Happiness

Mar. 9th, 2010 12:23 pm
theatokos: (Default)
[personal profile] theatokos
I offer the following diatribe in response to a friend’s post about happiness and some essays she read regarding materialism. Plus, my suggestions for happiness in the second cut.


Why does genuine happiness seem to be so hard to come by? We have more than we, as humans, have ever had before. For me, it’s easy to over-think happiness by virtue of my big fat brain and that I tend to have too much time on my hands. Modern conveniences have given us far more leisure time than our ancestors had. And that’s a good thing. But we also just plain have more, and are pressured into acquiring even more. That’s not such a good thing.

Since moving to Wales I’ve been happier than I’ve been in years. Despite money issues and wearing out my clothes, clothes I am unable at the moment to replace. Despite not having the hoity-toity restaurants I love. Despite being far away from people I love. Culling our things in preparation for the move was liberating. I can name about 5 things off the top of my head that I miss, most are kitchen items and one is our bed. The rest? I can barely remember what we owned. All the consumption and distraction from the US and cities feels profoundly overwhelming when I think of it. Who does all that consumption benefit anyway? Not me. Not you. Not the majority of third world workers who make our cheap shit. Not the environment. Not your kids.

Some rich dude out there is getting richer while we commute to a job we’re luke warm about to afford more stuff we think we need. We’re exhausted at the end of the day, no wonder we reach for pre-packaged food. Of course we need 4 sodas and 6 cups of coffee to get through the day. Of course we’re getting fatter: there’s no food in our food and our asses perpetually glued to a chair of some kind. But, since we’re getting fatter there are multiple diet aids and low fat foods we could try ‘because we’re worth it.’ And if our teeth were whiter we’d be more attractive, and let’s buy 41 different scented products to cover up the fact that we’re animals (scented shampoos, soaps, lotions, deodorants, perfumes, hair gels, toothpaste – everything has a synthetic scent). Don’t forget we spend part of our weekend driving from store to store to find more stuff at the lowest possible prices. Baloney, I say. When I’m feeling polite.

Much of that stuff gets in the way of spending time with our loved ones and ourselves, doing the things we want to do. I’m not saying that stuff or shopping are bad in and of themselves, I’m just saying that we are distracted. Our happiness doesn’t usually make anyone richer except ourselves, therefore it’s not encouraged. If we thought we were fine the way we are a lot of people would lose a lot of money when we stopped buying the latest X, buying diet books, or the fanciest face cream.

And so I offer you:


My suggestions for happiness.
I don’t say rules, because who needs more of those?

1. GET RID OF YOUR TV
At the very least, cancel your cable. Movies and television are fine via dvds, but standard cable and network television is the gateway to advertising. Want to reinforce empty gender stereotypes? Want to get your kids to whine at you for sugary foods and plastic crap? Want to feel like you’re not attractive enough? Then by all means keep your tv on.

2. CANCEL EXTRANEOUS MAGAZINE AND CATALOG SUBSCRIPTIONS
Also gateways to advertising. You don’t need catalogs reminding you every month (or more frequently) that there are pretty new things to purchase. When you want or need something new you know where to find it: stores and/or the internet. Cancel any magazine that says any version of “10 ways to make him happy in bed”, “Your best body now!”, or “6 new superfoods to rev up your metabolism”. There is nothing new here that you don’t already know. They just want to sell you something. If there’s a great article you want to read, you can probably find it on-line or at the library.

3. DON’T COMMUTE
Either move closer to your job, so you can walk, bike or use one form of public transportation, or find a job closer to you (or telecommute). Commuting is not only detrimental to the environment it’s hard on your pocketbook, waistline and happiness. (Some people absolutely love their commute or their job is amazing and makes commuting worth it. But mostly, this doesn’t seem to be the case, and I refuse to do it.)

4. EAT REAL FOOD
Get rid of anything in your cupboard that says ‘low fat’ or has more than one ingredient you either can’t pronounce or don’t know what it is. Most packaged food has little actual food in it. Animals won’t eat margarine. We’re animals. Eat butter. Fat is good. Preservatives, artificial colors, and fillers, like sugar and various corn- and milk-product offshoots are not. Stop drinking soda (or at least, multiple sodas a day). Your body is your temple, and you are what you eat. Sounds cheesy, but it’s true. Your cells, your blood, your flesh are made up of what you eat, and if you eat animal products, what those animals ate. Aren’t you worth more than petrochemical products and animal byproducts? I’m going to say, yes.

5. QUALITY, NOT QUANITY
You do not need 10 pairs of pants. You may want them, but you don’t need them (see the next two points). I am working toward having nicer and less of everything, which means not having as much. I’d much rather pay a lot more for something well made that will last and be something I am excited to use/wear, than something that falls apart and makes me go, enh. We are led to believe that we need bigger, more, fancier. But it’s just not true.

6. ELIMINATE ‘SHOULD’ FROM YOUR VOCABULARY. LEARN THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ‘WANT’ AND ‘NEED’
Stop shoulding all over yourself. Should is nothing but another way to beat yourself up. You ‘should’ call Soandso back. No. You either want to or need to. You ‘shouldn’t’ eat that second piece of cake. Nonsense. You need to pee and breathe and eat. You want to have people like you (nothing inherently wrong with that). Should is a form of control, either external or internal. It’s guilt inducing, and there’s enough guilt in the world already. Replace the word should in your vocabulary with either want or need and see what happens.

7. EMBRACE BEAUTY
There is enough cheap crap in the world, when you see beauty embrace it. Art. Craft. Home made soup. Doesn’t have to be Fancy Culturally Approved ART. Wherever you find beauty, embrace it, cultivate it, make time for it, support it, bring it into your life.

8. MAKE TIME FOR YOURSELF AND GUARD THAT TIME/SPACE WITH YOUR LIFE
A half-hour of reading a novel before bed? Yoga twice a week? Breakfast by yourself at 6am? 10 minutes of meditation at lunch? Your morning run? Dinner with your best friend every Friday? Whatever it is, do it, schedule it, prioritize it. This goes double for those who have kids.

9. PRACTICE GOOD POSTURE
Want to feel a little better? Want to look and feel more confident? Want to look slimmer? Want to be 150% more attractive? Want to look like you know what you’re doing? Stand up straight, take a deep breath, and smile. Works every time. Seriously. If you have chronically bad posture, find a chiropractor, yogi, Alexander method instructor, martial artist, someone to help you.

I haven’t mentioned anything here explicitly about exercise, which is known to release endorphins and blahdiblah and it will make you thinner and healthier and wouldn’t you like that? Mostly I feel like there is so much useless moralizing around The Workout and The Diet and Being Fit. Moving your body is supposed to be fun, not a Should. I think that if you’re out of your car more, eating more healthfully, doing things that make you happy and feel good, chances are good that you’re getting some more exercise right there. If you’re happy and healthy being 20 pounds (or whatever) overweight, more power to you. Dieting is just another form of the Cult of More, in my never humble opinion.

I also haven’t mentioned anything about other people. I think that if you are happy with and about yourself then you’ll start to find people who are also happy with and about themselves. I tend to find that drama queens are surrounded by drama queens. But I suppose I could add another suggestion:

10. WHEN YOU FIND GOOD FRIENDS, HOLD ON TO THEM
Good friends make life ten times more enjoyable. If you have only one good friend in all the world, cherish that friend. A friend of mine told me several years ago, you can always make new friends, you can’t ever make old ones. And, as I’ve come to learn over the last six years, internet friends do so count.

Date: 2010-03-09 01:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] riva-asherah.livejournal.com
I enjoyed reading this. I've never been much for materialism and my partner and I have both specifically chosen career paths that are aimed at not supporting societal consumerism in any way. We both walked away from highly paid situations years ago because nothing about making money in that way made us happy. Now we have rewarding jobs but no money. With you on all of the points you suggest to improve happiness - though counting down the next few months until I can pehaps achieve number 3!

Date: 2010-03-09 09:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
Seriously. You and driving. I can't believe you've come to see me - twice! That is a long and winding drive!

Date: 2010-03-10 07:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] riva-asherah.livejournal.com
Driving to come and see you is better than commuting. It is actually not a bad drive and it's not the distance that is an issue but the type of roads. Still, after my crash the other day I would be more than happy to see the end of commuting.

Date: 2010-03-09 04:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lopezuna.livejournal.com
Those are some great non-rules!

Date: 2010-03-09 09:27 pm (UTC)

Date: 2010-03-09 06:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keypike.livejournal.com
So much to digest and comment on, but I'm running late for a meeting (how apropos, no?).

I will come back later....but wanted you to know I've now read (twice), and love you for writing this.

Date: 2010-03-09 09:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
I love you too.

Date: 2010-03-09 10:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] seaivy.livejournal.com
Been there done that -life is good.
But there is a problem with the commute. My husband worked for a big corporation that played building checkers. Move into a new building and get all the bargains for doing so. When they expire move out and find a new set of bargains. This meant the offices moved every two to five years. Some times it was a short move sometimes it meant an hours commute or more. The Corporation was also fond of moving departments from one location to another.
Finding a new job wasn't an option. This one paid the bills and was part of a "career". After a certain age moving from one job to another is not an option. And in these hard times leaving a job may mean no job.
Sometimes the less than ideal must be lived with an made the best of.

Date: 2010-03-10 08:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
"Sometimes the less than ideal must be lived with an made the best of." Absolutely. I didn't feel like prefacing all of this with caveats like "your mileage may vary" and "various economic factors or race or gender or whatever may effect the decisions you have to make in your own life" etc.

Date: 2010-03-10 12:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bloodfever.livejournal.com
I agreed with some items on the list, but think that #3 is simplistic and does't quite work.

It's impossible here, unless by commute you mean "by car". Living within walking distance of work in this town means paying $700+ a week in rent. Living within walking distance of satellite CBD's means paying $500pw in rent. We would have to sacrifice *everything* to do it, and we would struggle severely even then. Commute is part of a compromise between managing financially, being near family, having space for ninja to live and play, having time to actually raise ninja, and so forth.

(Heh, also, ironically this is another list of shoulds ;p)
Edited Date: 2010-03-10 12:24 am (UTC)

Date: 2010-03-10 08:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
Re: #3. I know. And when we move back to the States we're going to have to face this again. Still. In a better world (one that is possible, but damn hard to do) commuting would be cut down. I'd love to see a resurgence of smaller towns and rural communities and the revivification of urban cities as places where people lived/worked/played, rather than work in the city, lived in the suburbs, played some where else.

Date: 2010-03-10 10:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bloodfever.livejournal.com
Maybe it's cultural, but I can't imagine urban cities ever being good for 'living'. Even with the creation of viable smaller towns/more satellite cities, and so forth which would make urban cities a bit smaller there just wouldn't be enough space - for families anyway. The idea of raising (particularly young) children in high density areas is...well, I don't like it.

Date: 2010-03-10 09:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
It isn't a list of should! I never said that word. This is MY list of suggestions only. I don't think every one needs to do all or any. But these are things that have worked for me. But yeah, I write and talk rather definitively. Cuz, you know. I've got ALL the answers.

Date: 2010-03-10 10:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bloodfever.livejournal.com
It reads like a should I guess because by and large they're all suggestions that make sense, and anything I'm not currently doing that makes sense to do just becomes a mental should. I think it's human nature. There are shoulds and there are shoulds, of course.

Although we actually do a lot of things on that list by default. I watch 90% of the tv I do in downloaded form, and tv for ninja is advertising-free. Don't have any subscriptions. Don't buy heaps of anything because we simply can't afford to. I have me time, *I* don't commute (although Troy does). Blah blah, etc.

Date: 2010-03-10 10:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
I certainly didn't want to make you feel bad. Or feel that you have to justify your life to me. I have strong opinions but everyone's life and circumstances are different. For some, getting out of debt 'should' be on that list - I'm working on that. That's an area I struggle with feeling like I need to justify.

Date: 2010-03-10 10:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bloodfever.livejournal.com
Not justification, just discussion.

Date: 2010-03-10 02:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amyura.livejournal.com
LOVED the post, but I do agree with the last two posters about "commuting." Unless I live right in a city, and frequently even then, being a teacher means driving a car to work at least some of the time. There are too many books and papers to lug back and forth; add two kids to the mix and forget about it. If you live in a semi-rural area as I do, there are fewer than a hundred houses within walking distance of most schools. And in this economy, just quitting and finding another job within walking/public transport distance, or just moving, are both completely impossible.

That said, I love my job and my career and my kids' sitter, and the 15-minute drive to work doesn't stress me out in the least.

Date: 2010-03-10 08:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewigweibliche.livejournal.com
Hm. You know, you don't have to do all or any of these. And honestly, if you didn't have to commute, would you? But good jobs and good places to live aren't in the same place most of the time. But I maintain that commuting is detrimental to happiness. But many things are detrimental to happiness and we have to do them anyway.

I also feel like, after living in CA, that a 15 min drive to work hardly counts as a commute!

Date: 2010-03-10 01:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miss-malloreee.livejournal.com
I loved this!

& especially this: you can always make new friends, you can’t ever make old ones

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