Do You Fall into This Happiness Trap? The False Choice
Gretchen Rubin
6x NYT Bestselling Author | Host of the "Happier with Gretchen Rubin" Podcast | Pre-order "Secrets of Adulthood," out April 1st
It’s very easy to fall into the happiness trap of false choices–of thinking you can either do X or Y, and that’s the choice you have to make.
False choices are tempting for a couple of reasons. First, instead of facing a bewildering array of options, you limit yourself to a few simple possibilities. Also, the way you set up the options often makes it obvious that one choice is the high-minded and reasonable choice, and one is not.
But although false choices can be comforting, they can leave you feeling trapped, and they can blind you to other choices you might make.
“I’d rather have a few true friends instead of tons of shallow friends.”
You don’t have to choose between a “real” few and “superficial” many. I have intimate friends and casual friends. I have work friends whom I never see outside a professional context. I have childhood friends whom I see only once every ten years. I have several friends whose spouses I’ve never met. I have online friends whom I’ve never met face-to-face. These friendships aren’t all of equal importance to me, but they all add warmth and color to my life.
“I think it’s more important to worry about other people’s happiness, instead of thinking only about myself and my own happiness.”
Why do you have to choose? You can think about your happiness and other people’s happiness. In fact, as summed up in the Second Splendid Truth, thinking about your own happiness will help you make others happy. And vice versa!
“Either I can be financially secure, or I can have a job I enjoy.”
“If I don’t want to live in a chaotic, clutter-filled house, I need to get rid of all my stuff.”
“I’d rather have an interesting life than a happy life.”
“It’s more important to be authentic and honest than it is to be positive and enthusiastic.”
Can you find a way to be authentically enthusiastic or honestly positive? In my experience, it’s often possible, though it can take a little extra work.
“I can care about people, or I can care about possessions.”
From Eleanor Roosevelt: “Happiness is not a goal; it is a by-product.”
Happiness is a goal and a by-product. Nietzche explained this well: “The end of a melody is not its goal; but nonetheless, if the melody had not reached its end it would not have reached its goal either. A parable.”
One of my Secrets of Adulthood is “The opposite of a great truth is also true.” Sometimes, the falsity of a false choice comes from the fact that both choices are true. I have more time than I think and less time than I think. I can accept myself and expect more from myself. I want an empty shelf, and I want a junk drawer.
In further illustration of that point, false choices themselves can sometimes be unhelpful but at other times, helpful. A false choice can be an indirect way for you to figure out what you really want; the way you’ve framed the question reveals the path you want to take.
For instance, a reader emailed me and, after a long explanation of his situation, wrote, “So the question is: do I decide to risk everything to pursue a life of meaning and happiness, or do I stay stuck in my boring job?” That may have been a false choice, but in any event, it was pretty clear he’d made his decision!
Can you think of examples of when you, or someone you know, fell into the trap of a false choice? What was it?
To read more about this, check out Happier at Home, chapter five.If you'd like to get my monthly newsletter, sign up here (highlights from the blog and Facebook). If you love great quotes, sign up here for the "Moment of Happiness," and you'll get a happiness quote by email every morning. Free of course.
(Photo: Sky Noir, Flickr)
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11 年Hola quiero saber si se puede leer en castellano
The first big surveys served the purpose of counting how many people there were in a country, once that was done the next question followed naturally "how many sheep are there?" and from there it's a small step to "how many facebook friends have you got?" The questions evolve alongside society and they apply to society not individuals. I have rarely been in the position to choose others happiness over my own so I don't think it's a useful question. But if you are about to lead your country to war, this question might tell you if your people are likely to follow you. The "happiness trap" itself is false, if I am asked in survey "would you rather have a job you enjoy or a secure income?" I'll answer it honestly and then go back to what I was doing. I am not committed to carrying out the actions I indicated on the survey. I'm not in a happiness trap, no one is, it is an artificial construct. If I want to make real decisions and choices I'd hire a personal coach, to get a personal context. There are a lot around these days, Eric Schmidt of Google says his coach is indispensable.
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11 年Yes I agree with your statement my dear lady., happiness is not a goal., it;s product we can buy through cultivating our ability and knowledge with the right proportion of adding wisdom on it.