Baby Boomers: Stop Making Happiness the Goal

Studies show that younger baby boomers consistently report the lowest levels of happiness with startlingly high rates of depression. An AARP study confirmed there is a U-shaped happiness curve with the early 50’s as the lowest point of well-being.

This blog is based on the premise that those studies describing baby boomers as the generation dwelling in doom and gloom don’t have to be self-fulfilling prophecies. Instead of allowing these happiness studies to make us hopeless during our 50’s and 60’s, this blog focuses on how we can find happiness during these sometimes difficult years.

But can we try too hard to be happy? Should baby boomers make happiness a goal? Does it seem like the more you strive for happiness the more it seems to elude you?

Is the media making us feel like happiness is like a button we push for instant bliss?

Is the media making us feel like happiness is like a button we push for instant bliss?

These may sound like odd questions coming from a blogger who writes about finding your bliss.

However, one recent study showed those that made happiness a goal, reported 50 percent less frequent positive emotions, 35 percent less satisfaction about life, and 75 percent more depressive symptoms.

Maybe that’s why I’ve noticed lately happiness isn’t quite as trendy as it used to be. A few years ago, the science of happiness made the covers of Time, Oprah, and even The Economist. Happiness articles and quotes glutted the Internet. The quest for happiness bred a whole industry of life coaches, motivational speakers, psychotherapists, research enterprises – and yes, blogs like mine.

But are we getting tired of pretending to be happy all the time? Are we sick of the media telling us to have a positive attitude no matter what’s happening in our lives?

Maybe so.

Jimmie Holland, M.D., a psychiatrist with Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York, coined the term, “the tyranny of positive thinking.”

Sometimes it might feel like baby boomers are being bullied into thinking that if we don’t wake up every morning with an instant perpetual smile on our face – something is wrong with us.

Social media hasn’t helped. When I described some of the trials I’ve faced these past few years, a friend told me, “I would have never guessed. You look so happy in your Facebook pictures.” Yes, I suppose that I’ve fallen into that trap posting only photos that look like I’m having the time of my life – all the time. Of course, I’m not, but this is the fictionalized world we all live in with social media.

Commercials also make us feel like happiness is an entitlement. An instant feeling on tap that can be purchased with that new sports car or a new pair of shoes.

The truth is everyone has problems. No one is happy all the time. It’s like that quote from Regina Brett: “If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else’s, we’d grab ours back.”

The fact is, most people have it worse than you despite the happy picture they are painting on Facebook. So maybe it’s time we baby boomers quit comparing our ‘happiness’ with others. Quit making “living happily ever after” some kind of prize we all want to achieve.

Negative Emotions Are Normal at Times

I was reading an interesting article, The Fallacy of Happiness, on Spike. The article pointed to a study by health insurers Aviva, that showed a quarter of adults in the UK suffer from stress, anxiety or depression and are not seeking help for it because they feel embarrassed by their “mental health conditions.”

Here's your happy pill!

Here’s your happy pill!

“How strange it is that such normal, eternal human emotions as stress, anxiety and depression are now placed under the category of mental-health problems,” columnist Patrick West writes. “Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, the clinical depression which leaves people unable to get out of bed for days: these are conditions that properly fall under the category of mental illness.”

He has a point. West contends that it’s natural to worry or feel low from time to time. These are normal human emotions that have somehow become pathologized.

All of a sudden, negative feelings are considered some kind of disease or aberration – something that must be cured right away. That’s become obvious with all the assortment of “happy pills” the pharmaceutical industry hands out like PEZ Candy. I mean, how did our parents and grandparents ever survive without prescriptions like Xanax, Zoloft, Prozac, Valium, and Ambien?

You Are Fine Just as You Are

Lancet, a prestigious medical journal, published a study on 700,000 women in midlife showing that there might not be a link between good health and happiness as other studies in the past have claimed.

Even more interesting than the results were the reactions of people,  Of course, grumpy people were jumping for joy since they no longer had to endure accusations that their crappy attitude is endangering their health. But countless others were outraged that all their quests for happiness might not lead to good health and longer lives like they thought.

But here’s the thing. The giddy kind of happiness we have all come to expect is not the norm. Life can be a struggle at times, filled with disappointments, failures, and obstacles.

Many people who make happiness their objective are trying to avoid uncomfortable negative feelings that come with the normal ups and downs in life. We can’t be happy all the time. We baby boomers are old and wise enough to know that happiness is fickle.

Everyone has those heart wrenching moments when it’s impossible to be a Pollyanna. For example, I wasn’t jumping for joy while watching my Mom die after suffering from a horrible disease this past year. I wasn’t cheerful as I watched the painful disintegration of my son’s marriage and the effect on my three grandchildren. When I first started writing, I wasn’t exactly exultant when stacks of rejection letters filled my mailbox. Or ecstatic when people I loved betrayed me. You get my drift.

Should we still try to aim for a positive attitude? Definitely. Will we always achieve it? No.

Groundbreaking work by Iris Mauss supported the idea that striving for happiness may actually cause more harm than good. “When people want to be happy, they set higher standards by which they’re more likely to fall short,” she said. “This, in turn, may lead to greater discontent, in turn, lowering levels of happiness and well-being.”

Mauss explained, she’s not saying, ‘Don’t try to be happy,’ If you give people the right tools, they can increase their happiness and well-being, she notes. It is an exaggerated focus on happiness that can have downsides.

No matter where you fall on the happiness spectrum – which in part is due to genetics – self-acceptance is key.

Let’s face it, I’m never going to be giddy and giggly, but that’s okay. If you’re like me, a bit on the serious side, you can take comfort from studies that show too much cheerfulness can make you gullible, selfish, and less successful. A wee bit of unhappiness, in fact, can inspire us to make necessary changes in life.

Happiness is not a Goal

“Happiness is not a goal…it’s a by-product of a life well lived,” Eleanor Roosevelt famously said.

So, let’s all ditch happiness as a goal. As I wrote about in a previous blog, aim for fulfillment instead. Strive for contentment. Set your sights on inspiration and adventure. Search for purpose and meaning in life.

If you baby boomers make those your goals, you’re more likely to feel the joy and happiness you’ve been searching for all along without even trying.

Images courtesy of Stuart Miles and iosphere at FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

juliegorges

Julie A. Gorges is the author of two young adult novels, Just Call Me Goody Two Shoes and Time to Cast Away and co-author of Residential Steel Design and Construction published by McGraw Hill. In addition, hundreds of her articles and short stories have been published in national and regional magazines, and she received three journalism awards from the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association while working as a newspaper reporter. Julie currently lives in southern California with her husband, Scott, and has two grown children and three grandchildren.

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2 Responses

  1. Pearl says:

    Thank you so much for this blog, Julie!

    You said: “These may sound like odd questions coming from a blogger who writes about finding your bliss.”
    Yes, and who has an army of smiley faces for her page’s banner. 😉 But you’re open and honest and I have liked how you’ve changed the direction of your blog more toward “aim for fulfillment”, contentment, inspiration, adventure, purpose and meaning.

    That does so much to help take the pressure off.

    I agree with you that it has gotten to where, I think, many of us do feel bullied. Being perpetually happy and positive has become one more unwinnable battle for a lot of us, I know it is for me. One more thing I have to do – but can’t.

    Bless you. Thank you. And I wish you much fulfillment and contentment! 🙂

    • juliegorges says:

      Your comment both touched me and made me laugh. I suppose I do have an army of smiley faces for my banner – never quite thought of it that way! At any rate, I’m so happy my blog struck a chord with you – that is always my aim. If I write something my readers can relate to and find reassuring, inspiring, comforting, or motivating – that’s my reward. As always, thank you so much for your insightful thoughts, Pearl.

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