Happiness - 'freedom to' and 'freedom from'

At its most basic level, happiness is a ‘freedom to’.

  • A freedom to enjoy life’s simple things - food, sleep, exercise, nature, and the pleasure of small groups.

  • A freedom to set your own path. The more you know what you want, the more the voices of others quieten.

  • A freedom to surround yourself with people that inspire you, and to avoid the people that drain you.

  • A freedom to learn, and to never stop learning.

  • A freedom to give to others, and to make this your primary focus.

But at its core, happiness is a ‘freedom from’.

  • A freedom from worry - by identifying, and accepting, the worst case scenario. 

  • A freedom from desire - by cultivating gratitude for the present moment, rather than contracting with yourself to be unhappy until you get what you want. 

  • A freedom from anger - by learning your early triggers, and how to respond to them.

  • A freedom from your own internal narrative - by labelling your thoughts, and then letting them go. 

  • A freedom from the quest for immortality - by accepting your complete lack of cosmic significance.

  • A freedom from the notion of success and failure as totally deserved - a notion which fails to give the due credit to the enormous role that fortune plays in all of our lives.


Further reading:

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, Simple Psychology

Interview with Naval Ravikant, Tim Ferriss

How to Like People, Derek Sivers

Tribe, Sebastien Junger

Waking Up, Sam Harris






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