We all have choices. “Free will,” I believe it is called. If you
want to stay unhappy, there are some proven ways to accomplish this. Time after
time, I have seen these ideas put successfully into action, making NOT ONLY
the person who practices these techniques miserable, but, also allows those
around them, especially spouses and children, to maintain a perpetually high
level of misery, too. These techniques are quite powerful, and should only be
attempted by people who are truly, sincerely dedicated to maximizing their unhappiness.
Stay in a state of fear
One can see the world as a safe place, or one can live in fear of real and imagined
pain, hazards and difficulty. Fear can keep you inside of your house forever,
with the wrong person forever, in the same job forever, etc. Here is a fact:
98% of what we worry about never happens. But remember, there’s always
that two per cent chance on which to maintain our focus.
Endlessly analyze and don't make any changes
It's fine to understand what is going on with you, others or the world, but
be careful of the paralysis by analysis trap. You know the joke about the guy
who has been wetting the bed for twenty years? Now that he has been in therapy
for the last fifteen years, he still wets the bed, but now he knows why he wets
the bed. Find a therapist who will help you gain insight into problems, but
will never provide any direction or support about actually changing those problems.
Don't listen to anybody
We sometimes get stuck in our own little ways of thinking about or doing things.
Other people can be helpful to give us a new perspective or new possibilities,
so, don’t listen to anybody. Always assume that you know better than they
do.
Listen to everybody
At the same time, letting other people's views of what is right for you dominate
your life can keep you pretty unhappy. Try to keep on pleasing most people who
are around you. For those of you who truly want to stay stuck in misery, keep
on trying to please the people who can never be pleased.
Blame others for your actions or problems
If things happen to go wrong, take heart in the knowledge that it was not your
fault. If you search hard enough, you can find somebody or something to blame.
No matter what, never take responsibility for your own actions. If all else
fails, then blame your mother. This technique of mother-blaming is very effective,
and tends to please analytic psychiatrists to no end. Oh, heck….let’s
give this one its own section:
It’s all your mother’s or your father’s fault
If you had a less than ideal childhood, if your parents were not very good parents,
or, just outright bad parents….then of course you are unhappy. If your
problem was one of parental neglect or abandonment…then, of course you
are miserable. My definition of a dysfunctional family is any family composed
of two or more people. If your parents did a lousy job, then you can spend the
rest of your life holding on to that pain. It is possible to move beyond that
hurt and pain, but it is easier to hold on to the resentment, anger and sadness.
Blame yourself or put yourself down regularly
If you haven’t mastered to art of blaming others and your life is not
going well, you might as well blame yourself, and continually put yourself down.
Making a habit of negative self-talk will almost assuredly demoralize you and
undermine your confidence.
Hold on to anger
Anger is a feeling. You can choose to appropriately deal with your anger, or
not. You can hold on to it, or let it go. Appropriate, safe expression of anger
will allow anger to leave your body and leave you feeling lighter, happier and
free. Holding on to anger is a sure recipe for ulcers, headaches, heart disease
and probably cancer, too. Holding on to anger will also keep people away from
you, allowing you to isolate and really focus your energy on how you have been
wronged. One of the surest recipes for unhappiness is allowing resentments and
anger to linger.
Practice and perfect passivity
Staying stuck in one place is the perfect breeding ground for depression and
anxiety. Learn to stay in one place and really, really avoid any temptation
to do something different. NEVER be assertive and ask for what you need…You
may become disappointed. Becoming a victim takes dedication and practice, but
it is attainable if you want it badly enough.
Have no sense of spirituality
To paraphrase that famous sociologist Madonna Ciccone, “We are living
in a material world.” Focus on the attainment of goods, and ignore the
invisible threads that connect all things. Equate all spiritual beliefs with
religious beliefs, and throw the baby out with the bathwater. Believe that there
is no higher power, that all things are random and that you are the most powerful
thing in the universe.
Do no charity or volunteer work
Do I really need to explain this one? You can’t stay focused on your misery
and simultaneously help someone. Besides, do you really have time to help others?
Keep doing the same thing that doesn't work
If what you are doing isn't working.keep doing it. Why keep doing the same thing? Because it is familiar, comfortable and easier than changing. Change is scary. Here is a great quote: People from dysfunctional families seek out familiar pain. Bob Earll said it, but he probably stole it from somebody else.
Bill O’Hanlon re-tells a story: A man was drunk and on his hands and
knees under a street light, obviously looking for something. A cop walks by
and asks the man what he is doing. The man says that he dropped his house keys
and is looking for them. The cop starts helping him look for the keys. After
ten minutes of futile searching, the cop asks, “Now, where was the last
place you remember having your keys?” The man said he had them in his
hand, for sure, when he was across the street. The cop was confused, “If
you had them across the street, why are you looking for your keys here and not
across the street?” The man replied, “Well, the light is much better
here.”
Keep thinking the same thoughts when those thoughts don't help
Some people think changing your thinking will result in changing your actions.
Others think you need to change your actions, then your thoughts will change,
too. Regardless of how you approach it, not changing your thinking style or
your thoughts will almost certainly make changing impossible.
Keep putting yourself in the same unhelpful environment
When you are in a situation that is awful, like a poor work environment or a
friendship where you feel continually taken advantage of, stay in that environment.
Again, change is scary, and by staying put you will eliminate any anxiety brought
about by trying to do something different.
You heard it here first, folks: Misery Loves Company
If you are around unhappy people almost exclusively, then the chance of your
finding happiness is minimal. There is really no better way to spend time than
with people who insist on lamenting about how bad things are. Victimhood is
contagious.
Don’t ask for help
If you can’t do something or need something or want to learn something,
figure it out yourself. Don’t seek other’s input, they probably
know less than you do, anyway. Asking for help is a sign of weakness.
Don’t trust your inner voice
As we grow older, we learn to distance ourselves from our true self. If you
get a nagging feeling in your gut, ignore it. Use your head, not your heart.
Don’t trust any feelings that you can’t absolutely be sure of. Kramer,
Jerry’s neighbor, once said, “What does the Little Man say? Listen
to the Little Man, George.” Now, you aren’t going to take advice
from the likes of Kramer, are you...you see how he turned out, didn’t
you?
Seek addiction in your life
One sure way to be miserable is to be actively engaged in an ongoing addiction.
If you can’t muster up the dedication needed to be an addict, try marrying
one instead. And, check this out: It doesn’t matter what the addiction
is! You can be a food addict, a sex addict, a pill addict, an alcoholic, a compulsive
gambler, a compulsive spender….it doesn’t matter. All addiction
has at its core a commonality: Addicts are uncomfortable in their own skins.
And staying in the addiction ensures that this discomfort never fades.
Lie, Deny and Lie
Dishonesty breeds unhappiness, and unhappiness breeds dishonesty. Denial is
powerful; one can truly fool one’s self. On the other hand, when we lie
to others, we tend to know we are lying. Living a life of lies almost guarantees
misery. Lie to yourself, lie to others, and then lie about lying!
Procrastinate
This is very powerful. When you procrastinate, you almost always are thinking
about what you should be doing but are NOT doing. This makes you miserable.
Then, when you absolutely have your back up against the wall, and work furiously
to finish a task you should have started “X” amount of days ago,
you will be miserable as you try to complete the task. And, usually do a lousy
job at the task. Then, when you finally are finished, you will feel miserable
and unsatisfied….but you will still procrastinate the next time, too.
External self-esteem
There is self-esteem and there is OTHER-esteem. Other-esteem is having one’s
view of oneself dependent on what somebody else thinks of me. In addition, other-esteem
is having one’s view of oneself dependent on “things,” like,
“I am as good as the kind of car I drive.” Or, “I am as good
as my job says I am.” If we seek happiness from without, rather than from
within, than happiness will always elude us. However, it is good for the economy…..and,
you do love America, don’t you?
Have a disorder
People show up in my office wearing designer clothing and designer diagnoses.
The new, “hot” ones include Attention Deficit Disorder, Bipolar
Disorder, and Fibromyalgia. Truly lucky people can have all three diagnoses
at the same time if they were fortunate enough to have the correct doctors before
they meet me. Having a bona fide disorder makes changing that much more difficult…and
that is what is important, isn’t it?
Isolation is a key component of misery
Our ability to connect with others at a deep level is a constantly evolving
skill. People tend to get better at being social as they age. Some people never
learn to connect with others and give up trying. A special note for women: Learn
to distrust and not spend time with other women. I often hear “I just
prefer to be with men, all my friends are men--women are so ______.” Learn
to fill in the blank: “catty,” “backstabbing,” “gossipy,”
“manipulative,” “boring,” “superficial,”
“too vain,” etc. Ladies, learn your own ways to avoid intimacy with
other women.
And men? Well, since we don’t like to talk anyway, isolation comes easier
to us. If, as a man, you are required to interact with others, keep all communication
at a simple, non-feeling level. I have found that talking about sports or work
is an effective block to having any true connections with others.
Hey! How ‘bout them Braves?
This article is a much expanded version of a handout from Bill O'Hanlon. It is adapted here with his permission, and I thank him for that. Bill's work can be found at http://www.brieftherapy.com