iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Gretchen Rubin

GET UPDATES FROM Gretchen Rubin
 

How To Ask For Help

Posted: 07/26/09 10:55 AM ET

HelpbuttonI'm working on my Happiness Project, and you could have one, too! Everyone's project will look different, but it's the rare person who can't benefit. Join in -- no need to catch up, just jump in right now. Each Friday's post will help you think about your own happiness project.

One of my Secrets of Adulthood is "It's okay to ask for help," and one of my resolutions is to "Ask for help." Why I find this simple act so difficult, I don't know. But I know that other people do, too -- for example, the excellent Marci Alboher just wrote about how to ask for help.

I don't like to admit I don't know something or understand how to do something, and feel even more uncomfortable and sheepish when I ask for help promoting my work. I was comforted when I read this confession in Samuel Butler's Note-Books: "I was nearly forty before I felt how stupid it was to pretend to know things that I did not know and I still often catch myself doing so."

The thing is, asking for help really - helps. It makes my life a lot easier and more pleasant. And that makes me happier.

So now I'm going to ask for help getting the word out about The Happiness Project.

If you're so inclined, it would be a huge help if you'd forward the link to this blog to three people who might be interested. Do you know someone facing a happiness challenge? Someone very interested in the subject of happiness? Word of mouth is the best recommendation; people really respect their friends' suggestions.

Also, if you're inclined to buy the book The Happiness Project, it would a huge help if you'd pre-order it. The book hasn't hit the shelves yet, but early interest brings all sorts of benefits for a book. Buzz at the beginning really matters.

So, phew, I did it. I asked for help. Not just one kind of help, but two!

Asking for help boosts happiness, because not only does it make your life easier, it demonstrates that you have a social network that supports you. What's more, asking for help is a sign of relationship and trust. As Benjamin Franklin recommended, "If you want to make a friend, let someone do you a favor." I remember someone at work telling me, "I never liked that guy until he asked to borrow $50. Then I realized he must consider me a friend, and presto! I started liking him."

Also, by asking for help, you're boosting other people's happiness. Studies show that for happiness, providing support is just as important as getting support. Often, people like to help. I know I like to help. That's part A of the Second Splendid Truth, also known as "Do good, feel good."

Do you find it difficult to ask for help? When you do ask for help, does it make you happier?

* On Gimundo I found this happy video of fun with sticky notes -- by EepyBird, the same people who did the Diet Coke and Mentos experiment.

* Interested in starting your own happiness project? If you'd like to take a look at my personal Resolutions Chart, for inspiration, just email me at grubin, then the "at" sign, then gretchenrubin dot com. (Sorry about writing it in that roundabout way; I'm trying to thwart spammers.) Just write "Resolutions Chart" in the subject line.

 
 
 

Follow Gretchen Rubin on Twitter: www.twitter.com/gretchenrubin

I'm working on my Happiness Project, and you could have one, too! Everyo...
I'm working on my Happiness Project, and you could have one, too! Everyo...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 39
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
02:10 PM on 07/29/2009
Great picture of the Kitty Cat.
12:07 PM on 07/28/2009
This is great - thanks. This morning I am composing a paragraph asking for help with something and will be emailing it along with a request they ask for something they need in return to several people in my closest network. I hope it inspires them to help, but also to reconnect and see what shared resources we may have to help each other.
09:48 AM on 07/27/2009
The Happiness Project IS great and so is the site.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gladys1963
You should see my macro-bio!
09:32 PM on 07/26/2009
I had to laugh at the kitten picture. My cat loves to get on top of doors (as a step to a higher place) but never hesitates to ask for my help getting down.

I feel so used!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Montana 123
Mama to Three Little Monkeys
04:51 AM on 07/27/2009
Our late kitty, Mischief use to do this. LOL Silly cat.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gladys1963
You should see my macro-bio!
10:22 AM on 07/27/2009
Sometimes my dear Siamese just wants to talk so he acts as though he wants to get down but gets back on the shelf instead. I know this cat giggles.

I'm sorry you lost your dear Mischief. Sounds like you have many fun stories by which to remember him! (Or her--don't know why I'm assuming only boy cats are mischievious!)

=^..^=
08:30 PM on 07/26/2009
I think it's always great when people have the courage to be, who and what they really feel. It's a great way to get the help you need.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rivahcat
You can't teach a dogma new tricks--D. Parker
07:20 PM on 07/26/2009
The kitty picture looks like my sweet angel Domino!
photo
grasyknol
Senator Sherrod Brown - My Senator!
12:45 AM on 07/27/2009
Looks like mine too except mine is a lot more fluffier and is 9 years old.
06:38 PM on 07/26/2009
I have to agree with some of the other comments. It depends on who you ask. even people you think are your long time best friends will turn on you as soon as you need some support. In my case it was just needing someone to listen. All I received was rejection, condescending comments and judgment. I am grateful now, and remember to NEVER ask for help again.
04:47 PM on 07/26/2009
"If you want to make a friend, let someone do you a favor." I remember someone at work telling me, "I never liked that guy until he asked to borrow $50. Then I realized he must consider me a friend, and presto! I started liking him."

Uh.. isn't this how the ma*fia works?
photo
JDM73
male, 38, writer/draughtsman/ex-musician
03:53 PM on 07/26/2009
I would say that one of the most important things to consider in asking for help is approaching the right people. If you ask the wrong people for help, the response could range from indifference to annoyed impatience to outright hostility. And, sadly, not all of us have a supportive social network.
02:24 PM on 07/26/2009
robbyj i just want you to live. i need you- you are very perceptive.
02:23 PM on 07/26/2009
As long as you ask the right people for help. Ask the wrong, albeit well meaning, people and watch your confidence take a nose dive, while your negative self talk eggs it on.
03:56 PM on 07/26/2009
Amen... The reality that there exists 'right' and 'wrong' people to reach-out to for help is never honestly discussed in those "Self-help" books. I appreciate [LyssaBarnes] honesty below. That there are many women who fiercely resist any criticisms, constructive or otherwise, suggesting that "things are not OK" or that she might be failing as a wife or mother. So a women might seek out help if she's lost on the road or uncertain about a purchase. But avoid appearing "lost" for answers in her marriage or parenting. This makes sense since women are expected to put on the 'best face' and be well put together. So both men (myself) and women have different motivations for "keeping up appearances" and create obstacles to support and help for themselves, each other and their children.
07:54 PM on 07/30/2009
Thanks. You never know who the right or wrong people are. One thing that I have learned is that if you reach out the right person may come to your side after a while. I no longer have some friends that I used to, but I wouldn't trade the new ones I've made to get any of the former back.
12:10 AM on 07/27/2009
As others have written here, asking the right people is crucial. I asked a close friend of 20 years to come to the hospital to make sure I came out from under the general anesthesia OK ... she didn't have to be with me during the surgery. I had no family in town at the time. The hospital was on her way home from work. She said she was too busy ... no specific reason given. I apologized for stressing her by asking (I've grown a spine since then). I've also run into people who are SO anxious to help you with certain things ... and then that goes into the "you owe me" column.
02:17 PM on 07/26/2009
Fabulous photo. Illustrates the top perfectly and calms the mind.
01:02 PM on 07/26/2009
That works fine for women.

Men have a gender role to fulfill.
It's plain to see in suicide statistics.

Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death for males.

Suicide is the nineteenth leading cause of death for females.

73% of all suicide deaths are white males.
02:06 PM on 07/26/2009
Supposedly, the reason men won't ask for directions is because they are afraid they will look weak in front of another male. While it may seem silly, it's hard-wired into the brain from when our earliest ancestors had to play the role of the alpha male, even if they weren't one, in order to survive.

For the same reason, that's why many men find it easier to confide in a women rather than in male friend. Sometimes the fear of not seeming to be strong can overwhelm all reason and can actually end up by hurting the person intent on appearing to be in control.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
03:41 PM on 07/26/2009
Anastasia, I think everything you have said is true. However, as a man, I resist asking for directions and I get a map and try to figure it out myself, because I highly value self reliance. Anyhow, with exceptions like the Donnor Party, getting lost has led to many discoveries :).
12:11 PM on 07/28/2009
There is a biological reason men don't ask for directions. Think about it. It takes 3 million sperm to find one egg, going one way in a dark cave. And only one of them will find the egg and be strong enough to penetrate it!!!
12:43 PM on 07/26/2009
I think this makes a lot of sense and is good advice. I think people generally want to help other people and have good will towards them. I respond to kindness.....period..! If someone is nice and polite and pleasant and respectful to me, it matters not to me what race, religion, sex, sexual preference or anything else they are. Thats why I love my cats more than people. they are always happy to see me.
12:08 AM on 07/28/2009
It's not a sexual preference. A preference is where one has a choice and chooses one over the other. It is a sexual orientation.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:06 PM on 07/26/2009
It's one thing to ask for help. Children do it all the time. But, having asked, there are no guarantees that the person you've asked either can or will be of any assistance whatsoever. All we ever need is information, so why not do the research online?
12:22 PM on 07/26/2009
This is where the quest for "help" can turn into a "carousel" . Ex. You ask a friend for advice on finding a partner. They then recommend this book "How To Find the Perfect Mate" (example title). Ok you go and buy the book to find one of it's recommendations is "Ask your Friends for Help". XD enuf said, at least for now.