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Bullies 2 Buddies Newsletter )
 by Izzy Kalman, MS......Empowering Victims the World Over June 2003 
in this issue
  • What is the Secret to Happiness?
  • The Sin of Taking Things for Granted
  • Ancient Wisdom About Wealth
  • Getting More of What You Want
  • The Paradox of "Rights"
  • Rights versus Resilience
  • Cats Do It, Too
  •  

    What is the Secret to Happiness?

    I love Discover magazine. If you like to keep abreast of developments in science, including the science of human behavior, Discover magazine is certainly one of the best ways.

    The June 2003 issue had a small item about a couple of English economists, Andrew Oswald and Andrew Clark. They developed a system for calculating the monetary value of happiness and surveyed various populations throughout the world. They found that "a poor, black South African surviving on $200 a year is, on average, as happy as an upper-middle-class American earning $70,000"! How is this possible?

    Think of it this way. Now that we have cellular phones, we would feel miserable if suddenly we had to give them up. Yet we are no happier today than we were before there were cell phones. Thirty years ago, we would have been miserable if we had to give up TV. But we were no happier then than before the days of TV. Seventy years ago, we would have been miserable if we had to give up indoor plumbing. But we were no happier then than we were before the days of indoor plumbing. And so on and so on. We can strip away convenience after convenience, and we will realize that we are no happier today than our ancestors were thousands of years ago. In fact, if you read anthropological studies of human tribes living in the forests (a great source is The Forest People, by Colin Turnbull, about the Pygmies), you will find that they are the happiest people in the world. That doesn't mean that their lives are easy. They're not. They can never be sure where their next meal will come from. Most children born into nature die before they are old enough to have children of their own. People in nature exist by virtue of all their sharpened senses, enabling them to survive indefinitely in the wild without the benefit of modern technology.

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    The Sin of Taking Things for Granted
    Does this mean we should drop all our earthly possessions and return to life as hunter gatherers? Of course not. First of all, the planet could not feed six billion people without modern agriculture. Secondly, without having been brought up in nature since birth, it would be almost impossible for us to develop the skills to survive in the wild. And third, even if it were possible to survive, we would be miserable with longing for the luxuries we once had.

    Just because Pygmies in the forest are happier than we are, they don't disdain our technological advances. Whenever primitive people are exposed to more modern technology, they admire and desire it. Our hunter/gatherer relatives would much rather wear our comfortable factory-made clothing than their bark loincloths. They eagerly go on hunting runs so they can trade up for modern goods. Once they have experienced something better than what they are used to, they don't want to give it up.

    The problem with us today is that we take what we have for granted. To quote from the great Joni Mitchell, "Don't it always seem to go/ That you don't know what you've got till it's gone/ They paved paradise/And put up a parking lot." We suffer through our unbelievably comfortable lives, guided by the illusion that we will only be happy when we have enough money to buy a higher level of comfort. I'd bet one of the reasons we in the Western world are despised by people in poorer countries is that we have so much luxury and have no appreciation for it. They see us as decadent and degenerate, and I wouldn't argue with them about that. Billions of people in the world would be overjoyed to eat our garbage, while we get upset when our cell phones can't get a proper connection.

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    Ancient Wisdom About Wealth
    The secret to happiness is nothing new. Wise people have understood it for thousands of years. The secret is encapsulated in a Jewish saying found in the compilation of law and wisdom called the Mishnah, Ethics of the Fathers, written almost two thousand years ago. The following is the Mishnah's ultimate definition of wealth. (By wealth is meant the material possessions necessary for contentment). It reads, "Who is the wealthy person? He who is happy with what he has."

    You will never feel wealthy and happy as long as you believe that what you have is not enough. Your net worth can be 10 million dollars, but you'll feel poor if you believe you should be worth 11 million. However, if you are happy with what you have, regardless of how little it may be, you automatically feel rich.

    While I should probably feel grateful every moment of the day, I don't think I'd accomplish much if I were constantly focused on gratitude. However, I do feel intense gratitude at least once a day. That is because I am particularly grateful for indoor plumbing. Since I shower at least once a day, this means that I feel gratitude at least once a day. I am grateful to whatever Higher Powers put me on the planet in a time and place when ordinary people can live more luxuriously than kings have lived throughout most of world history. What a marvel it is to be able to strip naked and take a long, hot shower even when the temperature is below freezing outside. My mother grew up in Poland in the first half of the century, and she's too embarrassed to tell me how infrequently she got to have a bath. Can you imagine what it was like when we were living as hunter/gatherers and you wanted to wash your body in the cold of winter?

    Getting More of What You Want
    There is a paradoxical side benefit to appreciating what you have: you tend to get more of what you want! You can't use this principle like a scientific formula, and it won't work if you fake it. Otherwise it is likely to backfire. If you are anxiously waiting for your rewards, you will be unhappy as long as they haven't arrived, and your unhappiness is likely to breed failure. Only when you are genuinely happy with what you have, with no ulterior motive, will you be likely to get more of what you want.

    Why should being grateful for what you have bring you more? It is not necessary to seek mystical explanations for this. When you are happy, you treat others more generously, so they treat you more generously in return. You make them happy, so they try to make you happy.

    I can back this up with my personal experience. The "game" that I developed and teach at my seminars on anger control I believe to possibly be the most powerful therapeutic technique one can find. Part of me has wanted to make it available to others, but another part of me has wanted to guard it closely as my own personal possession and be the only one using my method. I certainly did not want to be giving it away cheaply. I decided to ignore my possessive instinct when I was engaged by Cross Country University to give seminars, and this has turned out to be the best professional decision I have ever made. Even though I only earn only a pittance for each seminar participant, so many people come to learn it that I am earning more money teaching my method than I did by merely practicing it. And I am having the tremendous satisfaction of helping incomparably more people this way than I could possibly haver hoped for by selfishly keeping it to myself.

    So please learn from my experience: if you want more, give more. But without expecting anything in return.

    The Paradox of "Rights"
    Modern society is constantly fighting for more "rights." We believe we are entitled to a life free from worry about food, shelter, education and health care. We believe we are entitled to be treated with respect by virtue of birth, without having to do anything to deserve respect. We are currently fighting for the right to have no one treat us in a way we don't like.

    But these rights don't really bring us happiness. True, each additional right makes our lives easier because we no longer have to fight to get the benefit the right gives us. And it relieves us from the feeling that life is unfair because others have benefits that we don't. But the pleasure is short-lived. We quickly take the right for granted and start becoming mad when the system fails to provide us with the goods or services that the right entitles us to. For instance, when kids are given the right not to be made fun of, someone has to enforce this right. The kids have to go to the teacher or principal whenever someone calls them a name, and if the school doesn't succeed in solving the problem, which it usually doesn't because telling adults makes fighting between kids escalate, then the kids and their parents become even angrier than they were before. They become angry not only at the kids who are doing the insulting, they become angry at the school for not granting them their rights.

    And there is a never-ending list of rights that we can fight for. As soon as we obtain one, we start anxiously looking forward to the next one, and can't be happy till that one is obtained for us. If you have ever known people who are busy fighting for their rights, you probably noticed that they are constantly angry and complaining, which is good for neither physical or emotional health. And after a while you want to get as far away from these people as possible.

    Rights versus Resilience
    Another drawback to "rights" is that they take away the need for us to develop and use our personal skills. Part of the pleasure of life comes from the feeling of accomplishment of satisfying our own needs and developing our abilities. Children make it so obvious when the gleefully shout, "I did it all by myself!" A "right" means that someone else has to give us what we want rather than having to achieve it on our own. It deprives us of the opportunity to become self-reliant and resilient.

    I am not suggesting that society take back the rights it has given us. The job of a strong society is to become increasingly fair and generous, to spread the wealth around to its individual members. All I am saying is that we should not confuse societal strength with individual strength. They do not always go together, and are sometimes opposed to each other. The very purpose of rights is to relieve individuals of the responsibility to work for the benefit granted by the right. We should keep in mind that the happiest and most resilient people in the world are not those with the most rights, but those with no rights at all, the people like Pygmies who are still hunter/gatherers living in nature. What we should do, though, is constantly appreciate our rights rather than take them for granted. Then we will be truly happy.

    Cats Do It, Too.
    No, I'm not talking about reproductive functions. I'm referring to helping their siblings. For years, I've been contending that human siblings, despite superficial impressions, are not biologically programmed to want to kill each other. If they did, you can be sure parents would be spending a good part of their lives in the emergency room. We have the illusion that siblings want to kill each other only because we spend so much time and effort trying to get them to stop fighting that it seems they would be goners if not for our efforts. As I demonstrate in my seminars and explain in my website, siblings actually want to get along; it's only because of our attempts to make them stop fighting that they fight as much as they do.

    In the world of Nature, siblings in higher species of animals are born protecting each other. Look what I came across in a cat calendar:

    "Linda Wershing of Grey Eagle, Minnesota, writes that Bowie was the largest kitten in a litter of 10 but had a mellow personality even as a youngster. With the utmost graciousness, he made sure that each of his smaller siblings had access to the food dish."

    Certainly basic human nature is at least at the level of cats. Isn't it?

    To learn more about sibling relations, read Izzy's free manual, "A Revolutionary Manaul for Handling Children's Aggression" »

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