My Experiments in the Practice of Everyday Life

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“I Can’t Get Rid of My Stuff.”

2012 Happiness Challenge: For those of you following the 2012 Happiness Project Challenge, to make 2012 a happier year — and even if you haven’t officially signed up for the challenge — welcome! Each week, I post a video about some Pigeon of Discontent raised by a reader. Because, as much as we try to find the Bluebird of Happiness, we’re also plagued by the Pigeons of Discontent.

This week’s Pigeon of Discontent, suggested by a reader, is: “I can’t get rid of my stuff.”

I Can’t Get Rid Of My Stuff

If you want to read more about this resolution, check out…
9 common myths about clearing clutter.
Test yourself: Do you have clutter mentality?
Fighting clutter? Go shelf by shelf.

How about you? Do you ever have trouble moving clutter along its way out of your home? Have you found any good strategies?

You can post your own Pigeon of Discontent at any time; also, from time to time, I’ll make a special call for suggestions.

If you’re new, jump in right now, sign up here. Studies suggest that by taking action, like signing up for this challenge, will help you keep your resolutions. For the 2012 Challenge, each week I’ll post a video for you to consider, and you can check out the archives of videos here.

* Hey everyone: a New York City-based production company is looking for people who’ve been inspired to start their own Happiness Projects—and who want to share their stories. Does this describe you? Do you live in the greater NYC/tri-state area? Could you spend a few hours filming, at a convenient time?

If so, email a brief description of yourself, your Happiness Project, and how your life has changed as a result to THNKcasting@radicalmedia.com.

“Sometimes Material Desires Have a Spiritual Aspect.”

Further Secrets of Adulthood:

SofAmaterialdesires

* Volunteer as a Super-Fan, and from time to time, I’ll ask for your help. Nothing too onerous, I promise. Sign up here or email me at gretchenrubin1@gretchenrubin.com.

“It Was Very, Very Dangerous To Live Even One Day.”

Virginia Woolf

“She felt very young; at the same time unspeakably aged. She sliced like a knife through everything; at the same time was outside, looking on. She had a perpetual sense, as she watched the taxi cabs, of being out, out, far out to sea and alone; she always had the feeling that it was very, very dangerous to live even one day.”
–Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

How any times have I repeated this quotation to myself? Countless. Virginia Woolf! I love her work so much that sometimes I can hardly bear to read it.

* Join the happiness discussion on Facebook and Twitter (@gretchenrubin).

Want to Boost Your Self-Esteem? Throw Away Someone Else’s Trash.

Trashcan

Self-esteem is a topic that has generated a fair amount of controversy over the last few decades, but one thing seems clear: you don’t get healthy self-esteem from constantly telling yourself how great you are, or even from other people telling you how great you are. You get healthy self-esteem from behaving in ways that you yourself find estimable.

For instance, you feel better about yourself when you keep a difficult resolution, meet a challenge, solve a problem, learn a skill, or cross something unpleasant off your to-do list. And one of the best ways to feel better about yourself is to help someone else. Do good, feel good.

I had a friend who went through a period of tremendous rejection: she was fired from her job, she didn’t get into the graduate program to which she’d applied, and her boyfriend broke up with her. Everything worked out fine, and I asked her how she got through such a tough time. She said, “I was practically addicted to doing good deeds for other people. It was the only way I could make myself feel like I wasn’t a total loser.”

I recently performed a very small good deed that gave me a boost: I threw away someone else’s trash. I’ve always been careful to throw away my own litter, but it never occurred to me to do anything about random litter lying around.

The other day, though, I was in the subway, where an empty Snapple bottle was rolling around to the great annoyance of everyone in the car. The bottle rolled back and forth, back and forth, and I thought, “Someone should pick that up.” Then I thought—“Someone like me! Why shouldn’t I be the one to pick it up?” So I did. I was astonished by the surge of good feeling I got, quite disproportionate to such a minor action.

Since then, I’ve looked for chances to throw away other people’s trash. Newspapers strewn across seats in the airport, candy wrappers on the sidewalk, that kind of thing.

“Do good, feel good” is a happiness truism that really is true. Act like a considerate citizen of the world, and you’ll also boost your self-esteem. How about you? Have you felt a boost in your feelings of self-worth after doing something worthwhile?

I’m working on my Happiness Project, and you could have one, too! Everyone’s project will look different, but it’s the rare person who can’t benefit. Join in — no need to catch up, just jump in right now. Each Friday’s post will help you think about your own happiness project.

* I got a kick out of this video of a barista making animals out of foam. I know, but hey, it’s Friday afternoon.

* Want a happiness quotation in your email inbox every morning? Sign up for the Moment of Happiness. Subscribe here or email me at gretchenrubin1@gretchenrubin.com.

“The Most Ordinary Moments Are the Ones that Are the Most Transcendent.”

Kyran_pittman

Happiness interview: Kyran Pittman.

I met Kyran at a conference last year, and after talking to her, I ran out to buy a copy of her book, Planting Dandelions: Field Notes From a Semi-Domesticated Life (which just came out in paperback). One of the things that interested me most about it is Kyran’s emphasis on finding happiness in the small, ordinary details in life and appreciating the adventure of everyday existence. (For the millionth time in my life, I repeat to myself the quotation from Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway: “She always had the feeling that it was very, very dangerous to live even one day.”)

Kyran has thought a lot about happiness, and finding happiness in “planting dandelions.”

Gretchen: What’s something you know now about happiness that you didn’t know when you were 18 years old?
Kyran: Like most young adults, I was hugely self-conscious, and barely self-aware. I lived in a constant state of reaction. Feelings were like weather—something originating completely outside of me, mysterious and volatile. It was very easy to get lost in fear, anger, or sadness. When you’re young, you have no perspective. Everything is happening to you for the first time. You’re the primitive human. The sun goes away, and you don’t know why, or if it will ever come back.

Just thinking about it makes me want to run out and hug the first eighteen-year-old I see.

As I’ve matured, I’ve learned to recognize my feelings and their origins. When I’m in a sad or bitchy mood, I hit a mental rewind button until I find the thing that triggered it. Like, Oh! I’m angry because I let housework get in the way of writing today. Or, Huh, I was feeling great until I walked by the tv and heard that news story that made me afraid. The sooner I can address the issue, or at least acknowledge it, the sooner I’m back on track. And if it’s not something that can be resolved quickly, I at least have the reassurance that I’ve come through dark and difficult places before.

That’s perspective. That’s the dividend of experience. I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

Is there anything you find yourself doing repeatedly that gets in the way of your happiness?
I’m a recovering control addict. Anytime I try to control someone else, I’m setting myself up (and them) for certain unhappiness. In my memoir, I wrote about micromanaging my husband’s relationship with our children in the early parenting years, and how incredibly corrosive that was. When everything you do or say communicates a complete lack of confidence in another person’s ability to make choices, you set up a self-fulfilling prophecy.

It’s a very insidious thing, so I have to watch my motives carefully when I offer others my “help” or “advice.” There’s rarely anything more helpful than letting someone know you believe in them.

Is there anything that you see people around you doing or saying that adds a lot to their happiness, or detracts a lot from their happiness?
Tom Petty has this great line he sings on his Wildflowers album: “Most of the things I worry about never happen anyway.” I think the vast majority of unhappiness is based on stuff that isn’t actually happening. Certainly, life brings real and inevitable sorrow. But when I ask myself, am I okay today, I find I usually am. It’s tomorrow I’m unhappy about. Or something that happened yesterday. I don’t know why it’s so hard for us to stay in the present moment, when it’s often such a good place to be.

Have you always felt about the same level of happiness, or have you been through a period when you felt exceptionally happy or unhappy—if so, why? If you were unhappy, how did you become happier?
I grew up in the far northeast, and I joke that I never knew that I was really a cheerful person until I moved to the South. Only it’s no joke. I’m very sensitive to sunlight. If we have three cloudy days in a row in Little Rock, I’m miserable. Newfoundland is so beautiful, but there’s a reason its capital city boasts the most pubs per capita in North America. I’d have self-medicated myself into a coma long ago.

Have you ever been surprised that something you expected would make you very happy, didn’t, or vice versa?
It astonishes me that raising a family could bring me so much happiness. I never thought of myself as especially maternal or even very marriageable. I was destined for much bigger things than the white picket fence could possibly contain. I thought I would write a book someday about how I fell in love with my husband—our epic, star-crossed, movie-of-the-week courtship. What I found instead was that the best, most interesting part of my life—the real adventure—was everything that came after happily ever after. The most ordinary moments are the ones that are the most transcendent—when I think, this is heaven, here and now.

* I love this short video, a visualization of a passage of music by Ferdinand Ries in the shape of a roller-coaster.

* Want a copy of my Resolutions Chart, to help get yourself started? Email me at gretchenrubin1@gretchenrubin.com. Just write “chart” in the subject line.