How often in your life, do you delay personal happiness? Bring to mind, your daily schedule and routine.

Do you make room to find joy in these ordinary moments?

If you knew you could access a deep feeling of gratitude at any time – would you?

The premise of living happily ever after, causes many of us to immediately think of fairy tales and Hollywood romantic comedies.

Under this umbrella of thought, finding our bliss with such finality, becomes a fictional picture of life – one that’s far out of reach. But, what if living happily ever after has nothing to do with reaching at all?

Our big picture goals, like “meeting the one”, or getting that dream job, serve an important purpose by igniting our passion. But, our dreams and goals, once reached, are replaced by new ones that are constantly in motion.

Our happiness exists in the moments we call now. It’s our job to train our focus to grab hold of our moments, and feel the good available to us always.

Here are some of the strategies I use, to help train my focus to see the good and seize the good in life. Try them on and see how they fit for you.

Care about how you feel.

This strategy is all about stepping up to be 100% accountable for how you feel. This way of being can feel like a stretch. Especially if we have well- practiced patterns of thought that lead us to become comfortable feeling like victims.

It’s a systemic, societal issue that shapes us to believe it’s okay to adopt an “us against them” attitude. Every time we lead from this mindset we move away from happiness, and we also contribute to the larger social issue.

When we care about how we feel, we train ourselves to see the good in others. When we want to feel good, we stop showing up in our moments on autopilot. Instead, we practice what it feels like to find the joy in our now moments – no matter how dark they appear. Trust yourself to feel your way through this practice.

Keep your eyes on your own path.

This strategy is all about the car metaphor for life. When we attempt to step into the driver’s seat of someone else’s life, or busy ourselves as a passenger on a path that isn’t our own, nobody is in the driver’s seat experiencing our own journey. When we stop trusting ourselves, and get into the habit of appointing others to drive, we are almost always steered away from personal happiness.

In order to stay on your own path, the practice is to stop worrying so much about what other people think of you. It’s more beneficial to everyone, when we stay true to who we are, and we keep course-correcting back onto the path that feels right to us. I love what Dr.Brené Brown beautifully shares in her book, Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead:

“I carry a small sheet of paper in my wallet that has written on it the names of people whose opinions of me matter. To be on that list, you have to love me for my strengths and struggles.”

Know who your important people are, and when you’re in need, remember that those are the only people who get to temporarily take the wheel. Trust in your inner guide to stay on the path that feels best to you.

Stop beating up on yourself.

Self-awareness and self-reflection are two of the most important practices in life. I believe they should be the life-skills and strategies we learn at a young age. Having a healthy sense of self doesn’t make us selfish or ignorant.

Caring about how we feel, and connecting inward often, helps us stop expecting others to fulfill us. Having a healthy connection with ourselves, and training our focus to look for the good in life, helps us stop blaming others for our unhappiness.

When we get into the new habit, of “tuning in” instead of “tuning out”, we stop beating up on ourselves because we find comfort in the familiarity of our wise guide.

If you find yourself stuck in a pattern of beating up on yourself, or blaming others for your unhappiness, give yourself permission to take baby steps forward.

Whenever I find myself in this destructive cycle, I focus on softening my language and quieting my inner critic. We all have an inner critic and an inner wise guide.

The practice is to slow our busy minds and give less air time to our inner critic. Hint: our inner critic is usually the chattier of the two.

In her book, Thrive: The Third Metric to Redefining Success and Creating a Life of Well-Being, Wisdom, and Wonder, Arianna Huffington cleverly describes our inner critic:

“Even our worst enemies don’t talk about us the way we talk to ourselves. I call this voice the obnoxious roommate living in our head. It feeds on putting us down and strengthening our insecurities and doubts. I wish someone would invent a tape recorder that we could attach to our brains to record everything we tell ourselves. We would realize how important it is to stop this negative self- talk. It means pushing back against our obnoxious roommate with a dose of wisdom.”

See what changes, when you let your inner wise guide take the wheel a little more often. Give your obnoxious roommate a nap.

Let go and give in to playtime.

It can be second nature for us to push, apply force and strive much harder than we ought to in life. There is a place for effort, and there is also an equal space for ease. Much like the way our heart beats and the blood flows through our veins, there is a pumping action of force and release. Both are necessary for us to thrive.

Life is like this too. We must be willing to show up, and also let go. In-between showing up and letting go, there is a grace period where our opportunities for happily ever after reside. If we push too hard, and obsess over details too much, we miss the space and grace period necessary to enjoy the moments we are in.

This do-less to have more philosophy, is one that is at the core of Kate Northrup’s Origin™ Collective group. Origin™, is a membership I’m relieved to belong to because it’s helping women reinvent the way entrepreneurship and motherhood go together. Instead of wearing the multitasking overwhelmed mom badge with pride, we are invited to step into the cyclical nature of life that honours ease and play, as much as it does, effort and work. What I’ve learned, is there are many more opportunities for ease and play than we typically allow ourselves to enjoy.

In the Be Playful chapter of my book, Fall in Love With Your Life, One Week at a Time, I share:

“Sometimes we can even feel as though we must keep going despite exhaustion. That somehow, we will end up better off if we attempt to do it all.

When we feel overwhelmed by endless to-dos, deadlines, and responsibilities, it is a strong indicator that we need to offset the heavy parts of our lives with activities that have no purpose other than to make us feel light and happy. Taking a break in this way will help us to feel refreshed and better able to focus our attention on what is truly important. It will help to bring more balance into our daily lives.

I witnessed a great example of adopting a playful mindset one evening as I strolled through my neighborhood. I passed by a man in his seventies. He was alone in his driveway flying his remote-control aircraft. He wore a huge grin—the same beaming look of a five-year-old at play. This man was having the absolute time of his life immersed in a playful activity that clearly brought him joy. It reminded me how important it is to continue to do the things that brighten our spirits, at every age and stage of life. This joyful man reminded me of an important truth: Taking part in activities solely for fulfillment and happiness really is the key to staying vibrant. Being playful helps cultivate a strong love for life.”

Living happily ever after is all about finding the ease, playfulness and space in our now moments. What are you grateful for right now? What brings you a sense of joy? How will you live happily ever after?

Emily

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Originally published at emilymadill.com

Author(s)

  • Emily Madill

    Executive Coach, PCC

    Emily Madill is an author and certified professional PCC coach with a BA in business and psychology. Emily is one of Thrive Global's Editors-at-large and a coach at BetterUp. She has published 11 self-development and empowerment titles for children and adults. You can find her writing in Chicken Soup for the Soul:Think Positive for Kids; Thrive Global; The Huffington Post; TUT. com; Best Self Magazine; MindBodyGreen; The Muse; WellthyLiving.ca; TinyBuddha; Aspire Magazine and others. Emily has a private coaching practice and an online program offering courses that support others in creating lasting habits around self-love, well-being, and all things related to time and weekly planning. She lives on Vancouver Island, Canada, with her husband, two sons, and their sweet rescue dog Annie. Learn more at: emilymadill.com