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Lisa Earle McLeod

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Are Smart People Miserable?

Posted: 06/13/2012 11:27 am

Ernest Hemingway once said, "Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know."

There's a long-held belief that average people are happier than smart people. The premise -- frequently touted at Mensa meetings and Unitarian cocktail parties -- is that the super-smart are more likely to be tormented by issues like global warming and the meaning of life than the average Joe or Jane.

The masses in the middle of the bell curve may be content with a warm place to sleep and an occasional martini on Friday night. But the intellectual elite are wracked with despair because they alone understand life's complexities.

It sounds good in theory. The problem is, it's not true. According to a study from the Netherlands, there's no correlation on an individual level between intelligence and happiness.

One could make the point, if you haven't figured out how to be happy, how smart can you be?

"I'm too smart to be happy" sounds more noble than "I'm too fat to be happy," but it's really just one of the many excuses we use to justify our angst. "I can't be happy because I had bad parents." "I can't be happy because I hate my job." "I can't be happy because I'm in a bad marriage." "I can't be happy because I'm too old."

The truth is, happiness is hard work, no matter what your IQ, age, weight, or marital status. Happiness doesn't come to you, you have to create it.

People need two things to be happy -- purpose and pleasure.

We need to know that we're making progress towards meaningful goals, and we need to experience the joy of being fully alive in the moment we're in.

The challenge that is you need both. Neither purpose nor pleasure alone is enough. You can work tirelessly towards world peace or scooping soup for the poor, but if you don't take pleasure in the process, you'll never be truly happy. On the flip side, you can spend endless days at the spa having every inch of your body puffed, fluffed and soothed, but after a certain period of time, a lack of true purpose will eventually eat away at your soul.

We often believe that happiness is waiting for us on the other side of the if only's. If only I wasn't married to this person, didn't have this job, were thin or could solve the world's problems, then I would be happy. We tell ourselves that if only we could rid our self of our problems (spouse, job, ab flab) then we would be happy. But it's a myth.

If you want to be happy you need to do two things:

1. Decide to care about something -- Whether its your kids, your job, your church or global warming, find something that matters to you and help make it better. Being part of something bigger than yourself will boost your pride and self-esteem. Don't do it for external praise, do it because it matters to you.

2. Be fully present -- Happiness isn't found in the past or future. Reviewing pleasurable memories can build your confidence. But staying stuck in the past robs you of the present. Thinking about the future helps you set goals, but you don't want to put your happiness on hold until it gets here. Quiet your brain chatter and focus on the moment right in front of you. There's pleasure to be found in almost everything.

Find a purpose and decide that you're going to love each moment of your life while you're living it. It's not easy, but it sure is intelligent.

(c) Lisa Earle McLeod

Lisa Earle McLeod is a sales leadership consultant. Companies like Apple, Kimberly-Clark and Pfizer hire her to help them create passionate, purpose-driven sales forces.

She the author of The Triangle of Truth, which the Washington Post named as a "Top Five Book for Leaders."

She has appeared on The Today Show, and has been featured in Forbes, Fortune and The Wall Street Journal. She provides executive coaching sessions, strategy workshops, and keynote speeches.

More info: http://www.LisaEarleMcLeod.com
Lisa's Blog -How Smart People Can Get Better At Everything

Copyright 2012 Lisa Earle McLeod. All rights reserved.

For more by Lisa Earle McLeod, click here.

For more on happiness, click here.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mikeydjd83
09:15 AM on 06/15/2012
Ah, that elusive pursuit of happiness...

How did the author of the Declaration of Independence view his timeless phrase, 'the pursuit of happiness' in the context of his own personal life? Was it merely about a measure of an individual’s money or material wealth?"

Experience Life among th Ordinary and contemplate Thomas Jefferson's Personal 'Pursuit of Happiness' (Part One) at

http://lifeamongtheordinary.blogspot.com/2012/06/thomas-jeffersons-personal-pursuit-of.html
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novelist2000
veritas non olet
04:32 AM on 06/15/2012
I have observed that the human brain (or soul) can only cope with two of the three timezones, past, present, and future. Even large achievements do not bring joy to some people as they have such a strong past, struggle to secure a future that the present simply does not have enough room. That came to me when reading Kirk Douglas' 'Ragman's Son.' Then you find people who are strongly living in the present but don't care about the future or the past. Not sure why I am writing this, but anything that might aid to understand the small and large schemes of things is probably worth spending a minute on.

Another thing is your genetic make-up. There are people who are after quality, others are after quantity. Put the quality person in an environment where there is quantity but no quality, he/she'll suffer as is the case the other way round. Does this make sense? That's it for today.
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02:41 PM on 06/13/2012
Boy am I glad that I can afford right now to be viewed as either unintelligent or unhappy by Ernest Hemingway.

It's almost like a free ride or something.
12:25 PM on 06/13/2012
All good points.
Most of the unhappy people I know are dopes. Real dopes.
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JoeyDee2
I know what just passed here
01:19 PM on 06/13/2012
Are they dopes because they're unhappy? Or does being a dope make you unhappy? I have encountered a lot of dopey happy people.

A lot of unhappiness results from unfulfilled desires. If a person tries and fails, that can't be viewed as a character flaw.

Ever hear the expression, "try walking in someone else's shoes?"

Or do you want to just clap your hands?
12:25 PM on 06/13/2012
The real key to happiness is being oblivious to all the horrible things that are happening in the world. The more you know, the less likely you will be truly happy. Happiness is fleeting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JD Salinger
My micro-bio is invisible to the naked eye.
11:56 AM on 06/13/2012
Living in the "now" is challenging and elusive, but when you hit it, it's good.
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