A Formula for Happiness
Published: December 14, 2013 256 Comments
(Page 2 of 3)
This shouldn’t shock us. Vocation is central to the American ideal, the
root of the aphorism that we “live to work” while others “work to live.”
Throughout our history, America’s flexible labor markets and dynamic
society have given its citizens a unique say over our work — and made
our work uniquely relevant to our happiness. When Frederick Douglass
rhapsodized about “patient, enduring, honest, unremitting and
indefatigable work, into which the whole heart is put,” he struck the
bedrock of our culture and character.
Readers’ Comments
Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
I’m a living example of the happiness vocation can bring in a flexible
labor market. I was a musician from the time I was a young child. That I
would do it for a living was a foregone conclusion. When I was 19, I
skipped college and went on the road playing the French horn. I played
classical music across the world and landed in the Barcelona Symphony
Orchestra.
I was probably “somewhat satisfied” with my work. But in my late 20s
the novelty wore off, and I began plotting a different future. I called
my father back in Seattle: “Dad, I’ve got big news. I’m quitting music
to go back to school!”
“You can’t just drop everything,” he objected. “It’s very irresponsible.”
“But I’m not happy,” I told him.
There was a long pause, and finally he asked, “What makes you so special?!”
But I’m really not special. I was lucky — lucky to be able to change
roads to one that made me truly happy. After going back to school, I
spent a blissful decade as a university professor and wound up running a
Washington think tank.
Along the way, I learned that rewarding work is unbelievably important,
and this is emphatically not about money. That’s what research suggests
as well. Economists find that money makes truly poor people happier
insofar as it relieves pressure from everyday life — getting enough to
eat, having a place to live, taking your kid to the doctor. But scholars
like the Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman
have found that once people reach a little beyond the average
middle-class income level, even big financial gains don’t yield much, if
any, increases in happiness.
So relieving poverty brings big happiness, but income, per se, does not.
Even after accounting for government transfers that support personal
finances, unemployment proves catastrophic for happiness. Abstracted from money, joblessness seems to increase the rates of divorce and suicide, and the severity of disease.
And according to the General Social Survey, nearly three-quarters of
Americans wouldn’t quit their jobs even if a financial windfall enabled
them to live in luxury for the rest of their lives. Those with the least
education, the lowest incomes and the least prestigious jobs were
actually most likely to say they would keep working, while elites were
more likely to say they would take the money and run. We would do well
to remember this before scoffing at “dead-end jobs.”
Assemble these clues and your brain will conclude what your heart
already knew: Work can bring happiness by marrying our passions to our
skills, empowering us to create value in our lives and in the lives of
others. Franklin D. Roosevelt had it right: “Happiness lies not in the
mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the
thrill of creative effort.”
In other words, the secret to happiness through work is earned success.
This is not conjecture; it is driven by the data. Americans who feel
they are successful at work are twice as likely to say they are very
happy overall as people who don’t feel that way. And these differences
persist after controlling for income and other demographics.
You can measure your earned success in any currency you choose. You can
count it in dollars, sure — or in kids taught to read, habitats
protected or souls saved. When I taught graduate students, I noticed
that social entrepreneurs who pursued nonprofit careers were some of my
happiest graduates. They made less money than many of their classmates,
but were no less certain that they were earning their success. They
defined that success in nonmonetary terms and delighted in it.
If you can discern your own project and discover the true currency you
value, you’ll be earning your success. You will have found the secret to
happiness through your work.
There’s nothing new about earned success. It’s simply another way of
explaining what America’s founders meant when they proclaimed in the
Declaration of Independence that humans’ inalienable rights include
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
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