Two or three months ago, I couldn’t remember the last time I
had felt really happy. I realized that most of the time, I was just doing all
the things I had to do, and it felt like there was never time, opportunity or
energy to do anything I wanted to do. I felt like all my responsibilities were
weighing heavily on me, all competing for my attention, none of them getting
enough, leaving me feeling like a failure in all departments.
I even wrote about happiness (posted on my blog here) last
year. I had realized how important it was to find happiness right in your
current moment instead of waiting for it on some faraway horizon, and it helped
me a lot to go through that exercise. However, somewhere along the way, I lost
that happy feeling and it was replaced by worry, stress and the feeling of
being overwhelmed. I just felt like there were a lot of negative aspects of
life to deal with now, and they always overshadow the positive ones. I fell
into a woe hole and couldn’t get out.
I started to wonder if this unhappiness was just a part of
getting used to the stage of life I’m at now, compared to my life as a
teenager/20-something-year-old. More responsibilities, more things to worry
about, less free time, less opportunities to do the things that were considered
happy fun 15 or 20 years ago.
This was depressing me even more, so instead of thinking
about the stage of life I’m in, I zoomed out and started thinking about the
stage of history we are in. We’re dealing with new technology to which nobody
before us has had to adjust. Every time something massively and significantly
new is introduced, it takes time for people to get used to it. Just like any
relationship, after we rejoice in the benefits, the positives, the novelties,
we start to see the detriments, the negatives, the realities.
Over the past ten or so years, we’ve begun to live in the world
of social media. We’re connected, but are we too connected? We see everyone’s
up close and personal lives (at least, what they choose to share) every day. We
see the best photos of someone when we feel our worst, exhausted from the day.
We see friends’ and families’ vacation photos, feel happy for them, but also
feel a side of sadness that we aren’t on vacation. We see people posting about
the positive relationships they have and can’t help but hold up the
relationships we have and compare them, maybe feeling bad about being bitchy to
our husband when someone just posted about how in love he or she is with their
spouse.
We can’t help but compare, I guess, even though we know we
shouldn’t. We can’t even be completely happy for the people we love because we
can’t help but position our lives against theirs, noticing all the ways we don’t
measure up. No generation before us has had the same barrage of images at their
fingertips on a daily basis to peruse and position and zoom in and react to as
the people alive today. And it’s hard. It’s really hard to not feel jealous of
a celebrity who just had a baby and looks beautiful and has full-time nannies
to help her. It’s really hard not to feel a twinge when you see people hanging
out and doing something fun when you are lying in bed, exhausted from the day,
not doing anything fun.
Isn’t it ironic that the advancements associated with the
Internet and smart phones that are supposed to make our lives easier and better
actually make them harder?
It’s great that emails come straight to your phone, but it
blurs the line between work and leisure time. It’s great that you can Google
anything, but that black hole of the Internet is easy to fall into—it’s a
slippery slope that blurs the eyes, overwhelms the mind and can eat up so much
time...and can we even remember all we read?
It’s great that you can buy clothes online, but now
companies pump out “new arrivals” at least monthly, and when you start looking
for a specific item, you can get lost in the Internet. Just lost in the
Internet. I have started looking for something I wanted and found myself on
boutique web sites based out of Australia, wondering, how did I get to
Australia? These are cool things, neat conveniences, a massive amount of
options, but also way too many options.
We see ads tailored to products we have searched for, we are
pressured to buy, we are pressured to keep up with trends in home decorating,
fashion, jokes, news, and it all flies by so fast, like running to catch up to
a train but never managing to jump on it.
New technology is always cool, but it has the propensity to
create just as much unhappiness as it does happiness. Modern unhappiness. The
unhappiness that comes from wanting what you don’t need and not feeling satisfied
with all your needs actually being met (first world problems). The unhappiness
that comes from having all the cool and fun things we have, but then wanting the newer model that comes out six months later. The dizzy,
headachey feeling you get from scrolling on your phone for an hour in your bed
in the dark. The empty feeling you have from looking at Instagram images and
wanting things you saw but then forgetting what you saw because you just looked
at 100 images in 1 minute. The slightly dissatisfied feeling, off to the side
of your mind, but noticeable enough, that results from being on Facebook for
too long, reading opinions in the form of posts and discussions in the form of
a series of comments and pictures upon pictures upon pictures of people and
babies and pets. Cool, but also not cool.
Where we are in history, with the Internet and how it
connects and disconnects us, is the place where the cloud of modern unhappiness
hangs.
To feel sorry for ourselves about this wouldn’t get us
anywhere, though. Anyone older than you would probably chide you and say,
“You’re lucky to have all that you have. We didn’t have [this] when I was your
age.” This is true. We are experiencing a new type of unhappiness, but all the
people who lived and died before us had reasons to be unhappy, too. Disease,
shorter life expectancies, world wars, outdoor washrooms, you know, there is a
huge range of things.
There is a lot of talk nowadays about the young generation
being entitled. They expect a lot without wanting to work for it, which anyone
over 25 would scoff at. But you know, every generation must look at their kids
and what they have and say to them, “When your dad and I were kids, we never
had this.” We say to our kids things like, “Did you know that we had to drive
to a video store, rent a movie, drive home, watch the movie, REWIND the movie,
and return it, and all you have to do is pick what you want to watch from
thousands of titles, from several databases on your TV and press play?” I
remember my parents would say the same sort of thing to me, just one-generation-up
sort of things like, “We had to go to the movie theatre to watch a movie!” And
then you get into the generation before it talking about walking to school
uphill both ways, barefoot in the snow.
You get the picture. Every parent will tell their kids they
have it sooo good, and life is so much easier with so many more amenities than
when they were kids. Doesn’t that mean that we are all a little entitled,
compared to the generation before us? None of us realize how lucky we are to
have what we have because we don’t realize how hard our parents had it? We take
for granted what we have and expect it to be that way and heaven forbid your
Wi-Fi cuts out on your back deck? We want what we don’t need and feel bad about
our lives if they aren’t as good as some famous person we don’t even know, living
in California, having followed her dream to design clothing for cats, and now
we want her haircut and the hand towels she has in her kitchen? We are told we
must follow our dreams instead of being told that if everyone had their dream
job, society would collapse?
Every generation has faced different challenges to be
unhappy about. Even though there are different things that can cause
unhappiness, perhaps people have always been able to come back to the SAME THINGS
to build happiness. Perhaps happiness is that simple.
If you think about happiness in the simplest way possible, what,
at the very root, are the things that make us happy? Going back to Abraham Maslow's ideas, here are a few simple ways to feel happy:
· Having food to eat/eating good food (sometimes
in solitude, but a lot of the time with family, friends, at gatherings,
holidays)
· Loving others and being loved
· Feeling safe, secure, cozy
· Doing fun things (hobbies, vacation, parties,
down time), doing what you love to do and are good at doing
· For those who are religious, the fulfillment
that comes from having a relationship with God
These are a few. Perhaps you can think of more.
Whatever your age, we can find happiness in these things, or
variations of these things:
Babies basically eat, sleep and are held and made to feel
safe. Toddlers are happy when they are eating snacks, doing fun things, living
securely and safely within boundaries. Teenagers hang out with friends and eat
pizza; they need to feel like they belong. Eventually, parties transition from
pop-and-chip movie parties to parties with beer that you don’t want your
parents to know about to parties you host at the home you own to intimate
dinner parties with delicious food. Either way, it’s all a variation of the
happiness that comes from being with loved ones and enjoying food and drinks
together.
Whatever your age, you probably feel happy
when you can share a meal with family, go out for dinner with friends, are told
you are loved, have a cozy bed to sleep in, and get to do fun things once in a
while. Perhaps as we get older, our opportunity for happiness grows and gets
more complex. For example, we want to be happy ourselves, but we also want our
kids and other loved ones to be happy as well, which is just as much, if not
more important than our own happiness. We can start throwing in more things
like the happiness that comes from working hard to achieve something, or the
happiness that comes from seeing our children grow up, or the happiness that comes from being a support for others and from feeling supported by others.
It would stand to reason, then, that if our capacity for
happiness increases by growing and becoming more complex, that we would have
more opportunities for happiness and be more happy. Why is it that so many
people tend to feel more unhappy?
How can we be happy in the long term? How can we develop a
habit of happiness? How do we combat our modern unhappiness?
Down to its very core, once you wipe away all the things
that tell us they will make us happy but actually don’t, we really could be
more happy. Did you eat today? Do you have food in your house that you can make
tomorrow? Do you have any plans on the horizon? Did you do anything fun in the
last few months, memories you can replay? Do you have a bed to sleep in
tonight? Do you have people in your life whom you love, and love you? Do you
have a cozy couch to watch TV on? Are your needs met?
These are just a few things, but really, if you boil it down
to the basics, the same things that have made you happy all throughout your
life, the same things that have made people happy all throughout the ages, then
you probably have all the ingredients.
Bake a happy cake and eat it. IT WILL TASTE GOOD.
Think about your kids. Your parents. Your boyfriend,
girlfriend, husband, wife, sister, brother, friends. Think about what they have
done for you. Think about what you can do for them.
If you don’t like a certain part of your life, don’t
complain—change it or decide to accept it. Be realistic.
Be grounded in the day. Get out of the Internet; climb out
of the dark hole and tell yourself what day it is and what you are doing in that
moment. Find something to be happy about—find a positive thing. Take a moment
to let yourself laugh or joke about something. Spend more time being you in
person with other people also in person. Find joy in the everyday—you have
chores to do, but you are able to do them. You have dinner to make, but you
have good food to cook. You have work to do, but you have a job that is making
you money. All these things seem so basic, but they are so much more than what
so many people have.
We live in a very exciting time in history, and we are
learning how to navigate the Internet and all the inadvertent collateral damage
that comes from falling into it. We can do it. It’s our responsibility as people
alive right now to assess the downfalls of new technology and develop ways to
prevent it from hurting us. As adults, we can do what we want, I know, but we should
also set boundaries for ourselves so we don’t self-destruct.
We will be subject to this new, modern unhappiness, but we
can fight it and find the same, reliable happiness here, too—just like those
before us did.