The idea that pursuit of happiness can be futile has been
around for thousands of years. In my last post, I discussed J S Mill’s contribution
in the 19th Century. In this post I will discuss the contribution
made by Russ Harris in The Happiness Trap: Stop struggling, start living, which was first published in 2007. This book
is based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) developed by Steven Hayes.
Russ Harris suggests that many people are caught in a
happiness trap, which is based on four myths:
- Happiness is the natural state for all human beings;
- If you’re not happy, you’re defective;
- To create a better life, we must get rid of negative feelings; and
- You should be able to control what you think and feel.
It would be easy for me to become side-tracked into a
discussion of how prevalent the happiness trap might be. The survey evidence
suggests to me that in high income countries most people are actually fairly happy, but the picture that emerges does differ depending on the way
happiness is measured. For example, at a national level high levels of positive
emotion are not always accompanied by low levels of negative emotion. It is also possible for a substantial proportion of the population to experience chronic anxiety and depression at some time during their lives, despite the sustained existence of relatively high average happiness levels.
The important points are that too many people are falling
into the trap of struggling to get rid of negative feelings and of attempting
to control what they think and feel. I don’t think it is a myth that happiness
is the natural state for most humans to be in: a majority of humans seem to
have an inbuilt optimism bias. Nevertheless, there are times when it is
natural, healthy and appropriate for humans to have negative thoughts and
feelings. We cannot avoid having negative thoughts and feelings, but we can
exercise a great deal of control over our responses to thoughts and feelings.
Harris argues that happiness has two very different
meanings. The first refers to a feeling: a sense of pleasure, gladness or
gratification. The second refers to a rich, full and meaningful life. The
happiness trap is associated with craving the first form of happiness. If we
seek to live a full and meaningful life at various times we can expect to
experience the full range of human emotions, including sadness, fear and anger.
The author writes:
“The reality is, life involves pain. There is no getting
away from it. As human beings we are all faced with the fact that sooner or
later we will grow infirm, get sick and die. …”
But he provides grounds for hope:
“The good news is that, although we can’t avoid such pain,
we can learn to handle it much better – to make room for it, rise above it and
create a life worth living”.
So, how does the book suggest we go about creating lives
that are worth living? As I read it, the
book does this by suggesting ways in which we can exercise and develop our personal
powers (or capabilities) in relation to thoughts, sensations, values and goals.
The underlying idea seems to be that if we manage to cope with unhelpful
thoughts and unpleasant feelings, identify and endorse the values we want to
guide us, set sensible goals for ourselves, act purposefully and engage fully
in what we are doing, we will end up with lives that are worth living. That
makes a lot of sense to me.
The approach suggested for coping with unhelpful thoughts or
stories is to defuse them. The simplest technique suggested is to give yourself
some distance from the thought by observing, “I am having the thought that …”.
Many other techniques of defusion are suggested. One I particularly like is to
thank my mind for the unhelpful advice it is giving me, and then ignore it.
The approach suggested for coping with unpleasant feelings
and sensations is expansion - that means
making room for them rather than struggling with them. The three basic steps of
expansion are: to observe the feelings and sensations in your body; breath into
them; and let them come and go, or just stay there. If that sounds like Vipassana
meditation, there are probably good reasons for that.
On the basis of my personal experience (as a consumer of self-help
advice rather than a professional) I have doubts about the author’s
recommendation to focus on the most uncomfortable sensation first. Acceptance of unpleasant sensations seems easier in the context of scanning my whole body, noticing and accepting all the sensations.
Nevertheless, I particularly liked this comment:
“As you practice this technique one of two things will
happen: either your feelings will change or they won’t. It doesn’t matter
either way, because this technique is not about changing your feelings – it is
about accepting them”.
Russ Harris is of course not the first person to argue that we
need to be guided by our values – our deepest desires relating to how we want
to be and what we stand for – in order to have a rich full and meaningful life.
For example, Aristotle emphasized the importance of values to individual
flourishing, and Ayn Rand had John Galt develop a cogent argument leading to a
definition of happiness as “that state of consciousness which proceeds from the
achievement of one’s values” (Atlas
Shrugged, p 1014). Harris underlines the importance of values by referring
to Viktor Frankl’s observation that the prisoners who survived in Auschwitz were
often not the physically fittest, but those who were most connected with
something they valued such as a loving relationship with their children.
Harris suggests that people identify their values in all
domains of their lives: family, marriage, friendships, employment, personal
development, recreation and leisure, spirituality, community, environment,
health etc. Many of the questions involve asking what sort of person we want to
be and what qualities we want to bring to our experiences.
The next step is to set goals and action plans relating to
our values for each domain of our lives. When reading about it, the process
seemed as though it might be just as boring as corporate planning, but that need
not be so. Findings of recent neural research (by Christopher Cascio and colleagues
at the University of Pennsylvania) indicate that a focus on things we value in life
- referred to as self-affirmation – is associated
with greater activation in parts of the brain that are known to be involved in
expecting and receiving reward (the ventral striatum and the ventral medial
prefrontal cortex). A focus on what is
most valued in a future context also involves more neural activity in areas
associated with thinking about the self (the medial prefrontal cortex and
posterior cingulate cortex).
It is worth remembering that the point of acting in
accordance with our values is about the quality of our journeys through life
rather than about reaching ultimate destinations. As Russ Harris puts it:
“When we move in a valued direction, every moment of our
journey becomes meaningful”.
I have written enough to provide a few hints about the contents
of the book. My one criticism of the book (as a consumer of self-help products)
is its failure to recognize that some cognitive approaches, e.g. Neuro-Semantics,
can help people to adopt the frames of mind that they value, without having to engage
in a struggle against negative thinking. Leaving that aside, in my view, this
book has great value in helping readers to work out what they have to accept in
life, what they can hope to change, and what commitments they have to make to
make their lives more meaningful.