Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Ancient wisdom reveals 6 rituals that will make you happy
Ancient wisdom reveals 6 rituals that will make you happy Ancient wisdom reveals 6 rituals that will make you happy People have enormous respect for ancient wisdom. They just donât read it. Funny thing is, weâre more likely to live happier lives when we visit the classics section than the self-help aisle.So how do we get the skinny on what one group of brilliant dead guys - The Stoics - had to say? Well, for that, I called my friend Ryan.Ryan Holiday is the bestselling author of The Obstacle is the Way and Ego is the Enemy. His new book is The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living.So what can the guys who invented the toga party teach us about living well? Letâs get to itâ¦1. Events donât upset you. Beliefs doYou get dumped by someone youâre totally in love with. Feel sad? God, yes. The world is going to end.Okay, same scenario, but afterwards you find out that person was actually a psychopath who killed their last three partners. Feel sad you got dumped? No, youâre thrilled.So clearly âgetting dumpedâ isnât the important factor here. What changed? Nothing but your beliefs.If you lose your job and believe it was a lousy position and believe it wonât be hard for you to get a better job, youâre unfazed.If you believe it was the greatest job ever and believe youâll never get another one that good - youâre devastated. Emotions arenât random. They follow from beliefs. Hereâs Ryan:The Stoics are saying there are no good or bad events, thereâs only perception. Shakespeare encapsulated it well when he said, âNothing either good nor bad but thinking makes it so.â Shakespeare and the Stoics are saying that the world around us is indifferent, it is objective. The Stoics are saying, âThis happened to me,â is not the same as, âThis happened to me and thatâs bad.â Theyâre saying if you stop at the first part, you will be much more resilient and much more able to make some good out of anything that happens.Skeptical? Sound too simple? Guess what? You couldnât be more wrongâ¦This part of Stoi c philosophy was adapted by famed psychologist Albert Ellis to form Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - which is now the dominant method for helping people overcome problems ranging from depression to anxiety to anger.Most of the bad feelings you have are caused by irrational beliefs.Next time youâre feeling negative emotions, donât focus on the event that you think âcausedâ them. Ask yourself what belief you hold about that event. And then ask yourself if itâs rational: âIf my partner dumps me, Iâll never get over it.â âIf I lose my job, my life is over.â âIf I donât finish reading this post, the writer will hate me forever.â Only the third one is true. The other two are irrational. And thatâs why you get anxious, angry or depressed.Revise your beliefs and you can change your feelings: âEven if they dump me, I can meet someone else. Itâs happened before and I got over it.â(To learn more from Albert Ellis about how to never be frustrated again, click here.)So youâre revising your beliefs to overcome sadness and anger. Awesome. But what about when youâre unhappy because youâre worried about the future?2. Control what you can. Ignore the restYou know the Serenity Prayer?âGod, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, and Wisdom to know the difference.âReinhold Nieburh came up with it around 1934. The Stoics were preaching that basic idea, oh, about 2000 years earlier.The Stoics were really big on control. But they were not control freaks at all. A key part of Stoicism is just asking yourself, âCan I do anything about this?âIf you c an, do it. If you canât⦠then you canât. But worrying achieves nothing but stress. Hereâs Ryan:What the Stoics are saying is so much of what worries us are things that we have no control over. If Iâm doing something tomorrow and Iâm worried about it raining and ruining it, no amount of me stressing about it is going to change whether it rains or not. The Stoics are saying, âNot only are you going to be happier if you can make the distinction between what you can change and canât change but if you focus your energy exclusively on what you can change, youâre going to be a lot more productive and effective as well.âHereâs a quick visual to help get the point across: Next time youâre worrying, pause and ask yourself, âDo I have control over this?â If you do, stop worrying and get to work.If you donât have control, worrying wonât make it better. And going back to the first point, it might be a good idea to ask yourself what your belief is thatâs causing all this worry⦠Yeah, itâs probably irrational.(To learn more lifehacks from a variety of ancient thinkers, click here.)So sadness, anger and worrying are irrational responses and theyâre not the right way to react when things happen. So what is the right way to react to stuff that doesnât meet your expectations?3. Accept everything. But donât be passiveThis is the one everybody has trouble with. Nobody likes the word âaccept.â We think it means âgive up.â It doesnât.Letâs look at it this way: whatâs the opposite of accept? Deny. As in âdenial.â And nobody ever recommends denial.Albert Ellis told people theyâd be much happier if they removed the word â shouldâ from their vocabulary. âShouldâ is denial. Youâre saying your expectations deserve to override reality: âMy kids shouldnât be misbehaving!â (News flash: they are.) âTraffic shouldnât be this bad!â (Um, but it is.) âIt shouldnât be raining!â (Say it louder. Complaining might work this time.) Denial is irrational, and as we just learned, irrational beliefs are where negative emotions come from. So the first step is to accept reality. But that doesnât mean you have to be passive.You accept the rain. Itâs here. Denial and shoulds wonât change anything⦠but that doesnât mean you canât grab an umbrella. Hereâs Ryan:Acceptance to us means resignation but to the Stoics it meant accepting the facts as they are and then deciding what youâre going to do about them. The problem is that because we have expectations about how we want things to be, we feel like acceptance is settling, when in reality we have no idea what could have happened instead. This awful thing might have saved us from something much worse. Or maybe this is going to open us up to some new amazing opportunity that we canât yet conceive. The Stoics are saying, âLetâs not waste any energy fighting things that are outside our control, letâs accept them, letâs embrace them and then letâs move on and see what we can do with it.âNext time things donât go your way, donât deny reality. Accept it. Itâs here. Then ask if you have control over it. If you do, do something. If you donât, ask if your beliefs are rational.Thatâs how you go from: âIt shouldnât be raining! We canât go to the park! The day is ruined!â to âYeah, itâs raining. No park today. Letâs see an awesome movie.â(To learn the neuroscience behind mindfulness, another ancient happiness technique, click here.)Alright, weâve covered a lot of Stoic methods for beating bad feelings. That covers defense. Letâs talk offense. How do you improve your life?4. Choose whose child you will beI know, I know - that doesnât make any sense at all. Hold your horses, Iâll explainâ¦Everything weâve talked about so far happens in your head. And, as we learned, thatâs where the problems usually start. But if lifeâs gonna get better we need to learn from other people.Youâre not alone in this world. You have so much to learn from others. Role models. Mentors. And Seneca, one of the big cheeses of Stoicism, got the point across with this beautiful quote that I love:We like to say that we donât get to choose our parents, that they were given by chance â" yet, we can truly choose whose children we wish to be.When I spoke to Anders Ericsson, the professor who came up with the â10,000 hoursâ theory of expertise, he said the first step in being better at anything (and that includes life) is to find a mentor. Hereâs Anders:They need to talk to somebody that they really admire, a person that is doing something in a way that they would like to eventually be able to do. Have this person help you identify what it is that you might need to change in order to be able to do what that other person is doing. Interview that person about how they were able to do it, and then have that person help you identify what is it that you canât do right now and what are the ste ps towards reaching that desired level of performance.Next time you face a challenge, think of someone you admire. Research shows asking yourself âWhat would _____ do?â can have powerful positive effects on your behavior.(To learn how to find the best mentor for you, click here.)Role models and mentors are great for helping you be your best. But how do you make sure youâre actually improving? How do you know youâre making progress toward being the best you?5. Morning and evening rituals are essentialPlenty of research shows that rituals can really improve your life. What type did the Stoics recommend?Morning rituals and evening rituals. One to get you ready for the day, the other to reflect on how things went and figure out what to improve. Hereâs Ryan:The Stoics thought you should start the day with a ritual of reminding yourself of what youâre going to face. Marcus Aurelius said, âToday, the people that you face will beâ¦â and then he proceeds to list basica lly every negative trait you could possibly encounter in the course of a day. Thatâs not pessimistic, heâs saying, âNow that you know this, donât take any of it personally and try to understand why people might act this way and forgive and love them for that.â The Stoics believe you start the day with a meditation of whatâs to come and then you should end the day reflecting on what has transpired and what can be improved.The Stoics didnât believe in perfection. They felt we were all a work-in-progress. You can always be getting better. As Seneca said:As long as you live, keep learning how to live.(To learn the morning ritual that will keep you happy all day, click here.)Okay, weâve learned a lot of ancient wisdom. Letâs round it up and get the final tip that science agrees is one of the most powerful happiness boostersâ¦Sum upHereâs how ancient wisdom from the Stoics can help you be happier: Events Donât Upset You. Beliefs Do: Only the end of the world is the end of the world. Control What You Can. Ignore The Rest: Worrying never fixed anything. Accept Everything. But Donât Be Passive: Nobody recommends denial. Accept. And then do something. Choose Whose Child You Will Be: âWhat would Batman do in this situation?â Morning And Evening Rituals Are Essential: Plan for the day, then reflect on the day. Marcus Aureliusâ classic book Meditations starts out kinda weird. He mentions all the people who he feels indebted to for having helped him. Itâs basically a gratitude list.The Stoics were big on gratitude. In fact, in Meditations he wrote:Donât set your mind on things you donât possess as if they were yours, but count the blessings you actually possess and think how much you would desire them if they werenât already yours.A few thousand years later research would catch up with him on that one. Studies show mentally subtracting cherished moments from your life makes you appreciate them more, makes you grateful and makes you happier.âWhat if I never met my partner? What if my child was never born? Wow, I am so lucky to have them in my life.âYou donât need that shiny new thing in order to smile. Take a second to appreciate all the shiny things you already have that arenât so new.New is overrated. Sometimes ideas from thousands of years ago are all we need to be ha ppy.Join over 285,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.Related posts:How To Get People To Like You: 7 Ways From An FBI Behavior ExpertNew Neuroscience Reveals 4 Rituals That Will Make You HappyNew Harvard Research Reveals A Fun Way To Be More SuccessfulThis article originally appeared at Barking Up the Wrong Tree.
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