Five years after graduation, a recent reunion of close friends from university brought the strangest of life insights to surface. Each and every one of us has different dreams, hopes, fears and failures that we carry around with us. While each of us had different apparent sources of happiness (a high-flying career, successful personal relationships, a newborn child) and unhappiness (saas bahu conflicts, financial dependence on a family business, failed relationships), there was one underlying principle that cut across all our discussions: our lives no longer reflect the intrinsic nature of our personalities. Over time, we had compromised our own individuality to make people around us happy and meet social expectations. While this is natural to some extent when transitioning into adulthood, what was surprising was that we genuinely believed that making others happy and meeting social expectations was the way to ‘achieve’ happiness and that we should compromise — paradoxically — our own personal happiness to ‘achieve’ this happiness.
Just like you would work hard on building a career or a relationship, happiness is something that requires a lot of effort to be made, before it can be realised. It’s frustrating when we’re making a lot of effort to be happy but not realising any tangible difference in how we feel. That’s because we’re often trying to build happiness from the outside in rather than the inside out. Imagine constructing the exterior or the roof of a house without putting a foundation in place: you will give the appearance of making progress quicker but eventually the building will fall flat.
Why do we build happiness from the outside in? That’s because we don’t just want to be happy or make others happy, we also want others to perceive us as being happy and successful. We need others to tell us that we’re ‘happy’ using objective markers of happiness (careers, relationships, health, wealth, etc.) because we’re too afraid to develop and own a definition of happiness that is unique to us. It’s easier to have other people tell us we’re happy rather than telling ourselves we’re genuinely happy (somehow it’s less believable when we speak to ourselves). As a result, we outsource our happiness because it’s easier to understand what other people want from us as opposed to what we want from ourselves. In the end, this triggers a vicious cycle where we compromise our personal happiness to haplessly generate happiness for those around us and project a perception of our happiness within others.
How do we create happiness from the inside out? We need to ask ourselves what makes us happy rather than asking what ‘should’ make us happy. This task is significantly more challenging in a judgmental society like Pakistan but this is a difficult journey we must embark on to discover ourselves. Once we understand our drivers of happiness, we need to have the confidence to build a life that reflects our core values. We need to stop thinking this is selfish. After all, we can only bring joy and meaning in the lives of people we care about when we know how to bring joy and meaning in our own life.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 24th, 2013.
Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.
COMMENTS (14)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
amazing
Where is happiness?. Happiness resides between your two ears. Happiness is a state of mind and it should flow from your inner world to the outside world. Visualize success and happiness in your mind every day for 10 minutes and in a few months your life will be transformed in a positive way. Compare and compete against yourself only. You can never become another person or another person cannot become you. We are all unique in our own way. You can find happiness in a sun rise, in a sun set, in blue sky, in rain, in nature etc. if you look for beauty and happiness in small small things. We dont really need expensive gadgets or to take drugs to experience happiness. Happiness is just a state of mind.
I am a Sunni Syed Muslim and I have the courage to write that I have noticed that Pakistani Muslims are most selfish people on earth.
No one cares for others, even not the real brothers and sisters from the same mother and same father.
If some one would like to confirm my statement, he or she should go and find out that how many property cases are pending for decision in the Lower Courts, High Court and in the Supreme Court.
Bilal is taking about happiness, which is far from imagination in every walk of life in Pakistan.
What people want is only and only money, as if money is God for them, and nothing else, even at the cost of real happiness which comes from the depth of the heart.
There are some charitable organization who are taking care of a fraction of poor people in Pakistan and these charitable organizations are trying to give happiness either to such elderly people who are sent by their real children to old homes or of those men and women who are all alone in this world or to those orphans who neither have parents nor a home to live there.
Why does the author write such stuff ?
This is not a blog
He always write crazy things.
well written artical it has all the ingredients that a good artical takes . Happiness comes from your inner peace ,do not let people destroy your inner peace ,you will be in a peaceful state of mind .
we live in a society where people judge you by the luxurious car you have ,and by your job in a MNC no matter how deplorable you feel inside ,people have their own gauge to judge your happiness ,that is why do whatever makes you happy become an human agency,make people follow you
This is what inner peace is, and infact, the driving force whic synchronizes all our abilities streamlined for a common cause. Great piece !
@PakiMujahid: BANGALORED is the synonym for OUTSOURCED,,for americans i think it's entirely correct!!
Just for ur kind information..Outsourced has been replaced by word BANGALORED....here in USA
The whole problem arises because we define happiness wrongly. Those interested in getting the definition right, and enjoy happiness all the time, should learn it from Gautama Buddha. Simple!
Extremely well thought through and articulated.
Our inner self is the source of happiness and miseries both. Yoga and the "Art of Living" address it so well. Yoga and Art of Living has nothing to do with any particular religion.
"Judgmental society like Pakistan"....very true. Inferiority complex runs in a nation after being colonized and beaten up.
Aaaah I wish I had the courage to do this.