Note: Each week SKA Oceans Blogging reviews a book or product related to
self improvement. This review represents the honest opinion of the
author, but we’d like to disclose that we receive a small commission on
orders.
Some of you might recall when SKA Oceans Blogging first mentioned Happier, after Tal-Ben Shahar’s appearance on The Daily Show
a few months back. It was exciting to see that self improvement is
spreading to Harvard classrooms and being legitimized by academia and
the mainstream media.
After finally finishing the book, my overall impression is a good one. Although I wouldn’t put it in the same league as The Magic of Thinking Big, it is definitely a worthwhile book that introduced me to some new ideas and gave me a lot to think about.
Structure and Content
Happier
is divided into 3 main parts. The first asks the question, ‘what is
happiness?’ and goes about trying to answer it. Shahar groups most
people into 3 mindsets:
- The Rat Racer: This group works constantly for the future, but in pursuit of wealth and success fails to enjoy the present.
- The Hedonist: This group lives in pursuit of physical pleasure and in avoidance of pain. By living only for the superficial, they aren’t able to find any meaning in life.
- The Nihilist: This group holds the opinion that sustainable happiness isn’t possible. If you’ll never be happy, there’s no point in trying.
Personally I’ve grappled which of these mindsets at different times,
so it was helpful to have each of them explained. Shahar contends that
each of these mindsets is fundamentally flawed, and that there is a
happy balance where meaning and pleasure can both be combined.
The second part of the book deals with happiness applied to
education, the workplace, and relationships. The book provides numerous
helpful suggestions for balancing challenge and anxiety so you can find
meaning without inflicting unnecessary pain on yourself. Each chapter
also contains questions that prompt the reader to evaluate their
personal situation as they go along.
The third part of the book is called meditations on happiness. Each
chapter is a reflection on a particular aspect of happiness that aims to
encourage the reader to embrace it. There are 7 meditations in all:
- Self-Interest and Benevolence
- Happiness Boosters
- Beyond the Temporary High
- Letting Our Light Shine
- Imagine
- Take Your Time
- The Happiness Revolution
I found this section to be the most substantial and interesting of
the entire book. This is where Shahar opens up and provides his most
inspiring reflections on the nature of happiness and how we can bring
more of it to our lives.
Final Thoughts
Overall, Happier
is an enjoyable and well written book. It contains a diverse range of
information from academic and non-academic sources and the exercises
that conclude each chapter make it easy to involve yourself with the
content.
The book feels like a college course and this has it’s pros and cons.
The benefit is that it’s interesting to imagine yourself as a student
at Harvard moving through the course as the semester progresses. The
downside is that the book lacks a conversational feel. Instead an
intimate conversation with Shahar, it feels distant, like you’re hearing
him lecture from a podium. There is also a slight over-reliance on
quotations that occassionally interrupts the flow of the book. Although
the chosen quotes are interesting, sometimes I felt myself wishing
Shahar would use his own words.
Despite these minor flaws, Happier
is still a must read for anyone interested in becoming a little bit,
well, happier. It’s extremely interesting to see pyschology and self
improvement merge into a new genre that captures the best parts of both.
If anyone else has read the book, I’d love to hear your thoughts.
2 Comments:
No matter if some one searches for his required thing, so he/she needs to be available that in detail, thus
that thing is maintained over here.
Here is my homepage ... simply click the up coming internet site
If you desire to take much from this article then you have to apply such
methods to your won weblog.
Also visit my weblog; stop grow