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The art and science of happiness | Arthur Brooks | TEDxKC
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Transcriber: Thekra Alkadee
Reviewer: Emma G
I'm a professor of happiness.
You might ask yourself, how can
somebody be a professor of a feeling?
The truth is that
it’s so much more than that.
And yet most people don't know that.
Everybody wants to be happier.
I mean, not everybody acts like they do,
but everybody wants to be happier,
deep in their souls, I do believe. But
most people don’t know how to define it.
I ask my students at the university,
what is happiness?
And many of them will say,
“Well, it’s the feeling
that you get when...”
In fact, they all talk about
feelings at the very beginning.
And I say, no, no, that’s not
the true definition of happiness.
It's so much more than that.
If I asked you, what's the definition
of the Thanksgiving dinner,
you wouldn’t say,
“It’s the smell of the turke, no.”
That’s an indication that there’s
something special going on in the kitchen.
It’s an indication that dinner’s coming.
And the happiness feeling that you get
is an indication of a much deeper sense,
a psychological and even
neuroscientific phenomenon.
Happiness is a combination
of three big things.
They're kind of like the macronutrients
in food, you might say.
If I ask you that to define
the Thanksgiving dinner,
you might say it's proteins,
carbohydrates and fat,
and you would be right.
And similarly, if I ask you
the definition of happiness
and you’re getting it correctly,
you would say
it’s a combination of three things
enjoyment, purpose and satisfaction.
Now, each one of these things
has a big literature unto itself.
There people studying each one
of these things. They are not obvious.
Enjoyment, for example, is not
the same thing as pleasure.
Maybe you'll see that in the dictionary,
but it's not true.
Pleasure is something that happens to you.
It runs through a very ancient part of
your brain called the limbic system.
It's a reward for something
that happens automatically
so that you'll do something
again and again.
Enjoyment is an elevation of that
where you take pleasure,
but you add your your true humanity to it.
You experience it with other people.
You move it literally
to a different part of your brain
called the prefrontal cortex.
And there you can remember it,
it becomes a part of your happiness
if your Thanksgiving dinner
gives you pleasure by filling your belly.
The enjoyment comes from consuming that
delicious dinner with your family members
and the people that you love,
thus becoming enjoyment and thus
becoming part of your happiness.
Similarly, purpose and meaning are not
quite so straightforward either.
Everybody knows that they want meaning
in life, but they can’t quite define it.
And it’s hard to.
It’s hard to find sometimes, isn’t it?
But even beyond that,
the great paradox of meaning
is that as part of happiness,
it requires suffering.
I ask people, when did you
find your resiliency, who you were,
the purpose in your life?
And inevitably people talk to me about
suffering, about challenges, about loss,
about grief, even
when their heart was broken,
when somebody died
that they loved and they survived.
That’s when they find
their true meaning in life.
The irony of that is that happiness
requires unhappiness to get meaning.
And just like those first too
satisfaction is a bit of a paradox.
As a matter of fact, is the most difficult
of the elements of
happiness for us to master.
Satisfaction is the great question
of life. We want it, we try to get it,
but we can’t keep it. Now what is it?
Satisfaction is a joy and a job well done
is the reward for a goal
that you know that feeling.
If you want to be satisfied,
you'll be satisfied when you graduate
from your university,
when you marry the person that you love,
when you get the house
you’ve always dreamed about,
when you retire after a long career
and then you’ll finally be satisfied.
You'll be joyful at the goal
that you actually met.
And furthermore,
you’ll be satisfied forever, right?
That's what your brain is telling you.
That’s what the marketing
around you in the world tells you.
That's what Mother Nature tells you.
But it’s wrong, you know perfectly
when you think about it a little bit,
that you hit your goals and they give you
a whole bunch of joy, that satisfaction.
And then it wears off.
You get that car in a new car smell
reminds you how wonderful it is.
And a couple of weeks later,
it's just a car.
You move to California
because you want the sunshine,
you want the beautiful weather.
And six months later, you're driving
around just cursing the traffic.
That seems like
one of the cruelest fates in life,
almost as if it were a hoax
for Mother Nature, but it’s not.
It’s actually part of
Mother Nature’s plan.
See, you can't keep satisfaction
because you die.
If you stayed satisfied with
those worldly things.
Let me explain a major and important
concept in the world of neuroscience,
it’s called homeostasis.
Homeostasis is the tendency
to go back to a baseline,
either physiologically or psychologically.
It’s the the equilibrium that we always
go back to, that we need to go back to.
So we'll be ready for the next set
of circumstances in our life.
For example, perhaps you went to
the gym today, you got on the treadmill
and your objective was to raise
your pulse rate for cardiovascular health
and you raise your pulse rate
to 140 beats per minute,
and after half an hour you got off
and within 15 minutes your pulse
was back down to 60 or 70
or wherever it's supposed to be.
Thank goodness for that.
If you didn’t have
homeostasis within a week
and your pulse remained
elevated, you’d be dead.
Now, similarly with your emotions,
you need to go back to your baseline.
For example, you feel fear as something
that happens, but the fear doesn’t last.
Why? Because you need to be ready
for the next thing
that might make you afraid.
You can’t be distracted with
the last thing or you wouldn’t survive.
Your ancestors wouldn’t
have passed on their genes.
With happy feelings,
it’s the same way.
You can’t say happy with something
that’s happening right now,
because you need to be ready
for new happiness or new unhappiness,
as a matter of fact,
this is a survival mechanism.
This is Mother Nature's purpose.
But she also has a slightly
nefarious purpose for you,
which is to make you think
you’re going to keep your satisfaction,
even though she won't let you
keep your satisfaction. Why?
So you keep running and
making progress and trying harder.
See, if you knew wasn't going to last,
you might just stop and sit down.
And Mother Nature doesn't want that.
So you run and you run and you think
you'll always get to keep it.
The Rolling Stones sing,
”I can’t get no satisfaction” in the songs
“as I try and I try and I try
and I can’t get no satisfaction.”
The real point of that song is not that
Mick Jagger can't get no satisfaction.
He can get satisfaction,
so he can’t keep no satisfaction.
That’s the irony of
this thing running almost
as if it were on
a treadmill trying to get it.
Now it’s interesting, isn’t it?
We have a concept
in my social science field
called the hedonic treadmill.
Hedonic means feeling treadmill
is just a metaphor, obviously,
but you want to get the feeling of joy,
you want to get the satisfaction,
so you run and you run.
Or as Jagger says,
you try, you try and you try.
You stay more or less in the same place.
But she never quite figure it out.
Furthermore, as you get more and more
addicted to the worldly things,
to the material possessions, the money,
the power, the pleasure, the fame,
the treadmill starts to turn up in speed
a nd so you’re running faster.
Pretty soon you're running
in blinding speed,
and you’re not just
running out of ambition,
you start to run out of fear, right?
If you’re a success addict,
maybe a little bit of a workaholic.
You know how this fear, this fear feels.
You’re running for more and more
satisfaction that comes
from the object of your work,
from the returns that you get
from that congratulations,
from the the raises,
the promotions, the deals done.
And pretty soon
you start thinking yourself,
I'm actually not getting that much
satisfaction. But what if I stop?
What happens if you stop on the treadmill?
You face-plant is what happens
if you stop on a treadmill
and nobody wants that.
Well, it might seem to you
that I’m kind of a downer here.
Then I’m telling you
about the human condition.
It’s not that great. It’s not that fine.
And maybe it even seems like
there’s nothing you can do.
Well, there is something that you can do.
There's a lot that you can do,
but you have to be willing to do the work
and go contrary to your nature.
The old idea that
if it feels good do it is wrong.
When it comes to happiness, Mother Nature
doesn't really care how happy you are.
She wants you to pass on your genes.
Your happines, that’s up to you,
and you need to
contravene your tendencies
and this is a perfect case.
I’m going to tell you how
how you can actually achieve
lasting and stable satisfaction,
but you can’t go with your instincts.
It starts with a formula.
Most people think that satisfaction comes
if I have what I want.
If I manage my haves, I expand my haves,
if I maximize my haves, I have things,
I have possessions, I have relationships.
I have money, I have power,
I have all of these worldly things.
But the truth is that stable
and lasting satisfaction
comes not from what you have,
but what you have divided
by what you want.
That’s a better model for it.
Because when you think about it,
it sort of makes sense
when you have a lot, well,
your wants increase by even more.
A friend, he told himself -
he was very successful in business -
early on in his twenties, he said,
You know how I’m going
to know I’m a real success,
that’s kind of his own yardstick.
I’m going to go to
the Mercedes dealership
and be able to buy
a car in cash, he said.
And the day he was able to,
he was 32, such a gifted guy.
He went down and
put down his money in cash.
I mean, who buys a Mercedes in cash?
Different question. He puts down
the money and he says, I want my car.
And they gave it to him and
his satisfaction lasted all of 45 seconds.
As he was driving off the lot,
he thought to himself,
I should have saved six months longer
and gotten the Ferrari. What happened?
He was managing his haves,
but his wants were sprawling.
Remember your high school fractions?
If you got a fraction,
it’s got a numerator and denominator.
If you maximize the numerator,
then the number goes up. It’s true.
But another way for it to go up,
another way for your satisfaction to go up
is to decrease the denominator
to manage your wants. Ask yourself this.
Do you have a haves management strategy?
Of course you do. Everybody does.
Do you have a wants management strategy?
I bet you don't. Most people don't.
The secret to lasting satisfaction
is not to manage your worldly haves
to have more, but rather is to want less.
I have a beautiful friendship,
one that I treasure with His Holiness
the Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso,
the 14th Dalai Lama, who dispenses
wisdom to people all around the world.
He’s the world’s
most respected religious figure.
And he was guest lecturing
for my happiness class last year.
And I asked him this question.
He was in his home in Dharamsala
in the Himalayan foothills.
I was in Boston, where I teach,
and we were separated
because of the coronavirus epidemic.
But we were so close and all the things
that we were talking about.
And I asked him for my students
and a live audience of 14 million people.
It was a beautiful public event.
I said, Your Holiness,
what’s the secret to satisfaction?
He didn’t tell me that. He didn’t tell
me the fraction I just gave you.
But he said it in words. He said,
“We need to learn how to want
what we have, not to have what we want
in order to get steady
and stable satisfaction.”
Another way to think of this
is not to have a bucket list,
it’s to have a reverse bucket list.
In other words, don't think of all of
the sticky cravings that you have,
but rather make a list of all
those cravings and make a plan
to renounce your craving
to those things. If you get them, great.
But if you don’t, that’s great, too.
Make a conscious decision
to divorce yourself
from the cravings
to the things on the list.
That’s a reverse bucket list.
That’s what strong people do.
Can you do it? I do that
every year on my birthday now,
and I've just watched my happiness
through my satisfaction increase.
Now, you might ask yourself,
is there anything,
anything that will give me stable
and steady satisfaction?
The answer is yes. But it's not money,
not power, not pleasure, not fame.
That’s the bad four.
Here’s the good four -
faith, family, friends and work.
Now, my faith I don’t mean my faith,
I don’t mean it necessarily
a formal faith.
I mean a sense of the grandeur,
a sense of the transcendent,
a perspective that's bigger
than your everyday life,
which is so small and so tedious.
Maybe it comes from a walk in
the forest every day for an hour.
Maybe it comes from studying
the ancient stoic masters.
Maybe it comes from going back
to the faith of your youth.
Maybe it comes from a meditation
practice. You choose.
But you must do something
every day that zooms you out.
Your family life, the ties that bind that
don’t break, the ties you don’t choose
and God knows in many cases you wouldn’t.
Maybe you had a tough Thanksgiving
where Aunt Marge wouldn’t
stop talking about politics.
But you know perfectly that the 2 AM call
that you make would go
to one of those people,
don’t ruin those relationships over
trivialities like politics and ideology.
Friendship. You need friends, but you
don't just need people around you.
People who can help you,
people at work. That’s not it.
Maybe they are people at work
who’re your best friends, but maybe not.
Here's the the thing to ask yourself.
These people around me,
are they real friends or deal friends?
You know the difference.
And finally, work.
Work that’s meaningful
and meaningful, I don’t mean
money and power, no no.
I mean any job,
whether you’re an electrician
or a bus driver or a college professor
or a politician or
a movie producer, I don’t care.
It has to have two characteristics
and two characteristics only,
you earn your success.
You’re rewarded for your hard work
and merit and personal responsibility
and you’re serving other people
with your endeavors.
Those are the secrets to meaningful work,
faith, family, friends and work,
which is all four different kinds of love.
And that, my friends, is the secret.
So ask yourself these questions.
Are you getting true satisfaction?
It can’t come from having more.
Have you been chasing the wrong thing?
On the worldly side?
If you’re going to get more
and better be on the faith,
family, friends and work dimension
and not on the things
that the world is telling you to chase.
Those are the things
of which you need to want less.
What is true for us is true
for the people that we serve.
If you, for example,
have customers, you have clients.
It's important that you realize that
you shouldn't sell the wrong thing.
You shouldn’t make these promises
of satisfaction that you cannot deliver.
Remember, the point is that people
can enjoy what you provide together
in bonds of love, and only
then will your product
bring true and lasting satisfaction.
Associate what you do in
your work with the true sources of love
and happiness and
satisfaction for all people,
which in turn, will bring
more satisfaction to you.
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