Birds Of A Feather - A Robin’s Tale
/There’s a robin in our front yard, a very persistent, though misguided, robin, Let’s call him “Rob” for short. Rob has been visiting our front yard for three years now.
He eats the berries off our Saskatoon bushes and Chokecherry tree, poops the seeds on my bike’s handle bars and pecks at the seat.
But that's not all Rob does...
Rob must have been a football player in another life because he loves giving himself concussions by repeatedly slamming into our large front window. He slams his body multiple times a day, trying to reach the Garden of Eden he sees on the other side. What does he see? You guessed it, a mirror image of what he already has: Saskatoon bushes and a Chokecherry tree.
Despite his destructive behaviour, I like Rob. He serves as a good reminder of some of the failings of the human condition: our belief that, somehow, if we do the same thing over and over again, we’ll manage to achieve a different outcome. It’s especially egregious when we apply it to the pursuit of happiness.
I’ll Be Happy When…
Welcome to the hedonic treadmill that’s so common in affluent societies such as ours. We have a great deal of practice with the following statements:
- I’ll be happy when…
- If only I could manage to…
- Life will be so much easier when…
- If only I could afford…
- I “need” to get more/a bigger…
We easily lose focus on what we have now. What we can enjoy in the present which, incidentally, is what we were hoping for in our last round of “I’ll be happy when”. How'd that work out?
I’ve learned that lesson repeatedly, first with shoes, then purses. And it only took 42 pairs of shoes and 12+ purses to learn it! At least it was a salve for the soul of a fashionable sort but still, what a waste. I was treating the symptom and not its cause. As the saying goes, know better do better.
Focus On What You Have
Happiness comes effortlessly when we focus on what we have now, especially internal sources of happiness: the richness of our relationships, our skills and abilities, our achievements and creations, and who we are as individuals. Yes, our prized possessions and what they enable us to do also matter to our happiness, but less than we'd like to think.
It’s what we focus on in the present that guides how we feel, not thoughts of future happiness. If we think about the future, we tend to think about a void (be it time or money or both). It makes us feel anxious, impatient, restless. It makes us want to do something to fix the uncomfortable feeling, and that feeling robs us of enjoying life now.
Of course, if you’ve prebooked and prepaid a vacation, that anticipation is a good feeling. You get to imagine the vacation over and over again. It can make your days sweeter and the vacation brings you more joy overall. However, if we’re focusing on what we don’t have—especially when others have it already—then it’s a different type of anxiety: status anxiety.
Status anxiety is the type of anxiety that tells us that we’re lesser beings until we “fix it”. We’re essentially telling ourselves we’re broken and can’t feel whole until some external asset or condition fixes us. That fix will work for a little while, until we find ourselves broken again.
If Rob could see that the berry bushes and tree offer more than enough for him, every year, he could be content. But the pull of more is just too great, even though he could never manage to eat it all. I guess his bird brain will never learn.
It’s a good thing we're not Rob.
Robin image courtesy of Keith Williams at Flickr.