Gratitude Reprised
As the American Thanksgiving holiday approaches, our thoughts turn to Giving Thanks and the emotion of Gratitude. This emotion is so foundational to the experience of all the Positive Emotions that I believe it is impossible to oversell its importance or speak of it too often.
Gratitude is defined as, the quality of being warmly or deeply appreciative of kindness or benefits received; thankfulness.
Reminders about the Importance of Gratitude
- Expressions of Gratitude are the bricks of the foundation upon which Happiness, Optimism, Hope, and Joy are built.
- Practiced regularly, Gratitude shapes your worldview toward noticing abundance versus scarcity, since it focuses on what you Have versus what you Lack.
- You bring positive energy to the conversation whenever you speak with others about something for which you are grateful.
- Grateful people make better friends, parents, coworkers, and leaders.
- Finally, when you practice gratitude, you feel more content with the world, no matter what your current state (even unemployed!).
Practice makes Better
If you want to learn the piano or run a marathon, you must practice, practice, and practice. The same is true of emotional states. Here are nine intentional activities that will help you live a more Gratitude-filled life.
1. Keep a Gratitude Journal. This is the most basic and powerful practice in all of Positive Psychology. Every book on happiness published in the past eight years places this practice at/near the top of the list. Every day, write down three blessings from the past 24 hours. Pencil and paper or online journal work equally well – the key is that you write it, not just think it (it makes a difference).
2. Remember the Bad Times. In his 2007 book, “Thanks,” researcher Robert Emmons noted the value of reflecting on past difficulties — not to dwell on them, but to appreciate that you survived and are stronger today as a result of the experiences.
[This one resonates for me personally. Viewed in the rearview mirror, some of my darkest moments and biggest mistakes have come to symbolize significant turning points or deep learning that would not have been otherwise possible. In the words of Helen Keller, “Only through experience of trial and suffering can the soul be strengthened, vision cleared, ambition inspired, and success achieved.”]
3. Say, “Thank you.” Those who say ‘thank you’ more often than ‘please give me….’ experience higher life satisfaction.
4. Three Square Meals. A good friend of mine takes a moment before every meal and says three things he is grateful for since his last meal (and he is the most grateful person I know!)
5. Appreciate Someone. Every day, let a person in your life know you are grateful for them, and why. Even if you only do this weekly, in a year you’ll have sent 52 notes.
6. Build a Gratitude List. Start with a list of 25-50 things for which you are grateful. Whenever you think of something new, add it to the list (challenge yourself to reach 100!). Pull the list out and read it for a quick pick-me-up whenever you feel down, sad, or ungrateful.
7. Wear a Body of Gratitude. With feet flat on the ground, pull your shoulders back and your head up, open your palms toward the person you are facing, and take a deep breath.
8. Fill a Gratitude File. Every time you receive a thank you note, place it in your file. In email, create a folder to store these. When you are having a bad day open the file and, as you read, feel the warmth of other people’s appreciation wash over you.
9. Notice the Invisible and the Infrastructure. When was the last time you gave thanks for the fact that the lights actually go on when you flip the switch? Or that your faucet flows with clean, drinkable water? Or that you can live without fear of being assassinated in your home? Much of the world’s population still lacks these life basics, so take a moment to appreciate what may have become invisible to you.
Happy Thanksgiving. And in case you’ve not heard me say it before, my dear Readers: I am grateful for you!
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The 13 Principles of Happiness offer specific practices to strengthen your “happiness muscles.” Visit http://www.theexecutivehappinesscoach.com/happiness/philosophies.cfm, to download a 1-page PDF Poster. Post it on your refrigerator, and have extras handy for when your guests read it on Thanksgiving and want their own copies!
NINE STRATEGIES TO AVOID HAPPINESS
Filed under: Happiness Tips, Humor, Practicing Happiness
Nine Strategies to Avoid Happiness: How to Live as a Victim and Still Control the World!
1. Take Everything and Everyone for Granted. After all, it’s their job to take care of you, right? Practice rudeness, then sneer at the ones who can’t handle it. On those rare occasions when someone meets your impossibly high expectations, be sure to point out something that wasn’t perfect, even if you have to make it up.
What to Avoid: Never say “Thank You” or express Appreciation for anything. Gratitude totally kills the buzz of a bad mood.
2. Cultivate Pessimism. The world is a dark and dangerous place; make it your mission to remind people of that. No matter what anyone suggests, frown and say, “That will never work!” Scan the global weather channel daily so when people say “good morning” to you, you can remind them of a recent earthquake, typhoon, fire, or flood.
Exercise: Practice slumping, frowning, and rolling your eyes to deepen your skill.
3. Use Social Comparison as a Weapon. When you notice any positive self-talk happening, immediately think of someone who is smarter, prettier, or more skilled than you – that will tamp down Self-Confidence before it gets out of control. When a coworker receives recognition for their work, ice that down quickly by pointing out, “I’ve seen better.”
Child-rearing Tip: when your child brings home an essay or artwork, put on a Sad face and say, “too bad you’re not talented like <insert name of a friend> is.”
4. Never Give Anyone a Break. Make ‘No’ your favorite word. Never give of yourself, and for heaven’s sake avoid volunteerism. Performing Acts of Kindness releases serotonin in your brain, which makes you feel better – and that’s the last thing you want!
Bonus Tip: Being mean to someone in public carries causes most bystanders to feel a little Depressed or Angry all day. Double your impact!
5. Push Other People Away. Isn’t it annoying when your family and friends try to “take care of you?” Stay strong! Keep declining invitations until they stop coming; then complain about Abandonment. If you must attend, sit in a corner and whine about something irrelevant.
Special note about pets: Avoid warm-blooded pets, which tend to form icky Emotional bonds. If you must have a pet, get a lizard, fish, or something with a reptile brain – there’s no risk they will ever care about you!
6. Reject Simplicity. CNN apparently thinks you can handle three to six simultaneous streaming data feeds, so stay connected to The Grid at all times. Respond to every email or call immediately (your global clients will be impressed when you respond at 4AM your time).
Special note: When you slow down and allow yourself to enjoy just one thing in the present moment, you risk allowing Happiness and Joy to take root. So keep it complex!
7. Avoid Commitment. According to Barry Schwartz’s work on the Paradox of Choice, having more options does not make us happier; in fact, we get more stressed. So keep your options wide open! Shun goal-writing exercises, as those create undesirable consequences like greater focus and discovery of your life purpose. Live randomly and put off decisions until you have 100% of all data (which of course will be…never).
Bonus: Lacking a strong foundation, you need never Respond rationally to anything; instead, you will strengthen your Anxiety muscles and get really good at living in React mode.
8. Sit Down! Did you know that studies of clinically Depressed people prove consistent exercise raises Happiness levels as much as Zoloft? This is why you must guard against Wellness (a thinly disguised conspiracy to control your life). Skip all health seminars, and when they start distributing salads and pedometers in the company cafeteria, drive to lunch at McDonalds. Look, if your Physical energy improves through better Self-Care, it will naturally pull up your Mental, Emotional, and Spiritual energies, and you can’t let that happen!
Caution: If you accept even a tiny responsibility for personal Well-Being, it’s a slippery slope. Soon you’ll be expected to manage your own Happiness, too, and how unfair is that?!
9. Nurture Resentment. Never let go of anything. Remember, Forgiveness is for weaklings. It takes a determined person (like you) to hold on to all those old slights – real and imagined — and still endure the new crap that’s getting dumped on you.
Take it a level deeper: Plan regular time to Obsess about someone who wronged you in the past. Daily attention ensures your negative emotions remain at a constant simmer, burning away your immune system. You’ll get sick more often, of course, which will give you lots of opportunity to Hate those people who did this to you!
Remember, Practice builds stronger muscles. Exercise at least one of these nine daily, and soon you’ll find yourself snugly tucked away at the bottom of the Deep Dark Pit of Despair, finally safe from all those nasty “happy” people who, by the way, are totally out of touch with the way the world really works.
But you know the Truth, don’t you? BWAHAHAHA!
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The 13 Principles of Happiness offers the opposite of what you want. DO NOT VISIT http://www.theexecutivehappinesscoach.com/happiness/philosophies.cfm to download them. If you practice any of those 13 habits, you’ll never achieve your goal of UNhappiness.
Can You Relate? Practicing Happiness
Filed under: About Happiness, Happiness Tips, Practicing Happiness
I recently appeared on Coach Kathy Dawson’s new daytime talk show, Can You Relate? The focus of this six-minute segment: to improve your relationships, to start with you. Here are a couple tools to help you build stronger Positive Emotion Muscles!
Gratitude: You already know how to do this!
As you do your final preparation for Thanksgiving, remember that this is, in the end, a holiday about giving thanks and offering gratitude.
Some people find it awkward to express their gratitude. That discomfort comes from living in a world that has programmed us into thinking it’s all about me, me, me and stuff, stuff, stuff.I came across this quote recently, and offer it to you as a reminder that, once you strip away all your “programming” from marketing and advertising, you are one of the most grateful creatures on the earth.
We are born helpless infants, creatures of pure need with little resource to give, yet we are fed, we are protected, we are clothed and held and soothed, without having done anything to deserve it, without offering anything in exchange. This experience, common to everyone who has made it past childhood, informs our deepest spiritual intuitions. Our default state is gratitude: it is the truth of our existence.
Charles Eisenstein, contemporary philosopher, author of The Ascent of Humanity
Happy Thanksgiving to you all. In happiness, Jim
Say Cheese: 15 Fascinating Facts About Smiling
Ken recently contacted me to share an article he thought my Happiness audience would also enjoy — on Smiles. Of course! Ken’s audience is nurses (www.nursingschools.net), so he’s really grounded his research in the medical world — proving that smiles are GOOD FOR YOU!
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Everyone loves the quote “laughter is the best medicine,” and as a nurse, you have probably even experienced the benefits of smiling and laughter with your patients. In fact, smiling can boost your mood and even your immune system. Keep reading for more fascinating facts about our smiles.
- Forcing yourself to smile can boost your mood: Psychologists have found that even if you’re in bad mood, you can instantly lift your spirits by forcing yourself to smile.
- It boosts your immune system: Smiling really can improve your physical health, too. Your body is more relaxed when you smile, which contributes to good health and a stronger immune system.
- Smiles are contagious: It’s not just a saying: smiling really is contagious, scientists say. In a study conducted in Sweden, people had difficulty frowning when they looked at other subjects who were smiling, and their muscles twitched into smiles all on their own.
- Smiles Relieve Stress: Your body immediately releases endorphins when you smile, even when you force it. This sudden change in mood will help you feel better and release stress.
- It’s easier to smile than to frown: Scientists have discovered that your body has to work harder and use more muscles to frown than it does to smile.
- It’s a universal sign of happiness: While hand shakes, hugs, and bows all have varying meanings across cultures, smiling is known around the world and in all cultures as a sign of happiness and acceptance.
- We still smile at work: While we smile less at work than we do at home, 30% of subjects in a research study smiled five to 20 times a day, and 28% smiled over 20 times per day at the office.
- Smiles use from 5 to 53 facial muscles: Just smiling can require your body to use up to 53 muscles, but some smiles only use 5 muscle movements.

- Babies are born with the ability to smile: Babies learn a lot of behaviors and sounds from watching the people around them, but scientists believe that all babies are born with the ability, since even blind babies smile.
- Smiling helps you get promoted: Smiles make a person seem more attractive, sociable and confident, and people who smile more are more likely to get a promotion.
- Smiles are the most easily recognizable facial expression: People can recognize smiles from up to 300 feet away, making it the most easily recognizable facial expression.
- Women smile more than men: Generally, women smile more than men, but when they participate in similar work or social roles, they smile the same amount. This finding leads scientists to believe that gender roles are quite flexible. Boy babies, though, do smile less than girl babies, who also make more eye contact.
- Smiles are more attractive than makeup: A research study conducted by Orbit Complete discovered that 69% of people find women more attractive when they smile than when they are wearing makeup.
- There are 19 different types of smiles: UC-San Francisco researcher identified 19 types of smiles and put them into two categories: polite “social” smiles which engage fewer muscles, and sincere “felt” smiles that use more muscles on both sides of the face.
- Babies start smiling as newborns: Most doctors believe that real smiles occur when babies are awake at the age of four-to-six weeks, but babies start smiling in their sleep as soon as they’re born.
Jim’s NOTE: The two pictures in this post are of my “baby” sister Eileen (who has a beautiful smile) and her youngest, Shannon. Shannon was just 3 months old when this shot was taken — and she already was smilin’ like her mom!
To read this article in the original, visit here. Thanks for Sharing a Smile, Ken!
Put the 13 Happiness Principles into Action
Filed under: About Happiness, Everyday Happiness, Practicing Happiness, Relationships
For the past 32 years I’ve been married to an amazing woman who has partnered with me in raising a great family, but who pretty much left me alone when it came to running my coaching and consulting business (except for balancing the books!). A few years ago, however, she started to pay more attention to my work on Happiness as she noticed they have a real impact. Please join me in welcoming guest author Cheryl Smith as she shares some of her accumulated learning.
The 13 Principles of Happiness Applied to Real Life
by Cheryl Smith
I am an accountant, not a writer. Still, I’ve learned a lot about Happiness over the past few years. What follows are some of my “aha” moments that relate to some of Jim’s 13 Principles of Happiness.
Become Positively Self-ish, #1
I always used to put everyone in my life before me — whether my husband, my children, my parents, or my friends, I always suppressed my own needs. I remember one Christmas when Jim and I were writing our holiday letter, and I had no personal highlights. I was the “support” behind most of Jim’s and the kids’ highlights, but I actually had none of my own.
I feel differently now. I realize how I can give even more if I prioritize my needs, too. I love children and truly enjoy every minute I can spend with young kids. Several years ago I seriously considered foster parenting, but life and various health issues altered that path. I do, however, volunteer once a week at Providence House (a crisis nursery for children) and I get a lot of joy from working with the kids. When I returned to work after my surgery, in the “heat” of the tax season, I felt that I would have to give up my volunteering. However, after thinking long and hard, I decided to be positively self-ish and I found the time to maintain my training hours and have continued my volunteer work despite everything else.
Be Authentic, #13
I witnessed an example of this last month when my son got married. He and Katie chose to celebrate their wedding in the way they wanted whether that met with others’ expectations or not. They had a small private event in northern Michigan with two dozen of their closest friends and family and then the next weekend they had a celebration in Chicago with a comedy show and a party at a venue decorated with eclectic 50’s décor!
My daughter and son-in-law married several years ago in the gracious splendor of the Basilica of Notre Dame and for them, it was perfect. Last month was perfect for Justin and Katie. Neither event was better, just different.
When you Live Your Values (#2) it is much easier to remember what is most important. When it comes to marriage, it is about making a lifetime commitment to the one you love, whether on a beach in northern Michigan or in the Notre Dame Basilica. I believe they have both chosen wisely, and in the process been true to themselves.
Build Reserves, #5
I have realized recently that what I want to build reserves of in my life is Memories. I don’t need extra things; what I want is extra experiences. I told my family that I don’t want gifts for birthday or Mother’s Day. Instead, what I want is a chance to get together or to receive a phone call. I guess that is why Jim, Kelly, Paul, Jared and I gave Justin and Katie a honeymoon trip for their wedding gift. What we were really giving them was an adventure and an opportunity for memories.
Tolerate Nothing, #6
This principle is one of my favorites and I practice it often, frequently in small ways. The recent wedding gave me an opportunity to really put it to use. Because Justin and Katie chose an unconventional path there were some friends and family who were less than supportive of the plans. At first I was worried about “how to make it right.” But Katie’s mother and I decided that we would not tolerate, nor worry about, those folks. We decided that those who came to the events would be those who were supposed to be there, and we would happily celebrate with them. And we did.
Choose to Respond, #7
Just 6 months ago I was diagnosed with a brain tumor. It was not within my brain, but rather inside the lining surrounding my brain; and it was not cancer – but was still a brain tumor! I chose to respond with all resources available to me. I had a wonderful surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic and nine days after my diagnosis I had 10 hours of brain surgery. The only open date on the surgeon’s calendar was Christmas Eve, and for a moment I worried about “ruining” the holiday. But I decided that I have to take care of me (I guess that’s also Principle #1 again).
There are many things in life that we cannot control, but in whatever way possible we must respond and face things head on. I try to face things as quickly as possible now. I find that it gives me much less time to worry and far more energy to act.
Pay Attention, #9
I think that staying focused on what is going on around you is critical. I don’t just mean what is going on at the global level. I mean what is going on right in front of you!
I will always remember a conversation with my 25-year-old brother-in-law, Sean, the Thanksgiving before his death from Leukemia. Sean was trying his best to be with family, even though he’d just learned that the cancer had returned. After dinner I noticed that he had moved away from the group and eventually headed upstairs. After a few minutes I followed him up. He was in his cousin’s bedroom crying. I walked in and just held him. He said, “ No one wants me to be here, I make them uncomfortable. No one even came looking for me.” It was not a time to debate his statement or correct him. It was just a time to hold him and remind him that we all loved him.
Always pay attention to those around you.
Simplify, #10
This is the principle I find easiest and hardest to incorporate into my life. I like things simple, very simple, if possible. But I also like things to be predictable, and I hate change. But Jim has helped me to learn that change and simplify need not be mutually exclusive. Change does not have to complicate your life, unless you let it. Sometimes the very best way to simplify is to allow a change or let go!
Cheryl Smith, CPA, is a wife, mother, and tax accountant. She lives in Cleveland, Ohio, with her terminally happy husband and two unnamed goldfish.
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Anyone can make the decision to be happy when they PRACTICE an aspect of happiness every day. Why not post a copy of the 13 Principles on your workstation wall or on your refrigerator so you can put them into action like Cheryl has? You can download a 1-page summary. Choose Happiness.
Practice Does Not Mean Perfect
I practice yoga.
I have to continually remind myself of that notion. I PRACTICE yoga. I continually strive to be better at it. But sometimes, I forget about the “Practice” part, and I try too hard to be Perfect…which is how I’ve ended up with two yoga injuries six months apart.
How can something that is GOOD for me turn ugly? Well, let me tell you, it ain’t easy.
My Yoga Story
My interest in yoga began eight years ago when my daughter, home on break, asked me to go with her to a Beginners Workshop on the other side of town. I went, I got hooked. Over time I have progressed from doing a few poses (or asanas) purely for the stretch value to now practicing intermediate yoga asanas to calm my mind, practice my breathing, and strengthen my ability to be fully present.
The whole point of yoga (which translates as “union”) is to help one connect body, mind, heart, and soul; and to accept and work with one’s limitations. It is about acceptance.
Oh, and did I mention that when you practice yoga regularly it tones muscles, improves balance, dramatically increases core strength, and FEELS fabulous? Yes, and that is where I get in trouble.
I REALLY like that physically fit thing. So, when I do a downward dog, I REALLY do a down dog. And the leg stretch in Warrior poses? I have to stretch to the max, and do a PERFECT pose, like the guys in the pictures in Yoga Journal. Which is how I injured my hips doing yoga last year… and why I now have shoulder problems.
Yes, I over-yoga’d. Sigh.
Do you REALLY need to be Perfect?
Have you ever done something like that? Gotten yourself so wrapped up in something you do that you just have to be PERFECT? Hey, don’t deny it, you have. It may not have been yoga. Maybe it was soccer. Or being the perfect spouse. Or perfect parent. or completing the P90X program – twice. Or gardening to excess. Or obssessing about fat/sugar/salt in your diet. Or getting all As in school. Or playing World of Warcraft. Or being PERFECTLY Happy?
It’s not about the physical part, it’s about the conversation of needing/wanting to be perfect, to do it right, to follow it all the way to the end.
Be Perfect ABOUT your Practice
Exercising my body, in the end, is not about being perfect — it is about being fully present to the process what’s going on with me. Being present means that I cannot come onto the yoga mat with an “agenda.” It can actually harm me to be too “determined,” about always getting it “right.” A better approach, I am reminded by one of my teachers, is to approach my yoga practice with equal parts patience and persistence, and to say, “I will do the best that I can, with what I have, today.”
And that is such a lovely approach to… well, just about everything: sports, school, parenting, marriage, diet, video games, and even happiness. You’ll simply never get it perfect every time, but you CAN be perfect in your practice, always learning, always getting back up and trying again when you fall.
So, as I nurse my inflamed shoulder back to health, I have learned how to modify my down dog so I’m no longer hyperextending my shoulder. I’m kinder to my hips when I stretch. And I don’t expect myself to be happy ALL the time.
But I keep practicing!
Let Music Shift Your Mood
I didn’t feel very well (physically) over the weekend, and slept really poorly. I woke up Monday morning with the alarm, feeling VERY sleep deprived and nauseous. I made the decision to take care of me, and slept in until 8:30. FINALLY caught up on sleep. Showed up at the gym at time I’m usually leaving, and still gave myself an hour, including a great yoga workout. Ahhh!
So, I arrived at my desk starting to feel rested and human again, but… but then realized that my self-care had put me several hours behind on my plans for the day. As I started to dig into my goals for the day, I felt my mood slipping into darkness.
“Wait a minute! I thought. “what about all that crap you spout about ‘choosing your attitude,’ Jim?!” Hmm. Just thinking about it was not enough, however. I needed something more than sheer force of will to help me shift my mood.
So I opened up iTunes, clicked on my High Energy playlist, and chose Randomize. The first three songs to pop up:
Susan Boyle singing I Dreamed a Dream. Not a bad start. I felt inspired.
Next up was Adam Lambert’s wickedly delicious I’m Here For Your Entertainment. For all the controversy over his TV appearance, this is a fabulously upbeat song with a great beat. And I’ve found that if you let go of finding sexual overtones in the words, it can also be a great song about coaching, as in the refrain:
No escaping when I start
Once I’m in I own your heart
There’s no way to ring the alarm
So hold on until it’s over
Oh!
Do you know what you got into
Can you handle what I’m ’bout to do
‘Cause it’s about to get rough for you
I’m here For Your Entertainment
Oh!
I bet you thought that I was soft and sweet
You thought an angel swept you off your feet
But I’m about to turn up the heat
I’m here For Your Entertainment
Can you see the coaching link? Well, maybe not the entertainment part so much, but more the ‘hold on’ and ‘it’s about to get rough for you.’ I tell clients up front that there will be moments of discomfort. And it is a coach’s job is to turn up the heat sometimes, yes?! <grin>
Then up came Brian Eno & John Cale singing Spinning Away, that lovely upbeat tune that I downloaded on the recommendation of a friend (at this point that I felt gratitude). That was it. I simply HAD to get up and dance around my office!
Then, best of all, the Andrews Sisters’ high-flyin’ rendition of Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy. Woohoo! When I hear this song, my feet actually move themselves!
Mood shift accomplished. Here’s to the power of music.
Next time you’re stuck in a mood that’s not working for you, try listening to some music that you love… and notice what happens!
39 Rules for a Good Life
Filed under: About Happiness, Everyday Happiness, Happiness Tips, health
I received this in email at the beginning of the year & loved it. But I was overwhelmed with other stuff at the time, so I set it aside. Pulled out the article today and I STILL love it (unable to find an author attribution). It’s called Handbook 2010, but it’s more like Rules for a Good Life.
HANDBOOK 2010
Health:
1. Drink plenty of water.
2. Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a beggar.
3. Eat more foods that grow on plants and eat less food that is manufactured in plants.
4. Live with the 3 E’s — Energy, Enthusiasm and Empathy
5. Make time to pray.
6. Play more games
7. Read more books than you did last year.
8. Sit in silence for at least 10 minutes each day
9. Sleep for 7 hours.
10. Take a 10-30 minute walk daily. And while you walk, smile.
Personality:
11. Don’t compare your life to others. You have no idea what their journey is all about.
12. Don’t have negative thoughts or things you cannot control. Instead invest your energy in the positive present moment.
13. Don’t over do. Keep your limits.
14. Don’t take yourself so seriously. No one else does.
15. Don’t waste your precious energy on gossip.
16. Dream more while you are awake
17. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.
18. Forget issues of the past. Don’t remind your partner with His/her mistakes of the past. That will ruin your present happiness.
19. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone. Don’t hate others.
20. Make peace with your past so it won’t spoil the present.
21. No one is in charge of your happiness except you.
22. Realize that life is a school and you are here to learn. Problems are simply part of the curriculum that appear and fade away like algebra class but the lessons you learn will last a lifetime.
23. Smile and laugh more.
24. You don’t have to win every argument. Agree to disagree…
Society:
25. Call your family often.
26. Each day give something good to others.
27. Forgive everyone for everything..
28. Spend time w/ people over the age of 70 & under the age of 6.
29. Try to make at least three people smile each day.
30. What other people think of you is none of your business.
31. Your job won’t take care of you when you are sick. Your friends will. Stay in touch.
Life:
32. Do the right thing!
33. Get rid of anything that isn’t useful, beautiful or joyful.
34. Time heals everything.
35. However good or bad a situation is, it will change..
36. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.
37. The best is yet to come.
38. When you awake alive in the morning, thank your God for it.
39. Your Innermost is always happy. So, be happy.
Be Happy. Don’t ya just love it?!
Mood and Language: which comes first?
In a recent coaching teleclass a participant asked, “is it our mood that creates our language, or is it the words and stories we use that create our mood?” She was looking for a neat and crisp definition of how people work.
It ain’t that simple. Figuring out how people work is like solving the Chicken or Egg puzzle – which came first?
The answer to the above question is not either/or; it’s Yes. Both.
Our head (and our language and stories) and our heart (our emotions/reactions) and our physical self (behavior, non-verbals) are inextricably connected – each affects the other two.
The mood or emotion we’re in affects our behavior and it influences what we say and what we think. Our thoughts/language lead to the emotion we’re in and also affect our behavior. And of course our behavior leads to consequences that subsequently influence our reactions and stories.
A recent comic strip illustrated this principle beautifully. It’s called Non Sequitur (distributedby Universal Press Syndicate). Some context is important. The main character, Danae, is a very wise 10-year old girl who wears a black T-shirt emblazoned with a skull, and she is always in a foul mood, believing that everything wrong in the world is the fault of a conspiracy spawned by “booger-brained boys.”
- Frame 1: Danae stands with a smile on her face and thinks: “I’m in a good mood today… I wonder why?”
- Frame 2: “Hmmph… oh, well” she says out loud, and she skips merrily down the street, passing Timmy, a boy who lives nearby. He turns around and says, “Geez, why’re you in such a foul mood?”
- Frame 3: Startled, Danae asks, “what?” “you said ‘hmmph’…” “So?” “It sounds cranky” “does not” “If you say so…”
- Frame 4: “Hey, I was in a GOOD mood!” “Ahh.. ‘was’… past tense…” he says, turning away. “No… I AM IN A GOOD MOOD!!” “Then why are you shouting??”
- Frame 5: “’CUZ NOW I’M IN A BAD MOOD!” she screams, black smoke and a death’s head emerging from her mouth. And as Timmy walks away he says, “Hmmph… Well, I was in a great mood ‘til you came along”
I love this strip, although I’m sure the illustrator was not thinking of modeling ontological principles when he wrote it. He demonstrates first how the mood affects thinking and behavior; then how different language changes the mood and then the behavior – of both parties!
Who we are and how we show up is a constant dance and balancing act between what we think, the emotion we’re in, and what we do. To live a happy life we must monitor ourselves in all three areas and recognize that even minor shifts in one can transform the other.
Some examples:
- Shifting our “story” about other people’s motives can cause us to move from suspicion to trust to calm to worry… and how we react to those people will vary based on the mood we put ourselves in.
- Taking a few deep breaths can calm both our emotions and our thinking.
- Moving fast and getting caught up in being busy-busy-busy can shift our mood to anxiety and focuses our thinking on what’s NOT done versus what we have accomplished.
- If we are “feeling good” and run in to another person who’s having a bad day, we can hold fast to our own mood by carefully monitoring our language to avoid picking up the conversation that other person wants to pull us into.
- Wearing a smile pulls our emotions up and opens our thinking
So, the answer to Which? is Yes. If we want to live a balanced life, then, we must attend to all three areas: the stories we tell ourselves and others, the emotions we’re feeling, and how we interact with others.
Have a happy one; and remember that YOU are in charge of how you experience life today!

Happiness, the BOOK!