Happiness Is an Option for You: 4 Easy Habits That Make Your Life Better, Based on Research
with Shawn Achor
There are 4 happiness habits that, based on research, are scientifically proven to make you happier in 21 days.
Shawn Achor is the author of 4 New York Times bestsellers and has created the largest happiness training program in the world.
Shawn goes deeper than he has ever gone in an interview, discussing his struggle with depression and how these 4 habits have helped him climb out of it.
This conversation is packed with practical and proven tools that you can put to work in your life immediately.
Happiness is the joy you feel moving towards your potential.
Shawn Achor
Featured Clips
Transcript
Mel Robbins (00:00:03):
Are you ready to put your happiness hat on? What if I told you that we have the OG of Happiness Research? So many of you are writing and you're struggling with happiness, and what Sean says and what he teaches on stages around the world is that you and I have happiness all wrong. The definition is wrong. That's part of the problem. He is going to teach you that if you do these four habits for 21 days, you will be a happier you. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast. All right, let's do this thing. Okay. Are you ready to put your happiness hat on? I know I am. I have a really cool show for you because it's everything that I know that you love. First of all, I know that you love research and science and big credibility, and so what if I told you that we have the OG of Happiness research?
(00:00:59):
That's right. Harvard educated works with all the major corporations and brands around the world teaching his protocol, the Happiness Advantage Training, which is one of the largest and most successful positive psychology training programs in the world. Not only that, but he has written three New York Times bestselling books including The Happiness Advantage, big Potential, and Before Happiness. His name Sean Achor. Now, I met him years ago and I've always loved Sean because he wears the academic hat and I am the punch in the face. Let's get fucking practical and understand what this shit means because research is wonderful, but if I can't apply this shit to my life, I am going to be a miserable bitch. So today here's what we're going to do. We're going to get Sean on the line, and I also have questions from listeners because so many of you are writing and you're struggling with happiness, and what Sean says and what he teaches on stages around the world is that you and I have happiness all wrong.
(00:02:04):
The definition is wrong. That's part of the problem, and we're going to dig into that. We're going to go question by question, and as we do, I'm going to tell you what I know we're going to talk about. We're going to talk about the four habits that Sean has been researching forever. He is going to teach you that if you do these four habits for 21 days, you will be a happier you. He's also going to dig deep into the research of what happiness is and what it isn't as he takes your questions, and I, of course, I'm going to hold his feet to the fire and I'm going to listen to that scientific stuff, and then we are going to break it down into normal people speak, and we are going to make sure that we leave here with happiness tools in our pockets and motivation in our backseat so that we not only learn and listen and laugh today, but that we also put it into action. Alrighty, Sean Achor, welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
Shawn Achor (00:02:55):
Thank you so much. I've been looking forward to this.
Mel Robbins (00:02:57):
Me too. We're going to do something a little different today, and I don't know if we've told you this or not. I like to invite you onto the podcast and then completely surprise you by what we're doing, so you feel very uncomfortable. Just kidding. We're going to unpack all of the incredible research and insight that you share on stages and with corporations around the world about happiness by having you give our listeners advice. And before we jump into the seven questions that we have for you, I wanted to just ask you so that we are all starting on the same playing field. What is the definition of happiness?
Shawn Achor (00:03:48):
Do you want me to answer that now or
Mel Robbins (00:03:50):
Yeah.
Shawn Achor (00:03:51):
Okay. We define happiness. I define happiness as the joy you feel moving towards your potential. So it's both an emotion that is directional, it's got a valence to it, it's positive, but that it doesn't stop. It's not complacent. It actually leads to seeing more of what we're capable of in terms of our potential as an athlete or as a musician or a parent or a poet.
Mel Robbins (00:04:21):
So do we get it wrong when we're just in our day-to-day life saying to ourselves, I don't feel happy? Are we talking about happiness wrong? Is that part of the problem?
Shawn Achor (00:04:32):
I think that could be, but because I think we use happy in so many different ways, I'm not happy with this hotel room or I'm not happy within this moment. What we're looking for is not that moment of happiness because it's so fleeting if you're trying to hold onto that, it just slips through our fingers almost as soon as we define it. What we're looking for is more of an emotional trajectory within someone's life that even when someone is suffering, they can actually experience joy in the midst of that. I mean, the reason why I love that we've conflated the ideas of happiness and joy together is that if happiness was based on the pleasure model, pleasure is fleeting. So we only have it when things are good, but joy is something we can experience even when life is not good in the midst of childbirth. It's not high levels of pleasure all the time, but moments of joy can correspond even with the highest amounts of fear and pain we can experience as human beings. So I love that. I think what we need is redefinition of what we mean when we talk about happiness. They're stuck in a single moment, but what we're looking for is what's the trajectory in that moment that even if I'm experiencing pain, whether it be back pain or fatigue or whatever it is that someone's experiencing, that we want them to actually experience joy in the midst of that so that we can make the negative experiences those troughs shorter.
Mel Robbins (00:05:58):
So maybe I should ask you what the heck is joy? Because as you're talking about childbirth, I'm like, Sean, I don't know what kind of epidural they had in your wife, but I did not experience a whole lot of joy until the crown was over and the kid was out and I was done with it, and they handed me the ice pack to put in my underwear. So when you talk about joy, what do you mean?
Shawn Achor (00:06:21):
Well, even in those moments, once we've had the baby, it's not suddenly that everything's perfect again. Now they're waking us up and now we're taking care of this little thing that we have no idea how to take care of. At least we didn't and we're already exhausted at that point, and then the doctors leave the room. What do we do at this moment? I think if we're constantly looking for that moment where everything is great, that there's no stress, the race is finished, well, we find as it never actually happens for people because as soon as they finish the race, they're thinking about what they need to do when they get home, or as soon as they get that promotion, they're immediately thinking about, what am I going to do now that I have this promotion and how do I get this person on my team to become more positive? The joy that we're experiencing is that feeling like that we're not stagnant.
(00:07:11):
There is that Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which I haven't really studied very much, but I know it goes from the base. It was basic needs all the way up to self-actualization through stages of I think, and self-esteem. What we find is that happiness doesn't occur at only one of those moments that we find, and you've seen this as well, that
Shawn Achor (00:07:34):
In our travels we go to places that are quite impoverished, where we'd assume that given what the people that are there have or their lack of options, that they would be miserable all the time, and we don't find that. We find happiness in these surprising places where you feel joy and optimism even in places where I might feel imprisoned that it's not where you are on the Maslow's hierarchy of needs that determines your happiness. It's whether or not you feel like you're moving up on it, that there's growth.
(00:08:04):
And I think that the moments in my career where even if you've written a book, I kind of thought as if you write a book, I thought I was done. That was the mountaintop experience. I did it. That was my baby. It was much less painful than what my wife threw through, but I felt like, oh, I did it. And then you realize, wait, I kind of want people to read this, and what do people think? I'm a fraud and how do I, oh, maybe I need to write another book or I want to get it on a bestseller list, or how do I turn this into changing more people's lives? You realize it's not even done. You've actually only started when the book came out and there's this sense of futility that can occur within those moments. That moment I thought would create greater levels of happiness in my life, but if we're able to experience joy as we move through those pursuit of goals, that's the only place I think that anyone finds it.
(00:08:59):
That's why I think people can be very happy where they have very lower means, but they suddenly get some extra money or they work really hard for something and they're able to buy their kid a present right or braces or that you write a book and it doesn't guarantee levels of happiness, but then someone tells you something about how it impacted their life, and even though you might've heard it a hundred times, you kind of needed to hear it again to remember that this was important or that you're doing something meaningful in this world. So I think that that's what it is, is that it's that constant search of meaning that allows us to feel like what we're doing on our daily actions is moving us up towards self-actualization, which I don't know what Maslow meant when he said that, but to me it means my highest potential as Sean, as a dad, as a husband, as a speaker, as a terrible tennis player,
Mel Robbins (00:09:56):
I honestly am a little confused about the difference between happiness and joy, and I have a feeling that our first question from Tina is going to open the door to you really landing this plane and this distinction for us. So let's roll that clip from Tina.
Tina (00:10:16):
Hi, Mel. I want to know how to change from thinking that you can only achieve happiness depending on external things, if I had enough money, if I had a job, if I had a partner to finding it within you.
Mel Robbins (00:10:31):
Sean,
Shawn Achor (00:10:33):
I love that question. So the reason I love it is that the original way that psychology looked at happiness was just a pleasure, a pain model that all we're doing as human beings is responding to things that feel good in that moment or things that hurt and we run away from those and then they decided pleasure must be what happiness is because we're running towards that all the time. To me, I don't think that there should be a difference between happiness and joy. I want there to be confusion. I want the two to be conflated. I think we need to help redefine happiness for the world that happiness is the joy you feel moving towards your potential. So I want people to have a disruption in that model because of exactly what was asked in that question. It was a great question because I think that we assume that the external world is a good predictor of people's levels of happiness.
(00:11:23):
That's why when parents say they want the best for their kids, they want their kids to be happy, they assume that means in a good school or the top of their team, or they mean something in their head that determines success and that's going to guarantee happiness because they've checked off some externals. But when you look at the research, just the external world is a terrible predictor of happiness. We find happiness in all these surprising places and we find unhappiness in places where people have everything. I cut my teeth on this research when I was at Harvard and when I got in, I had never been there. I had only seen it in the movies. I applied on a dare. I was a volunteer firefighter. I wasn't like a valedictorian or anything, and I was so happy that I got in and I assumed that everyone who got into a place, an environment with opulence and opportunity would be guaranteed happiness. What we found is that 80% of them go through work debilitating depression once they get there, another 10% the last time this was public contemplated taking their lives. And then when I traveled to, and those are statistics, but
Mel Robbins (00:12:30):
Are you talking about just Harvard?
Shawn Achor (00:12:32):
Just Harvard in that moment? And
Mel Robbins (00:12:34):
You were one of 'em.
Shawn Achor (00:12:36):
I was one of them, and we can get into that too. I went through depression myself actually after I graduated when my job was to make sure that the first year students who went from being top 1% of their school now realized that half of the students are now below average, how we could stop them from going through depression or anxiety, but they were in this incredible place. They had a success. It should have guaranteed levels of happiness. The worldly and external factors should have guaranteed happiness and it didn't. When I traveled to 50 countries doing this research, I learned very quickly that the story that I just described had nothing to do with Harvard. It's how the brain processes the world that if we think our happiness is based upon the externals, the problem is that every time your brain has the success, it changes the goalpost of what success looks like. And as soon as that occurs, then what should have created great levels of happiness? So you get a degree, don't get excited yet you don't have a job, you get a job, don't get excited yet you have to get through inflation or you got to get that promotion.
Mel Robbins (00:13:37):
How do married do you change this? I think we all, at some point you wake up and recognize I've been living this, I'll be happy when I'll be happy when I get the house. I'll be happy when I finally have a boyfriend or a girlfriend or a partner. I'll be happy when I lose the pounds. I'll be happy when this and that model doesn't work. And what Tina's asking is how the hell do I change my mindset? How do I stop trying to find it outside of me? I don't even know how to begin to find it inside of me. In fact, you mentioned that you were depressed and I was reading an article where you were interviewed and you said that you were writing in a journal during this period, and the first entry you wrote was, I don't remember being happy and I don't think I'll ever be happy again. And now you're like the world's guru of happiness. So in that moment though, Sean, you had an experience that I think everybody has at some point,
Mel Robbins (00:14:32):
I'm not happy and I don't think I'll ever be happy again. And so what's the first thing that you would want somebody to know if that's where you are right now?
Shawn Achor (00:14:45):
I think the very first thing I'd want is actually the recognition because I kind of wish I had known that earlier, that whole thing we're talking about, because I think you're right. I think we all have that moment where you realize, I thought I'd be happy when and it didn't work. But then if you ask somebody why they're not happy, they'll tell you about one of their externals, right? I'm not happy right now because I don't have a boyfriend. I'm not happy right now because I've got this guy at work. I'm not happy right now because I don't have enough money.
(00:15:12):
So I think the very first step might be acknowledging it that the human brain is designed to foil any attempt that success will guarantee happiness because every time you hit one of those targets, we change what we think would create happiness. I think the best example of that is actually the pandemic because I think at the beginning of it, in the middle of it, everyone thought think how happy we're going to be when the pandemic wanes. That's true, and the pandemic is waning and we don't have that guaranteed levels of happiness. And what we forgot was there wasn't 100% levels of happiness before the pandemic. So I think the first is a recognition that this isn't working. From there, I think that it requires a mindset shift and a behavioral shift in that article and in the work that I do, I research what we can do to create happiness when the world doesn't look like it should. And I think one important caveat to that is that while I'm talking about what we can do internally that doesn't negate the need for external changes,
Mel Robbins (00:16:08):
Yes,
Shawn Achor (00:16:08):
We have systemic reasons why there's inequality, discrimination, racism that we should fight.
Mel Robbins (00:16:13):
Absolutely.
Shawn Achor (00:16:14):
I believe what gives us the power to fight that is the internal changes and that everyone needs to do it, not just the people seeking happiness. The people who are being discriminatory need to do it too.
Mel Robbins (00:16:25):
So let's start with the mindset. What is one step, one simple step that somebody who is sitting alone like Sean, unhappy Sean back in the mid 2010s writing, I don't remember being happy and I don't think I'll ever be happy again. How the hell do you change your mindset? Because if you keep saying that to yourself, you're not going to be able to access happiness within,
Shawn Achor (00:16:53):
Right? Well, I think there's something unique in that moment because I was attempting to do something about it. I'm trying to write in a journal to be happier. I'm just like, I don't think this is going to work, which we know from research that's not a great mentality. You can predict the course of treatment based upon whether or not you believe the doctor can heal you. So that was not a suspicious place to start.
Mel Robbins (00:17:17):
Okay, so Sean, are you telling us that what you're about to tell us to do is going to work and we should believe in our ability to change our mindset and to take actions and to access happiness?
Shawn Achor (00:17:36):
Yes, I would actually. I would wholeheartedly say that not only because experienced myself, but then we've researched it ever since. I mean, what I've learned in this research is the depression was not the end of the story at all,
Shawn Achor (00:17:47):
And that even in the midst of a broken world, in fact, only in the midst of a broken world have we ever been able to create happiness. So the question is how do we do so? I think the starting point is realizing not only that our strategy wasn't working, but acknowledging that there are multiple realities in this moment, and one of 'em is, I don't have a boyfriend or girlfriend or I don't have this money, or I don't have this job that I want, or I'm frustrated about whatever it is. I think when you acknowledge that that's true, you could say that's one reality, but there's also some other realities as well. Last week I went to the hospital, I was having chest pains.
Mel Robbins (00:18:23):
You were
Shawn Achor (00:18:24):
Young. Yeah, I was in er. I missed my very first talk in two decades, and I realized in that moment when they strip you of kind of everything and the doctor's going to knock on the door, when the doctor knocked on the door, I was like, this could change my life. It didn't. I was completely fine, but in that moment, my whole life changed. My whole life could have changed and was completely disrupted within those moments. I think when we realized that there's multiple realities in that moment, one of them is I missed a talk. I'm not with my family. I'm in a hospital I don't want to be in. That's true. On the other hand, I'm going home today. I'm going home to two kids that I love and a wife that I love. Those are equally true, but in the same reality and because my brain has the limited amount of resources I need to choose and I need to choose what I'm going to be focusing my brain on, there is so much negative in this world that I could spend the entire rest of my life focusing upon that and upon my fear, but that doesn't serve me at all.
(00:19:25):
It's not a valuable reality for me that in the midst of these multiple and true realities, I'm going to look at the ones and focus on the ones that are going to allow me to fix the negative parts of my life or that are at least going to give me the optimism and happiness and joy to take the next step and the next step in depression. I just needed a step forward. I felt like I just stopped moving. So I started doing these habits and these are the habits that we know work, and these are all the things you know about as well. Gratitude for example. And I think that this would be my answer to someone sitting there and to that 26-year-old boy who is feeling this was in those moments I needed to scan. I needed to stop scanning for all the deficits in my life and I need to use some of those finite resources to scan the world for the things that I was grateful for. And it was hard because my brain kept being like, yes, but what about this? But what about this thing you don't have, right?
Mel Robbins (00:20:20):
Yes.
Shawn Achor (00:20:20):
So I had to literally train my brain and we train it exactly like we've seen anything else with the human body is I had to keep doing it right? I can't build a bicep. If I only lift a weight once, then I'm done, right? I had to do it every day and I had to create a pattern out of it even when I wasn't sure it was going to work. And even when I could see no change in my life, I'd say easily for the first two weeks, I saw no change in my life.
Mel Robbins (00:20:45):
I was
Shawn Achor (00:20:45):
Sitting there trying to,
Mel Robbins (00:20:46):
Oh, ahead you, sorry.
Shawn Achor (00:20:48):
I'm just sitting there writing down things I'm grateful for and my life still feels terrible. I remember breathing hurt when I was depressed because everything hurt and everything didn't seem like it was worthwhile.
Mel Robbins (00:20:59):
I think one thing can really going thing
Shawn Achor (00:21:03):
So that's the thing. I don't get to talk about this much in any of the interviews, so I'd love to talk about this too. I think you're going deeper than some of the surface questions we normally get. I think that the habits are what pulled me out of depression. I write my gratitudes, I journal, I do exercise, I write a two minute kind note almost every day. I'd say 90 plus percent days since my mid twenties. I know that when I don't do those things, it's like when I don't brush my teeth, I get this film in my mouth. That's what I feel like my world looks like when I don't do those habits. Those habits are the way the building blocks for creating happiness. But the turning point for me, which I never get to talk about, the turning point for me in all of this was actually not me.
(00:21:49):
My job was to make sure other people didn't get depressed, so I kept trying to be there for other people. I was just supposed to be this paragon of knowing what you were supposed to do in optimism, and I kept going deeper and deeper in depression because I knew that there is a dissonance between what I was feeling and what I was showing to the world. The turning point for me and what actually got me to try to do those habits was at the bottom of the depression for me. I turned to my eight closest friends and family and told them that I was going through depression and a couple of these people were sort of my competitors there at Harvard or my peers, and I told 'em I was going through depression and I said, it's genetic. There's nothing you can do. My grandmother, grandparents, like it's genetic.
(00:22:34):
I just wanted to tell somebody. But immediately the groundswell of support was phenomenal. They kept calling me, they emailed me, they met up with me. One of brought me cupcakes. It's not what I did it to get cupcakes, but as soon as I did that, everything changed. And the reason for it was actually a study I found way later in my life. It was a study by these two researchers in Virginia and they found that if you look at a hill, you need to climb in front of you. If you look at that hill by yourself, your brain shows you a picture of a hill that looks 20 to 30% steeper when you're alone compared to that hill that you look at of the same height while standing next to someone who you're told is going to climb the hill with you. So I said that in a convoluted way, when you're alone hills actually look 20 to 30% steeper to the visual cortex,
(00:23:22):
Which Is amazing. I thought we have this objective view of the world that's bad. This is good. This is how tall that mountain is. What we realized was it was one of those matrix moments where I realized that the world is not objective, it's subjective, and that hill, those challenges are collapsing and expanding based upon whether or not you think you're radically alone going through this and trying to get out of this or whether you're with other people. So as soon as I did that, as soon as I opened up to other people, that was the turning point because it was the move from happiness as a self-help idea to
Shawn Achor (00:23:55):
This recognition that happiness was not an individual sport at all, and suddenly that hill of overcoming depression in front of me dropped by 20 to 30% and they opened up about things they were dealing with. None of 'em was depression, but it was just challenges they were experiencing and we started creating these meaningful narratives and social bonds that made me want to do the habits. There was something worth doing the habits for. So it was a combination of habits and social connection and a mindset shift that allowed in that moment to break from this idea that nothing matters and that there's nothing that I can do that matters and that I have to just wait for the world to change.
Mel Robbins (00:24:31):
Well, it makes perfect sense and it reminds me of the fact that the surgeon General just had that opt ed piece that went viral yesterday about the epidemic of loneliness and in his op-ed piece in the New York Times, he talked about his own struggle with it and how the turning point was him admitting just like you did to his family friends and to a few colleagues that he was really struggling with this and it was their checking in on him and them sharing back that they felt disconnected from social groups and from themselves as well after the last three years. That really was the turning point, but I love that you added that research because it is true when you are down and sad and you feel like a sad sack that nobody wants to hang out with, that's the story you tell yourself and that story then and the emotions that feel low make you keep isolating, and it's when you reach out that you change the behavior and you change the narrative, and then that provides a little bit of that intrinsic lift that you need that maybe there is something I can do.
(00:25:43):
Maybe there is hope. I want to go a little bit deeper on this because you've been there and I've been there and lots of people listening have been there and are there right now, and so when somebody like you come in or I'm sitting here on the mic, it's so easy to be resigned and push everybody away and be like, well, that's great for you Sean, but you don't know what I'm going through. And I think this question, Andrea, it's actually number three. It's Charmaine. Let's play Charmaine's question because I think it's going to help us even go a little bit deeper to provide some hope. Sean, for somebody who's really feeling like I've tried everything
Charmaine (00:26:27):
Since my teen years, I've been asking myself, why am I here? What's my purpose? How do I create happiness within myself? I've made so much progress yet right now I feel lost. I feel like a failure. I feel not good enough. I feel like I'm not a good girl. I feel like I'm not a good enough mom to my daughters. I feel selfish and I feel off course and I'm not living up to my potential. I've done the work. I know this is coming from my limiting beliefs, trauma projections that I have taken on as truth. Yet here I am feeling lost alone and frankly stupid. I do understand the privilege I possess. I practice gratitude. I know I am blessed and I do a lot of things. I don't think I'm depressed. I'm not completely unhappy, so what the fuck am I? I'm in some goddamn vortex of nirvana and hell,
Mel Robbins (00:27:33):
Sean, what pops out at you?
Shawn Achor (00:27:38):
So many things. First of all, how self-aware this person is to be able in the midst of this, to be able to identify the stages that they've been through where they are currently a recognition of the good, but also feeling like that they don't feel good enough and that there's more potential. What I kept hearing in my head over and over again is this sounds like me. This sounds so human. I think we fluctuate all the time between this. I've got things going and then wow, I certainly don't, if I have a really productive Monday, I get everything done and I'm super cleaning the house Tuesday and Wednesday are terrible. I'm exhausted. I don't want to do anything. I feel like I waste every Tuesday and Wednesday whenever I have an amazing Monday. I think that that's because we swing and I think what our hunger for is if our hunger is for a mountaintop experience all the time, that we always know that we're loved, that we're always amazing, that we're always beautiful and the smartest person in the room.
(00:28:45):
I think that that's an illusion and a false desire because I think it's an accurate reflection that we are not living up to our potential. I think that that's true all the time. I think that I could be doing better as a dad. I could be doing better as a husband. I know that when I work really hard at being a great dad, I know I immediately look around at all the people, they're doing amazing things at work and I'm like, whoa, I'm so buying. Then when I do a ton of stuff for work or travel ever, then I'm like, oh, I should be a better dad. I swing back and forth between this and I think what we need are those anchor points in the midst of it and where those anchor points come from. You had me on the show or to join you because I researched this, but I also went to the divinity school before getting into this.
Shawn Achor (00:29:37):
So what motivated my beliefs in why positive psychology mattered came from this belief that the story we tell ourselves and the lens through which we view the world changes how we act in it and where we find our meaning and where we find that value. And I think that those narratives, those belief systems can answer some of those questions about how can I feel loved even when I'm not achieving my highest or my potential? I think in the world that's very difficult because if we get on Instagram and we know exactly who's doing great based upon likes, right? Where based upon some sort of quantification or money can tell you who's doing great and who's not, and none of those fill that void. So where those anchor points could come from, I think that they have to come from other people as well. There was a study that came out of Stanford that found that loneliness had nothing to do with actually the number of people within your life.
Shawn Achor (00:30:35):
Loneliness was simply the absence of meaning you felt in the relationships with other people and their meaningful impact upon you that if you weren't doing anything meaningful for other people's lives, then you didn't feel social connection for the people that are around you all the time and vice versa. So if that's the case, if meaning is what's driving our levels of happiness, then I think we actually, my grandmother said it. She's like, if you want to be a friend, if you want a friend, you have to be a friend. And I was like, okay, that's overly simplistic, and I also a girlfriend that's not working out for me. I can't be the girlfriend. So in that moment, I didn't understand. Now I get it. What we're finding is that when people are experiencing that fluctuation back and forth, I think we're searching for meaning and people search it for in different ways, religion and philosophy and psychology.
(00:31:36):
I think that a lot of the things that we search for don't work out for us, which is why we get to the point where she's talking about where we feel this vortex of I've got it, I don't have it. Got it. I don't have it because we're reaching onto things oftentimes or loosely while we're grabbing onto things that are true. My mentor, Talbin Shahar said that you're never as great as you think you are and you're never as bad as you think you are. And what I loved about that is that meant that there was a middle path in the midst of it that sometimes when I think I'm a great speaker or whatever it is, then I get humbled very quickly by anything. Or if I think that I'm not doing great, then occasionally I'll get an email and it's like, Hey, this was really important to me.
(00:32:17):
That middle path was actually the one that I wanted to be in, and it's this recognition and being okay with I am not at my full potential, but that's okay. And the reason that's so okay is because I'm having a meaningful impact upon other people. So that habit that I mentioned of writing a two minute pause of email, praising or thanking someone else, I found that one to be probably the most helpful of any of the things that I've, because you can take someone in a socially isolated state with high levels of introversion, and if every day they scan for one new person to write a two minute positive email to, they stop on day eight, unless we pay them $15 on day eight, that's when they realize fully that they're not a crazy extrovert with all these friends that they could write to. They're like, I wrote to everyone in my favorites list and my mom twice. That's everyone. And then they scan and they remember who's that mentor who got me into this job, or who's that high school teacher that seemed to have some answer to some of those questions that that person was just asking? Or what about my first grade, my kid's first grade teacher who transformed my son's life, but I don't talk to 'em anymore because my kid's in second grade.
(00:33:21):
And you start to see all these people that are in our lives that we're not connecting with and a two minute email thanking them or praising them or saying, I've seen how you've been going through breast cancer and it inspires me that you're able to find happiness in low health. When I struggled find happiness, when I seem to have higher health, that those moments that just brief, meaningful act using technology for two minutes, we found that if you do it for 21 days in a row, your social connection score rises up to the top 15% of people worldwide, right? That's including experts. And what we found was that it was you were lighting up these nodes of meaningful connections on your mental map of social connection. And that I think if you look at the philosophers, I think if you look at religion, I think if you look at psychology, they keep breaking down this idea that you can achieve happiness alone, that you could just figure out your thoughts enough and then you did it. You can just maintain your happiness. That happiness and meaning only come from this interplay with the ecosystem with others around us.
Mel Robbins (00:34:29):
I love that. Go ahead. Or if you're about to talk another study, go for it.
Shawn Achor (00:34:33):
Oh, I was just going to tell one quick study, please. It's a beautiful one. It's not about humans. You probably heard this one. This was also in the New York Times as well. There's a study where they found all these fireflies, fireflies everywhere, light up individually and randomly in the dark, and that's how they attract a mate. And their success rate per night per bug is 3%, which I'm told is good. But these researchers found on opposite sides of the globe, these two species, one in southeast Indonesia and one in the smoky mountains of Tennessee that you can take buses out to go see. And these fireflies have these neurotransmitters that allow them to all light up and all go dark at the same time, which is beautiful, but not that smart because we live in a survival of the fittest world, right? We're told be the fastest, smartest, brightest, light shining, otherwise you'll never be successful.
(00:35:23):
And at MIT, they studied these fireflies and they realize we just don't understand how systems work that when they lit up together seemingly with their competition, the success rate doesn't drop. The success rate goes from 3% to 82% per bug. It's not like one bug does better. The whole system was doing orders of magnitude better than we thought was possible because as they lit up together, their light became brighter and it was attracting more and more potential mates than a single light would've been able to do and created these virtuous cycles. And we kept seeing the same thing. When we looked at humans, we found that the greatest predictor of long-term levels of happiness, as you know, one of the greatest predictors is social connection.
Shawn Achor (00:36:00):
It's the breadth depth, the meaning in your social relationships. So it's not something you could figure out in your head and then you did it, and then you can hold happiness forever. It's about finding a way of lighting up with other people and getting them to light up as well.
Mel Robbins (00:36:14):
So Sean, what I love about what you just said, especially in response to that question from Charmaine, is that I was listening to her just tick off one negative, nasty, critical thought after another. I could feel like this heaviness, and then all of a sudden it occurred to me, wait a minute, I bet happiness is broken into two things. It is from the neck up and it's the things that you tell yourself, but it is also and probably way more important that you think about the things that you're doing from the neck down. And that's where these habits come in, that if it's all doom and gloom from the neck up, you're not going to feel any sort of motivation, hope, or interest in lighting up with everybody else. But if you can force yourself to start ticking off these simple habits that you recommend, that you practice, that you've researched and you just highlighted the one of taking and making a two minute note, just a two minute note every single day for 21 days, it will have an impact in how you feel, which of course will start to shift all that shit you've been saying to yourself, which probably is stuff that you heard your parents say to themselves.
(00:37:32):
And so you are, what I love about your research is that you're also making it actionable because I think that's part of the problem that when we feel shitty and we say shitty things to ourselves, we don't take the actions that actually change it.
Shawn Achor (00:37:48):
Yeah. I heard one time I was on a plane and the woman sitting, I don't know, kitty corner behind me to the back, she said she was talking to somebody else loudly that she had just met about all these psychological understandings about herself, literally a litany of all the psychological problems that she had. And I realized, and she said she'd been going to therapy for years. She had this incredible knowledge about herself and understanding where she was. And at no point did she ever mention anything she was doing about it. She was talking to a stranger about it, which was more trauma dumping than actually trying to move forward. But I think there's this moment where I really thought that if I read enough books that I'd find happiness.
(00:38:37):
I thought if I read enough books, I'd be smart and then people would like me. That was completely not true. And I think that we take these passage, and I love what you're saying there, is that there's this interplay between the beliefs and the actions that we do. You see the same thing with religion between this faith and works. It's the things you believe, but if you say you believe those, but you're not doing any of those, I'm not sure you actually believe these things, that there's got to be connection between those. And what I would say is in addition to that is don't try to do it alone. I think that we treat happiness, self-help. I know our books are in self-help sections sometimes, but as soon as we do this on our own without that friend, without that mentor, without those people that we're doing meaningful acts for, then we get frustrated very quickly and think we're doing something wrong. And what's wrong is actually the formula. Happiness never works out if it's an individual pursuit. And that that's one of those other mindset shifts, I think was crucial to find that there wasn't, you can't do enough yoga to force yourself into happiness unless that yoga caused you to be more peaceful with that interaction with your mother-in-law.
Mel Robbins (00:39:46):
That's like happiness applied. I like to play another question. This one, Andrea, is from Pam. So this is a question from a listener that I think will help us dig deeper into the connection between you and people around you and how they impact your happiness.
Pam (00:40:05):
I'm listening to your podcast now and almost crying. What if your happiness seems centered entirely on that of another? In my case, it's my son. I've heard you're only as happy as your happiest child. And I have one son and he's not happy. I know he lives with his face in his phone and he says he doesn't mind being a loner. I know that he was happiest many years ago when he had a girlfriend who adored him and was very active. Now he's 26 and should be in the prime of his life, and he isn't. And as a result, I feel deeply unhappy. How do I move past this and how can I help him do the same at 65 and four years out from breast cancer treatment? I think it's time to find my warm people and find that happiness again.
Shawn Achor (00:40:56):
I hear that. I mean, I have two kids of my own and so much of my happiness is built upon them and because of them and any frustration that I feel is usually because I'm not with them, right? Or when they're hurting, I so wish it was me. So I think that that's unavoidable. I think that love necessitates amounts of pain that we have to buy into. So I think that the fact that there's pain associated with that love should not be the surprising part. I think what I would, if this was me saying that, and I feel like that's been me saying that sometimes in my life, we got to hear only a little bit of her story. Her story was her son's story mostly right? Then we heard that she went through breast cancer. I would've loved to hear her story, and yet we're hearing her story as a bit character or a side narrator of her son's story, which means that our happiness becomes very fragile.
(00:41:53):
So you and I both, well in financial groups, they always tell you, diversify your portfolio. Don't all be in all stocks and don't be in all bonds. And that's my knowledge cliff. Don't be on all one thing. I think the same thing happens with meaning, and I think we see it with people who love their kids. We also see it with workaholics where they love something and it's meaningful. The work is meaningful and pleasurable and they're good at it. So then they just do more of it. But the more they do that and they don't do other things, they're slowly taking out other meaningful parts of their life so that their entire meaning portfolio is all in one stock. It's all that sun or it all becomes that work. We don't even know what to do with ourselves when we don't have work to do, right? That's a workaholic. They give free time and they're like, what do I do? Maybe I'll just have a few more emails, then I'll feel happy again. Right? That used to be you.
Mel Robbins (00:42:47):
I remember when we first met, you had kind of fallen into that trap and you had to make yourself a promise that whenever you were on a plane, you were going to put your laptop away and you were going to force yourself to watch a movie because you were starting to see that you loved work so much. And this was me too, that you hadn't diversified where you got your happiness from. And so I think that's incredible advice, and I also keep thinking about that swinging. So I loved it when you were saying earlier to think about your life and the emotional and the meaning aspect of life as this range. And if you never knew the depths of sadness, you wouldn't ever experience the greatest heights of joy. And that there is always this swing and when it swings in a direction where you have really uncomfortable feelings, that that is a mentally healthy and a mentally emotional place to be in life at times.
(00:43:51):
And one of the greatest things that I've learned recently, Sean, and it's helped me a lot as a parent, is that it so important that the people in your life struggle at times because inside that struggle is where they learn the lessons and they have to dig deeper and discover something inside themselves. And it's the hardest thing in the world to see somebody that you love suffering. And I had that experience watching my husband struggle with depression, and I could throw every book on the planet, Adam, every podcast episode, Adam, but I can't do the work for him. I can just hold space for that. And I think we have to do that for ourselves that on those days that you feel like shit, you've got to hold space for the fact that you've just swung in the direction of a healthy feeling and eventually it's going to swing back.
(00:44:48):
And what I like about what you're teaching us, Sean, is that through these habits, and you said a gratitude practice, a journaling practice, exercising every day, taking two minutes to write a note to somebody. These are simple things that leverage all this research. This is the neck down approach as far as I'm concerned, something that has nothing to do with how you feel but impacts how you feel that these are things that anybody can do, but what do you do? Because I can sit here and mouth off on the mic and say that I can hold space and all this shit, but the truth is I get very triggered when somebody that I love is sad and I want to fix it, Sean, but how do you hold space? How do you operate, whether it's you personally, Sean, or what do you recommend because you do so much corporate strategy work and teaching, what do you do for leaders when there's somebody on their team that's really struggling? How do you show up as a space and commitment for happiness for others when they don't feel like it?
Shawn Achor (00:45:54):
It's such an interesting question because when we speak to groups of people, you get 300 people in a room, plus someone in there is going through grief just statistically, someone's going through grief. Maybe 20% are on an antidepressant or anti-anxiety medication that the 10% or more have been abused. And to go into, the more I think about it, the more I become paralyzed as a speaker. If I thought about that, I know that I would not say some of the things that I would be saying even in this conversation, maybe not. But I definitely would soft pedal some of the things in the happiness advantage. If one of my friends had just lost their son, I would not go immediately to this because I think that there's a moment and a long moment for grief that we need to allow and recognition that that's part of love and that's part of being human. At the same time, what's helped me hold that space that you're describing is that I'll find out after a talk that someone would come up to me and be like, this traumatic event just happened to our kid. And I immediately think in my head, why did I say some of these things?
(00:47:11):
And they were like, you have no idea how much I need to hear this today. So my beliefs and assumptions about what that person needed to hear were completely wrong. And I give myself space to realize in those moments that I don't have everything figured out, which is actually really helpful in a way that I think links back to what you were describing, that I think that what the last person described was exactly what my parents felt about me when I was depressed, right? My parents have said it to me, they were like, we felt helpless. We watched you go through depression. We saw you were depressed and we couldn't do anything. And we were in Boston far away from us, so I could hear them feeling the same thing that parent felt as well. And that's why I'm a happiness researcher now because I went through that depression and because they were there for me in the midst of it and my friends were, and because I took these steps, all of that made me feel like depression wasn't in the story and made me want to talk to other people about it.
Shawn Achor (00:48:10):
So that moment of suffering that you're describing, what I keep telling parents that will say, my kid is depressed, I say I was too. And that's not the end of the story. And that's very typical. That is very normal. I think we panic when we don't feel that happiness we're told we're supposed to feel all the time. What I wish that it could be a constant corollary to my work is to let people know that you should not feel happy all the time. If you do, that's a disorder, right? You're divorced from reality. What we want you to do is that when you feel swung towards the negative side and you're doing deficit thinking like the first person that we need to spin some of those precious finite resources to scanning for the positive parts of the story that are equally true, or to talk about our story instead of just our son's
Mel Robbins (00:49:03):
Story. I think that the numbers that you said about an audience are way higher. And I would push back on you and say that the research and the recommendations that you're making work and that everybody needs to hear 'em. And if you're in a state of acute grief, then you're not going to be capable of doing it. But the second that you're grabbing for a lifeline, these simple habits that you're talking about of simply getting out of bed, exercising, journaling, practicing gratitude, and then sending a note of kindness. And it might just be to people that helped you during the funeral, that gives you a lifeline, that gives you access to the power within you that helps you come back to yourself. And so I think we make the mistake of tiptoeing around people's depression and people's sadness, and we treat them with kid gloves when actually what they need is not only the empathy and the support and the check-in, but these mile markers and guideposts that help you swing back in the direction of feeling happier again.
(00:50:13):
And I do love that you keep coming back and back and back to this idea that this is something you practice. I have never heard anybody say that happiness is a team sport. I have always thought about it as happiness, like having good social connections results in happiness. But you're saying almost the inverse, which is that when you prioritize connecting with people in a more meaningful way, or even simply to seek some support and help the result that you feel is more joy and happiness, even as you're going through these very difficult times, it's almost like happiness and joy can become a life fest that keeps you afloat. It's not like it's exhilarating, and I'm starting to really get at a much deeper cellular level what you're saying when it's like, we need a different definition for this. It's not pleasure, it's something else that's way more important. I want to go to another question that we have. Let's go to question number four. I bet you've got a great answer for Annemarie.
Annemarie (00:51:31):
Hi Mel. This is Annemarie calling from Guilford in the United Kingdom absolutely adore listening to your inspirational podcast. Thank you. Can you advise people who perhaps have a chronic illness and can't exercise or work full-time how they too can lead a happier and more fulfilled life? Sometimes we feel trapped and just grateful someone will even hire us. It's often a job to make ends meet rather than do something that we love and find fulfilling. How do you stay motivated and hopeful and keep joy in your life? How do you prevent yourself from spiraling and thinking the worst because you are sick so much of the time? Thank you so much. And sending all love,
Shawn Achor (00:52:12):
It's very tough. And I faced that last week when my heart wasn't doing well or whatever was wrong with me, and I thought it's so much easier to feel. I actually looked outside the window and there was the security guard outside the hospital, and I so much wanted to be him. I wanted his life where he wasn't caring about health. So this question hits home where someone has to think about their health all the time, and I think that recognizing that that makes it hard. I used to write in books when I'd sign it. I'd say Happiness is a choice, Sean. I don't do that anymore because I actually still do believe happiness can be become a choice eventually, but not in the immediate moment without any practice. And it's okay when it doesn't happen, and that takes way too long for you to write into every book. I think that there is a recognition that I have an idea. Yeah, go ahead.
Mel Robbins (00:53:09):
What if you wrote Happiness is an option?
Shawn Achor (00:53:15):
I like that because choice seems to add a burden where I don't want there to be a burden, but a recognition that it's an option.
Shawn Achor (00:53:23):
I love that. I think I might use that now. That's great. I think that when we can't do something, we're outlining something that's a deficit. I can't exercise. But we know that most of these habits don't involve exercise. So there are things that we can do in those moments that can raise levels of happiness. I think the choice is just harder. I think the choice is harder when you're being racially discriminated against or when you have a health issue or when your kid is depressed. I think the choice becomes harder within those moments, but still it's an option as you're describing. And where I think we get meaning, even when our own body becomes our prison, is from other people.
(00:54:02):
And I know that because I've done work with the National MS Society, we did a whole campaign with them where we got the person who is experiencing MS and a caregiver to come together, and they heard about these habits and then we did it together, and then we videotaped their experience for the next six months as an encouragement for other people. So they weren't just hearing someone who has a happiness research talk about this. They could hear about it translated into the life of someone who's dealing with ms, and what I saw was that as a researcher, I study people. I just study this, not because I'm amazing at happiness and I need to tell everyone about it. I study the people who are able to create happiness. Even when it would be very difficult for me if I lost one of my children. I do not know what would happen on the backside of it.
(00:54:49):
Regardless of all of this work, I don't know who I would be, but I do know people on the opposite side of trauma and grief who have done incredible things with their life that are incredibly positive. I just met someone who lost his daughter and is the head of a hospital system in the midst of covid and was just one of those people that just you walk away feeling like life is worth living. So I know it's possible. So given that you can see that people are doing that, I think it becomes to your point, an option again, and then meaning comes from other people.
Mel Robbins (00:55:24):
Now, when you say meaning comes from other people, I want to be very clear everybody, because we are also saying you have to stop thinking you'll be happy when you get in the relationship or lose the pounds or you'll finish the PhD or you have your first song playing on the radio though I'll be happy when or thinking that some achievement is going to make your life fulfilling. No, and I think most of us have heard that it's about what becomes fulfilling in life is working on this thing climbing the mountain. So I want to be very clear that Sean is not saying that other people are the source of your happiness. What Sean is saying is that connection, meaningful connection with other people creates feelings of meaning and joy and happiness in your life, and that serving others and helping other people creates meaning and joy. So this is not trying to counsel you, somebody else holds the key to your happiness. It's another one of those ways to think about happiness differently. Am I saying that correctly, Sean?
Shawn Achor (00:56:33):
Yeah, I think saying it, and it's a very important thing to say and also that if you're in a relationship with somebody that's harming you, that you do not need to be in the relationship with that person or you need to be able to find safe spaces outside of that. That being the case we did work with, alongside that, we were working in Flint, Michigan in the midst of inequality and discrimination and racism, which are real and visceral and pernicious negatives within the society. They could easily, when we came into the community, I was worried people would be like, we'll talk about happiness when the jobs come back and when there's not lead in the water.
Mel Robbins (00:57:09):
We'll
Shawn Achor (00:57:09):
Talk about happiness when there's not racism. We only had money to work with the teachers, so we were trying to raise levels of happiness for the teachers. So they'd stayed for more than two years and if their story was, I live in the midst of this society that's broken,
Shawn Achor (00:57:24):
I can't wait to get out of here, then of course they would want to get out of there. What we found while we were doing this is that only in the classrooms where we were able to raise the levels of happiness for the teachers, the teachers, students, parents or guardians, wellbeing scores started improving dramatically. So we were measuring the community, but we weren't doing anything. We thought for them. We were only working with the teachers and yet their wellbeing scores were improving. The students' test scores in those classrooms were rising and we weren't working with the students yet.
(00:57:53):
We were finding that if you could change the mindset and behavior of some of the individuals within an ecosystem, you could actually measure the impact of people 2, 3, 4 degrees separate that they never even met. And the reason I highlight that is one that makes us feel good about ourselves, but two, it's the reason for taking that next step. If doing this gratitude journal is just about me, it feels empty and vacuous that it's just about my happiness. This is just going to gym so I could look good, but why am I going to look good if I don't have someone to look good for? You could get stuck in all those ideas. What we were finding in the midst of this is that when people were able to raise their levels of happiness, joy and meaning, it caused other people to see that happiness was an option.
(00:58:43):
But at the same time, that gave them the fuel for why my work is meaningful as a teacher. And we had this one day where they did a random acts of kindness. We took teachers that are doing everything in their power to try and hold this community together, and we had them do one more thing. We had them on one day all come together and do a random act of kindness for the community and we didn't know there was going to be a blizzard that day. So at four in the morning, they were giving donuts to road construction crews. They were going out to hospice centers, hospitals. This was their day off, the parent teacher or the teacher in service day. We even went to the DMV to pass out happiness kits that they made until they got kicked out because one of the managers actually said, this is just not part of our culture, which I thought was hilarious.
(00:59:26):
But in the midst of this, you talk to those teachers who give everything all the time about that day, they immediately light up their joy. And my mom was a high school English teacher for 30 years. It was very hard to get her to do something for herself, but if she knew that doing something for herself could raise the levels of happiness for other people, it felt meaningful. And so what I'm hoping for is not that my happiness exists in somebody else, but you're describing that there was this study that came out about it's better to live a meaningful life than a happy life, which I thought as soon as you split meaning and happiness, we've already made a mistake.
Mel Robbins (01:00:07):
Yeah. Isn't it the same thing?
Shawn Achor (01:00:09):
Yes, they should be because it's very difficult to stay happy when you feel like your life is meaningless and it's very difficult to keep doing meaningful activities if you don't feel any joy doing that or any return on it. You have to have the two melded together. I would say grit alongside that as well. What we're finding was that that meaning was coming from our participation positively in creating a better world that was outside of just the individual and that when you enhance and expand the power out and let people be part of your life as well, that's when we start to see those larger gains in people's thoughts of happiness.
Mel Robbins (01:00:47):
If I had to say this in a very rude way, you ready? And I know you need to go, so I'll make it fast. It's almost as if you don't have some clinical diagnosis or mental health issue that's compromising your rational thinking and your emotions. If you're unhappy, you're not playing a big enough game in life. You're too focused on your own misery. You're too focused on yourself, and gratitude is one way to make you see the bigger picture. Taking two minutes and sending a really positive note to somebody else is a way to help you see the bigger picture when you exercise, particularly if you get outside and you're out in nature and you move your body, which shifts your emotions, which shifts your thinking, which helps you then think bigger. All of these things are about getting out of your own teeny, tiny, selfish, miserable focus and expanding your eyes to see that there's a lot more about your life experience and about what is your potential that's available to you when you stop staring at your nasal and complaining about everything that's going on your navel.
Shawn Achor (01:02:06):
I like that also, that
Mel Robbins (01:02:07):
You're not as mean as me though. I don't see you throwing a few fucks in there. I see Sean being a very nice happiness researcher as you,
Shawn Achor (01:02:15):
I feel like I could just listen to you forever. I feel like you're able to synthesize in such a beautiful way and you can hear it from the people who call in and even though they're suffering, you're doing something so meaningful in their life. Alongside that, I would say we get so focused upon whether or not a glass is half full or half empty and then we decide or happiness based upon that, or optimism or pessimism. But I've always had this idea, this picture in my head of we're so focused on this glass being half full or half empty, but ignoring that there's a picture of water sitting right next to it that we could fill it up with,
(01:02:49):
And we're trying to determine whether or not our current life is where we want it to be. And I would say it isn't. And I think in many ways we all have a disordered life where we put the wrong things at the top or think the wrong things will create greater levels of happiness. And what we're finding is that when we do these habits and when we care and let other people in care for and let other people in, we're filling up that glass and that glass does not look like it did the day before.
Mel Robbins (01:03:20):
Yeah, that's great. Okay, so what are the habits that you're teaching people around the world, Sean?
Shawn Achor (01:03:26):
We get people to write down each day for two minutes, three new things that they're grateful for that have occurred over the past 24 hours, and we don't let them repeat for 21 days in a row so that it's not what you're grateful for that matters, it's the scanning. We also got people to go on a 15 minute brisk walk four to five times a week, which we found as the equivalent of taking an antidepressant for the first six months for the next two years as a 30% lower relapse rate back to that depressed state. We find that if you take your hands off your keyboard for two minutes today and just watch your breath go in and out, you're training your brain to do one thing at a time and 21 days later, not only are your accuracy rates improving by 10%, the levels of happiness rise, stress levels drop, and the cortisol levels of the people that are around you change, so their stress levels are dropping as well. So you're literally changing other people's biochemical patterns based upon your habits. And finally, we've got people to write a two minute positive email each day praising or thanking one new person, a different person each day for 21 days in a row. So just thanking them for something or praising them for something a week tire or strong tie. But 21 days later, we find that it dramatically improves the greatest predictor of your long-term levels of happiness, which is your social connection score.
Mel Robbins (01:04:35):
Boom. That's not just the happiness advantage people. Those are the happiness actions, and I'm telling you, based on the research, the van is right, you got to do it. I always say, Sean, this is not just a listening podcast. This is a fucking doing podcast. So do those things for 21 days and I think you'll be shocked at how the needle moves or as Sean likes to say, you swing in a new direction. And Sean, anything else that you want everyone to know
Shawn Achor (01:05:12):
Except where you are right now, but realize that this is not the end of the story. So I believe the change is radically possible from our genes and our environment when we change our mindset and change our behavior and we link in with other people as well.
Mel Robbins (01:05:25):
Well, I'm sad that this is the end of the conversation and I do think your next book, the title should be, this is not the end of the Story. It's the one thing that made my, there's a lot of things in our conversation today, but the couple times that you said that it was so hopeful and it also is believable optimism, and so there is something in that this is not the end of the story that has limitless possibility, and yet something seems very achievable in that.
Shawn Achor (01:06:06):
I love that and I love that happiness is an option. There are so many points. I feel like I'm going to be thinking about this interview for a long time. You've just got this depth that makes it just beautiful. So I learned a lot from this.
Mel Robbins (01:06:19):
Alright, listen, YouTube, I know you're watching this. We just went to commercial break over on the podcast side. You want to know why? Because those advertisers pay for this shit, and so you want to know how you can help me click subscribe. Don't sit there and be a free loader. That's not cool. That's not what your friend Mel Robbins needs. I need you to do your side of this, which is click subscribe. Why? The more subscribers I have, the more advertisers we attract, which means the more videos we can create for you, don't be a freeloader in life. Hit subscribe, help a lady out, and then everything that you learned today from the OG of happiness, you better fucking put it to work because it doesn't work for you to just watch me. You got to stop watching and start doing. Well actually keep watching, but also do alright, let's join back in with your friends that listened to the ads.
(01:07:08):
Boom. Back to the show. I want to highlight a couple takeaways because there was so much that we covered and it wasn't in a very orderly I'm robot asking questions that the PR company gave me. That's not how we do this on the Mel Robbins podcast, so let me just make sure that you have the succinct takeaways. First of all, it's very clear that we should have one word, and the word for happiness should be meaning, happiness and joy, meaning happiness and joy. What I got from that is it's all the same thing, pleasure, laughter, going out and blowing off some steam with some buddies on the weekend. These experiences that make you laugh or swipe, those are great, but what Sean and I are talking about to you today is something way deeper and we're talking about you having an experience in your life that no matter what the fuck is going on, that you have this greater perspective and you have this connection to values and meaning and other people.
(01:08:23):
That happiness when it's tied to meaning and joy and connection to other people, that it is a life jacket that keeps you afloat in hard times and it is almost like the dial on a stove that you can turn up to really get the water boiling when things are great, it's an accelerator, it's an amplifier, and it's also a lifesaver. I'm going to stop thinking about this as some emotion I feel, and I'm going to start thinking about it as a framework through which you live your life, that you are doing the work to create greater meaning. If you even just think about the four habits he taught us, if you list them off generically, you're like, duh. But if you really stop and consider the deeper thing we're talking about here, we're talking about shortcuts to deeper meaning in your life, and if you drill down into decades of psychological research, let's just even put aside all the research that Sean's team's been doing.
(01:09:22):
Every one of these taps into bodies of research that have been performed for decades that ladder up to us knowing that they will help you create more meaning in your life. They will be the amplifier and they will also be the life jacket when shit gets hard, and so I just want to remind us all of them. It's this journaling practice of naming three things you're grateful for in the last 24 hours and you can't repeat 'em for 21 days. And he said the value in that is it forces you to scan. It's very similar to the things that we talk about here, like looking for three wins or looking for hearts. You are actively scanning the environment to see something positive. The high five habit is actively looking at yourself and treating yourself different, and Sean was saying it's in the training of the mind to change what you're looking for that creates the meaning and the lift and the impact.
(01:10:24):
The second thing that he said is something we talk about all the time here, which is this walk. You're late walk like you're late. Sean recommends 15. I say, yeah, 10 will do. And it's true if you simply get out the door and you walk like you're late, and I tell you that you cannot be listening to anything because I want you to have an experience of being with yourself and I want you to be outside and hear nature or other people or the sounds around you, and I want you to walk late because of the research around how it shifts your mood and how it taps into longevity, and I also don't want anything in your ears because I want you to be present and finally you're going to get the bright light, so we agree on that one too. Another one that we agree on, I tell you every day, text one person a day, reach out to one person a day.
(01:11:13):
His is take two minutes and write an email positive to somebody. Exact same thing, exact same research that we're both citing. This is so important. Oh, and I love this one. This one I do not do, but I love this one. We might have to steal this one. You need to set a timer on your phone because God knows neither one of us are going to remember this, so set a timer in your phone to take your hands off your keyboard and just breathe for two minutes. That's a good one. That's a good one. I like that one. Those four things of stopping the multitasking, proactively connecting with other people and reaching out, getting outside and taking a brisk walk and being with yourself and shifting your mood and getting that dopamine, and finally, the act of intentional journaling and scanning for wins and what you're grateful for.
(01:12:07):
That's the quad of incredible happiness for you. Now, the other thing that we talked about is that there's a huge swing here. If you are happy all the time, you're not normal and you're not healthy, you're probably manic, okay? A normal, healthy, mentally healthy person has days where they feel connection and meaning and joy and days where they're swimming in the fricking toilet, okay? You can't have one without the other. Really, what we're talking about is using these habits and a mindset switch to throw on a life jacket so you can float in a toilet and climb your way out of there, and on those days where you are experiencing meaning and joy that you're fucking present so that you actually can feel those core memories. That's what he was saying. Alrighty, I love you. I want to make sure that I don't end this without telling you that I love you and I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to just ride the wave, experience those core memories, create deeper meaning and joy in your life.
(01:13:27):
Reach out for help when you're having a bad day and tap into this advantage that we've just given you. One of the OGs of happiness just handed you the keys, and now you got to grab 'em, stick 'em in the lock, turn it, and push a door open to a happier you because happiness is an option. I love you, okay? Am I okay, Jesse to go? Yeah. Okay. Ooh, I guess I'm not happy about that. There's something in my throat. Okay. Wow, that is a big truck going by. You know what? I'm not happy that the truck is going by, but I feel a lot of joy in my heart because we're making progress on this episode and you can feel, oh my God, okay, I have to take this up. I've been harassing her. There is the truck again, my God. Leave it to Mel to schedule podcast tapings on a construction day.
(01:14:30):
We're going to do something a little different today, and I don't know if we've told you this or not. I like to invite you onto the podcast and then completely surprise you by what we're doing, so you feel very uncomfortable. Just kidding. Oh, and one more thing, and no, this is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode. Hey, it's Mel. Thank you so much for being here. If you enjoyed that video, bye. God, please subscribe because I don't want you to miss a thing. Thank you so much for being here. We've got so much amazing stuff coming. Thank you so much for sending this stuff to your friends and your family. I love you. We create these videos for you, so make sure you subscribe.
Our most commonly held formula for success is broken. Conventional wisdom holds that once we succeed, we’ll be happy; that once we get that great job, win that next promotion, lose those five pounds, happiness will follow. But the science reveals this formula to be backward: Happiness fuels success, not the other way around.
Drawing on original research—including one of the largest studies of happiness ever conducted—and work in boardrooms and classrooms across forty-two countries, Shawn Achor shows us how to rewire our brains for positivity and optimism to reap the happiness advantage in our lives, our careers, and even our health.