Introduction by
Ted Kooser: Do others of you think about what you'll miss when you leave
this life? For me it will be the great skies over my part of the world. Here’s
Emily Grosholz’s take on this, from her new book The Stars of Earth:
New and Selected Poems, from Word Galaxy Press. She lives and teaches in
Pennsylvania.
Friday’s quote from Operation Happiness got me
thinking about the concept of building a foundation for happiness—the kind of
foundation that will support us when we’re deep in grief, facing some of life’s
more wrenching experiences, like losing a parent, watching a child struggle, or
coping with the serious illness of a friend.
Building a foundation for happiness of this nature involves
more than investing in some bubble bath and chocolate, or even a great book and
cozy blanket. While comforting self-care rituals are nice (and necessary), by
themselves they won’t be enough to support us during our darkest hours.
I went back through the Catching Happiness archives, and I
thought about the things that have helped me most during my hardest times, and
here are four I’ve found useful in building a foundation of happiness that
sustains me. Perhaps they’ll help you, too.
Create and strengthen close personal relationships.
Relationships are the number one contributing factor to happiness, according to
a long-running Harvard study. I’m grateful that I have quality relationships
with my family and my husband’s family. I also have many close friends, and
many “virtual” friends I know only online. They’ve stepped in to offer support,
love, encouragement and more when I’ve needed it most. I have several people I
know are only a phone call or text message away if I really need help (and I
hope they know I would do the same for them). It’s easier to walk through the
dark valleys when someone walks beside you.
Determine and write about your personal values.
Surprisingly, this is one of the keys to coping well with stressful situations.
Sometimes painful feelings result from not doing what someone else expects you
to do, or from making hard choices. When you’re tired of struggling,
remembering why you’ve chosen to think, behave, and live the way you do can
help. Reminding yourself of your personal values can give you strength when
you’re suffering.
Treat your body well. Eat healthfully, exercise, and get
enough sleep. If you’re run down or sick, it’s much harder to feel happy. If,
like me, you have a few nagging injuries, look into how to treat them…then
actually do it! Care for yourself the way you would care for a child or someone
dependent on you.
Make a list of simple mood boosters. This may seem frivolous
in comparison, but there is a time and place for using mood boosters. When
you’re knee deep in misery, you’ll be hard pressed to come up with anything
that might lift your mood, so now is the time to think about what generally
makes you feel happier. See “Five Ways to Feel Happier (in 10 Minutes or Less)”
and “The Dark Side” for ways I boost my mood when sadness threatens to
overwhelm me.
If your happiness is built on a foundation of deeper values
and practices, it will stay with you, running like an underground river even
when you face un-happy experiences. Happy feelings will return, and sorrow and
grief are temporary.
For more ways to seek deeper happiness, check out:
“Part of building a foundation for sustainable
happiness involves preparing to weather the most challenging times with as much
peace, light, and inner fitness as possible. The way to do this is to gain
skills that help us create supportive, go-to responses for emotional pain and
tools to help us find the strength to take baby steps toward healing that lift
us up, help us process, and empower us through our journey. Part of changing
our view about happiness is embracing the idea that there are always
encouraging tools and resources to reach for in any life situation if we’re
willing to take action.”
—Kristi Ling, Operation Happiness: The 3-Step
Plan to Creating a Life of Lasting Joy, Abundant Energy, and Radical Bliss
What tools and skills do you use to cope with
emotionally difficult times?
I’ve been having trouble getting back into the habit of
writing for Catching Happiness—maybe you’ve noticed? My life has
been…full…lately, and I’m playing catch-up in more than one area. So to ease
back into post writing, here are four things I’ve been pondering lately:
Life is too short to sweat the small stuff.
Being around
people who have lost loved ones has reminded me that so many of the little
things I fret and obsess over (which dog food to switch Luna to now that she’s
a year old, for example) are just that: little things. They barely matter now,
and won’t matter at all in 10 years. That’s becoming my new rule of thumb: will
this matter in 10 years? I’m just worn out with all of the obsessing.
I have no idea how long it takes to do anything.
I just read
Dan Charnas’ book Work Clean: The Life-changing Power of Mise en Place to Organize Your Life, Work, and Mind, and took away some helpful ideas.
Charnas takes principles he’s learned from interviewing dozens of culinary
professionals and executives and tweaks them to apply to work and life outside
the kitchen. One thing I’ve discovered while doing one of the exercises from
the book is that many of my projects take longer than I think they do. I also
forget to factor in the time it takes to transition between activities, make
and eat breakfast and lunch, take care of our pets, and shower and change
clothes after a workout! All those little things add up to a big chunk of day
that I’ve not accounted for, and so I wind up scheduling too many things in a
day, leaving me feeling unproductive and defeated.
It’s OK to feel sad.
After my dad died, one of my close
friends lost her mother, and a friend from my old boarding barn became dizzy
and fell while getting out of a car, and passed away from her injuries. Even
though my life is unutterably blessed, I feel sad—sad for my friends, sad that
I won’t have these people in my life, sad that we have to say good-bye
permanently before we’re ready to do so.
But it’s OK to feel happy, too.
Friday as I was pouring my
cup of Barnie’s Creamy Buttery Caramel coffee (no affiliation) and getting
ready to sit down and write this post, I felt a little lift of my spirits that
I haven’t felt in probably at least a month. Do I dare to feel happy? Yes, I
think so. Sad doesn’t last forever, 24/7, just the way happy doesn’t. And that’s
OK, too.
These are just a few of the ideas that have been floating
around in my head as I try to get back to “normal,” whatever that is going to
look like. I’d like to thank all of you for your kind comments and for sticking
with Catching Happiness when there wasn’t much happiness to be caught!