A Surefire Method to Experience Joy in Your Life

By Srikumar Rao,
Author of Happiness at Work: Be Resilient, Motivated, and Successful -- No
Matter What
Galileo got it wrong.
The earth does not revolve around the sun. It revolves around you and has been
doing so for decades. At least, this is the model you are using.
You live in a "me-centered" world in which you interpret everything that happens
in terms of "What is its impact on me." Your spouse gets a great job offer and
you wonder what effect this will have on your relationship. Your daughter drops
out of high school to begin an in-depth exploration of controlled substances and
you wonder what your friends will think about your parenting. Your boss leaves
the company and you wonder whether you will be promoted or what your relations
will be with the next person to take that position.
You are constantly preoccupied with "me" and what you like and what others think
of you and why things aren't going your way. It reminds me of the joke about the
gorgeous girl who spoke about herself endlessly and then tried to make amends
"But enough about me. Lets talk about you. Tell me what you like about me."
Do you think I am exaggerating? That this is certainly not true of you because
you are a concerned citizen and care about the environment and poverty and have
actually campaigned against land mines? Oh, Yes, Victoria. This is true of YOU,
yes you!
Think back on the last few conversations you had with a good friend. Did you
sometimes lose thread of what your friend was saying because you were busy
crafting the perfect response in your head? Have you ever been introduced to a
person and, ten seconds later, forgotten his/her name? Go back in time and
recall the most boring class you took in college. Do you, or do you not,
remember the one time you made a comment that was brilliant -- or at least you
thought it was.
Here is something for you to know -- if you live the vast majority of your time
in a "me-centered" universe, then you are going to get more than your share of
depression, angst, sorrow and all of the things that make life terrible. That's
just the way it is.
If you want to experience joy in your life, you have to be able to step outside
yourself and become part of a cause that is much larger than you; one that
brings a greater good to a greater community. You have tremendous flexibility in
defining both the greater good and the greater community. If you don't succeed
in this, then you will continue to pull that heavy wagon up the mountain and
despite the fact that you are pulling it, it will somehow run over your foot.
Try this experiment -- the next time you have a conversation with a good friend,
do not use the words "I", "me" or "my". This simple device prevents your from
expressing your opinion and many are astonished both by how difficult it is and
by how much the depth of listening goes up when you are no longer preoccupied by
thinking of what you are going to say.
Now try another experiment. Try living for a week in an "other centered"
universe. In this universe others are not put in this world to serve your needs
so you cannot legitimately get frustrated by the elderly lady ahead of you on
the checkout lane who takes forever to put her change away or the stout man who
stands in the aisle of the plane blocking you while he removes his magazine from
his bag and tries vainly to stow it in an overhead bin that is patently too
crammed to accept it.
See what you can do to serve others. Smile cheerily at the elderly lady. Point
out to the stout man that the bins further on are empty and offer to put his bag
there as you move on. What is it that you can do to brighten their day somewhat?
Have you ever had a random encounter that was so refreshing that it made your
day? I was on a message board yesterday admiring a comment made by a reader
about a rant posted by another. It was a very reasoned statement that pointed
out the flaw in the ranter's reasoning and asking why he felt compelled to say
what he did. Another reader jumped in and said something to the effect that
"Without saying anything on the merits of the case I really like the way in
which you responded to his post. Thanks for keeping civility in the debate."
With this opening others chimed in as well and she replied with a heartfelt
"Thank you" and that this had made her day.
The same thing has happened to you many times. Perhaps the stranger who cracked
jokes and kept everyone upbeat in the slow-moving line. Perhaps the jovial taxi
driver who told you that you were looking really gorgeous when you were feeling
bedraggled after a five time zone flight. Perhaps the salesman in the clothing
store who told you that you looked really handsome in that suit and you knew
that he was not merely trying to make a sale.
Do the same yourself. Deliberately, each day, do something to make someone's
day. Plan it. Exercise your creativity. This is one of the exercises in my
program and I am amazed at what participants come up with when they set their
minds to it. An executive in a European city saw a group of foreign students
anxiously counting change to see if they had enough for train fare and
anonymously bought tickets for all of them by putting it on his credit card and
instructing the ticket attendant to run the charge. He said he hadn't felt that
good for years.
So make someone's day, every day. Strangers, colleagues, friends, parents, your
spouse, children, relatives -- even the ones you don't particularly care for!!
-- and all fellow travelers on this spaceship we call Earth. Do it deliberately.
Invest emotional energy in making it happen. Do it anonymously whenever you can.
Don't expect thanks -- what you do and the opportunity you have to be of service
is its own reward.
© 2010 Srikumar Rao, author of "Happiness at Work: Be Resilient, Motivated, and
Successful -- No Matter What"
Author Bio
Srikumar S. Rao is the author of Happiness at Work: Be Resilient, Motivated, and
Successful -- No Matter What (Published by McGraw-Hill). He conceived
"Creativity and Personal Mastery," the pioneering course that was among the most
popular and highest rated at many of the world's top business schools. It
remains the only such course to have its own alumni association. His work has
been covered by major media including the New York Times, the Wall Street
Journal, the Financial Times, Time, Fortune, BusinessWeek, the London Times, the
Guardian and the Daily Telegraph. CNN, PBS, and Voice of America, and dozens of
radio and TV stations have interviewed him.
Please visit
www.srikumarsrao.com for more information. You can also follow him on
Twitter @srikumarsrao, join the happiness community on Facebook: Facebook |
Srikumar Rao, and watch his videos on the McGraw-Hill YouTube Channel.
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