Take Back the Power from Your Emotions and Be Happy
What are the
ways in which to actualize your own happiness like never before?
It’s
Wednesday morning. The slow and steady build-up of chimes releases from
your iPhone on the opposite side of the room as you struggle to bring clarity
to your vision. You roll out of bed in chagrin as you forcefully bulldoze your
way to silence the alarm, making last weekend’s drunken slip-and-fall at the
bar look both graceful and poised.
The week is
already off to a rough start and your projections don’t anticipate a changing
of the tides. It is at this point, you make the unconscious decision to shift
into autopilot and attempt to suppress all emotions for the rest of the week.
A seemingly
innocuous choice, you concede that while it’s probably not the most prudent
selection for experiencing the final three days of the workweek, it’ll be fine
as long as people stay out of your way.
As long as
those pesky, reactive emotions aren’t triggered, you’ll make it to the gilded
fringe known as the weekend.
It begs the
question however — the alarm, the preparation, the commute, the work, the
sacrifice — what are you doing this all for? What’s the endgame?
How to Take Back the Power From Your Emotions and Finally Be Happy
THE DESIRED OUTCOME
At the core
of humanity, the most sensible and universal answer to that question is to be
happy. Happiness, unfortunately for us, isn’t anything tangible we can latch
onto. Happiness is an emotion, and it’s just as fleeting as all the others. It
either occurs, or it doesn’t. We think we have some control over it and while
that’s true, it’s conditional. Understanding happiness is to understand
all emotions.
Many will
argue that their negative emotions produced via negative life events are what
keep us from the onset of happiness. Moreover, most of us run from our negative
emotions, suppress them, or lie to ourselves and others about their actual
impact.
But negative
emotions — or any emotion for that matter — aren’t just random,
overly-sensitized respondents that array like soldiers whenever something
issues an abrupt wake-up call.
Painfully
misunderstood, your emotions are predictors and the basis for
every experience, action and understanding that occurs for us in life. That’s
right — these annoying nuances we claim are responsible for all of our poor
decisions are nothing more than little tarot card readings.
Not sold?
Let’s consult a couple of experts.
THE OPPOSITION
Dr. Max Di
Luca of the University of Birmingham School of Psychology investigates the
mechanisms of human perception using psycho-physical methods and computational
modeling. He says of the brain’s ability to predict the future,
“Our brain
relies on the past history to predict what will happen next. Any regularity we
encounter can inform us on what should be happening because we project what we
have learned from the past into the future.”
His colleague
Dr. Darren Rhodes offers a similar take on our perception of time,
“We are not
passive watchers. We use what we know about the world to inform us about when
something is likely to happen. If our predictions are slightly wrong, we
perceive the world somewhat in between expectation and reality. We hear, see
and feel what we think we should be experiencing, not what is really happening
out there.”
In layman’s
terms, your brain doesn’t react to protect us but rather, predicts.
It leverages past experience and similar situations to create meaning from
whatever’s happening in the forefront. It’s not trying to identify what the
situation is as much as it’s figuring out what the situation is
like. What you feel thereafter is indicative of the experience the brain is
preparing for.
It seems like
a good idea, but if you look closer it’s a bit primitive. After all, the brain
was originally constructed to ward off saber-tooth tigers. Instances often
repeated themselves to the nth degree. Nowadays, we’re a little more
complicated — to denote all experiences as previous ones is a tad premature.
Nonetheless,
the onset of happiness is very much a prediction, as well. It ensues when the
horizon appears to be within our grasp, shining every so brightly with clouds
of faith and hope decorating the sky.
The
double-edged sword of happiness, however, is aiming for it is actually
incongruent with happiness itself. Happiness occurs when you’re present to or
involved in something for its own sake rather than some superfluous purpose —
even if that purpose is as noble as the desire to be happy.
Striving for
happiness is actually full-on prediction mode. It establishes in a never-ending
series of checkpoints that will continue moving the finish line backwards until
your final breaths. The harder we work, the more the expectation inflates.
THE SOLUTION
So what the
hell do we do? It sounds like a lose-lose(?)
On the
contrary, the things that keep us from happiness — stress, anxiety, worry, fear
— are as fabricated by the brain as happiness itself. All these emotions make
up the universal set of signals each of us human beings are armed with to make
better sense of life.
Killing
yourself to alter your external circumstances to allow for happiness to emerge
will be quite the empty moment should your target hinge on your joy.
When you’re
finally able to interpret your emotions as your brain doing it’s best
impression of a fortune teller, you’ll realize you don’t have to wait for your
happiness. When you accept life’s simplicity and your place in it, getting out
of your head and giving yourself to others as a result, elation is right around
the corner.
We’ve made
life wildly complicated by misinterpreting our emotions and fashioning
extrinsic distractions to supplant them, when all we’ve really needed this
whole time is a passionate hobby, a few exciting plans, and good old-fashioned
human relatedness.
If you go
back to the Stone Age, 90% of everything was relevant. Nowadays, it’s
essentially the opposite. Happiness today takes focus, understanding (both of
what you know and what you don’t know) and an intense appreciation for
everything around you.
Don’t be
fooled by the guise of anxiety or the rackets of fear. Simply be compassionate
for how your naive-beyond-its-years brain is doing its best to help you
survive.
It knows your
needs but it’s up to you to create your desires.
Be happy, and
give up everything else.
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