2820: Who Says We Have To Be Happy All the Time? by Lynn Newman with Tiny Buddha on Accepting Your Feelings
Optimal Living DailyJuly 04, 2023
2820
00:10:38

2820: Who Says We Have To Be Happy All the Time? by Lynn Newman with Tiny Buddha on Accepting Your Feelings

Lynn Newman with Tiny Buddha asks if we really have to be happy all the time

Episode 2820: Who Says We Have To Be Happy All the Time? by Lynn Newman with Tiny Buddha on Accepting Your Feelings

Tiny Buddha has been helping people heal, grow, and find peace since 2009. The site features stories and insights from people of all ages, from all over the globe. For daily wisdom, follow Tiny Buddha on TwitterFacebook and Instagram, or subscribe to the blog. And be sure to check out Tiny Buddha’s Inner Strength Journal: Creative Prompts and Challenges to Help You Get Through Anything, by site founder Lori Deschene.

The original post can be found here: https://tinybuddha.com/blog/who-says-we-have-to-be-happy-all-the-time/

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[00:00:00] [SPEAKER_01] Before we start, please check out our new podcast, Good Sleep. Have you ever noticed how a calm mind can really set the stage for a good night's sleep? That's the idea behind our new podcast, Good Sleep. Greg, our host from Optimal Relationships Daily, is here to help ease you into a peaceful night's rest with some positive affirmations. And these affirmations aren't just comforting, they can help ease anxiety and nurture positive thoughts, setting you up for true good sleep.

[00:00:25] [SPEAKER_01] So press play on Good Sleep tonight because a good tomorrow starts with a good night's sleep. Just search for Good Sleep in your podcast app and be sure to pick the one from Optimal Living Daily. This is Optimal Living Daily episode 2820, Who Says We Have To Be Happy All The Time by Lynn Newman with tinybuddha.com. And I'm Justin Malik, your host and narrator, back today with an article from Tiny Buddha. So that let's get right to it as we optimize real life.

[00:00:59] [SPEAKER_01] Who Says We Have To Be Happy All The Time by Lynn Newman with tinybuddha.com. Quote, Develop a mind that is vast like the water, where experiences both pleasant and unpleasant can appear and disappear without conflict, struggle, or harm. Rest in a mind like vast water. Buddha.

[00:01:23] [SPEAKER_01] When I think about having to be happy all of the time, I feel a certain kind of pressure. Sure, it's different now than it was, but that doesn't mean there aren't cycles when I question everything. Sometimes I can catch myself thinking that everything would magically fall into place if I had all the success I want in my career, the happily ever after relationship without any issues, or anything else I seemingly need.

[00:01:48] [SPEAKER_01] Happy enough that I didn't care, I'd walk around like a beaming light where everyone saw my radiance and adored me. It's a noble wish. I can envy those who seem happy all of the time and seemingly have it all together. The problem is, it's a dream of perfection. On a day when I don't feel happy or like a dark cloud is passing over my head, I can feel I've failed at life. The pressure to be happy actually makes me unhappy.

[00:02:17] [SPEAKER_01] And when I feel sorrow or pain or depression, I can fear it'll never go away. I worry the prize of arriving to this big, beautiful, happy life isn't mine to have in the first place. Here are three things I've learned to get through the lows that have helped me change the way I view my life and myself. Number one, moments of real connection often stem from acknowledging our struggles.

[00:02:44] [SPEAKER_01] Sometimes when I was in the dumps, I wanted to hide and isolate myself. But shared moments of loving connection didn't always have to happen when I was my happiest self. When I look at my closest friendships, I realize what helped form them into solid, supportive relationships were through moments of shared vulnerability. True intimacy came when I revealed what I was feeling or what I was going through, opening up to a deeper emotional honesty.

[00:03:10] [SPEAKER_01] Not feeling afraid to share truthfully what was going on for me allowed another person in more profoundly. And because of this, others felt safer to be real with me. They didn't worry I judged them for how they felt on any given day and I'd have compassion. It's the heart where true connection lies, not just in times of laughter and shared happiness. And forming a loving bond through times of difficulty gave us more appreciation for the shared joys that did arise.

[00:03:40] [SPEAKER_01] I learned how to do this, though, without being in a victim mentality. If I shared what I was feeling with a sense of neediness or wanting the other to help me, fix me, save me, it was harder to be around me. But if I shared with a sense of 100% responsibility for my feelings and issues, others trusted I would take care of myself without having to do anything for me. I could say, I'm having a difficult time and this is what I'm learning about myself.

[00:04:08] [SPEAKER_01] My intention for self-awareness and an interest to solve my own problems with humility gave people space to be with me without feeling burdened. And this, in return, although not expected, allowed reciprocity. Number two, peaceful acceptance is more important and more sustainable than happiness. I can be hard on myself. This idea of a perfect life, to not be messy, mixed up, afraid, and feeling small,

[00:04:38] [SPEAKER_01] makes those days when I'm down much harder. Now I just let those dark days be. Or more than that, I know even though those times suck royally, I'm growing. Now I focus on what can make me feel peaceful rather than happy. There's a lot more room then to get stronger and bring back the fire that seems to have left me. I do grounded, simple things that bring me joy like knitting, reading a good novel,

[00:05:04] [SPEAKER_01] seeing a play, or taking a long walk in a different neighborhood. These small moments of taking the day easy and allowing with grace brings me inner balance, which I discovered is most needed in these kinds of down and outs. Just chilling out and taking the strain off helps me feel more present, alive, and clear. And that is far more sustaining than the elated, euphoric states I can have when something great does happen for me.

[00:05:30] [SPEAKER_01] Those super over-the-top kind of happy moments are fleeting and transitory. They pass by quickly as I return to daily life. Creating peace, rather than striving for constant happiness, gets me off the hook. Free of drama, stress, and anxiety, I take it easy even if I still feel messed up. Then I'm even keel, and that's a lovely feeling. It's really kind of refreshing. In reality, I don't have to do anything or get anything to be happy.

[00:05:59] [SPEAKER_01] I just get to be me. And number three, periods of uncertainty do pass, but it's how we hold them in the present that matters most. I've learned I can feel down when I'm not feeling on purpose or when I'm unsure of what's next. Not knowing what's going to happen, I can fear I'll be stuck in the muck, unsafe, unlovable, and not enough. That in-between space is uncomfortable and disquieting.

[00:06:26] [SPEAKER_01] If I don't feel on point, motivated, or like I'm getting what I want immediately, I can think I've failed in life. As an artist, I can worry my next creative project won't come, or fear I'll never fall in love again. This kind of future thinking is the death to my happiness, because I can think there's something wrong with me for not having it all figured out. What I do in these times is nothing big. I focus on nurturing myself and find the easiest thing I can do.

[00:06:55] [SPEAKER_01] I apply what's gentle, loving, and kind. I ask my spirit what it needs, rather than my ego that's striving for happiness. I accept it as a time to go within, rather than seek pleasure without. A gentle time to restore and regenerate, giving myself space to prepare inwardly for the new. Truth is, there are sometimes slow-moving streams and still pools, and I can't force a river, no matter how much I want to.

[00:07:23] [SPEAKER_01] My learning is not to flee from my sense of emptiness, but to loosen my grip and relax into the gap. Like a trapeze artist letting go of one bar and reaching for the next, I trust it's in this very space that the new is discovered. I try to honor the passages without forcing anything. As I take tender steps toward my endeavors, I allow the beauty of the next to arise according to its own timing. Somehow I'm freer, even if I happen to be unhappy.

[00:07:52] [SPEAKER_01] I know it's not really the truth of my being, and that's a very cool thing. Kind of something that makes me happy. What gives you a sense of peaceful aliveness? In what ways can you connect more with others? How might you meet transition cultivating a sense of easy? And how might all of this give you more permission to be? You just listened to the post titled, Who Says We Have to Be Happy All The Time?

[00:08:21] [SPEAKER_01] By Lynn Newman with tinybuddha.com. As a small business owner, you never clock out, and neither does LinkedIn Jobs. While you're running your business, LinkedIn Jobs is running a powerful search for your next great hire. We've been lucky finding our team here at Optimal Living Daily, and I think LinkedIn Jobs would have taken luck out of the equation, finding us the best quickly. Post your job for free or pay to promote, and let their intelligent matching system connect you with candidates who align with your company's needs.

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[00:09:19] [SPEAKER_01] Post your job for free at linkedin.com slash selection. That's linkedin.com slash selection to post your job for free. Terms and conditions apply.

[00:09:30] [SPEAKER_00] Überlass deine gesunde Ernährung und die Gains nicht nur deinem Bauchgefühl. Denn bei der Ernährung gaukelt uns unser innerer Schweinehund manchmal ganz schön was vor. Sag stattdessen Hallo zu deinem neuen Coach, Yasio. Yasio ist die meistgenutzte Ernährungs-App Europas, made in Germany. Egal ob Massephase oder ein bisschen abnehmen, tracke Kalorien, Proteine, Carbs, Fette, Bewegung und Intervallfasten. Und mit den tasty Rezepten bist du ready für deine Ziele. Let's go! Lade die Yasio-App jetzt herunter!

[00:10:00] [SPEAKER_01] Thank you to Lynn. She's a guest writer on Tiny Buddha and has her master's in counseling psychology. You can come by tinybuddha.com for a lot more. I feel like I've heard, possibly from one of the articles I've narrated, since I've narrated thousands now, I think I've heard before an idea that constantly searching for ways to be happy can actually bring about more unhappiness and dissatisfaction with our lives.

[00:10:26] [SPEAKER_01] But does that mean we should stop reading articles like this about happiness? Well, I don't think that's what Lynn's saying, but there is something to say about being dissatisfied often enough to feel like we constantly have to search for sort of remedies to not being happy all the time. Which, like Lynn said, seems more like a dream of perfection than anything else. It would be inhuman to be happy all the time, no matter how many other people come across that way,

[00:10:55] [SPEAKER_01] either on social media or on podcasts even, possibly in real life. We might know that person who always seems to have everything together and happy about everything all the time, but I'd say something's going on there that needs further digging and probably isn't exactly what it seems. So, something to ponder today. Have a great rest of your day, and I'll catch you tomorrow for the Wednesday show where your optimal life awaits.