electrical parts, etc, and that old work horse is purring like a kitten. I'll help the old man clean and refurbish the body tomorrow or the next day and we'll mount that this week sometime - his son is back in Mass working on a road-crew. I'm pretty happy, though lots of folks in my position would not feel that way. I have a sister who works in health-care and who performs on weekends in a pretty popular band, and she is constantly miserable (or at least wants me to believe that she is miserable and listen to her problems). The happiest times that I have ever seen her enjoy is when I'd get her to sit in with me in my band and we'd do vocal duets on standards like "Brown Eyed Girl", "Mustang Sally", etc, and fill the dance floor.

To people who give a hoot: we are our own worst critics. It is easy to get the popular acclaim of others if you are good at something. It's a lot harder to get your own self-respect when you know your capabilities and feel that you've fallen short.
 
  • #14
I think happiness is relative and individual - different things would make different people happy to different degrees. Happiness is largely like an opinion - so this is like asking "What is the prettiest color ?" every person would give a different answer.

All this excludes those who are by character unhappy - misery is an absolute...

:cry:
 
  • #16
Like I said before, I hadn't quite defined satisfaction in that very post. As I said, I'll disclose the quote in the end. This is it: 'The key to happiness is something to do, something to want, and someone to love'.

You see, the quote defines satisfaction as 'something to do, something to want, and something to love'. So, satisfaction isn't immeasurable, and happiness, i.e., the way in which a person feels satisfaction, is an individual thing. Some people find satisfaction in helping others (mohd adam), while others find it in earning more and more money, though money is kind of a different thing… a catalyst, just as DaveC436913 said.

The reasons for which a person becomes happy, or the amount of happiness one feels could be a result of inheritance.
 
  • #17
WaveJumper said:
I don't know the recipe for happiness but i do know that ignorance helps a lot.

ignorance is bliss!

Words like selfish and respect come to mind.
 
  • #18
...ignorance is bliss because I believe one can't be truly happy if one knows someone else is unhappy...

"please don't chase the clouds pagodas" - as long as you have no expectations and things you must have or achieve I think you could be happy - just living in the moment.
 
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  • #19
Happiness may be a state in brain, that can be achieved either by mental manipulation
(Yoga,...), drugs (alcohol, narcotics, nicotin,...), physical activities (yogging,...) or
good news to you. To mention some possible, more or less durable, reasons for "happiness".

I have often wondered how people in miserable, uncomfortible or otherwise bad conditions
(crippled soldiers, starving natives) still may look so happy in pictures and videos.

Religious people also appear happy. Perhaps expecting something good waiting for them, if only first in next life, make you feel happy.

"Don't worry, be happy." :wink:
 
  • #20
Happiness is not contemplating happiness. It's like a beautiful woman or a lucid dream. Chase it with desires and it flies away. Capture it and it loses its potency. Surrender the ego to it and it's yours forever. I've always found it when I'm not looking. She's a byzantine lover.

This is akin to the statement "ignorance is bliss", but that expression never satisfied me.
Happiness identifies a mind in place and time as a singular entity, giving it purpose in the immediate condition, rather than ego-driven actions wrestling with reality towards some desired outcome. That's a chain of events with no end. Happiness doesn't preclude awareness of the world. It just works despite it, and sometimes in favor of it.

Just shut up and dance.
 
  • #21
If happiness is sought in achieving a goal, then as soon as the goal is achieved, the happiness will begin to fade and you will feel compelled to reach for the next goal. (It doesn't work; I know, I've tried.) If happiness is sought through getting stuff, then there will never be enough stuff - once you get what you were after, the happiness will fade and you will only desire more stuff. Seeking happiness in people, things, recognition, or goals is like trying to grab both hands full of wind - as soon as you grasp it, it is gone.

The one key I have found to happiness in this life: gratitude.
 
  • #22
JazzFusion said:
If happiness is sought in achieving a goal, then as soon as the goal is achieved, the happiness will begin to fade and you will feel compelled to reach for the next goal.
And this is bad how?
 
  • #23
For me a good portion of my happiness is to be had in my music making.
I think people forget to think about everything they've already achieved.
I look back on all the music I've made so far and I almost feel content, like I could die now and be happy with what I had done.

Also, I think happiness is a general outlook on life. Maybe it can be a thought, a sensory experience like watching the rain, being with someone and talking to them, etc.
In fact it might be possible to say that happiness is really unrelated to what you do, but rather how you feel about doing it. I notice I can feel a bit down when doing the exact same things I do when I feel content.
And yeah happiness can be on a big scale or small scale, but I think most people have the capacity to find joy unless there is a big problem or issue dragging them down on a daily basis.. That's usually the source of a depression then..
I am content most days sometimes by being productive and creative, and other days by not doing anything at all just relaxing in the sun or even sleeping in the middle of the day or petting my dog. I mean it's complicated in some ways.
 
  • #24
DaveC426913 said:
And this is bad how?
Because it leaves you on a hamster wheel in a never-ending cycle.

Feel free to set goals and achieve them, by all means. But don't let your goals and/or accomplishments define your inherent worth as a person, or your happiness. (Take this from an experimentalist who already tried this approach :shy: )
 
  • #25
JazzFusion said:
Because it leaves you on a hamster wheel in a never-ending cycle.

Feel free to set goals and achieve them, by all means. But don't let your goals and/or accomplishments define your inherent worth as a person, or your happiness. (Take this from an experimentalist who already tried this approach :shy: )

Perhaps a better way of phrasing it might be "the pursuit of happiness".
 
  • #26
octelcogopod said:
I look back on all the music I've made so far and I almost feel content, like I could die now and be happy with what I had done.

That's pretty much the exact opposite feeling I have after having spent the last 5 years dedicated towards my PhD research which is tauntingly unfinished. If I were to die, I might just remain a ghost to haunt this world forever as my soul would not be ready to let go. Ah, how I envy you in that regard. Cherish your state of mind.
 
  • #27
Crowing over the miseries of others is what really gets me going in the morning.
 
  • #28
mohd_adam said:
the key to your happiness is by helping the others to be happy.

Oh that's such a cliche; The key to happiness is indulging in hedonism;Finding pleasure in particular things that will please you the most, it could be acquiring wealth all of your life, it could be making others happy; it could be being devoted to a hobby that could turn into an obessesion and passion; I don't believe that there is only one source of happiness; Different things make different people happy
 
  • #29
Sorry, but that's also cliche.

One of the greatest examples of hedonism in the history of the world was an ancient near-eastern king who amassed so much gold, silk, spices, etc that the (relatively-worthless) silver had to be stacked in heaps outside the city walls. He had over 700 wives and 300 concubines (lemme see... this is March 13, so you must be...??). Since he (obviously) didn't have an MP3 player, he had over 200 musicians and singers on full-time staff. He studied whatever he wanted to learn (he became known as somewhat of an expert on biology, agriculture, history, and languages). He was a religious scholar, poet, and writer. He went out of his way to try new experiences and indulge whatever impulse he had, just to see where it lead.

At the end of it all, he said his search for happiness and purpose in life was vain and meaningless - like trying to grasp both hands-full of air.

I'll stick with gratitude for what I have as the key to happiness - it works for me ;-)
 
  • #30
JazzFusion said:
I'll stick with gratitude for what I have as the key to happiness - it works for me ;-)

Good point. One of the things that brings me peace is to count my blessings. The ways my life could be so much worse are too numerous to count.

What do you have right now that you could lose?
 
  • #31
The thing that make me happy, which is relative to me but could help other people, is to be who I am no matter what. Without fronts of personality in-front of anyone then you get a sense of being something true. If you lie, then you struggle for something that you are not. Struggle leads to stress, stress leads to your unhappiness.

Also being friendly to other people because its always nice and enjoyable to talk to a new mind. Plus being helpful to a point were your not overwhelmed makes you feel nice.
 

1. What is the key to happiness?

The key to happiness is subjective and varies from person to person. Some may find happiness in material possessions, while others may find it in experiences or relationships. Ultimately, the key to happiness is finding what brings joy and fulfillment to your life.

2. How can I find happiness?

Finding happiness involves self-reflection and understanding what makes you happy. It can also involve trying new things and stepping out of your comfort zone. It's important to prioritize your mental and emotional well-being and surround yourself with positivity and things that bring you joy.

3. Can happiness be achieved through external factors?

While external factors such as relationships, career success, or material possessions can contribute to happiness, true happiness comes from within. It's important to cultivate a positive mindset and find joy in the present moment rather than relying solely on external factors for happiness.

4. Is happiness a constant state?

Happiness is not a constant state, as it is natural for emotions to fluctuate. It's important to acknowledge and accept negative emotions, but also to actively work towards finding joy and positivity in life. Happiness is a journey, not a destination.

5. How can I share my opinion on the key to happiness?

There are many ways to share your opinion on the key to happiness. You can have conversations with friends and family, write about it in a journal or blog, participate in online discussions or forums, or even conduct research and publish your findings. The important thing is to express your thoughts and ideas in a respectful and open-minded manner.

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