Philosopher and writer Eamon Evans on humanity's relentless and impossible pursuit of happiness through materialism, social media and self help, and why the kindest and best people have been crushed at a couple of times.
Eamon started to think more deeply about happiness and contentment in his 20s, after a bout of serious depression.
He realised that trying to be happy all the time was paradoxically making him miserable, and says that's true for most of us in this modern world.
Eamon began to trace the history of human's infatuation with being happy.
What he found was that the story of humanity was tied up with other pursuits like survival, honour, virtue and discipline until very recently.
Only in the 20th century did people start wanting to stop to smell the roses all the time, but Eamon says a permanent state of happiness impossible and emotionally counterproductive.
In fact, our obsession with being happy is actually making us sad, and on top of that, it's making us sad about the fact that we're sad—a concept called 'meta-unhappiness'.
While modern progress on speaking out about and seeking help for mental health issues is something to be celebrated, Eamon says it's better to accept day to day feelings of struggle and sadness as a normal part of human life, and look upon seasons of misery as miracles that build character, make us kinder, and more interesting.
The Importance of Being Miserable is published by Simon and Schuster.
This episode of Conversations was produced by Meggie Morris, Executive Producer was Nicola Harrison.
It explores advertising, marketing, smart phones, addiction, dopamine, serotonin, Gen Z, glimmers of hope, gratitude, being grateful, how to be grateful, gratitude journal, Buddhism, enlightenment, Mad Men, advertising, capitalism, mental health, mental wellbeing, self help books, religion, industrial revolution, greed, property, wants versus needs.
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