The Simple Secret to a Happy Life
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If my wife saw this headline, sheād probably fall over laughing. OK, so maybe I donāt fit the classic profile of a happy person. And maybe I shouldnāt be dispensing advice on how to be happy. But I do know what makes people miserable. And itās no coincidence that the same thing destroys careers and entire companies.
Now, before I tell you what creates more personal and professional misery than anything else and what, conversely, you should always avoid if you want to lead a happy life, let me ask you a personal question: Have you ever lied to yourself?
Donāt answer right away. Take your time and really think about it. Seriously. Itās not exactly the kind of question you get asked a lot ⦠or are likely to be asked again. But it may be the most important question youāve ever asked yourself so, if I were you, Iād give it some serious thought.
And while I donāt know you from Adam, I can tell you one thing with great certainty: Your answer should be āyes.ā And yet, maybe half of you will say āno.ā The funny thing is, those who said they do lie to themselves are actually more honest with themselves than those who think they donāt.
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Thatās because we all lie to ourselves so often in so many ways it isnāt funny:
- When you chronically eat foods that are bad for you and donāt get enough exercise, you tell yourself itās OK but you know it isnāt.
- When you exaggerate your accomplishments or claim to be what youāre not on your āAboutā page, your bio, or your social-media profiles, you tell yourself everyone does it and you have to āfake it ātil you make itā when, in reality, neither is true.
- When you tell yourself that itās someone elseās fault that youāre not doing better in your career or that bad things keep happening to you, deep down you know that isnāt true; youāre just not willing to face the truth.
- When you spend money you have no business spending, max out credit cards, overindulge your vanity with expensive items you simply canāt afford, or otherwise overextend your finances, thatās your ego writing checks that reality canāt cash.
- When you treat others like crap ā acting out in self-righteous anger, in jealous rage, or by making empty threats ā you tell yourself they deserve it when, in reality, you lack the courage to face your true feelings of fear, shame, and inadequacy.
- When youāre deceitful at work or in your business ā committing fraud, providing bad advice for selfish reasons, taking money you didnāt earn, or making commitments you can never meet ā you must have some sort of twisted logic to justify it.
I can go on but Iām sure you get the point. And youāve got to admit, thereās some pretty heavy stuff in that list. Stuff most of us have done at one time or another. And trust me when I tell you, it will come back to haunt you. What goes around really does come around. And it will make you miserable.
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I should know. Iāve done some of those things myself. The good news is Iāve been around for ages and started facing my demons long ago. Thatās when the truth began to dawn on me that not being honest with yourself is a silent killer. Itās the single most preventable source of personal and professional destruction.
If you want to lead a reasonably happy life and have a fulfilling career, the secret is simply to be honest with yourself. Simple, but far easier said than done.
Iām sure youāve heard Henry David Thoreauās famous quote from Walden: āThe mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.ā The reason itās so well known is that it resonates with so many people in so many ways. But to me, itās always meant that itās all too easy to trap ourselves in cages of our own design.
If you consider that Thoreau made that great philosophical leap while living in simplicity and solitude in a cabin near Walden Pond for just over two years, it reveals one of lifeās great ironies: We lie to ourselves because we want material things we donāt need or deserve. Thatās what makes us miserable.
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If my wife saw this headline, sheād probably fall over laughing. OK, so maybe I donāt fit the classic profile of a happy person. And maybe I shouldnāt be dispensing advice on how to be happy. But I do know what makes people miserable. And itās no coincidence that the same thing destroys careers and entire companies.
Now, before I tell you what creates more personal and professional misery than anything else and what, conversely, you should always avoid if you want to lead a happy life, let me ask you a personal question: Have you ever lied to yourself?
Donāt answer right away. Take your time and really think about it. Seriously. Itās not exactly the kind of question you get asked a lot ⦠or are likely to be asked again. But it may be the most important question youāve ever asked yourself so, if I were you, Iād give it some serious thought.