海角大神

The Happiness Project

A writer sets out on a year-long quest to find happiness.

The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun By Gretchen Rubin Harper, 320 pp., $25.99

Before I even finished the book, I had already preordered multiple copies of Gretchen Rubin鈥檚 latest title, The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun. Which means if you鈥檙e looking for an enlightening, laugh-aloud read, get the book and forget the rest of this review. If you need more convincing, let me count the monthly ways....

Gretchen Rubin already had a pretty good life. She鈥檚 married to the man of her dreams, has two 鈥渄elightful鈥 daughters, is a bestselling author with a Yale law degree, is healthy, and lives in her favorite city surrounded by supportive family and friends. But she鈥檚 also prone to misbehavior that undermines her well-being: she loses her temper over trivial things, and fights melancholy and insecurity, not to mention that unshakable guilt.

One morning on a city bus, Rubin had a startling epiphany: 鈥淚 was suffering from midlife malaise 鈥 a recurrent sense of discontent and almost a feeling of disbelief ... 鈥業s this really it?鈥欌 Asking herself what she really wanted, her answer seemed simple: 鈥淚 want to be happy.鈥 Like most of us, she 鈥渉ad never thought about what made [her] happy or how [she] might be happier.鈥 But unlike most of us, she actually figured out how: 鈥淚 decided to dedicate a year to trying to be happier.鈥 And she gives the rest of us great hope because she did so without making radical changes like running off to Indonesia. Rubin assures us, 鈥淚 wanted to change my life without changing my life, by finding more happiness in my own kitchen.鈥

First she planned and prepared. She compiled her own 鈥淭welve Commandments,鈥 which begins with the all-important 鈥淏e Gretchen,鈥 and her 鈥済oofier list鈥 of 鈥淪ecrets of Adulthood,鈥 which includes tried-and-tested gems like, 鈥淏y doing a little bit each day, you can get a lot accomplished,鈥 and Luddite-loving zingers like, 鈥淭urning the computer on and off a few times often fixes glitches.鈥

Armed and ready, Rubin set off on her year-long journey. Superbly organized into amusing step-by-step months, 鈥淗appiness Project鈥 is a definite success 鈥 just reading it will make you happier. Rubin manages to offer plausible, solid suggestions for what worked for her; she鈥檚 great at navigating that delicate line between 鈥渏ust do this,鈥 and 鈥測ou might want to try that.鈥

As self-help books go, Rubin鈥檚 works because it鈥檚 filled with open, honest glimpses into her real life, woven together with constant doses of humor. She begins the year boosting her energy to be better prepared for the next 11 months: In January, she sleeps more, exercises better, and cleans out her closets. February is spent working on her marriage: She vows to nag less, fight right, and 鈥渘ot to eat a half pound of M&Ms on an empty stomach.鈥

In March, Rubin focuses on work: She launches what becomes a highly successful blog [www.happiness-project.com], directly e-mails a critical reviewer of one of her books (later having a 鈥渧ery nice conversation鈥 with him at a cocktail party!, and writes her own bad (but so funny) reviews for this very title. April is spent enjoying parenthood鈥檚 鈥渇og happiness鈥 鈥 鈥渢he kind of happiness you get from activities that, closely examined, don鈥檛 really seem to bring much happiness at all 鈥 yet somehow they do.鈥

In May, Rubin learns to have more fun; in June, she nurtures friendships new and old; in July, she decides money spent wisely can buy a little happiness after all; and in August, she empathizes with other people鈥檚 catastrophes and finds a spiritual master in Saint Th茅r猫se of Lisieux (after whom I was named!).

In September, she writes a whole novel; October has her trying hypnosis, laughter yoga, and drawing as part of her quest for mindfulness; and in November, she adjusts her attitude to laugh more (small children laugh 400 times per day, but adults just 17 times). By December, she goes all out for 鈥淏oot Camp Perfect,鈥 fails every single day, but proudly, happily resolves to keep trying.

So is Rubin happier by the year鈥檚 end? Absolutely. She has Four Splendid Truths and her Resolutions Chart, not to mention those Twelve Commandments and Secrets to Adulthood that guarantee she鈥檒l live happily ever after.

By the way, as Rubin explains, goals and resolutions are different: 鈥淵ou hit a goal, you keep a resolution.鈥 You complete the goal of reading this book, you keep your resolution to sing every morning to set the goofy tone that will happily permeate throughout your day. Now that鈥檚 the kind of New Year鈥檚 resolution we can all keep!

Terry Hong is media arts consultant at the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program. She writes a Smithsonian book blog at bookdragon.si.edu.

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