Loving What Is – The Secret Ingredient For Lasting Happiness

“Horrible #!@& shot”, screamed my golf buddy as he saw his ball disappearing into the trees. He had had a good round so far and felt this shot was going to ruin it. He was furious with himself and stayed flustered the rest of the afternoon.

Unfulfilled expectations are one of the biggest sources of unhappiness in human life. Our life is laden with these events – you miss out on the promotion you so badly hoped for, your partner and you have such diverse views that you can rarely agree, your child’s performance or behavior is at complete odds with your expectations, your favorite team loses the final, the weather in your much awaited holiday turns out to be lousy.

They are all potential sources of discontent. Essentially, any mismatch between our expectation and reality leads to disappointment. We feel frustrated, angry and sometimes bitter – a perfect recipe for being unhappy. Unfortunately, we routinely encounter such situations in every day life and even the smallest of mismatches contributes to the accumulating unhappiness.

The cause

At a deeper level, this discontentment is linked to our deep identification with our egoistic mind. Our mind routinely conjures up images of the future, elaborating on the potential rewards of our actions, which would take us closer to our dream of greater success and happiness. In the process, we build strong attachment with specific outcomes – the promotion, the child’s strong performance, the favorable weather and so forth.

Additionally, conditioned by our judgmental nature, we see things as ‘good’ or ‘bad’ and operate from the belief that one outcome is necessarily better than the other. This makes us further cling to the one outcome that we believe is most desirable. Any mismatch is then unacceptable and perceived as a serious setback.

The case for cultivating acceptance

Deeper acceptance means surrendering to what is – not what we want, what it could have been or what it should be, but what is. It is about acknowledging our current reality and being at peace with that. This surrender is not about resigning to our circumstances, but about passionately persisting with our actions without narrowly defined expectations of results.

This means being committed at work, without worrying too much about the potential gains; playing hard but not obsessing about winning; becoming open to accepting our partner as they are and letting go of our instincts to judge them against an ideal mental image; letting go of our wish for perfect children and being open to understanding their individual potential.

Cultivating such acceptance dilutes the ability of our circumstances to disappoint us. As we become open to varying outcomes of our actions, our happiness is no longer hostage to manifestation of only specific outcomes. In the process, we discover the joys of a meaningful journey and do not postpone our happiness until only when we reach a desirable destination.

3 keys to start loving your reality

1.   Learning detachment

Cultivating acceptance demands letting go of our incessant desire to control the future. It is about recognizing that our efforts are only one of the variables impacting the outcome; comprehending that all we can hope to control is our efforts; lastly, realizing that what determines our happiness is not the outcomes, but how we react to them.

Our obsession with results also comes from our deep-rooted belief that one outcome is necessarily better than the other. This judgmental approach to evaluating every outcome as positive or negative is what creates fear, greed, anxiety and disappointment. We spend an inordinate proportion of our lifetime craving for things we don’t have and fearing to lose what we do have.

There’s also an implicit assumption that if we try hard enough somehow it is possible for us to create circumstances in our life for only the ‘favorable’ situations to prevail. Nothing could be further from the truth. In this universe, where the only thing permanent is impermanence, ‘favorable’ and ‘unfavorable’ situations arise with the regularity of four seasons and hence there’s no point getting overly attached to pleasant experiences as much as it is futile to being averse to painful ones.

2.   Having faith

Our ability to let go of the fixation with the results gets enhanced by having faith in something larger than ourselves. For this, we need to appreciate that the universe is evolving perfectly at all times. The sun rises and sets as it needs to, the winds move, and the water turns into rain as it needs to, the plants are born- some to become trees and some to die early- as they need to.

The working of the entire universe is governed by laws of nature- like the cycle of birth and death, karma and so forth- and our reality is nothing but these laws unfolding in their natural process. It is we humans, who desperately resist it. Seized by our ego, we instinctively start taking all our circumstances- successes and failures- personally, without recognizing that these are mere outcomes of a larger evolution and that they don’t represent any bias for or against us.

Aligning our thinking to these ideas helps us better accept our current reality – we then don’t judge it only from the limited perspective of its personal impact but relate to it as an integral part of life’s evolution. We neither rush to take credit for every success in our life nor blame ourselves for every personal setback. So, when you are anxious about your children, remind yourself to have faith that they would be fine; when the outcome of your efforts are not in line with your expectations, remember what is manifesting is for your highest good.

3.   Building Compassion

The third key to loving the prevailing reality is to build compassion – compassion for ourselves as well as for others around us. Owing to our strong attachment with results, coupled with the belief that we are solely responsible for them, we can be too hard on ourselves during setbacks. Being compassionate towards ourselves and mindful of the sincere efforts we put in allows us to feel more reassured, calm and confident.

Similarly, we need to build compassion for others and their circumstances. Rather than judge our colleague, partner or child for their comments or behavior, we ought to build an empathetic understanding of their personal situation. Hidden beneath your partner’s apparent anger might be their deeper love and concern for you; what’s untold by the aggressive behavior of a friend might be their history of personal suffering; and perhaps passing you over for promotion was the fairest thing your boss could do in his situation.

Endnote

Cultivating acceptance builds equanimity and strengthens our ability to welcome the current reality with greater openness. This automatically creates a deeper sense of calm and happiness in our life. We are then not averse to varying outcomes and can handle all situations, including on the golf course, with grace!

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COMMENTS

9 Responses to “Loving What Is – The Secret Ingredient For Lasting Happiness”

  1. Dear Rajiv

    This has struck a deep chord with me. I have been thinking about this for a long time.

    While you have mentioned that we can cultivate acceptance, and also outlined the 3 keys to it which in a lot of sense i have been practising it for a long time.

    However, what i have realised is that many a times it remains just a shallow appearance. Even with all the practice, it has become a part of me.

    And which has led me to understanding that everything that i am and i project is what i am deep inside and is based on my knowing of “what i am deep inside”. Until and unless i get in touch with that “real me”, all my efforts will just be floating on the water, where they just are in touch with the water but not fully immersed.

    so, the real key seems to get in touch with our real selves. and when we do it we get in touch with something bigger. the pivot moves from our ego to the universal ego where there are no expectations and hence no disappointments.

    Having said that, I also understand that “meditation” which for me is an act which moves into deeper into you, is probably the key to do it.

    Will love to know your insight into this.

  2. Rajiv Vij says:

    Hi Vipin:

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

    I agree, I find meditation practice and other opportunities for regular reflection very helpful in this regard. Further, reading books and articles that constantly remind you of your ‘true identity’ can reinforce your meditation practice. Lastly, being in the company of like-minded people could support you in this regard as well.

    Best wishes with your efforts!

  3. Anonymous says:

    Thank you for this and other articles as well, for bringing fresh perspectives that aids to reduce our anxieties and to work towards our peace of mind.
    Tough to practice “acceptance” always, but it seems to be the only way for our peace of mind. Thanks once again.

  4. The GK Blog says:

    Respected Sir,
    I found your article very meaningful and full of insights. Thanks very much for such an enlightening article.
    Regards
    Kandarp Rai

  5. The GK Blog says:

    Respected Sir,
    I found your article very meaningful and full of insights. Thanks very much for such an enlightening article.
    Regards
    Kandarp Rai

  6. Anonymous says:

    Thank you for very insightful articles bringing new perspective to my/our lives.

    Can you also please cite some approaches in dealing with corrupt officials in the government departments and deficient services in private sector, etc.

    Apart from being empathetic, understanding and providing more than adequate latitude for their ‘personal history’,how can we elicit ethical and professional work culture?

    Can/will meditation and patience create the conducive situation automatically for appropriate solution cited above?

    Hope there will be an article on this giving some ideas.
    thank you.

  7. Anonymous says:

    Thank you for the outstanding posts

  8. Anonymous says:

    hello!sir, very insightful posts. thank you. here’s a suggestion – could you or have someone publish these articles as a book so we can give them as gifts to youngsters as well as other troubled/struggling individuals. you convey well all the significant points/perspectives that some of us are struggling to communicate.please continue to post/retain the blog even if they are published. thank you!!

  9. JP Singh says:

    Very well said Rajiv !! And it is so surprising to see head hunting ads by top companies looking for ‘result oriented’ professionals ….. no wonder focus shifts from action to greed and unhappiness in case results don’t come in.

    JPSingh