Thursday, February 26, 2026

In the book titled, The Happiness Project: Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun, the bestselling author Gretchen Rubin writes that she had an epiphany one rainy afternoon in the unlikeliest of places – a city bus.
“The days are long, but the years are short,” she thought. “Time is passing, and I’m not focusing enough on the things that really matter.” (Money doesn’t buy happiness!) In that moment, she decided to dedicate a year to her own happiness.
Reading her musings, I remembered how many decades ago it occurred to me that I could not change the world but I could only change myself. But how? I reread the world wisdom books, researched new scientific literature on meditation and mindfulness, and read tons of books about what it meant to be aware and content and wise. I discovered that the day I journaled, meditated, exercised, wrote and read was a satisfyingly productive day. Combined with loving family relationships, good friends, a concern for others was a powerful source of happiness.
When we are attentive and self-aware, we have stronger relationships, we are more creative, confident, and better communicators. We don’t fret about why things happened but rather focus on what we can do to fix them. We act.
I try my best to be self-aware and keep attentive from the time I leave my personal power spot in the morning to the time I go to bed at night. But you know what? Sometimes I forget. This happens because haste, petty feelings, and unimportant thoughts hijack my attention. When this happens I do not admonish myself but bring my attention back to the breath and return to the task at hand. With this habit my attention and awareness have improved.
Why not hunker down now? Let the daily practice of journaling, deep reading and breathing exercises begin your day. What is keeping you from grounding yourself, settling at your personal power spot. The winter months are great for spending quiet time with yourself. Sitting in the silence and solitude with your body, heart, and mind at one place will start your day in a positive way. For the rest of the day, you will feel grounded. Make sure your attitude is helpful, generous, positive. Follow the joy you have begun to derive from your daily practices and soon the joy will start following you!
Finally, Gretchen Rubin is right when she says that an orderly and disciplined life contributes to the inner calm; that the smallest of changes can make the biggest difference, and lastly, money, when spent wisely, can buy some happiness.

Jennifer D. Diamond
Thank you for sharing, Madhu! 🙂
Lorraine
Yes to every word of this! A friend sent me a story (not sure if true) about a women who had a bucket list of items but didn’t do because her husband would think it silly or a waste of time or it would inconvenience their schedule… then she died. He found her list and realized how much she didn’t live her life/dreams. The story really impacted me… Your post reminded me of that. I have an opportunity opening up that I really want to do… but, but, but… not ideal timing… etc. I think I need to give it a go and see what happens!
Lorraine
P.s. I must add, my husband is lovingly and completely supportive of everything I do —and encourages me — my problem is internal.
Madhu B. Wangu
You must, you have to “give it a go” as you say, especially if you heart is nudging you hard to do it. Please Lorraine!