Are You Addicted to Happiness? 6 Easy Ways to Break the Happiness Cycle for True Fulfillment

“Hi! My name is Mel, and I am addicted to happiness.”

As a life coach, women often contact me stating they don’t feel happy with their current job, or a relationship is breaking down, they are unsure what their career plan is, they are struggling with financial stresses, or they feel a general unhappiness with the direction of their life. They are often focusing on trying to change something external. It does not take long, however for many of these women to realize that they are out-sourcing their self-worth, and are focused on their happiness, not their joy that is, they are focused on the external rather than the internal.

Society is saturated with advertising focused on happiness and being happy.  We’re sold clothing, exercise, makeup, beverages and food, we also hear it in the wellness space – we should aim to be happy, or we should work on our happiness. The focus is on encouraging people to invest their energy, and their resources, on external factors. To some, this is a deliberate play to ensure you buy their products or services – marketing teams are paid incredibly well to do this! It plays on your self-doubt when you are wanting to be better. For others, however, it is a misuse or misunderstanding of vocabulary.

Let me outline the difference, In her book, The Gifts of Imperfection, Brene Brown discusses the difference, outlining that happiness is an emotion that is reliant on external circumstances. This could be the perfect house, promotion, a new dress, an award, relationships, or a new car. Like other emotions, happiness comes and goes based on how we chose to react to the external context or situation. Joy, on the other hand, is the internal connection you have with the world around you. This does not fluctuate like an emotion; rather it is cultivated and built.

I want to clarify that happiness is something good in our lives, it is a human emotion. I am not at all suggesting not to experience or want to experience this, rather it is about not relying only on this to feel right about our lives. It is when we are not fostering our internal state of joy that we start to search for this external happiness, and rely on the ‘hit’ it gives us.

This is where the happiness addiction comes in, and trust me, I know it well. One external stimulus can’t maintain happiness for a prolonged period. The ‘high’ of the happiness will eventually run out, the job promotion, the praise, new outfit, or the amazing holiday does not make you feel good forever. Eventually the emotion subsides, which creates a comedown of sorts.

Naturally, you don’t want to feel this way, and so you will search for another ‘happiness hit.’ This could be done by online shopping, texting/messaging other people, applying for another job, entering into new relationships, having a few extra glasses of wine, or taking on an additional project at work. This cycle will continue, of using external things to make you feel good until you work on your internal self, and at creating your joy.

Like other addictions, after a period of time, we need more of the substance, in our case happiness, to reach that same high point. I hear this with women I work with, who start to increase their behavior; they are spending more, reaching out to more men or women, or needing more from them, working crazy hours and taking on more than they can handle.

Personally, I relied on the status of my achievements, the job title I had and the praise I received from others. These were my ‘hits,’ and it made me exhausted. I was continually doing things to get this external recognition so that I could feel good internally. I came to realize that until I felt that I was good enough right now, as I was, I would continue to search for this validation, over and over again. I started the work to correct this.

Do you rely on external factors to feel good? Are you stuck in the cycle of happiness hits and feel as though your happiness drops off after the initial ‘high’? Much like people who are overcoming other chemical addictions, we need to remove the thing that we are addicted to, and replace this craving by nourishing our souls – do pardon the simplicity here.

If this has resonated with you, here are the steps that you can start doing, these steps will start building the joy and replace the happiness addiction.

1. Practice Gratitude

It should be the number one action you take, and you should do it daily. Most people I work with make this one of the first tasks they do as part of their morning routine, so it sets your day up with a grateful mind, which builds a joyous state. You can think about what you are grateful for while you do some diaphragmatic breathing, you could say this out loud while still lying in bed or in the shower, or, like me, you could write down what you are grateful for every morning with a herbal tea. I only do three things every morning, but I am specific. I don’t write family, friends, dogs, and rather I would write “I am grateful for Cara, a friendship that is honest and non-judgmental, a friend who always has my back and would support my decisions no matter what.” Being specific in your gratitude opens up all that you have.

2. Journal and reflect

What are your strengths, the things you love about yourself, what opportunities do you have for growth? Is time to focus inwards. A lot of people struggle to do this, and start by asking other people, what is a good way to start, but beware of doubting what other people have said, and starting to counter their comments. I suggest setting a rule around this for yourself, something like if more than one person says something, e.g., I am good at linking big picture ideas together, I will write it down and add it to my list, without questioning it or arguing that it isn’t true.

3. Spend time alone and enjoy your own company

This could be walking or hiking, relaxing in the tub, meditating, brainstorming, dreaming, Pilates, etc. This was something I really struggled with, being quite the extrovert who needs connection with others to recharge. Like most things, it takes practice and trial and error, find what it is that works for you. Now, I am in a space where I work from home and can spend full days on my own without bouncing off the walls going stir crazy!

4. Identify and address negative self-talk

Listen to what you are telling yourself, and ultimately believing in yourself. If you are speaking negatively about yourself, of course you will be looking externally for the feel good, because you aren’t giving it to yourself!

An exercise you can do that I often do with clients is a ‘3 column talk’ activity:

5. Read and research

Find books and research articles, listen to podcasts, and watch documentaries on this topic.  We are all unique and have had different experiences, so various perspectives, voices, and explanations will serve you well. Some of my favorites are; The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho, The Gifts of Imperfection by Brené Brown, You Can Heal Your Life by Louise Hay, The Elephant and the Twig by Geoff Thompson, Care of the Soul by Thomas Moore, and Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff.

6.Positive Affirmations

Make this part of your daily routine. Statements like “I am enough” “I deserve love” said out loud to ourselves every day is powerful! These are all exercises I undertook to recover from my happiness addiction, and some I still practice regularly today. Like many things, it is a journey and an up and down one at that. I always choose to feel happy when an external factor warrants that emotion, but I no longer need or crave these things to feel good. I feel good because I am me.


“Hi! I am Mel, and I am a recovering Happiness addict.”


Comments

Trena:

Great read!!! Clear, easy steps that I know are so powerful for us women who often run on emotions and hold on to unnecessary things. This article says it all and makes finding inner joy a real and possible thing.

    Mel H:

    Thank you Trena, running on emotions is so very common you are right. Appreciate your words!

Samantha:

Thank you Mel i look foward to reflecting today and using these easy steps to recovery from my intant happiness recovery. .. although i dont have the money to buy my happiness this artical has sparked somthing in my brain that has realised i try and find it in other ways… and that makes me un happy. .. i go good for a few days then crash! I dont want that!!! Time for a change!! And to be able to stick to it! ????

    Mel H:

    Thank you Samantha! You have hit the nail on the head, it helps for a few days and then there is a crash which leaves us more unhappy! It is a journey, and I always think reflection and gratitude are places to start x

      Samantha:

      Very true Mel! I am working on my gratitude more and more… even found some great positive affirmation meditations to listen too and teach my subconscious that this is the way we talk to me now haha!! ???? ????

        Mel H:

        Awesome! I love that last line x

    Samantha:

    Thank you Christal ???? I am happy to share most of the time if it means it will encourage others! Aswell as i think it helps the healing process! ! So greatful to have all this awsome content to read and learn from!

Renee:

Great read! The perspective of happiness as an addiction as really interesting. It has become such a socially acceptable norm “to be happy” but is much more connected to the ego than the soul. Nice to have joy explained in this article and how gratitude plays a part. Sometimes, joy seems like a more worthy pursuit.

    Mel H:

    Thank you Renee! I love how you have put this: it has definitely become a social norm and the connection to the ego v the soul is spot on!

Samantha:

Thank you guys. .. have some time before my bubs wakes up so wrote the list down in my own words to help me rememeber. .. its funny.. its all think i know already but i still turn to other things for happiness or my comfortable place really… enough is enough!! Very greatful verrrryyyy bloooooody greatful guys!! Xoxoxx ????

    Mel H:

    This makes me very happy!! Glad it helped!! I love that you’ve taken some time for yourself too and really engaged. Enough is enough – woohoo I love it! ????????

Jenny Konz:

Great article Mel… we all know that consumerism (if there is such a word) has taken over some women and they feel the need to have the latest clothing and makeup, or the latest technology, but all it’s doing is feeding the “happiness bug” as you have shown us. Go back 50 years when women were very happy and content with the joy and pride associated with keeping a nice home and looking after their families and led very simple lives. My Mum was one of those….. I would love to see more of your articles as I think they are inspirational and will help many women to just stand back and think about things and how the world is evolving and affecting us.

    Mel H:

    Thank you Jenny! The pressure on women is immense, and I agree consumerism is a part of that. Simpler times and not being bombarded with so many “you should” messages!! Thank you again ????????

Alex Sale:

Great read. I think I come into the ‘planning a holiday, being on holiday, then returning to plan the next one’ category …. doing these things makes me feel very happy! I also find much happiness sharing good times with my family and friends, however reading this has reminded me once again that it really is what happens internaly that outweighs all the highs gained from any external factors. Thanks Mel for the reminder! Also, is that you in the pic … love the happiness shining through ????

    Mel H:

    Thank you Alex! And so you should love holidays and feel happy with them, they are amazing for sure! It is getting that balance of not relying on those factors to feel good, and when you are alone with none of those things around do you still feel joy? It’s also the roller coaster of emotions people have when they rely on other things, once they run out, there is a drop…like the addict huh? Thank you again ????????

Blake Oliver:

Like Brene Browns ted talks, this was a huge eye opener. I typed into google, “addicted to happiness” and this popped up. I may not be a woman but I struggle with this too. Thanks for sharing!

    Mel H:

    Thank you Blake! It is definitely not only women who struggle with relying on the external factors AT ALL!
    I am glad this could help you in some way!

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about the author

Mel H

Mel is a life coach, Barre and Pilates instructor, a workshop facilitator, a writer, and a creator. After nearly a decade in the Education sector she decided it was time to do her own thing and in April this year she started Mel H: Holistic Wellness. She loves working with women; helping them to set and achieve goals, reflect on their barriers, and ultimately empower them as part of their self-worth and self-compassion journeys. #InvestInYou

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