I have friends who are happy with an average job, little money, and no relationship. I know other friends who are happy with a great career, plenty of cash and a fulfilling relationship.
Theyāve tapped into the power to be happy regardless of their material possessions. Theyāve learned to be happy and grateful now, as opposed to someday.
It doesnāt mean that you have no further need for ambition, drive or dissatisfaction because youāre happy.
Not at all.
You still want to strive for more. You still have goals and dreams; the difference is that your results do not affect whether you are happy.
Happiness is not something you find externally but something you cultivate deep inside yourself. Having a lifelong aspiration or passion can lead to happiness. Something that drives you every day, something that challenges you and make a positive difference in the world.
I got to a place of happiness through what the Japanese call Ikigai.
Like the Danish word hygge, thereās no simple, direct translation into English, but it roughly means the āthing that you live forā or āthe reason for which you get up in the morning.ā
My ikigai is my writing because it fulfils these five objectives.
- Itās challenging. Your ikigai should lead to mastery and growth.
- Itās a lifelong commitment. Itās not something you master easily. You must be dedicated.
- One of a kind. No one can do what you do in the way you do it.
- It makes you feel good. Ikigai is associated with positive relationships, happiness and good health. It gives you more energy than it takes away.
- Freedom. You donāt need to ask permission to pursue it. My basic tools are a pencil and a piece of paper. I could be anywhere in the world doing what I do.
As it turns out, happiness is incidental to how you live your life. It cannot be obtained by striving and by doing.
Itās a product of your ikigai.
āHappiness cannot be pursued; it must ensue, and it only does so as the unintended side effect of oneās personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself or as the by-product of oneās surrender to a person other than oneself.ā ā Viktor Frankl.
Happy people live in the now. They experience the moments. They are incredibly grateful for all they have. They focus their lives on what is important to them because guess what? They're in control.