I often teach about happiness and what has become exceedingly clear is this: there are 7 qualities chronically unhappy people have mastered.
According to Psychology Today, University of California researcher Sonja Lyubomirsky states: “40% of our of our capacity for happiness is within our power to change”.
If this is true and it is, there’s hope for us all. There are billions of people on our planet and clearly, some are truly happy. The rest of us bounce back and forth between happiness and well, unhappiness depending on the day.
Throughout the years I’ve learned there are certain traits and habits chronically unhappy people seem to have mastered. But before diving in with you, let me preface this and say: we all have bad days, even weeks -myself included- when we fall down in all 7 areas.
“40% of our of our capacity for happiness is within our power to change”.
The difference between a happy and unhappy life is how often and how long we stay there.
Here are the 7 qualities of chronically unhappy people.
1. Your default belief is that life is hard.
Happy people know life can be hard and tend to bounce through hard times with an attitude of curiosity versus victimhood. They take responsibility for how they got themselves into a mess, and focus on getting themselves out of it as soon as possible.
Perseverance towards problem versus complaining over circumstances is a symptom of a happy person. Unhappy people see themselves as victims of life and stay stuck in the “look what happened to me” attitude versus finding a way through and out the other side.
The difference between a happy and unhappy life is how often and how long we stay there.
2. You believe most people can’t be trusted.
I won’t argue that healthy discernment is important, but most happy people are trusting of their fellow man. They believe in the good in people, versus assuming everyone is out to get them. Generally open and friendly towards people they meet, happy people foster a sense of community around themselves and meet new people with an open heart.
Unhappy people are distrustful of most people they meet and assume that strangers can’t be trusted. Unfortunately this behavior slowly starts to close the door on any connection outside of an inner-circle and thwarts all chances of meeting new friends.
3. You concentrate on what’s wrong in this world versus what’s right.
There’s plenty wrong with this world, no arguments here, yet unhappy people turn a blind eye to what’s actually right in this world and instead focus on what’s wrong. You can spot them a mile away, they’ll be the ones complaining and responding to any positive attributes of our world with “yeah, but”.
Happy people are aware of global issues, but balance their concern with also seeing what’s right. I like to call this keeping both eyes open. Unhappy people tend to close one eye towards anything good in this world in fear they might be distracted from what’s wrong. Happy people keep it in perspective. They know our world has problems and they also keep an eye on what’s right.
Unhappy people tend to close one eye towards anything good in this world in fear they might be distracted from what’s wrong.
4. You compare yourself to others and harbour jealousy.
Unhappy people believe someone else’s good fortune steals from their own. They believe there’s not enough goodness to go around and constantly compare yours against theirs. This leads to jealousy and resentment.
Top Comments
This kind of approach is so demoralising to those of us who are mentally ill and at times don't have a lot of control over how we feel. After reading this I feel so very, very guilty for not being able to follow this advice and being a "negative Nellie". I've spent the last five years being treated for bowel cancer. I've had one surgery after another, six months of chemotherapy, I wore an iliosomy bag for twelve months and then more surgery. Apparently I should have been able to deal with that, severe clinical depression and fibromyalgia with a spring in my step and a song on my lips because god forbid I should be negative and allow my pain and fear to distract them from their happiness.
I'm sorry the attitude in the article makes me feel despairing, angry and a total failure. I just don't have the words to describe how much I despise myself right now.
To find the reasons for having these 7 qualities seems the best way to me. Like going to therapy and searching in childhood the reasons for unhappiness. Much better than reading something like this and feeling guilty for feeling you're not able to be happy like "the happy people". That can be very devastating.