Side quest (April 8, 2023)

Tools for happiness

I’ve been brainstorming “tools for happiness” to put in The Therapy Book (that is, the fiction WIP) over the last week or two. Not that I’m sure how to define happiness. It’s sort of a chicken-and-the-egg situation, where I have to make this list in order to define what I’m making the list about.

The “rules” are:

–Has to come from a place of long-term personal happiness rather than short-term pick-me-ups (for example, mastering a craft rather than “doing crafts”)

–Has to lead to a healthier society rather than a more selfish OR restrictive one

No particular order, except that “agree to disagree” seems fundamental somehow; I ran into someone else saying that recently and felt quite validated. Some repetition:

Agree to disagree

Acknowledge differences and find their benefits

Taking initiative, even if the results aren’t what’s desired

Savoring the relationship/membership

Accepting responsibility for the in-group in “your” area of expertise; leadership

Knowing self, through separating from that sense of “self”

Self-parenting skills: emotional regulation/self-soothing, unconditional acceptance, self-discipline–all of those things coexisting

Acting in accordance with values

Faith where logic fails (not religion but well-placed trust)

Acceptance of the existence of death and other endings

Some sort of larger-than-self perspective (multiverse thinking, big/little scale thinking)

Play, co-play

Checking in/reporting status

Shared pleasures & hobbies

Good health

Release of trauma

Purging assholes who can’t control their behavior, holding them accountable instead of preserving the relationship at all costs

Primate-grooming behaviors: touch, compliments, validation, sympathy, memes

Patience, waiting for someone to process/practice/learn rather than trying to “fix” them (that person might be yourself, anyway)

Humor (gently!) to bypass fear, rather than to isolate outsiders

Looking for shared advantage, connection

Repetition, practice, time spent (on a process, with a person)

Loyalty

Vulnerability

A place for everyone, with flexibility of place

Flow state/in the groove

Paying attention

No-thought

Boredom

Beginner’s mind/resets (on some level?) Refreshing the mind so you’re back to first-level internal bullshit, instead of stacking bullshit thought on top of bullshit thought, anyway.

Mentorship relationships

Generosity: almost more the ability to receive it than to give it

Boundaries set for self, not others

The ability to say no; the ability to negotiate; the ability to apologize

Taking in, responding deeply to, and making creative work (but not all creative work? there’s something to be mindful about here, but I’m not sure how to say it–some work is there to play on your fears and increase them and not to process/relieve them?)

Exposing the self to the possibility of being wrong, making course corrections

Proper grief, patiently allowing yourself to feel pain without stacking pain on top of pain

Threading the maze/pantsing/boostrapping: being unable to resolve something as you are, making necessary changes, grieving the self left behind, and continuing forward

The feeling of being understood

The feeling of contributing, particularly in the way one likes best

Letting thoughts be just thoughts and feelings just be feelings

Experimenting rather than needing to succeed

Failing faster and more efficiently, with fewer repetitions

Trying new things and responding genuinely, instead of from fear

Seeing from other people’s perspectives (instead of just going, “That person is nuts”)

Setting aside filters/masks as a mark of trust

Letting time pass between event and reaction

Seeking nuance wherever your spot black-and-white thinking

Getting rid of stuff you no longer want or need

Taking time to clean, repair, rest, maintain

Meditation/mindfulness

Hydrate properly on a regular basis

Treats as treats, not replacements

–I feel like in order for this list to be useful, it has to be condensed down to something that’s clearer about underlying principles. But it was quite pleasant to write all these down. I’ll probably come up with more.

Got any others?

outsider art, tools of happiness

I asked Midjourney what the tools for happiness were. I’m not mad about the result.

I am not prepared to be someone on a “health journey,” because most of what I’m focused on is my mental health at this point, but I would also show off my high kick. Better. It’s slowly getting less embarrassing just to TRY doing them, is probably the important part.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top