As a therapist, the number-one goal I hear from my patients is: “I just want to be happy.” I ask, “What would being happy mean to you?” The answers range from “Everything I wish for will happen” to “I will feel good all the time” to “I won’t ever feel sad or disappointed.”These patients are deeply misguided: believing that bliss is a permanent, attainable state is both unrealistic and emotionally dangerous. Awful things occur that we cannot control, and that will and should at least temporarily affect how we feel.”A utopian world would be like I Love Lucy: it would be possible to have a minor stress of the week resolved in 24 minutes”My happiness-seeking patients are also, sadly, doomed to fail. It’s a time-worn paradox: the more you obsess over whether you are happy or happy enough, the unhappier you are. As I’ve witnessed from years of counseling patients, contentment emerges as a byproduct of a good life, not from the pursuit of it being your life’s purpose.
Source: Everyone wants to be happy. Almost everyone is going about it wrong. – Vox