Lessons in happiness...

Atilla

Legendary member
Messages
20,861
Likes
4,037
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-12935895

1. Stop worrying

Learning that nothing in life ultimately matters, and that we have bravely to face up to whatever life throws us, over which we have no control. I was brought up by a wonderful but fear-filled mother who made us all full of apprehension about some impending disaster. I spent my adolescence, 20s and 30s full of anxiety about terrible things happening to me, my wife and our children - even to our dog, help us!

In my late 40s, I began to understand that everything in life is as it should be, and that worry can be a terribly self-centred and limited way of thinking. Luckily I married, Joanna, who is a worry-free zone, but even with her help, it took me many years to begin to free myself. Worry is a denial of trust, about which I wrote a book last year. As Camilla Carr and Jonathan James write at the front of their book about their kidnapping by Chechen rebels, "being human, our nature is love, our nurture is fear".

2. Happiness is the opposite of selfishness

Happiness is the very opposite of selfishness. It involves conscious choice every second of every day. Much of my life has been spent either unhappy or in a kind of neutral state and I now realise that one can make a conscious decision to be happy.

Dr Seldon says happiness can be a conscious decision
Happiness follows from a sense of living in harmony with oneself and with others, and turning one's mind to the present and away from one's own self-centred thoughts. If one beats up one's body, feeds it the wrong things and drinks too much, one will feel lousy. But by living naturally and exercising regularly, the body will tell the mind to be happy.

The same goes with one's relationship with other people. If one is in conflict with others or is taking advantage of them, it is inescapable that one will be unhappy. I have tried hard in the last few years to live in harmony with my own body and with others. It has made me happier as a result and, by being so, it has benefited those around me.

3. Live by water

I need to live or at least spend time by water. It could be a pond, a river, a lake or the sea. If I am cut off from water for long times, I begin to feel miserable. We are so lucky to have a house by the sea in Brighton and to be able to hear the waves crashing on the beach as we fall asleep. At Wellington College, we have several lakes, and a small pond in our own garden. My ideal home would be to live in an old house on an estuary with a wooden mooring. To feel the water surging in and out twice a day is to hear nature breathe.

Philip Larkin wrote: "If I were called in to construct a religion I should make use of water." Water is the essence of life. I can neither sail, swim nor row well, but I love all three and feel a profound harmony when I am either by or on water.

4. Learn from experience - not just university

Most of what I learned at university in my course has not proved of enduring value. I studied Politics, Philosophy and Economics. Little of it explained the world as it really worked. It could have been so much more imaginative but was killed by an obsession with a very narrow version of intellectuality. To have ignored eastern philosophy, which offers a much more profound view of the world, was a huge shame.

I have had to learn about politics, philosophy and economics, as well as about life, from my own experience.

5. Be yourself

I have learned to be myself - not to try to be somebody else. It was my own fault, but I did not feel that my schooling or upbringing especially helped me to understand myself or what I wanted to do in life. It is now an obsession with me as a head master that young people are encouraged to make their own choices and learn how to live. Happiness lessons help here - we have them at my school. They learn that making mistakes can often be a good thing. Learning to meditate and do yoga helped me enormously.



Contemplation and reflection... things to ponder... :)
 
My lesson in happiness:

1) If you wake up each morning and look forward to the day ahead, are excited etc (or most mornings) then you got it sussed, doesn't matter if your days are spent driving a bus, being a lawyer, doctor, stacking shelves,

2) If you wake up on monday and cant wait for friday, dread the day ahead etc, then you got some thinking to do...
life is way too short to be in that state
 
My lesson in happiness:

1) If you wake up each morning and look forward to the day ahead, are excited etc (or most mornings) then you got it sussed, doesn't matter if your days are spent driving a bus, being a lawyer, doctor, stacking shelves,

2) If you wake up on monday and cant wait for friday, dread the day ahead etc, then you got some thinking to do...
life is way too short to be in that state


Life is in levels and stages as one evolves mi thinks.

Re: point 1 - sometimes I'm excited about work and sometimes not. The work however is the same. Moreover, there can be 10 people with 10 different emotions about the same work. I'm thinking what are the cocktail of factors that lead to these outcomes??? A mystery indeed.

What are the ingredients that determine happiness?

I don't think work is a good example. You get paid for doing work. This thing about enjoying work is a misnomer. When you work you agree to rent out your time. Should you expect to enjoy your work and to what level? I'd expect most people do not enjoy their work which is why they have to be paid as compensation.

It helps if one does and that's a boon but should not be expected. I doubt toilet cleaners are happy with the way public uses toilets but work that must be done.


To contrast with the weekend Friday when one does not work is skewing the happiness consideration :rolleyes:.


Some people find them selves in the work they do. They have not much in their lives and find work is where they can excel as an extension of their alter-ego sort of thing. Not sure if they are happy but certainly driven.
 
Life is in levels and stages as one evolves mi thinks.

Re: point 1 - sometimes I'm excited about work and sometimes not. The work however is the same. Moreover, there can be 10 people with 10 different emotions about the same work. I'm thinking what are the cocktail of factors that lead to these outcomes??? A mystery indeed.

What are the ingredients that determine happiness?

I don't think work is a good example. You get paid for doing work. This thing about enjoying work is a misnomer. When you work you agree to rent out your time. Should you expect to enjoy your work and to what level? I'd expect most people do not enjoy their work which is why they have to be paid as compensation.

It helps if one does and that's a boon but should not be expected. I doubt toilet cleaners are happy with the way public uses toilets but work that must be done.


To contrast with the weekend Friday when one does not work is skewing the happiness consideration :rolleyes:.


Some people find them selves in the work they do. They have not much in their lives and find work is where they can excel as an extension of their alter-ego sort of thing. Not sure if they are happy but certainly driven.

What I said applies to the retired or unemployed, watching soaps, having children, cooking, i didnt just mean work but for most people, work takes up a major part of their life and so Its important for me to do a job I really enjoy. Its not a puzzle that 10 people can have different emotions about a job, but basically if you enjoy it then great, if you dont then imo a rethink is needed.
 
My lesson in happiness:

1) If you wake up each morning and look forward to the day ahead, are excited etc (or most mornings) then you got it sussed, doesn't matter if your days are spent driving a bus, being a lawyer, doctor, stacking shelves,

2) If you wake up on monday and cant wait for friday, dread the day ahead etc, then you got some thinking to do...
life is way too short to be in that state

That sounds great. Would you wake up looking forward to a day stacking shelves or cleaning public toilets? Really? Liar. LIAR.

The Dalai Lama is truly happy. Tucked away in his monastery having food, clothing and heating plus servants. Are you ****ing surprised he's happy?
 
4. Learn from experience - not just university

I have had to learn about politics, philosophy and economics, as well as about life, from my own experience.

Yep, learning that politicians can do what the **** they want and say what the **** they want plus rape your **** with higher taxes to cover their own cretinous ways brings a certain joy and happiness to my life. :LOL:
 
That sounds great. Would you wake up looking forward to a day stacking shelves or cleaning public toilets? Really? Liar. LIAR.

no i wouldnt but im sure there are a few people who do. Just saying that it doesnt matter wht you do or drive orwhere you live as long as you look foward to the day ahead.

So a high flying lawyer or dr who hates their job and always wanted to be a plumber is wasting a large percentage of their very short life imo
 
I suppose I should counter my negativity with some useful advice.

1) Find some recreation you enjoy doing, whether it's a sport or playing an instrument. The enjoyment can be found in the participation and sense of achievement.
2) Learn to meditate - to still the mind by concentrating on the breath.
3) Learn to breathe into the abdomen - it has a strangely calming effect.
4) Learn to appreciate what nature has to offer, whether it's a sunny day (easy) or a rainy day (look at the beauty of the rolling clouds or the way water droplets trickle down a window), play some classical, ambient or new age music in the background.
5) Laugh a lot, but with people not at people. Try to get people to laugh. Nothing is more satisfying than making people genuinely feel happiness through something I do. Apart from the obvious.
6) Avoid music with lyrics in them; the more troubled you are, the more you'll try to listen for answers to your problems or get sucked into the whirlpool of emotions and thought that the lyrics will create.
 
Last edited:
no i wouldnt but im sure there are a few people who do. Just saying that it doesnt matter wht you do or drive orwhere you live as long as you look foward to the day ahead.

So a high flying lawyer or dr who hates their job and always wanted to be a plumber is wasting a large percentage of their very short life imo

Ah, you mean change what you're doing? I agree with that. It's a balance; if you're earning a lot, keep doing it until you can stand it no longer, saving the money then you have an exit plan and a cushion.
 
my own or somebody elses? where do i make the incision? :cheesy:

*punches you in the head repeatedly to reduce stress*

punch.gif
 
*punches you in the head repeatedly to reduce stress*

punch.gif


you should try breathing from the abdomen instead, apparently its very calming (and less violent) :cheesy:


suppose I should counter my negativity with some useful advice.

1) Find some recreation you enjoy doing, whether it's a sport or playing an instrument. The enjoyment can be found in the participation and sense of achievement.
2) Learn to meditate - to still the mind by concentrating on the breath.
3) Learn to breathe into the abdomen - it has a strangely calming effect.
4) Learn to appreciate what nature has to offer, whether it's a sunny day (easy) or a rainy day (look at the beauty of the rolling clouds or the way water droplets trickle down a window), play some classical, ambient or new age music in the background.
5) Laugh a lot, but with people not at people. Try to get people to laugh. Nothing is more satisfying than making people genuinely feel happiness through something I do. Apart from the obvious.
6) Avoid music with lyrics in them; the more troubled you are, the more you'll try to listen for answers to your problems or get sucked into the whirlpool of emotions and thought that the lyrics will create.
 
Last edited:
you should try breathing from the abdomen instead, apparently its very calming (and less violent) :cheesy:

When I try and breath from my abdomen I only get to fart and nothing comes out of my belly button.

That's the quickest way to a shallow grave imo... :cheesy:

Thanks but I'll stick to breathing from my nostrells...
 
no i wouldnt but im sure there are a few people who do. Just saying that it doesnt matter wht you do or drive orwhere you live as long as you look foward to the day ahead.

So a high flying lawyer or dr who hates their job and always wanted to be a plumber is wasting a large percentage of their very short life imo


I think here one must reflect on the journey that brought us to this point.

Was it per chance or by design. Somewhere something has gone wrong. Perhaps expectations were not met. Communications brakedown. Either way there is always the opportunity to change.

I saw Kung Fu Panda recently as you may know and that one scene I posted on What you are listening to now thread, plucked a cord or two with me.

Kung Fu Panda - wasn't happy with making noodles soup so be became the Dragon Master. Lesson in life for us all I reckon.

I think you have a Kung Fu Panda in you - dear Scotty2Cues just waiting to get out. (y)


I reckon this book is great. I've read it and does make one think. I also think Dalai Lama is great too. There are centuries long experience and philosophy of people in his words. Must be read imho. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/images/0733608582/ref=dp_image_0?ie=UTF8&n=283155&s=books
 
On his yacht in St Tropez being massaged by two hot blonde Swedish lesbians while sipping a cold cocktail? No, I suspect his life sucks.

Yeah right. Bet you he can't get it to stand up right now...

Reminds me of that Swordfish scene - except life isn't made up like Hollywood... :LOL:
 
Top