When most of us think about what makes us happy, we tend to focus on the things in life that we crave or long to own. These things may be concrete consumables or they may be intangible resources, such as time,inner peace or true love.
It is easier for us to create a list of what we want the world to give us than it is to think in terms of what we can give back to the world.
We live in a world of instant feedback and conspicuous consumption. It may be experienced firsthand through the Buy Now button on Amazon’s website or through the obsession with following celebrities’ tweets or video reviews of products, films, and life, in general.
It is amazing how many things everyone seems to have in their lives and how many more things we might desire that we believe will make us feel even better about ourselves in relation to how we think others feel about us.
It is perhaps the paradoxical desire to divest to have more that has created the hot new trend for tiny houses or the online tales of people who are living off the grid,(ironic, isn’t it, that we hear about these folks’ experiences online?), or the movement to make do in life with 100 possessions or less. Actually, now that our cellphones can do just about anything that we need them to do from finding our potential mate to preparing dinner via online ordering from nearby take-out places,making do with less isn’t as austere as it once might have been.
Happiness in ones life can drive him or her to do extra-ordinary things to other people.These are excitement one can not withhold.I once spend more than what I have in my pocket with friends due to over happiness