My Experiments in the Practice of Everyday Life

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How To Make Friends – or At Least Think About It More Clearly.

Friendspaperdolls

Every Wednesday is Tip Day, or Quiz Day, or List Day.
This Wednesday: Two lists about making new friends.

I’m a huge fan of Michael Thompson’s book, Best Friends, Worst Enemies: Understanding the Social Lives of Children, so when I noticed that he was a co-author, with Lawrence Cohen and Catherine O’Neill, of Mom, They’re Teasing Me: Helping Your Child Solve Social Problems, I picked it up right away.

I saw the title of the introduction: “It All Started When She Hit Me Back…” Ah, I recognized that kind of claim! I needed no further persuasion to read the book (though my children, thankfully, have no particular social problems at the moment).

Given the title of the book, it’s no surprise that the authors discuss at some length the subject of friendship and how children learn to make and keep friends, and they include a list of “essential friendship skills.”

As I read this list, I was struck by how it could just as easily be applied to marriage or to work. These are the qualities a person wants to see in a spouse and in co-workers. They’re important in all kinds of circumstances.

According to these authors, the essential friendship skills are:

  • The enjoyment of the company of others
  • A capacity for reciprocity, turn taking, cooperation, and sharing
  • Empathy
  • Realistic, generally positive expectations that allow you to approach the world with confidence
  • Problem-solving ability
  • The ability to regulate aggressive impulses and other emotions
  • The ability to read emotions, especially subtle and mixed emotions
  • The ability to tolerate frustraton
  • The ability to “hold others in mind” [to think lovingly about absent friends]
  • Trust that others can and will hold you in mind
  • Self-disclosure—the willingness and ability to show vulnerability

The authors go on to list the essential elements of social competence that children need to use at school:

  • Emotional regulation
  • Turn taking
  • Joining a group
  • Giving positive attention to others
  • Sociability
  • Social knowledge [knowing the norms, customs, and references of your subculture]
  • Tuning in to social cues [picking up on other people’s emotions and signals]
  • Balancing autonomy with relationships

Again, I found myself thinking – marriage! work! family! These skills aren’t just for children, and just for school. I struggle to work on these precise skills, every day of my life.

Making friends can seem like an overwhelmingly complex, tangled subject to broach. It can be difficult to know even how to think about it. For a person who struggles to make and keep friends, or to maintain friendly relations with others, this list gives a helpful breakdown of areas to tackle. If you have trouble making conversation, you could work on your “social knowledge.” If you find yourself getting in a lot of disagreements, you could work on “emotional regulation” and “giving positive attention to others.”

What do you think? Has anything important be omitted from these lists? Do they provide a helpful framework for thinking about friendship?

* I loved scrolling through the beautiful images on Design for Mankind — “unearthing the internet’s treasures since 2006.”

* If you’re also looking for a good book, please consider The Happiness Project (can’t resist mentioning: #1 New York Times bestseller).
Order your copy.
Read sample chapters.
Watch the one-minute book video.
Listen to a sample of the audiobook.

Video Vacation Continues. Back in September.

Videoclip

I so appreciate the attentiveness of everyone who has noticed that I’ve stopped posting videos for some reason. (I appreciate it, but I’d also sort of hoped that no one would notice. Busted.) Fear not, the hiatus is only temporary. Because of my vacation schedule, I decided to skip making videos for the last half of August.

I’ll be back in September, with the theme of…Self-control. Which is a fascinating subject.

In the meantime, if you’re in the mood to watch videos, you can see them lined up here. Or you can check out my channel on YouTube.

Zoikes, it’s hard to believe that September is just about here.

* Lots of great material on Petit Elefant — “style, home, travel, family.”

* Want a personalized bookplate for your copy of The Happiness Project – or for a friend? Or want a signature card instead (or also), if you have the e-book or audio-book? Sign up here. Ask for as many as you’d like, I’ll mail them anywhere, and they’re free.

Why A Hurricane Filled Me With Gratitude.

Hurricane2

Like much of the East Coast, New York City was hit by Hurricane Irene. On Saturday, we checked our flashlights, loaded up on food, filled the bathtub, and hoped for the best.

We were extremely lucky. The hurricane didn’t affect us much — we didn’t even lose power. And I’m very, very grateful for that.

The hurricane was a good reminder about gratitude. For one thing, it reminded me that I have so much to be grateful for that it seems a bit preposterous that I need to remind myself to be grateful — but I do. When life is taking its ordinary course, it’s so easy to take everyday life for granted.

Also, the hurricane made me much more mindful of how much I love my apartment and my city, and how safe and secure I generally feel. It’s a sad foible of human nature that it often takes loss, or the threat of loss, to make us appreciate what we already enjoy.

For me, one of the main challenges of a happiness project is to maintain that sense of gratitude for everyday life — without a hurricane. As Churchill remarked to Sir John Martin, “You can’t expect to have a war all the time.”

How do you remind yourself to feel grateful, when life is proceeding as usual?

* I really enjoyed cruising around Making It Lovely.

* Want to get my free monthly newsletter? It highlights the best of the month’s material from the blog and the Facebook Page. Email me at gretchenrubin1@gretchenrubin.com. Just write “newsletter” in the subject line.

“But There Is No Happiness Without Action.”

Disraeli

“Action may not always be happiness…but there is no happiness without action.”
– Benjamin Disraeli, in Lothair

Like many sweeping generalizations, this statement is thought-provoking to consider, whether or not it’s absolutely true. What do you think?

* I love reading other people’s personal commandments, resolutions, and the like, so I really enjoyed reading these 39 Secrets of Adulthood.

* Want a copy of my Resolutions Chart, for inspiration? Email me at gretchenrubin1@gretchenrubin.com. Just write “chart” in the subject line.

Happiness Is…Being Back at Home.

RubyslippersDorothy

Home again! No matter how much I enjoy a trip, I’m always very happy to be home.

In the past, I often felt bad about my lack of a deep enthusiasm for traveling. Didn’t my love of hanging around my own apartment show a lack of adventurousness, a limited curiosity about the world, a cramped sense of possibility? (Not to mention an over-dependence on morning coffee prepared a certain way.)

To show myself that I had good company in this attitude, I collected passages from eminent thinkers who showed similar preferences. For example, in his essay Self-Reliance, Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote:

The soul is no traveller; the wise man stays at home, and when his necessities, his duties, on any occasion call him from his house, or into foreign lands, he is at home still…

As part of my happiness project, I’ve made a much greater effort to follow my personal commandment to Be Gretchen. I must remain stay true to my own nature. What’s fun for other people may not be fun for me — and vice versa.

At the same time, however, I remind myself that novelty and challenge do make people happier — including me. Traveling away from home gives me new perspectives, new insights, lots of fun — as well as a renewed appreciation for my ordinary life, and the pleasures of staying home.

* If you’ve never visited Lifehacker, check it out. A huge amount of great information there, presented in an engaging way.

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