Happiness for Cynics podcast
Join Marie and Pete as the discuss the passion paradigm, and how it could be contributing to the great resignation we are currently experiencing.
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Writer, podcaster, mental health advocate
by Marie
Join Marie and Pete as the discuss the passion paradigm, and how it could be contributing to the great resignation we are currently experiencing.
Coming soon
by Marie
This week Marie interviews Victor Perton the founder of The Centre for Optimism, who asks the question, what makes you optimistic?
The Centre for Optimism – Victor Perton (Founder and Chief Optimism Officer)
We ask “what makes you optimistic?”
We believe the times call for realistic and infectiously optimistic leaders. We are a movement supporting realistic and infectiously optimistic leaders to be beacons in the fog of pessimism and cynicism. We believe the leader is the person in your mirror.
M: Thanks for joining us on Happiness for Cynics. Today I’m here with Victor Person, who is the Chief Optimism Officer at the Centre for Optimism. The offspring of stateless refugees from the Baltics, Victor’s early working years were spent in the law, politics and public policy, culminating in 18 years in the Victorian Parliament.
After politics, Victor worked as Commissioner to the Americas working across North and South America on Foreign Direct Investment and Export Promotion. This was followed by service as Senior Advisor to the Australian G20 Presidency.
Returning to Melbourne, Victor was surprised by the negativity around Australian leadership and increasing levels of anxiety and depression in our community.
This led to the founding of The Australian Leadership Project and, after a eureka moment at the Global Integrity Summit 2017, the founding of its offspring, The Centre for Optimism, which has grown through COVID with 5000 members in 82 countries.
Today Victor’s work centres on asking people the question “What makes you Optimistic?
M: Well, I will start by saying welcome to Happiness for Cynics. Welcome to the show and it is such a pleasure to have you here. I’ve been watching from up in Sydney and wondering why all the great positive psychologists and optimist leaders and happiness leaders are all down in Melbourne. What’s going on down there, Victor?
V: It’s because people dress in black.
M: Laugh.
V: Tommy Hilfiger said ‘If only Melbourne women would put a little dash of yellow or orange on, doesn’t matter whether it’s earrings or a necklace. So, we’re so surrounded by black and whenever I go to Sydney, I’m amazed on the streets, you know, ladies wearing white suits and white dresses. And I think that’s the difference between Sydney and Melbourne, you’ve got that warmer climate, the humidity. We’ve got to find the happiness in a colder climate.
M: Mmm hmm. Well, it’s definitely working. Maybe we need a bit more black and we can borrow some of the Melbourne experts you have there. So, thank you for joining us. I’d like to start by digging a little bit into your journey if you’re willing to share and letting the snow how you became a proponent of optimism and what led you personally to this life philosophy?
V: Yeah, sure. So, it really… when I’m waxing lyrical, um, it really goes back three or four generations. So, my parents were refugees from Latvia and Lithuania.
And I’m a stereotype, if you actually have a look at all of the research, the most optimistic people in any country are the refugees and the Children of refugees.
And there was a University of Melbourne study that reported a couple of years ago that said that the kids of refugees in Australia 90% of them felt they belonged. 88% of them were confident about their future profession, compared to 55% of native-born Children.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: So, I’m that stereotype. And if I go back to that generation of my grandparents. My grandfather, he was a soldier in World War One, he had gone to Saint Petersburg in 1905, he helped to build a country. And in 1940 he was captured by the Soviets and tortured to death. My grandmother was sent to the gulag with her daughter and, you know, 12 years in the gulag, and then when you come back from the gulag, you’re black marked, people don’t like you.
M: Mmm.
V: But in 1987 she said to me, come over I’m going to the first rally of … and she said, “Look, I’m going to outlive communism.”
M: Laugh.
V: And you know this woman, a woman who’s been in the gulag. She’s in a walking frame. But she took part in the million hands across Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and in 1991 of course, she not only lived to see the end of communism but celebrated the end of communism. So, she was a great example to me, almost in some senses, that we go to [Viktor] Frankl’s, Man’s Search for Meaning.
M: Mmm.
V: You know, she’s almost the stereotype. And then my other grandparents, you know, my grandfather had gone through the Depression, had built a business [and in] 1940 everything [was] seized by the Soviets, arrives in Australia, working in a factory, but never complained.
M: No.
V: Never complained. And then my father died when I was pretty young. My mother worked three jobs. She died in October last year, teaching yoga for 51 years.
M: Wow.
V: And again, you know, always the optimist, always lifting other people. And a week before she died, she said to me, “Victor, you’ve done lots of interesting things in your life, but this asking people what makes them optimistic, you’ve never done anything more important.”
So, on this personal journey, I was in politics for 18 years, and in 2006 I could just feel Australian politics becoming ever more negative.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And it just wasn’t filling me full of joy anymore. So, I quit. And then out of the blue, the other side of politics asked me to go to America as Trade Investment Commissioner, working across North and South America. And everywhere I went, there was this astonishing positive stereotype of Australians and Australian leadership, and our work was made easier by that one chairman of a major corporation who said to me, “Victor, you Aussies remind me of the Americans of 100 years ago. Nothing is impossible.”
M: Mmm hmm.
V: The truck driver who would hear your accent on Route 66 would say, “Oh my God, I love that Fosters of yours!”
M: Laugh.
V: And so, you know, the work was easy, you know, through that positive stereotype. And then after that, I worked on the Australian presidency of the G 20.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And at that super elite level of Presidents, Prime Ministers, Finance Ministers, Central Bank Governors, it was exactly the same. You know, this complete trust in us as Australians and then I came back to Melbourne in 2015 and I know I had changed, you know, from living in San Francisco. Flowers and what was left in my hair –
M: Laugh.
V: – and dancing in the street as the Mamas and the Papas would recommend. But something had also changed in Australia, and I was astonished by the negativity of language. You know, you say, “How are you?” and 65% of people say not bad or not too bad. And we never say Oh my God, what’s wrong?
M: Mmm hmm.
V: It’s a sort of negative take and the news had moved from 50-50 good/bad, to 95% bad. You know, this 24 by seven assault on the brain. And then when you ask people about leadership in a country where real incomes have grown 30%, we’re a peaceful country, a healthy country, this scoffing about leadership –
M: Mmm hmm.
V: – just astonished me and I, you know, scoffing about political leadership, you do it. And even in China and North Korea, people have got jokes about politicians. But here was this deeper antipathy towards leadership.
M: Yep.
V: So, we started the Australian Leadership Project and we interviewed 2500 people on the qualities of Australian leadership and the science, and our research showed that the three qualities are:
Plain speaking.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: Now when you and I think of our circles, we know hundreds of people like that.
M: Absolutely.
V: We could probably walk down Pitt Street, Sydney or Collins Street, Melbourne and still be hitting 50% of people with those qualities.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: So, at the end of the project, I was still left bewildered at why people were so negative. And then I was fortunate enough to be on the final panel of the Global Integrity Summit in 2017.
M: Yeah.
V: Hence my pursuit. And you know, your listeners can’t see the posters behind me, but they are light houses.
That’s a long answer to a simple question, but I often say to people it goes back four generations of, of suffering, of resilience and coming through at the end because of it.
M: I will never, ever stop a long answer that is as engaging as what you just gave us. So, thank you and thank you for sharing your history as well as optimistic as you’ve made it. There’s a lot of hard times in there as well. So, I think there’s a lot to be said for people who’ve grown up in Australia and who haven’t had those hard times and who are still struggling for ways to be thankful and find optimism versus when we talk about post traumatic growth as well as being a good catalyst for finding happiness and optimism.
V: Marie, I did a radio interview during Covid, and the journalist said, you know, “Australian business has never had it this tough.” And I said, “Give me a break!”
M: Laugh.
V: Thinking about Australian business, people have lost their business in bushfires, people have lost their business in floods. All the refugees, you know, whether they’re Iraqi or Somali, who lost their businesses blown up.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You know there’s lots of people and we need to tap their wisdom, tap their experience because they have then come to Australia, and they’ve built the country.
M: Mmm hmm. Absolutely.
So, is it just leaders that need this kick up the butt with optimism or is it all Australians? I know you focus on leaders but do all of us need to really take a step back?
V: This was a great debate with my mother and me for almost 30 years.
M: Laugh.
V: Because I, in all my speeches, I tell people to go and graffiti their mirror. So, everyone who is listening if you use red lipstick, it’s really ideal. If you can borrow red lipstick, it’s good, but if not a marker pen, go and write on the mirror at work in the toilet, mens/ladies, ‘The leader looks like the person in your mirror.’
So that’s my philosophy that everyone’s got to lead at some point now. Now my mother’s view was always, you know, sort of to be a good leader, you need good followers. Where, as I say, it’s everyone. And it’s one of the really interesting parts of the research. You know, when you use the word leader in Australia, it’s often a ‘them’.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: The word boss actually, is more resonant here. If you want to ask people about leadership at work, using the word leadership actually doesn’t seem to resonate in Australia as it does in the United States or Canada, you know where a lot of these books are written, leadership and self-leadership. Here, there’s a nuance of language, where leadership is them, not us. So, for me, the Centre for Optimism came out of the Australian leadership project, and someone who put it really well for me was Dominic Barton, who was then the head of McKinsey and now the Canadian ambassador to China had to negotiate the release of the Canadian hostages who were being held for the Huawei executive. And he said to me,
V: I was actually in Sydney, I was having a coffee by circular key at six in the morning, and, you know, there’s not so much company and there was this other bloke reading the paper on the table next to me. You know, I’m a bit chatty and garrulous, so he wasn’t reading his paper three minutes later.
M: Laugh.
V: But he was from Singapore, and we got talking about the impact of optimism and he said, “Look, every Monday morning, I give my sales team a rev up speech, and by Monday afternoon it seems to have worn off”, and I said to him, “Have you ever asked them what makes them optimistic?”
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And in fact, he took it on board. And every month now, the start of the sales meeting on the first day of the month is, ‘what makes you optimistic?’ And the funny little nuance. I did an event for Saint Ives Rotary a couple of days before we recorded this on the North Shore of Sydney, and there was a scientist there who talked about his experience, and he had been a teacher, and when he left teaching, he moved into an educational institution helping salespeople. And it was that classic Seligman sorry where he was actually driven nuts by the optimistic belief of the salesman.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: But he said the more optimistic the salesman was, the more they kept confounding him by being right.
M: Laugh.
V: When they come back, having met the unrealistic sales figures they’ve given them at the beginning of the month. So, for me, it is everyone.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: But it’s complicated, and particularly in Australian language, where leadership is sort of them and oftentimes conflated with political leadership.
M: Yeah.
V: So, if you ask people, what do Australians want of their leaders? I’ve really got to give an explanation that says, well, I’m actually thinking of your boss or your manager rather than the Prime Minister.
M: Mmm hmm. You’ve touched on language differences in Australia. Are there any other differences from a cultural point of view in Australia when it comes to optimism? You know, I talk about how we’re optimistically cynical as a bunch, laugh. I won’t say that we’re necessarily not optimistic, but we are a cynical bunch, and we like to have a bit of a gripe at times. And you know, we have that tall poppy syndrome that everyone talks about as well. Is there anything that is stopping us as a country from being more optimistic?
V: Well, it’s actually going backwards, we’re actually regressing. It’s a bit like our maths results. We’re actually regressing. So, in a country that has so much so if you have measured optimism in Australia, both optimism for self and optimism for country. Twenty years ago, in 2000, Australia and our sister country, New Zealand, were the two most optimistic countries in the Western world. Today we are down around the middle. It’s actually going backwards, and there’s some really concerning statistics around. We were talking earlier about mental illness.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: The Victorian Royal Commission into Mental Health Treatment, published a statistic that showed that we have doubled the rate of medicated anxiety and depression since 2016. Now if that’s happening in Victoria, it’s happening in New South Wales as well. Now, are doctors prescribing medication for the ordinary anxieties of life. You know, grief, loss of job, the teenagers are driving me nuts, or the teenager is being driven nuts.
M: Laugh.
V: So, are we medicating stuff? So, if we look at that that deeper Australian culture, if we look in the colonial period and you know that the settlement you know, the choice of people who came here originally were the prisoners and the political prisoners. So, what mindset did they have? Look, if there’s one thing they brought with them it was humour.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: Laconic humour, which I often refer to as self-effacing. But there’s a friend of mine runs a company called, John Cole runs Team Leadership in Washington. He says Australian humour is so dry that Americans don’t even understand you’re telling a joke.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You know, they think you’re having a go at them or you’re having a go at yourself and “Oh, my God, what’s wrong with you that you can tell this joke against you?”
M: Laugh.
V: So Australian humour, similar to New Zealand humour, but there’s a uniqueness about it. We have not… On the verge of doing a project on Aboriginal optimism because when you think, you know, living 30,000, 40,000, however many years it was in this tough land.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You know, tasting new foods, adapting to new foods and alike. You know, there must have been a lot of optimism in the Aboriginal community as they settled this land. And so too for the Europeans and the Asians who came here post 1788, a lot of adaption. And so, my mother describes it, you know, they came here as refugees, you know, and, you know, they were ribbed mercilessly. My father’s original surname was Petronitis, right?
M: Mmm hmm.
V: Of course, he got ribbed mercilessly about peritonitis.
M: Laugh.
V: And ultimately, you know, before I was born, changed the name to Perton.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: But again, it was an affection, you know, people actually liked it. So, you know, those Australian characteristics of egalitarianism and plain speaking and dry humour, as you call it, is very attractive to people.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And you know. I came back and I was a bit bewildered by the negativity of language, much of which is, I think, to be blamed on the news. You know, we just get this 24 by seven assault on our well-being by being told we’re hopeless.
M: Mmm hmm. Social media is just an echo chamber for that as well, unfortunately.
I’m really keen to understand, we’ve talked about immigrants and resilient Aussies, and we do talk about resilience quite a bit as well and bonding Australians together. But do you think that maybe we’ve had it too good for the last few decades? Is that why we’re losing that self-effacing humour or that resilience? Or that… the optimism? Is that perhaps part of it? Life has become too easy.
V: Yeah, and there’s some really interesting work that’s been done by UNICEF and others and even the Dalai Lama. I was fortunate to be in an audience with him seven weeks ago. This younger generation, these teenagers may be the most resilient generation since World War II, because I’ve actually been locked up.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: They’ve actually been under threat from a disease that threatened to wipe out hundreds of thousands of people. So, those kids may in fact be the most resilient for a long time. And you know, I had someone talking to me yesterday about this problem that in Australian business and American business that from really 1990 onwards you were in constant growth.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You could write a budget and you would always hit it.
M: Yep.
V: Because the country was getting there. What was interesting was, I’m sorry, that person was talking about America [USA], because America got hit by the GFC in 2008. But Australia didn’t.
M: Yep, we didn’t.
V: And the extraordinary thing was, you know, the Australian media talking about the GFC as if it was something terrible. But in fact, Australia never stopped growing. So yes, so we’ve had it too easy. And this notion that there’s always something wrong, there’s nothing wrong with being self-critical.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: There’s nothing wrong with wanting to be better. But when everything the government does, or everything a corporation does, is analysed for the bad news. The zeitgeist of our contemporary news services is as pessimistic and miserable.
M: Yep, yep.
V: You look at the Australian News services now, you know, if there’s a good news story, it runs once. Remember recently there was a debate about, ‘we’ve stopped flights from India because of the Covid outbreak in India’, and it was just out of control. And they interviewed the head of the Indian community in Melbourne.
M: Yep.
V: And they said, what do you think? And she said, “Well, make sense to me! –
M: Laugh.
V: – if India is going through, you know, an absolute plague of covid, and we can’t work out who’s got it. I’d stop the flights too.” Well, of course, that interview never got repeated.
M: Well, the poor journalist was like, ‘Oh, this isn’t news anymore.’ Laugh.
V: Yeah! Well, they managed to find other people who said that the government was stupid –
M: Mmm hmm.
V: – and this was racist and xenophobic, and those are the people that ran.
M: Yep.
V: Rather than the logical leader of the Indian community who said, “Makes sense to me as an Indian Australia.”
M: So, we’ve talked about all the negativity out there and how that is obviously linked to Australia’s decrease in optimism. The answer, it seems, is that we all need to bring a bit more optimism into our lives, and we all need to be asking the question and leading when it comes to optimism. But what do you say to people who are afraid of or fight against toxic positivity?
V: Every time I see an article on toxic positivity, it’s someone trying to sell the negativity industry.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You know, it’s actually a nonsense term. The only person I think who really gets it is David Kessler, and I’ll quote him exactly.
V: So, three factors.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: Right? And, you know and so, for instance, the Centre for Optimism.
So, for most of the population, positive thinking does work, and that’s why we have a project on grief and optimism. But one of our members, it is a mother whose son was killed in a car crash.
M: Yeah.
V: Another member at the Centre for Optimism is a woman who has conducted hundreds of funerals as the celebrant. And so, when we do our guide to grief and optimism, we say, look, you know the optimist when they’re comforting someone listens.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You know. And if the person says something positive, you help to reinforce it. If they say something negative, you listen to it. And there’s a brilliant book which has inspired lots of other authors in the last couple of years, and I recommend to all of your readers is Hans Rosling’s, Factfulness.
M: I haven’t read that one. It’s not on my bookshelf.
V: It’s F-a-c-t-f-u-l-n-e-s-s, and he’s really interesting. So, when he writes about journalists, he says, don’t be angry at journalists for writing negatively or pessimistically. It’s their lens. It’s their world frame, you know, they are sent out to catch a story that’s a gotcha.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: If it’s a prime minister or, you know, if it’s a drug scandal at a football club, you know it’s not the good stuff. And if I summarise his position, he says, most of us have a worldview that’s based on what our Grade four teacher taught us. So, when we think of world hunger, or we think of Ireland for instance, we did and hour of optimism on Ireland recently.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And you know, when I think of Ireland, you know, I think of the land that sent away millions of migrants to America and Australia from the potato famine or British colonial rule. And yet you know that Ireland is now number two on the United Nations Development Index. Right?
M: Laugh.
V: But it’s this red hot, high tech, egalitarian society, you know, we’re average lifespans have increased, you know, 30 years and absolutely fantastic country. But, you know, my stereotype of Ireland is still, you know, the Irish nuns.
M: Laugh.
V: You know, who left Ireland to come to Australia to teach us and the other person who really I love on this is Steven Pinker.
M: Yep.
V: The head of Psychology at Harvard, and I don’t remember what it was in his book, Enlightenment [Now], or one of his interviews. But he said, “Anyone who remembers a wonderful past has got a really short memory.”
M: Laugh
V: You know, you go back 100 years, and you look at infant mortality rates and, you know, women dying in childbirth and people even in Melbourne and Sydney, dying of cholera and waterborne diseases. And even we did an event the other day for Central Africa. Even if you look at the advances in Central Africa, all we see on the Australian News is someone being blown up or, you know, girls or boys being kidnapped from a school. But in fact, you know there are great centres of innovation and new tech in Lagos and Nairobi and great things happening.
M: Not everything is like the Simpsons portrays it, right?
P: I’m not a big fan of the Simpsons. I’m a simpler man. I’m a more you know, Mister Ed. And you know, my favourite book is still The Magic Far Away Tree, and The Enchanted Wood by Enid Blyton and kids should be studying humour to laugh, shouldn’t they?
M: Yeah.
V: They should be studying poetry, to love beautiful poetry. But we’ve now got… Critical analysis has almost replaced the Bible as the font for education.
M: I will throw in. There is another Melbourne based group called Future Crunch that I am such a fan of who tell the happy news. And I make sure that they’re part of my news cycle on a regular basis because they pull together for those out there who don’t know them. They pull together the best news around the world, the progress that we’re making and is so heart-warming to put that against the normal news that we read and see that we are making huge strides in so many areas of human rights and the environment, and that it’s not all doom and gloom.
V: Yeah, but everyone can do that. I mean, we had a Future Crunch of great friends of ours, and we’ve had them on our show. But everyone can be a Future Crunch.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: You know, if there’s something good happening in your workplace or in your neighbourhood, you don’t need to wait for the newspaper to publish it, take a photo or do a two-minute interview of the person.
We went out to a town called Kaniva, in the West Wimmera. And it’s a town that’s got so many things running against it, you know, it’s a highway town. They’ve had the shutdowns. They’ve been stuck with South Australian refugees who can’t get across the border, the last bank branch is closing, because there was no highway traffic. The favourite cafe is closing. But you know, Marie, I went door knocking in that town, and I asked people, what makes you optimistic? And they ended up getting kids to do little videos, two-minute videos of what makes them optimistic about Kaniva.
And then we were going to have a town dinner and I was to be the guest speaker and, of course, what happened in the soviet socialist state of Victoria. We got locked down. I couldn’t go and be the guest speaker. So, I said, “Well, I trust you guys. You do it.”
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And they had 12 locals as the guest speaker, and at the end of the dinner they declared themselves to be the most optimistic town in Australia.
M: I love that story, I really do.
V: Every person out there listening, make this your homework today, so I’ll jump ahead of your last question. So, I’ll give you another hint, Marie, because you’re an expert on this. But what I would love everyone to think about is change your greeting for one day. If it works, change it for a week.
So, in Australia, you say “Hello, how are you?” Or “G’day how are you?” 65% of people will say, “not bad…” or “not too bad.”
M: Laugh.
V: And of course, we never say ‘Oh my God, what’s wrong?’
M: Mmm hmm.
V: We just ignore it, you know, it’s a wasted question. Wasted answer. So, we’ve done this in prisons. We’ve done this in all sorts of organisations. Today, I’d like you to say, “G’day, what’s been the best thing in your day?” or if it’s Friday, “What’s been the best thing in your week?” or Monday, “What was the best thing on your weekend?”
Now your language will get it right. That’s my language, but it works. The other day I was in the supermarket. I have a beautiful orange mask Marie, that says, “what makes you optimistic?” And the lady behind the checkout counter said, what do you do? And I said I run the Centre for Optimism. And I said, why don’t you try this for the day?
M: Mmm hmm.
V: Well, she looked a bit doubtful, and I said, well, let’s try it with the people behind us. So, there was a mother and a daughter about 10 or so and I said, Look, we’re just experimenting, tell us what’s the best thing in your day so far? And the girl said, I got 82 for my test and the mother lit up and the other two queues lit up and the other check out people lit up. And then the teller I said, well, what was the test?
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And in fact, I actually heard the business coach of the All Blacks in a radio interview say, “Well, I’ve been plagiarising Victor Perton for the last year.”
M: Laugh.
V: And that’s exactly what he’d been plagiarising that every one of his customers knows that when he comes in, he doesn’t want to hear a tale of woe to start with. He wants to hear a story of hope and optimism and opportunity, and Disney has got some great research on this Marie, Disney, Coke, Nike. All of the customer research they’re doing shows that people are yearning for stories of hope and optimism.
So, when we come back to who’s the leader and who’s got to change? As Gandhi said, the only person I can change is myself. So, for each and every one of your listeners, just for the rest of today or tomorrow, get rid of ‘how are you?’ and try ‘what’s the best thing in your day?’ Now, the first time you ask it, people will stare at you.
M: Laugh!
V: Because it’s so out of sync, and it’s like an Australian trying to order at McDonald’s in Louisiana. You know, you look like them, but they don’t understand what you’re saying.
M: Laugh.
V: So, you might have to repeat it. You know, ‘what was the best thing in your day’ or modified a little, but 80% of the time people will then share a little story of hope and optimism with you. And it might be ‘I had a beautiful breakfast’, or ‘my daughter made me a cup of tea’ or ‘God isn’t the sunshine beautiful.’ And the interesting thing Marie, coming back to that toxic positivity stuff is, in fact, if something’s wrong, if they say f-ing nothing, then you know there’s a question you need to ask them to help them with their well-being and for you to do the right thing.
M: Yeah.
I will if you’ll permit me, ask you one last question. Which is what has made you optimistic this week? Since it is a Friday.
V: So, this week. Yesterday I was at the University of Melbourne working with the staff of one of the Colleges.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: And going around the circle and asking each and every one of them, ‘what makes you optimistic?’ As you can imagine, there was one beautiful psychologist there who said, “Oh, this is a very difficult question.”
M: Laugh.
V: And we went through this, and it was just beautiful. And then the night before that, the Saint Ives Rotary meeting. And you know, there was one 85-year-old guy and he just lit up and he said, “Oh, Victor. You’ve made me more optimistic with the scientific evidence you’ve given me on the value of optimism. I’m 85, I now know I’ve got another at least seven years of optimistic living.
M: Laugh.
V: So, for me, it’s asking that question. What makes you optimistic? And I ask at least one person every day, whether it’s a President or a Prime Minister or women digging ditches in India.
M: Yeah.
V: And so, if your listeners want to do something that they will find quite interesting is, you know when you’re lying on the pillow tonight next to your partner or you’re at the dinner table, ask them what makes them optimistic, and they may stare at you at first, so you might have to define it for them.
M: Mmm hmm.
V: So, optimism is a belief that good things will happen and that things will work out in the end. And, of course, if your relative is a John Lennon fan, you can say John Lennon said,
M: Mmm hmm.
V: But optimism is not, everything is rosy, everything is fantastic. Optimism is belief that things will work out in the end. And Marie, for those of you, are for your listeners who are students of history. There’s this wonderful Woman who lived through the black plague called Mother Julian of Norwich and she was an English mystic. And her book is said to be the oldest surviving book in English by a woman, called the Revelations. But in it is a famous phrase, ‘All shall be well, all shall be well, all manner of things shall be well.’
V: And that has spawned poetry and music. So, if there’s one thing people remember from this rich conversation, Marie is:
M: I think that’s the perfect end to this fabulous conversation. Thank you so much for your time, Victor.
V: Thanks, Marie.
[Happy exit music – background]
M: Thanks for joining us today if you want to hear more, please remember to subscribe and like this podcast and remember you can find us at www.marieskelton.com, where you can also send in questions or propose a topic.
P: And if you like our little show, we would absolutely love for you to leave a comment or rating to help us out.
M: Until next time.
M & P: Choose happiness.
[Exit music fadeout]
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by Marie

When I first started exploring the world of positive psychology, I admit I was a huge cynic. I didn’t understand the science behind the bright t-shirt slogans that yelled “Choose Happiness!” and I railed against ‘toxic positivity’ and perceived band aid solutions to deep mental health issues.
Years later, after interviewing dozens of global experts and reading countless peer-reviewed research articles, after studying and gaining certifications, and after podcasting and writing on the topic of happiness every week, I admit there are some topics that still make me sceptical. Granted, the list is quite short now, and although these truly are scientifically proven to increase life satisfaction, when it comes to meditation, mindset exercises and positive affirmations, they’re just not for me.
Having said that, as an author and blogger, I cannot deny the power of writing or journaling. Writing helped me to not only recover from depression and trauma. It also helped me discover the power of positive psychology and a love of life. That’s why I’m happy to be exploring the Best Possible Self exercise this week, one of the most widely used Positive Psychology Interventions – even though it really boils down to being a mindset exercise but in long-form writing. But as with all topics on this site, it is science-backed and has been proven to help people be more optimistic and achieve a happier, healthier life. So, read on!
Time and time again, the personality trait of optimism has been shown to increase wellbeing, leading to greater physical wellbeing and even longevity. Optimists are happy people, who look forward to the future, and believe things will work out. That’s not to say that bad things don’t happen to them or that they don’t feel the appropriate negative feelings – like sadness, frustration or anger – because that is a natural and healthy response when things go wrong. Instead, optimists have a level of resilience that allows them to work through their feelings and move forward quickly.
“Everything will be okay in the end. If it’s not okay, it’s not the end.” – John Lennon
So, if optimism has so many benefits, then wouldn’t it be great if you could learn it? Well, you can. All it takes is the Best Possible Self exercise, which many researchers have studied and determined it can positively impact people’s mindset and increase optimism – leading to higher levels of mental and physical wellbeing.
In one study, researchers asked participants to write about their best self across personal, relational, and professional dimensions for five minutes a day, over two weeks. They then measured the effects on optimism and mood after one day, one week and two weeks. The results showed that participants had significantly larger increases in optimism compared to people who simply wrote about daily activities, both after only one session and over two weeks.
A second study, led by Sonja Lyubomirsky and colleagues, lasted four weeks and played with some factors to see what might detract from or amplify the results. Not surprisingly, the study supported previous research validating that the BPS exercise significantly boosted positive affect and flow. Additionally, they found that there was no difference in results when completing the exercise online versus in-person. However, students who read a testimonial about the benefits of BPS had the best gains in wellbeing compared to those who read neutral information or completed a control task. “The results lend legitimacy to online self-administered happiness-increasing activities and highlight the importance of participants’ beliefs in the efficacy of such activities for optimum results,” said the researchers.
Convinced? Let’s get started!

Time: 10-15 mins per day for 2 weeks
What you need: Pen and paper or journal
This is a simple exercise that can have profound impacts. All you need to do is set aside 10-15 minutes a day for two weeks. Find somewhere quiet or peaceful to sit and write continuously about your imagined best possible future. Let all ideas come freely, don’t sensor anything… even bad grammar or spelling. Let it all out on paper.
STEP 1: Block some time in your diary or calendar to dedicate to this activity over a 2-week period (or more). Lock it in so it happens!
STEP 2: Decide how to organise what you want to write about. You can try social, health, academic and career, or personal, relational, and professional, or come up with your own dimensions.
STEP 3: Sit somewhere quiet and distraction free. Set a timer for 10-15 minutes.
STEP 4: Write on paper about your realistic best possible future self for each category. Imagine that you are happy and have all you want. You have worked hard, opportunities have presented themselves, and you have taken them. You have achieved all that you imagined possible. Think about the steps that would be needed to get there, and how you would feel making that positive progress. When painting your ideal future, be as specific as you can. Who would be there with you? What would you be doing? How would you do it? What would you see, hear, taste, smell? Be descriptive and imaginative and really put yourself into a day in the life of your best possible future self.
STEP 5: Repeat the exercise the next day, and the next, and the next. Stick with it for at least 2 weeks.
Be realistic: You may be tempted to write about a future in which you win the lottery or marry your (already married) high-school sweetheart. Be careful to be realistic about your best possible future self. If you spend too much time wanting something that simply cannot happen, then it can often have negative mental health impacts.
Focus on the future: Similarly, make sure you stay focused on the future. Another trap is to spend too much time worrying about what you did or didn’t do in the past that will prevent your best possible future self from being realised.
That’s it. Happy writing!
King, A. (2001). The health benefits of writing about life goals. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 27, 798-807.
Layous, K., Nelson, S. K., & Lyubomirsky, S. (2013). What is the optimal way to deliver a positive activity intervention? The case of writing about one’s best possible selves. Journal of Happiness Studies, 14(2), 635-654.
Meevissen, Y., Alberts H., & Peters, M. (2011). Become more optimistic by imagining a best possible self: Effects of a two-week intervention. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 42, 371-378
Carrillo, A., Rubio-Aparicio, M., Molinari, G., Enrique, Á., Sánchez-Meca, J., & Baños, R. M. (2019). Effects of the Best Possible Self intervention: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PloS one, 14(9).
by Marie
Join Marie and Pete as they discuss being your Best Possible Self and the exercise that may be your key to happiness.
King, A. (2001). The health benefits of writing about life goals. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 27, 798-807.
Layous, K., Nelson, S. K., & Lyubomirsky, S. (2013). What is the optimal way to deliver a positive activity intervention? The case of writing about one’s best possible selves. Journal of Happiness Studies, 14(2), 635-654.
Meevissen, Y., Alberts H., & Peters, M. (2011). Become more optimistic by imagining a best possible self: Effects of a two-week intervention. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 42, 371-378
Carrillo, A., Rubio-Aparicio, M., Molinari, G., Enrique, Á., Sánchez-Meca, J., & Baños, R. M. (2019). Effects of the Best Possible Self intervention: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PloS one, 14(9).
Who Made the First Calendar? Historians believe timekeeping goes as far back as the Neolithic period, but actual calendars weren’t around until the Bronze Age in 3100 BC. The Sumerians in Mesopotamia made the very first calendar, which divided a year into 12 lunar months, each consisting of 29 or 30 days.
[Happy intro music -background]
M: Welcome to happiness for cynics and thanks for joining us as we explore all the things I wish I’d known earlier in life but didn’t.
P: This podcast is about how to live the good life. Whether we’re talking about a new study or the latest news or eastern philosophy, our show is all about discovering what makes people happy.
M: So, if you’re like me and you want more out of life, listen in and more importantly, buy in because I guarantee if you do, the science of happiness can change your life.
P: Plus, sometimes I think we’re kind of funny.
[Intro music fadeout]
M: Happy New Year!
P: Happy 2022! Woo, woo, woot!
M: Laugh.
P: I’m sure there’s something numerical about 2022 that’s going to be fabulous really. 2-0-2-2. What is that? that’s 2 and two 2’s are 4 and it’s 6… but it’s all 2’s, tea for two?
M: Laugh, we’re starting the year on a high here.
P: Laugh. Tea for two, there we go, it’ll be teatime. Laugh.
M: I never asked, have you been drinking Pete? Laugh.
P: …Maybe. No, I haven’t. I’ve been working all day. I’ve had a very busy day, but that’s good for the new year.
M: Yes, it is.
P: Yes, in honour of the God Janice.
M: …Wah??
P: The New Year was started by Caesar in 45 B.C. It was the first New Year’s Day.
It was named January in honour of the God Janice, who has two heads, one looking forward and one looking backward.
M: Ahh…
P: Which is why New Year is such a great time to project and look forward to what is to come but also reflect and look back on what was.
[Starts talking in an ethereal prophetic voice]
And use that as a launching pad to launch yourself forward into your new domain and [voice better louder] New dominion as ruler of the world!
M & P: Laughter!
M: All right, on that note.
P: Laugh.
M: We are here today –
P: Still Laughing.
M: – to look forward.
P: Look forward. How cool it be, though, to go, “Meh, don’t like this calendar. I’m going to make a new one. Everybody, you gotta start on this. We could have 364 days.”
Everyone: “It doesn’t work.”
P: “Oh, all right, all right. I’ll do a quarter day every year.” Laugh.
M: That kind of was probably the first calendar that was built on a bit of science. Astronomy?
P: Mmm. I don’t know, but I’ll give it to you.
M: Well, it must have been, because they got it kind of right, didn’t they?
P: Yeah.
M: We’re just guessing here now.
P: Yeah.
M: We’re just having a conversation.
P: Yeah, but 45 B.C. that’s yeah… But apparently the New Year’s Day goes back 4000 years.
M: Oh.
P: So, there were, ancient Egyptians used to celebrate a New Year’s Day. So, it wasn’t the Romans.
M: Well, a lot of other cultures, non-Western cultures, have this idea of cyclic time and things happening around seasons. And obviously there was collecting of grains and seeds.
P: Harvesting.
M: …Well, harvesting kind of requires a little bit more organisation rather than just gathering.
P: Laugh, yeah.
M: But you would have an idea of the seasons, definitely.
P: Hmm.
M: So, that cyclical idea of time, I think –
P: – was always present in ancient cultures? Yes.
M: I think in some way, particularly in Eastern culture and the cultures that believe in reincarnation or the ecosystems and everything coming and going, but just being movements of energy.
P: So, the hippies had it right. The celestial dancers were onto something. Let’s get naked in the full moonlight.
M: Laugh. So, what we’re talking about today really is a good time of year to be looking at. We’re talking about ‘Best Possible Self’, activity or exercise, and this is probably one of the most popular, or most prescribed or widely used positive psychology interventions.
P: Oh, what is it, Marie? What is it? What is it? What is it? Tell me. Tell me now!
M: Laugh. So, uh, okay. We’ll get there, we’ll get there. We’ve got 20 minutes.
P: I can’t handle the suspense!
M: Laugh. And so, the ‘Best Possible Self’. You can probably already kind of guess where we’re going with this. This is one of those topics that is really borderline for me, though.
P: Oh, oh we love that because you sort of sit there and get a little twinkle in your eye and you start twitching.
M: Laugh.
P: I can do this, really I can grr, grr, grr.
M: There are few things in my journey of self-discovery, when it comes to positive psychology, that I’m still really on the fence about.
P: Laugh.
M: So, meditation.
P: Yeah, we know. Laugh.
M: Mindfulness exercises and positive affirmations are probably three of the ones that we’ve discussed in the past that I’m like, eh?
P: So, is ‘Best Positive Self’ a positive affirmation? Or is this something slightly different?
M: It’s along the same lines as positive affirmations.
P: Mmm.
M: Definitely, mindset exercise and coming back to new year – new you. A lot of people are setting new year’s resolutions.
P: Yep
M: By this point in the year, a lot of people have given up on their new year’s resolutions.
P: Laugh! I’ll start again next week. It’s fine.
M: Laugh. And maybe you did set some new year’s resolutions that you haven’t been able to keep for a variety of reasons. A lot of us do that. And maybe you’re looking for something to replace that already in week three of January as we kick off our year.
P: Mmm.
M: And maybe ‘Best Possible Self’ is a new activity that you might be able to stick with.
P: Okay, okay, let’s dive in. What are we doing?
M: Essentially, it’s a mindset exercise, but it’s in writing.
P: Ok.
M: So, pretty much what we’re trying to do is increase optimism.
P: Oh, okay. Yep.
M: As a personality trait, optimism has been shown to increase well-being and leads to greater physical well-being and longevity.
P: Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes, that’s been proven heaps. And it is so obvious. Happier people get better stuff.
M: Yep.
P & M: Laugh.
P: Scientific language there.
M: And they don’t die.
P & M: Laugh!
M: Okay, well, they do. Everybody dies.
P: They do, yep.
M: Taxes, they get taxed too, but they’re happy about it.
P: Laugh.
M: So… laugh.
M: So, optimists are people who look forward to the future and believe things will work out. So, there’s a great quote often attributed to [John] Lennon, which is,
“Everything will be OK in the end. If it’s not okay, it’s not the end.”
P: Oh, I like that. Oh, that’s great, I’m going to put that on my wall. Laugh.
M: And it’s very much the mantra of optimists. So just because you’re an optimist doesn’t mean that you are practising toxic positivity.
P: Eeuggh, yeah.
M: It’s important to make this distinction, and a lot of people who don’t understand past the T-shirt slogan, like to throw this at psychologists and researchers.
P: Yep, yep.
M: But what we’re saying here is that it doesn’t mean that bad things don’t happen to optimists or that they don’t feel the appropriate negative feelings.
P: Mmm. When necessary, yeah.
M: Like sadness or frustration or anger, because that’s natural and healthy when things go wrong.
P: Yes.
M: Instead, optimists have a level of resilience that allows them to work through their feelings and move forward quickly.
P: Quickly being the operative word?
M: It allows them to move through and out the other side.
P: Mmm.
M: Now, sometimes some things take longer.
P: Mmm, yep. Major life events.
M: And some things will always impact you forever more. Definitely. People who are dealing with grief, a lot of them would say they’ll never be the same.
P: Yep.
M: And that’s fair and fine.
P: Mmm.
M: But people who are optimists will find a way to keep living and to work through that.
P: Yes.
M: And move forward often quicker, I won’t say quicker, but in a more constructive way. They won’t get stuck.
P: And it’s more than just looking for the positive, isn’t it? When you’re an optimist, it’s not about looking at the glass half full.
M: It is. It’s about that resilience as well.
P: Yeah.
M: So, when things go bad, you know how to process it.
P: Yep.
M: So, that comes with a certain level of EQ or emotional intelligence,
P: Yes.
M: that is needed in order to move through that. So, the most optimistic person with no emotional intelligence would still probably hit a roadblock.
P: Yeah.
M: That’s where you bury things rather than process.
P: Yes, yes, yes.
M: But you need both. But with both the world is your oyster. All the research shows that you’re going to have a far more successful life. You’ll earn more, you’ll amass more wealth, which is not a measure of happiness. But who’s going to say no to more money.
P: Laugh, true. Is it because it enables you to do other things?
M: Exactly. You’ll have more friends, and deeper friendships with friends. You’re more likely to get married, have successful relationships. All of the stuff that we’ve discussed on this show.
P: Yeah.
M: So, optimism is worth striving for.
P: Mmm.
M: Now, what we’re talking about here with ‘Best Possible Self’ is a way to learn optimism.
P: Ooh. Get your study hats on people. Red pencils and blue biros out please.
M & P: Laugh.
M: [whispers] We don’t use red pens anymore, that’s seen as negative.
P: Oh, but aren’t we hardwired to focus on the negative? I confused!
M: We are. So, we want blue pen or… anyway, that’s a whole other thing.
P: Just give me a box of crayons, I’m ready.
M & P: Laugh.
M: So, the great news is that research has shown ever since, way back in 2001, there was a study by… King. Mr King.
P: Mr King, laugh.
M: Of ‘The health benefits of writing about life goals, personality and social psychology.’
P: Oh, okay.
M: So, all the way back in 2001, was probably one of the first articles about this. And since then, quite a few people, including our one of our favourites, Sonja Lyubomirsky, has looked into it.
P: Yes.
M: And all of them are finding that this ‘Best Possible Self’ exercise, which really focuses on increasing positive mindset and optimism, is beneficial and works.
P: Okay.
M: So.
P: Laugh, so do it people.
M & P: Laugh.
M: So, let’s dive into some of those studies. So, in one study researchers asked participants to write about their best self across three different dimensions. Personal, relational, and professional for five minutes a day over two weeks.
P: That’s, yeah.
M: Anyone can do that.
P: It’s surprisingly hard to do five minutes of that intense reflection. Like that’s challenging for a lot of people. It’s shining –
M: Even if it’s across three different areas?
P: Yeah.
M: It’s kind of like meditation, right? The first time you do, you might stare out the window for four minutes and go, aahhh!
P: Laugh.
M: And then have 60 seconds of really intense writing.
P: But it is a training exercise, and that’s why I think what they’re saying here is that it’s not enough to do it just once a week. It has to be consistent over two weeks to get these effects, yes?
M: Yep, but only five minutes a day. That’s so doable. The busiest of busy people can normally fit five minutes into their day. But the one thing I’d say do not forget to schedule in downtime and rest so important. And that doesn’t mean just eight hours of sleep.
P: Oh no, no, no, no. It’s like, you gotta have your hour of you time.
M: Yep. So, five minutes a day over two weeks. And then the researchers measured the effects on optimism and mood after one day, one week and two weeks. And the results showed that participants had significantly larger increases in optimism compared to the people who simply wrote about daily activities.
P: Ok.
M: And the best part is they saw that both after only one session and over two weeks. So, it only takes one session of writing and thinking about ‘what could my best future look like’ to have profound impacts on your day.
P: Mmm. It’s the same thing with self-talk. If you’re always going ‘Oh, the sky is grey, the cat is black, you know, the toilet’s not clean.’ Laugh.
M: Laugh.
P: You’re constantly reinforcing that, that down.
M: Eeyore.
P: The Eeyore moment, exactly. A.A. Milne had it right, laugh.
M: All right, so that was the first study. The second study, again there are many, many studies, and we’ll put a few of them in the show notes for you. If you’re interested in the real science, the hard science.
P: Laugh.
M: Which I hope some of you are, cause otherwise I’m talking to no one, laugh.
P: [Whispers] Don’t trust us, we don’t know what we’re talking about. Laugh.
M: So, the second study was led by Sonja Lyubomirsky.
P: Ah, Sonja, we love her.
M: And this one lasted four weeks, and they played with a variety of factors to see what might increase optimism even more, or what might detract from the exercise. So, a couple of things they did… So, not surprisingly, in the study it supported previous research that validated the ‘Best Possible Self’ exercise. It significantly boosted affect, positive affect, and flow. And, of course, flow is something we’ve also spoken about before.
P: Yep.
M: But sitting down and writing is a great way to finding flow.
P: Accessing that really beautiful spot where everything just happens.
M: Yep, so additionally, though, they found… They got some people to do this exercise online and other people to do it in person.
P: Online, as in writing it down online.
M: Yes.
P: Oh, okay.
M: And we’ve spoken before about the difference between handwriting and typing.
P: Yes.
M: What they found for this exercise was there’s no difference in results when completing the exercise online versus in person.
P: Oh! That means there’s no excuses.
M: No excuses. And then the other thing they looked at was how pre-positioning the exercise might impact on outcome. So, students who were at a testimonial about the benefits of ‘Best Possible Self’ had the best gains and well-being compared to those who read neutral information about a control task. They say –
P: Setting them up for success?
M: – the results lend legitimacy to online self-administered happiness, increasing activities and highlight the importance of participants belief in the efficacy of such activities for optimal results. So, you can’t come in being a sceptic –
P: Mmm, yeah.
M: – for all you cynics, you’ve got to understand the science, understand why this impacts your brain and how in a way we say you’re tricking your brain. But really, what you’re doing is retraining.
P: I think training is a better word. Yeah, I like that word when you’re talking about changing things up.
M: And when you understand that that’s how this works and that there is science behind it, and you go do it yourself then you see the benefits.
P: Mmm, yeah. The brain is easily… it’s not easily manipulated, but we can manipulate it.
M: Yes.
P: We can project. And that projection factor. It’s not hippie nonsense and poppycock.
M: We can adjust.
P: Yeah.
M: We can adjust for that negative bias.
P: Yeah, definitely. It’s looking for the red car when you buy a red car and all of a sudden you see red cars, you put it out there in front of you and I think that’s the underlying principle of this.
M: Mmm hmm.
P: If you actually write it down, what your best possible self is when someone says to you, “What do you want to be?” You’re like, “I want to be a fireman!” because you thought about it. You’ve imagined it. You’ve imagined yourself in that outfit with the great calendar and the puppy dog and yeah, the big truck that goes ‘Beep, beep!’ Who doesn’t want to be a fireman?
M: Be a fireman? Or be with a fireman?
P: Laugh.
M: Alright, so how do we do the Best Possible Self?
P: Oh, here we go. Now we’ve got to the work people.
M: You’ve got to do the work. The good news is it’s really simple. All you need is a pen and a paper or a journal.
P: Ok.
M: And I’m going to bump it up to about 10 to 15 minutes.
P: Oh! Quelle dommage.
M: For just two weeks. So, the Lyubomirsky study, was a four week study and they went, I think, all the way up to 15 minutes.
P: Ok.
M: The first study we mentioned was five minutes for two weeks. I’m going to kind of go somewhere in between, two weeks and say, let’s put some time, 10 minutes, put 10 minutes into it.
P: Ok.
M: So, simple exercise with profound impacts. Find somewhere quiet or peaceful to sit and write continuously about your imagined, best possible future. You want to let all ideas come freely, Don’t sensor anything.
P: Mmm.
M: And don’t even worry about grammar or spelling. Just let it all out.
P: Yes, I bought it.
M: You wanna. You wanna let that flow find you.
P: Yep.
M: So, the first thing to do is step one, block sometime in your diary or calendar to dedicate to this activity over the period you’re going to do it. Lock it in so it happens.
P: Mmm.
M: If you don’t have the alarm going off or the reminder reminding you, it won’t become a habit and you’ll forget.
P: You’ll forget.
M: Plain and simple.
P: Yep.
M: So, lock it into your diary and set a reminder on your phone. Secondly, decide how you want to organise what you want to write about. So you could try, like Lyubomirsky’s study, four different areas, which are social, health, academic and career.
P: Mmm hmm.
M: Some people may not have a career. There might be students. Some people may not have an academic life, they’re just working.
P: Yep, it could be anything.
M: Yeah.
P: It could be losing weight. It could be eating better.
M: Well, social and health would probably cover those as well. So, find what works for you. The three from the first study were personal, relational and professional.
P: Ok.
M: So, group what you’re going to write about so that you can consistently right about these things over time and dig into them. Or you can come up with your own dimensions, as you mentioned. All right, so group them and then sit somewhere quiet, distraction free and set your time of 10 to 15 minutes. So, what you want to do is write about your realistic, best possible future self for each category.
P: Ok.
M: So, imagine that you’re happy and have all that you want in your social category, right? So, what does it look like to have the friends and the family that you want to have the interactions that you want to have? You’ve worked hard, opportunities have presented themselves and you’ve taken them.
P: Mmm.
M: So, you’ve achieved all that you imagined possible. So, think about the steps that would be needed to get there. How you would feel making that positive progress.
P: These are good things to write down on a white board or something, so that if you are finding yourself stuck in this righting moment, you’ve got those little prompts to platform launch you into more writing. If you’re getting stuck, that might be a really good idea.
M: Just remember to be specific as you can. Who would be there with you? What would you be doing? How would you be doing it? What would you see? Hear? Taste, Smell?
P: Yep.
M: Be descriptive and imaginative. And really put yourself into a day in the life of your best possible future self. And it might change over time. So, what you write about on day one may not be the future that you land on.
P: Mmm. That’ll be interesting to see.
M: But you want to be as specific and imaginative and descriptive as possible. Now, you then repeat the exercise the next day and the next and the next, and stick with it for at least two weeks. That’s it.
P: Okay.
M: Before we go, though, two things I just want to call out about what we just spoke about. The first one was a realistic, best possible self. So, you might be tempted to write about a future in which you win the lottery or marry your already married high school sweetheart.
P: Laugh.
M: Well, that ain’t going to happen, right?
P & M: Laugh.
M: So be careful to be realistic about your best possible future self. If you spend too much time wanting something that simply cannot happen. Then that can often have the opposite effect. It can have a negative mental health impact.
P: Yeah, right. Cause it’s unattainable.
M: It’s wishing.
P: And then [you think], ‘I’ll never be good enough.’ Yeah, and all that negativity comes back.
M: You know, ‘I wish I had gone to university. Maybe my life would be better.’ That type of thinking is not going to help you in the slightest. And in fact, it’s going to make you feel worse.
P: Yeah, yeah.
M: So, realism, realistic expectations and realistic, best possible future self is really important. And then the second thing is focusing on the future. So again, just like before, you don’t want to be thinking, ‘I wish I’d gone to university. My life would have been so much better if I had.’ You want to be thinking about the future. So, another trap is to spend too much time worrying about what you did or didn’t do in the past.
P: Yeah.
M: That will prevent your best possible future self from being realised. Again, where are you now? Where could you get to in the future? And then it’s about setting the goal so that hopefully at some stage you start actually taking steps to get there.
P: Towards it, yeah. Projection.
M: Mmm hmm. Yeah, so that’s it. Be realistic. Focus on the future and then paint your life the way you think it.
P: Laugh. [Singing] You can paint with all the colours of the wind. Laugh.
M: And hopefully then you realise your best possible future self. And don’t forget to do it every year or two because our goals and dreams and wants change over time.
P: True, yeah. I like it, I’m all enthused now. I think I’m gonna get my ‘Best Possible Self’, my BPS book.
M: Good topic for the 1st…
P: Kick off 2022.
M: Definitely and we have some great guests coming up as well on the show. So, changing the format a little this year.
P: Woo hoo!
M: Yes. So, I hope you tune in, share it with your friends and we’ll see you next week.
P: Have a happy week
[Happy exit music – background]
M: Thanks for joining us today if you want to hear more, please remember to subscribe and like this podcast and remember you can find us at www.marieskelton.com, where you can also send in questions or propose a topic.
P: And if you like our little show, we would absolutely love for you to leave a comment or rating to help us out.
M: Until next time.
M & P: Choose happiness.
[Exit music fadeout]
Please note that I get a small commission if you buy something from my site. Your support helps to keep this site going at no additional cost to you. Thanks!
by Marie
This week Marie and Pete talk about finding your flow and the wonderful benefits it can give you on your journey to true happiness.
[Happy intro music -background]
M: Welcome to happiness for cynics and thanks for joining us as we explore all the things I wish I’d known earlier in life but didn’t.
P: This podcast is about how to live the good life. Whether we’re talking about a new study or the latest news or eastern philosophy, our show is all about discovering what makes people happy.
M: So, if you’re like me and you want more out of life, listen in and more importantly, buy in because I guarantee if you do, the science of happiness can change your life.
P: Plus, sometimes I think we’re kind of funny.
[Intro music fadeout]
M: Welcome back.
P: I’m in a recumbent position and I’m not moving.
M: Laugh. Pete’s sitting, his legs crossed and his arm above his head.
P: I’ve been told that I’m not allowed to move because I make too much noise, laugh!
M: He does, our poor production people.
P: Laugh!
M: Person, sorry.
P: Yeah, we have a team.
M & P: Laughter.
M: Yes, Pete has a habit of scratching furiously –
P: Laugh.
M: – jingling his bracelets, clicking his fingers.
P: Laugh, I just like to express myself every now and then get myself into a mode and I like to let everybody know how I’m feeling.
M: Laugh. And by every now and then, you mean every two minutes.
P: If you’re wondering what we’re talking about. We’re talking about how to do a radio interview properly and how you have to sit with your hands on the table feet apart.
M: You should plant yourself in a position where – See he’s already just running his hands over his leg. Laugh.
P: I like touching things I can’t help it!
M & P: Laughter!
M: Very tactile, laugh.
P: You want people to be relaxed and be able to respond during an interview. So, for those of us who are more physically inclined.
M: Then we’d probably get you to stand in front of a mic that’s fixed.
P: Ahh…
M: So that you can’t touch things or bang things –
P: That wouldn’t work for me. Laugh.
M: – or just stay put! Well, for those of you who listen to our show, we hope you find the [background noise] …noise that is constant. Laugh. Pete just dropped a pillow.
P: Laugh. I did not!
M: We hope you find it charming, not amateurish.
P: Laugh, it’s something new every week that people can enjoy.
M: Laugh. All right, well, today we are actually exploring our full range of emotions, and it is not such a happy day today because we are sad to say that Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi has passed away at the age of 87.
P: Mmm hmm.
M: So, he’s a Hungarian-American psychologist, and we started out really early by looking at his work on flow, didn’t we, Pete?
P: Mmm. He was the first person that I remembered because I had to remember his name.
M: Laugh.
P: Had to learn how to say it.
M: We spent a lot of time drilling in Csikszentmihalyi, Csikszentmihalyi, Csikszentmihalyi.
P: Laugh.
M: And for those of you who you think that’s only four syllables, I think there’s like 20 letters, though. [16 letters]
P: Yeah, there was an alphabet.
M: Laugh.
Csikszentmihalyi was Hungarian-American, and he was known for his work in the study of happiness and creativity. He was really a pioneer in the positive psychology space, and in particular he introduced flow theory in the seventies, and he defined flow as a state of mind attained when one becomes fully immersed in an activity.
P: He was a real ground breaker, though I can’t imagine many people in the seventies who weren’t living in communes and going around and burning their bras.
M: Remember, he came from Hungary to the States in 1956.
P: Mmm.
M: So, he would have been living through World War II prior to that.
P: Yeah. It makes his ideas and his brain even more amazing.
M: Absolutely.
P: Chicago’s a pretty, pretty liberal kind of place. It has got some great minds and some really broad thinking people there.
M: Yep.
P: But in the seventies, he was in San Francisco. This person would have gone around going, “I want to talk about flow.” Laugh. Can you imagine what these academics?
M: Laugh.
P: I mean, this is exactly what the podcast is about. It’s about the cynical brain, and I just think someone who is that ground breaking, who could go, “I’m going to explore this and I’m going to pursue it with research.”
M: Mmm hmm.
P: That’s amazing conviction.
M: I think that a lot of people, you know, Viktor Frankl is another great example of someone who, so he wrote Man’s Search for Meaning and he spent a lot of his time researching what makes people happy and he lived through the camps.
P: Yeah, mmm.
M: So, I think Csikszentmihalyi – Pete’s changing chairs.
P & M: Laugh.
M: His knees are cracking.
P & M: Laugh.
M: Now Csikszentmihalyi, I don’t believe it was in the camps, but I do believe he was [affected].
P: Mmm.
M: He lived through World War II and was definitely impacted by it. And I think that led a lot of people to want to study psychology.
P: And the meanings and reasons behind why people behave in a certain way, yes.
M: And what matters in life. Just like over the last 18 months, a lot of people around the world during the pandemic have reassessed their lives and what is and isn’t important.
P: Mmm, yes. Hugely.
M: Yeah, so whereas you and I have planted gardens, Csikszentmihalyi dedicated his life to helping other people understand what brings happiness. He developed this theory of flow and received a lot of awards and an external recognition for that and spent a lot of time in universities teaching others about how to live life.
P: Mmm, yeah again that would have been a ground-breaking area of development.
M: And the field of positive psychology was really new then.
P: Yeah, yeah, certainly in it’s infancy.
M: And he was not only a pioneer in flow, but more broadly positive psychology and really helped the movement gain traction more broadly and with the public.
P: Yeah, yeah. So, for those who may not have heard our previous episode on this. Marie, what is flow?
M: Flow.
P: Yeah.
M: Flow, F – L – O – W, not Flo down the road.
P: Laugh. She makes the best pumpkin scones, I swear.
M: Laugh. Or not ‘flow’s come to town.’
P: Laugh.
M: Which is such an Aussie –
P: Laugh.
M: – saying. I’m not going to explain for our overseas listeners –
P: Laugh!
M: – what that means.
P: Laugh. Australian colloquialisms.
M: Let’s just say it happens once a month for most women.
P: Laugh.
M: So, what it [flow] means is that you’re completely focused on the task at hand, to the point that you forget about yourself and others and about the world around you.
P: Mmm.
M: So, you might lose track of time. But it doesn’t matter because you’re so engrossed in your activity and so happy in the moment.
P: Mmm. We’ve talked about it being a state of presence and a real mindfulness.
M: It’s this weird dichotomy where you’re so in the moment that you’re unaware of what’s happening around you.
P: Yes.
M: So, I’ve got a quote here from Csikszentmihalyi. So, he says,
P: So, it’s those things that you remember when you’re reflecting on something from 10 years ago or when you’re maybe in a stressful situation and you’re recalling that ‘No, I’m sure I can do this, I remember back in 1982 when I did that’, and I was in that moment. Is that kind of what flow does? It makes, it builds a little bit of resilience maybe it builds a little bit of a marker for us to rely on in future times?
M: I guess it does in the sense that if you’re looking at not giving up.
P: Mmm.
M: Or using your passion to dedicate time to building skills or depth of understanding, I guess from that point of view you could use it. But I think more than that, it’s the pleasure it brings in the moment. Just like mindfulness has been proven scientifically to help with happiness levels. It’s about being deeply engrossed in something and flow, similar to meditation, has the same types of impacts on the brain.
P: Mmm.
M: The same types of positive impacts and visualisation during flow can give similar results to when people are meditating. So, really, it’s about creating an environment where you can just follow your passion down a rabbit hole.
P: Laugh, be like Alice!
M & P: Laugh!
P: Follow the White Rabbit.
M: Exactly, follow the white rabbit and come out the other side, and you’ll feel proud and satisfied of what you’ve done that day versus eight hours on the couch Netflixing.
P: Mmm.
M: Which as Csikszentmihalyi says here can also be enjoyable.
P: Right, but in a different way?
M: Exactly. Or, you know, if you’ve worked really hard for a holiday and you just want to lay on the beach for a few days, that can be a good experience, and definitely we need that kind of rest as we’ve discussed before.
P: Yep.
M: But flow is a different type of… I won’t say rest, but it can be equally as satisfying and equally as positive to your mental health.
P: It’s kind of like a way of tapping into that well spring of positivity. For those who are maybe a little bit obsessive compulsive or much more active people, people like yourself who might struggle with meditation. This is another way of accessing those benefits.
M: Yeah.
P: In a very different format. You can be as neurotic as you want about getting the grout out of the bathroom if you really want to if that’s your flow.
M: Mmm hmm.
P: It’s much more in touch with… mindfulness with activity? Is that a fair call?
M: Yeah, I’d say so. And it’s about also achieving things. So many people read Marie Kondo’s book or watched her on Netflix and got to packing their T shirts in those little tepee things in the drawers.
P: Laugh.
M: You know what I’m talking about, laugh. I know you do.
P: Laugh!
M: And you know that was lockdown activity number one. Let’s go through and spring clean and de-clutter everything. And a lot of people really took a lot of satisfaction from spring cleaning their places during lockdown.
P: Yep.
M: So absolutely, you can apply it to many different things.
P: Laughter!
M: For me, it’s writing so I can start writing and look up hours later and the sun has gone down.
P: Yeah. When you’re in that moment, and it’s kind of really special because it doesn’t happen very easily. It doesn’t happen all the time, not every time do you sit down to write does it happen. It’s got to be –
M: Sadly, no.
P & M: Laugh.
P: – the right atmosphere, the sun is going to be in the right position, you know a butterfly has to have flapped its wings in Tokyo.
M: Mmm hmm, laugh.
P: You know. All that sort of stuff, laugh.
M: And there’s a great quote by Margaret Thatcher, and she says,
P: Mmm.
M: So, it’s like the satisfaction of ticking that last item off your to do list and then closing your laptop down on a Friday afternoon.
P: Yes, laugh.
M: Being like, ‘Yes! it’s the weekend.’
P: Laugh, it’s 5:03.
M: Laugh. Eh… Four o’clock.
P & M: Laugh!
M: Now, I’ll watch some Ted talks, laugh. Hang out here till the boss isn’t watching.
P & M: Laugh.
P: They’ve already been down at the pub for three hours.
M: Laugh! So, really, what we’re talking about. And, we mentioned this, I think it was episode five that we first talked about flow.
P: Yes, it was right at the beginning.
M: Yes, before you were studying and we’re throwing out scientific terms at us, left, right and centre.
P: Laugh.
M: We discussed the default Mode Network, or DMN.
P: Yes.
M: Where all your autopilot/default activities happen.
P: Yeah.
M: And so, to explain that term before we move on. So, as kids, everything is new and we’re constantly learning. And as we get older, things become more of the same, and as a result, our brains don’t need to try as hard.
P: Yes.
M: And they instead operate in the default mode network. So that’s when you’re on autopilot. But when you’re in a state of flow, just like when we’re experiencing awe, we move from the autopilot part of our brains to the learning and inspiration part.
So, it’s about switching from wake up, feed the kids, have a shower, brush your teeth, get out the door, get on your public transport, get to work. It’s about switching off that default mode network and that do this every day and switching on –
P: Yeah, it’s almost passive in a way, isn’t it?
M: Yeah, switching off the passiveness and switching on the engagement, the excitement.
P: OH MY GOD THAT’S A RED PEN ON THE FLOOR! Laugh!
M: Laugh, right? Imagine going back to Disneyland for the first time every day?
P: Ooohhh!!!!!
M: Right? That’s what you’re trying to tap into that wonder and awe.
P: Yeah.
M: Awe is another one as well. You know, for me, the moment that really brings back memories of awe was first seeing Taj Mahal. I imagine if I went back, I wouldn’t have that same feeling.
P: It’s divine, mmm.
M: Yep, it is. It’s about trying to find ways to tap into that again, and you can actually do that. And so maybe we can move forward with ways to bring more flow into your life and deliberately put into practise. Because there are… Oh, God, we’re sounding old now, 50 years of research now, thanks to Csikszentmihalyi on this topic. Since it first came out in the seventies.
P: Yeah, wow.
P: Yes! I’m fully on board for that one. Put it down. Put it in a drawer. And where I first went with this idea is give yourself time.
M: Yep.
P: Give yourself some time to experience flow, set some time in a diary and go ‘this is my flow hour.’ You might not get there but give yourself an hour to explore it.
M: Absolutely. And to do that,
P: Uninterrupted.
M: Yes, it needs to be uninterrupted. So, if you’re sharing a house with someone else, maybe try going to sit in the park.
P: Mmm.
M: Or go to the library.
P: Yep.
M: Those things still exist.
P: Laugh.
M: I know we get all our content online nowadays, but libraries have really evolved quite a bit.
P: I think they’ve done a remarkable job of remaining current and appropriate in the digital age.
M: Mmm hmm. Absolutely. So, go find somewhere quiet and turn off your phone. Put it on silent or leave it another room to stop you checking it because the other thing we do with our phones is if they’re within hands reach in that moment when we’re switching thinking from one idea to the next, we reach for the phone. We go ‘I wonder if anyone’s messaged, I wonder if I’ve gotten an email’ and it’s about not doing that and letting the ideas flow from one to the next, not interrupting that thinking.
P: Mmm and that’s a training thing as well, doing that repeatedly actually makes it an easier state. You don’t get distracted by the technology quite as often.
M: Mmm hmm. Even the technology that’s not on, right?
P: Laugh.
M: Because it’s just in arm’s reach. You turn it back on.
P: Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
P: Laugh, have your moment.
M: Mmm hmm. If you’ve got kids, you know, the phone ringing, the TV blaring, you know our busy lives can just feel like one big interruption, and I know at work I have in the past really struggled with finding flow. And as someone who needs to do a lot of writing and thinking, it’s really difficult when you’re constantly being pinged on teams and messenger or whatever your platform is that your company uses to communicate and then you’ve got emails and then you’ve got your phone and it’s exhausting at times to never have that time to do deep work.
P: Mmm.
M: And meetings.
P: Laugh.
M: Oh my goodness, do we love a meeting in corporate world? So, it’s about blocking out time, and I do this now. So, three days a week, not every day but three days a week. I’ll block a two-hour block, and mostly I’m successful at protecting it. And I’ll close down my email and my messenger apps and then just do some work. And I find I come out the other side of that day so much more satisfied with myself.
P: Mmm, yep.
M: Absolutely. Because I’ve actually done some work that day.
P: Because you’ve given yourself the time and eliminated distractions.
M: Yep, and not only that, I do get work done in between meetings and multitasking and all the rest of it. But there’s nothing like the flow that comes from the two hours uninterrupted work.
P: Mmm, the quality. Yeah. And I find that even when I’m working with someone as a client, as a massage therapist, it’s very easy for me to cut out all the distractions. And people tend not to want to interrupt that space.
M: Mmm hmm.
P: Unless they really, really have to. And it is. It’s lovely when I’m in there and I remember going back to when I first started professional work as a massage therapist, really easy for me to do 2.5 hour treatments because there wasn’t a time limit with certain clients and I could indulge and so I could actually –
M: How do I get a massage therapist like you?
P: Laugh! Get them when they’re young.
M & P: Laugh!
P: That’s all I can say, laugh! But it was that love. It was that lovely indulgence. And when you’re in that space, you can do some pretty amazing quality work because it builds one on top of the other. It’s that cumulative effect, if you like, of achievement. And, as you said, unlocking even more fabulousness from yourself.
P: Laugh. This comes back to our conversation about passion, I think.
M: Mmm hmm.
P: Knowing what it is that gives you that flow. Or what activity is that you know you can achieve that state in.
M: Yep. So, Csikszentmihalyi says it needs to be sufficiently difficult without being overwhelmingly difficult or unachievable.
P: Yeah, yeah.
M: So, there’s got to be a challenge there to it. This is why study, is a good one.
P: Yep.
M: So, I don’t know… As someone who’s gone back to university whether you’ve experienced flow when studying.
P: Completely, yeah. Especially when I’m engaged with the content. You do, you look up and go, ‘Oh my god, it’s dark. Where’d the day go?’ Laugh.
M: But I will say both of us are quite similar. And where we go to with our flow activity is it is so subjective, though. So, just because we haven’t mentioned it today in this podcast doesn’t mean that… You know maybe riding a horse –
P: Yeah.
M: – is your thing. Trying to think of things that other people might, laugh.
P: Climbing a mountain.
M: Mmm.
P: Like going for a peak, for example? I mean, that’s very challenging, and that can be a flow moment.
M: Yep.
P: It means you’re doing it on your own, laugh!
M: Yeah, definitely. So, there are some ideas that we can give you. Well three in particular. So, if you’re looking for things to bring flow and also some other benefits as well, a lot of it can be found by doing things in a novel or new.
P: Mmm.
P: Yep.
[Hop on Hop off Bus Tours – providing sightseeing tours on an open-top bus where you can hop on and off to explore it all at your own pace.]
P: Laugh.
P: Which might lead to new activities, yeah. I like that.
M: Mmm hmm. Or you can try volunteering or joining a book club.
P: Putting yourself in flows way.
M: Yes.
P: Laugh.
M: Absolutely. All right, well, that’s all we have time for today. Again, so sad news today in the positive psychology community.
P: Yes.
M: But –
P: What a legacy to leave.
M: Yeah.
P: Yeah, I just think it’s such a fabulous thing. I was the inventor of flow and positive thinking. Thanks. Goodbye, laugh.
M: Peace out, mic drop.
P: Laugh.
M: Laugh. Alright, well on that note, wishing you a happy week with plenty of flow.
P: Chow
[Happy exit music – background]
M: Thanks for joining us today if you want to hear more, please remember to subscribe and like this podcast and remember you can find us at www.marieskelton.com, where you can also send in questions or propose a topic.
P: And if you like our little show, we would absolutely love for you to leave a comment or rating to help us out.
M: Until next time.
M & P: Choose happiness.
[Exit music fadeout]
Please note that I get a small commission if you buy something from my site. Your support helps to keep this site going at no additional cost to you. Thanks!
by Marie
Sometimes we all need a bit of inspiration. Here are 50 happiness quotes about love and life and ‘what is happiness.’

“Happiness cannot be travelled to, owned, earned, worn or consumed. Happiness is the spiritual experience of living every minute with love, grace, and gratitude.” – Denis Waitley
“Happiness always looks small while you hold it in your hands, but let it go, and you learn at once how big and precious it is.” – Maxim Gorky
“Happiness is a conscious choice, not an automatic response.” – Mildred Barthel
“Happiness is a form of courage.” – Holbrook Jackson
“Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence.” – Aristotle
“Happiness is not something ready-made. It comes from your own actions. – Dalai Lama
“How simple it is to see that we can only be happy now, and there will never be a time when it is not now.” – Gerald Jampolsky
“Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony.” ― Mahatma Gandhi
“I felt my lungs inflate with the onrush of scenery—air, mountains, trees, people. I thought, “This is what it is to be happy.” ― Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar
“Happiness is a gift and the trick is not to expect it, but to delight in it when it comes.” ― Charles Dickens

“Happiness [is] only real when shared” ― Jon Krakauer, Into the Wild
“Happiness is holding someone in your arms and knowing you hold the whole world.” – Organ Pamuk
“The best way to cheer yourself is to try to cheer someone else up.” ― Mark Twain
“The greatest happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved; loved for ourselves, or rather, loved in spite of ourselves.” – Victor Hugo
“There is no happiness like that of being loved by your fellow creatures and feeling that your presence is an addition to their comfort.” – Charlotte Bronte
“Three grand essentials to happiness in this life are something to do, something to love, and something to hope for.”– Joseph Addison
“If you want happiness for an hour, take a nap. If you want happiness for a day, go fishing. If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. If you want happiness for a lifetime, help someone else.” – Chinese proverb
“Happiness is not doing fun things. Happiness is doing meaningful things.” – Maxime Lagacé
“If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion.” Dalai Lama
“Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared.” – Buddha

“Don’t waste your time in anger, regrets, worries, and grudges. Life is too short to be unhappy.” – Roy T. Bennett
“If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.” ― J.R.R. Tolkien
“If you want to be happy, do not dwell in the past, do not worry about the future, focus on living fully in the present.” ― Roy T. Bennett, The Light in the Heart
“I’m happy. Which often looks like crazy.” ― David Henry Hwang
“It is not how much we have, but how much we enjoy, that makes happiness.” – Charles Spurgeon
“Learn to value yourself, which means: fight for your happiness.” – Ayn Rand
“Let us be grateful to people who make us happy, they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.” – Marcel Proust
“People should find happiness in the little things, like family.” – Amanda Bynes
“Sanity and happiness are an impossible combination.” ― Mark Twain
“The greatest happiness you can have is knowing that you do not necessarily require happiness.” – William Saroyan
“The most important thing is to enjoy your life—to be happy—it’s all that matters.” ― Audrey Hepburn
“The true secret of happiness lies in taking a genuine interest in all the details of daily life.” – William Morris
“We tend to forget that happiness doesn’t come as a result of getting something we don’t have, but rather of recognizing and appreciating what we do have.”– Frederick Keonig
“You cannot protect yourself from sadness without protecting yourself from happiness.” ― Jonathan Safran Foer
“Happiness is a direction, not a place.” – Sydney J. Harris
“When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down ‘happy’.” – John Lennon
“Imagining something is better than remembering something.” – Robin Williams
“True happiness is not attained through self-gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy purpose.” – Helen Keller
“If you aren’t grateful for what you already have, what makes you think you would be happy with more.” – Roy T. Bennett
“Folks are usually about as happy as they make their minds up to be.” – Abraham Lincoln

“Happiness can be found in even the darkest of times, if one only remembers to turn on the light.” – J. K. Rowling from Harry Potter (Albus Dumbledore)
“There are so many things that can make you happy. Don’t focus too much on things that make you sad.” A. A. Milne from Winnie the Pooh
“There’s nothing like deep breaths after laughing that hard. Nothing in the world like a sore stomach for the right reasons.” ― Stephen Chbosky from The Perks of Being a Wallflower
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.” Dr. Seuss from The Lorax
“And above all, watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places. Those who don’t believe in magic will never find it.” — Roald Dahl, from The Minpins
“Be so happy that when others look at you, they will be happy too.” A. A. Milne from Winnie the Pooh
“Don’t cry because it’s over. Smile because it happened.” – Dr. Seuss (disputed)
“In every job that must be done, there is an element of fun. You find the fun, and the job’s a game.” ~ P.L. Travers, from Mary Poppins
“Sometimes, I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” – Lewis Carroll from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
“I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, It’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope. Which is what I do, and that enables you to laugh at life’s realities.” – Dr. Seuss
by Marie
Everyone wants their kids to grow up and be successful in life. If you grew up in my generation, that meant our parents valued academic achievement at any cost.
The story goes that good grades will get you into a good university, which will get you into a good job at a good company, where you will meet other good people and marry one of them, eventually having a good house, good car and good kids. Then you will be happy. The moral of the story is ‘work hard and you will be rewarded.’
Many mid-life crises have proven that this model is broken. Yet it hasn’t been until recently that we’ve had another model to replace it with. It turns out that kids need happiness to succeed in life, and our focus on academic success has actually been taking us away from success in life!
Thanks to the field of positive psychology, we now know that the key to success in life is happiness. Research shows that people who are often in positive moods and have happy emotions do better in life. They get better grades at school; they get better jobs; they are more resilient; they are more successful and they are even richer.
Why? As cognitive scientist Dr. Art Markman says, “Overall, when people are happy, they put in more effort to create a better future for themselves than when they are not happy.”
So, if you want your kids to be successful in life, first you have to teach your kids to be happy. Just like with adults, this means teaching kids to enjoy the process, to be curious, hopeful and optimistic. Here are some great activities you can do with your kids to help build these life skills.
The research on this one is really clear, spending time outside makes people happier, so teach your kids to be happy by loving the outdoors. It doesn’t have to be fancy or expensive, you can make family walks a habit during the week, take your kids to the park, walk the dog or go on a picnic, visit a lake or beach or a national park. Create a list of places and activities you can do as a family and let each member of the family choose an outing.
This is especially good if it’s something that you are passionate about too. Teach them how to cook, garden, draw, sculpt or even change a tyre. Make sure you listen as much as you talk, ask questions about your kid’s thinking, ask them how they would do things. This is about learning to enjoy learning, about teaching your kids to have a growth mindset, which research shows impacts how you see the world and makes you more likely to thrive in life. So remember it’s not about actually mastering the skill (the end goal), instead focus on the process (the journey).
Together with the whole family, get out and about to take some photos together. Create an album of your favourite people, things and places. Make sure each family member has plenty of pages to contribute their photos. Place one photo per page and write under the photo why this photo is important to the family member who picked it. Watch this Greater Good Science Center video to see how this activity can create meaning and happiness in your kid’s lives.
Research shows that planning a holiday can bring just as much joy as going on holidays. Get a map. Lay out the ground rules (budget, time away etc…) and pick a place that you can all visit together. Once the location is sorted, each family member should go away and identify one activity they’d like to do while away, and has to present back to the family in one-weeks’ time their activity, what it is and why they think it is a good idea. Bonus points for creativity and resourcefulness!
Studies show that experiencing moments of awe makes us more generous and patient, and helps you deal with stress better. According to the Collins dictionary, “Awe is the feeling of respect and amazement that you have when you are faced with something wonderful and often rather frightening.” It’s a thrill or a moment of wonder. It’s rare and special, and because of that, it is imprinted in your memory forever. Some people find awe and wonder regularly, in the small and big things around them, while others only experience awe occasionally. It is different for every person. Here are some ideas for activities to bring awe into your life.
Research has shown that volunteering is rewarding in and of itself, and helping others is a way to higher individual wellbeing. Giving to others activates an area of the brain linked with contentment and the reward cycle. So, performing selfless acts makes you happier. You could volunteer at a soup kitchen or teach your kids how to fundraise for a worthy cause, whether that’s making something to sell to the neighbours (bracelets or lemonade) or doing a charity fundraising walk together.
Related content: Read Moving On article 5 ways to teach kids resiliency and happiness
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by Marie
We’ve done the work to find the best personal development podcasts to help you bring more happiness and inspiration into your life.
It turns out you’re not alone, as the millions of listeners to the below podcasts can attest. If you need a bit of motivation, inspiration or happiness in your life, subscribe to the below 10 best personal development podcasts to motivate and inspire you.
Happier is hosted by happiness and habits expert Gretchen Rubin and her sister Elizabeth Craft. With more than 95 million downloads, they’re definitely doing something right. In each episode, they share happiness hacks and advice that can easily be incorporated in your life. Gretchen shares a lot of the tips she’s learned over the years. She has also written about them in her bestselling books The Happiness Project, Better Than Before, and The Four Tendencies.
Good Life Project, hosted by Jonathan Fields, is about helping you to live a better life (as the name suggests). Every week, he shares inspirational, intimate and unfiltered conversations aimed at helping you on your quest to live a more meaningful, connected and vital life.
Happiness for Cynics, hosted by best friends Marie and Pete, who have a lot of laughs as they present the latest research and case studies on happiness, with a heavy dose of cynicism. Marie (the cynic) and the always happy Pete are a lot of fun to listen to and really make you think about practical and research-backed ways you can lead a happier life.
Design Your Dream Life, hosted by personal development blogger and life coach, Natalie Bacon. The podcast is for women who want to reignite their lives, who want more fulfilment, more money, and more freedom. Natalie shares lessons on how to master your mindset, emotions, self-love, relationships, problems, overwhelm. She also focuses on productivity, time management, goal setting and habits.
The Life Coach School Podcast, hosted by Brooke Castillo, owner of the Life Coach School, where she trains and certifies life coaches. Her podcast focuses on learning to manage your brain and solve any problem in your life. It’s about helping you use your mind to make your dreams come true.
10% Happier, hosted by ABC News Anchor Dan Harris, who famously has a panic attack on live TV while hosting Good Morning America. On 10% Happier, Dan interviews celebrities and academics on meditation and life. He looks for an answer to the question: Can you be an ambitious person and still strive for enlightenment?
Tony Robbins is without a doubt one of the biggest names in personal development. His motivational podcast is a hub where he shares all of that amazing knowledge. In his podcast, Tony shares proven strategies and tactics for achieving massive results in your business, relationships, health, and finances. Tony has reached more than 50 million people from over 100 countries to create meaningful change in their lives.
The School of Greatness is a wonderful podcast from the best-selling author and entrepreneur Lewis Howes. Since its launch in 2013, the podcast has grown to be one of the top-ranked business and self-development podcasts in iTunes. It regularly appears in the Top 50 and with more than 4 million downloads a month. Episodes range from interviews with incredible world-class game changers in entrepreneurship, health, athletics, mindset, and relationships, to solo rounds with the host, Lewis Howes and the 5 Minute Friday format.
The Science of Happiness, hosted by award-winning psychologist Dacher Keltner and co-produced by PRX and UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center. They look at what it takes to live a happier life and give listeners research-tested strategies that you can put into practice today.
The Tim Ferriss Show is often the #1 business podcast on all of Apple Podcasts. It has ranked #1 out of 500,000+ podcasts on many occasions and has now surpassed 400M downloads. In each episode, Tim deconstructs world-class performers from eclectic areas (investing, sports, business, art, etc.) to extract the tactics, tools, and routines you can use. This includes favourite books, morning routines, exercise habits, time-management tricks, and more.
Got a favourite podcast we didn’t include? Tell us about it in the comments!
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by Marie
Be kind… it’s something many of us have been told since we were little.
But did you know that being kind to others can have positive impacts on your life too? Not only that, there’s solid research behind the act of being kind. Here’s what you need to know.
Practicing kindness is about deliberately or intentionally finding moments or opportunities to be kind to others in your life.
“A single act of kindness throws out roots in all directions, and the roots spring up and make new trees.”
Amelia Earhart
But to be clear, being kind isn’t about always thinking of others over yourself, and it’s not about striving to be always kind. We’re all human, which means we all have bad days, and we all have negative emotions at times – being unkind will also happen. So, practising kindness isn’t about striving to be kind all the time, but it is about finding times to be kind to others.
The best part is that practising kindness actually improves your psychological health too, so you might even reduce your bad days or moments by doing it, and it’s as easy as scheduling it into your week.
The research on kindness is quite definitive. The benefits that you get from being kind others are many and varied.
Performing acts of kindness releases the feel-good chemicals (oxytocin and serotonin), leading to increases happiness, energy, pleasure and creativity. Studies have even shown that being kind increases your lifespan.
At Oxford, researchers performed three studies and found that performing acts of kindness boosted wellbeing and positive social emotions. In fact, in the first study, people got benefits after only seven days of performing acts of kindness.
Not only do you get the “helper high” from being kind, but these neurochemicals have also been found in many studies to help reduce depression, pain, anxiety and stress.
Feeling lazy? The great news is that it can be really easy, quick and cheap to get the benefits of kindness. You don’t need to go looking for over-the-top ways to show people how kind you are.
It’s true that research shows helping others through acts of charity or volunteer work can make you feel better and happier, but recent research also finds that simply wishing someone well can have a similarly positive effect on our moods. In fact, even witnessing acts of kindness produces oxytocin, which aids in lowering blood pressure, and improves self-esteem, optimism and our overall heart-health.
So, what are some ideas for how to bring kindness into your week?
Publicly acknowledge and praise someone for doing a good job or simply for being who they are. If you pick someone from your workplace, make sure you include their boss, and why not follow up with a handwritten card?
Print off some cards with “Can I help” on them and a list of things you can help with around the house – from cooking and cleaning to gardening and handy-man repairs or grocery shopping or pet walking. Make sure to introduce yourself, including telling people why you’re doing this for free, and include your name and contact details. Then print of all the cards and drop them in mailboxes around your neighbourhood.
Mentoring is about more than giving someone advice and sharing knowledge. Mentors often develop close, reciprocal relationships with their mentees, who can bring a new or different perspective or ideas that can bring about self-reflection and growth for the mentor too. Aside from that, helping others can be really rewarding. On top of that, giving targeted support to an individual (rather than to a charity) has a better effect on your brain.
Consider a one-off donation or set aside some money each pay-check to donate to a reputable charity. There is something for everyone, from organisations that
A few spare coins can make someone’s day, and be
Stuck for kindness ideas? You can always download a Kindness Calendar from the Random Acts of Kindness website for some inspiration. For extra self-care points, why not complete the activities with a buddy or family member?
Related content: Read Moving On article 50 science-backed ways to be happier
Please note that I get a small commission if you buy something from my site. Your support helps to keep this site going, at no additional cost to you. Thanks!
Don’t forget to subscribe for our monthly newsletter for more tips, freebies and subscriber-
by Marie

It’s no secret that happier people do better in life. They’re more likely to get and stay married, they are more likely to graduate from university, they have more friends, more money, and feel more confident, and they are even more physically healthy. And yes, you guessed it, that means they live longer too!
So, how can you learn to be happy? It’s simple, just sign up for one of the many life-changing free positive psychology courses below and start your journey to being happier.
This is the free version of Yale’s most popular class ever. Professor Laurie Santos first taught this class in 2018 in response to concerning levels of student depression, anxiety, and stress. It became the most popular class in Yale’s history and garnered national and international media attention. Now, you can take it for free. You will learn skills of gratitude, happiness, mediation and savouring.
This 8-week course is run by the team at the University of Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center and was the first online course to teach positive psychology. Join the 409,000 student who have already learned the science-based principles and practices for a happy, meaningful life. You’ll learn what happiness really means and why it matters to you; how to increase your own happiness and foster happiness in others; why social connections, kindness, and community are key to happiness; which mental habits are most conducive to happiness and how mindfulness can help.
Learn the positive habits to reignite your creative drive and happiness. Wake up awesome and live with passion. Learn about how to clarify your dreams, strengths and passions in life; develop a positive mindset and positive self-talk; be more happy and enthusiastic; and be more creatively engaged in your life.
One of the most popular courses on happiness with over 130, 000 students. The course is based on the award-winning class offered both at the Indian School of Business and at the McCombs School of Business at The University of Texas at Austin. Take this course to find out the answers to questions like “why aren’t the smart and the successful as happy as they could—or should—be?” and ”What are the “7 Habits of the Highly Happy” and how can you implement them in your life?”
Another great course from the team at the University of Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, this course explains what happiness at work looks like, why it matters, and how to cultivate it. Learn why happiness at work matters and how to increase it within yourself and across your organization.
And here’s one more, just because I can…
The state of happiness is your most natural state of being. Learn how to become as happy as a carefree child; what stops you from experiencing the state of happiness you know is possible; and how to find inner peace.

But wait! If you didn’t see something you like in the above free Positive Psychology Courses, don’t fret! There are even more options that are not free, but really quite cheap.
Run by one of the founding fathers of positive psychology, Dr. Martin E.P. Seligman, this five-course specialization provides you with the key theories and research in the field of positive psychology as well as opportunities for application. Positive Psychology: Well-being for life. Master strategies and tools that enable individuals and organizations to thrive
The Science of psychology and happiness shows tested ways to increase your well-being and life satisfaction. Sign up as a new student and get 85% off this course, only $14.99
Psychology of Happiness: Learn about and Get Practical Tools to Become Happier and Even More Successful. Sign up as a new student and get 85% off this course, only $16.99
Professional Life Coach Certification: Habits and Happiness Accredited Certification with 40 CPD/CE Educational Credits. Sign up as a new student and get 85% off this course, only $12.99 Not quite ready to sign up to a course but want to learn a bit more about how to be happy? Read these 50 science-backed activities you can incorporate into your life that are proven to help you be happy: How to be happy – 50 science-backed ways to improve your happiness.
Here are some great positive psychology books to read.
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