Is your life where you want it to be?

Climbing Life’s Mountains.
Photo courtesy of Pixabay.com

Climbing Life’s Mountains.

By David Joel Miller, MS, Licensed Therapist & Counselor.

Is your life where you wanted it to be?

Many of the people I talk to in my therapy practice who are in their twenties, thirties, and even forties, men and women both, tell me that they are not where they should be in life. While there can be many reasons for that, I wanted to talk to you today about some of the more common reasons people fail to reach their goals, and even when they do, they don’t feel that they are successful enough.

In a previous post, I talked about how I view my personal process of setting and achieving goals as being metaphorically like an Indoor Mountain Climber. For this post, I will use that metaphor and expand on it. Whether the mountain you’re trying to climb is outdoors or a challenge in your home or work life, there are some questions you need to ask yourself.

How did I pick that goal?

Most people spend more time shopping for a used car than they do picking out a college major or a life partner. Not knowing the person you’re moving in with and not knowing what you will be doing once you get your degree and are working in that field leads to a lot of disappointment.

It’s common to underestimate how hard it is to climb the mountain you have chosen. People who have been in a career field for ten years often compare themselves to people who have been on the job for thirty or forty years and feel they have a lot of ground to catch up. When you have been climbing your mountain for a few hours, and you look up towards the summit, it can easily look like you have not gotten anywhere.

Most overnight successes spent years developing their skills before they got their big break. When you’re partway into your career, don’t complain that you’re not yet at the top of your profession. Take a good look around at how long those people above you have been climbing. It also helps to prevent discouragement to look at those people who are just starting out and realize how far you’ve come.

Did you pick the wrong mountain to climb?

Many people reach a point where they look around and say to themselves, “I think I’m climbing the wrong mountain.” A lot of people discover that the career they are pursuing doesn’t provide the rewards they’re looking for. What you learn in school are the basics. What you learn on the job is the reality.

Lots of things are fun when you’re first learning a new subject. Especially if you are like me and love learning just for the sake of learning. However, once you get on the job, those abstract theoretical questions can become the drudgery of doing the same task over and over. If you are going to spend all day filling out forms, you need to enjoy that process, or there needs to be some other reward in your outside of work life to keep you doing it.

Making a large salary won’t make you happy.

Studies of happiness tell us we have made a mistake in how we evaluate happiness. Happiness and unhappiness are not at opposite ends of a spectrum. Happiness is one feeling, and unhappiness is another. When life is hard, if you live in poverty and struggle to provide the basics of life, it’s likely you will be unhappy. But even in unhappy circumstances, when your partner or children hug you and tell you how much they appreciate you, it makes you happy.

This separateness of happiness and unhappiness explains to me why more money can reduce unhappiness but it will not by itself increase happiness. Spending money on things only makes you happy for a very brief period of time.

If you don’t have a car, buying one that runs makes you less unhappy. Buying a brand-new fancy prestige car may make you happy for a while, but that happiness is off, and you must keep trading up for the newest and latest prestige item.

Everyone needs something that gives their life meaning and purpose.

If you can find and pursue the one thing that gives your life meaning and purpose, you are much more likely to find happiness. For some people, their work is a way to earn enough money so that on their time off, they can do those things that give their life meaning and purpose. Other people are able to find a job which in and of itself fills their life with meaning and purpose.

Have you achieved the right balance between things that support you physically and those activities that give your life meaning and purpose?

Does David Joel Miller see clients for counseling and coaching?

Yes, I do. I can see private pay clients if they live in California, where I am licensed. If you’re interested in information about that, please email me or use the contact me form.

Recently, I began working with a telehealth company called Grow Therapy. If you’d like to make an appointment to work with me, contact them, and they can do the required paperwork and show you my available appointments. The link for making an appointment to talk with me is: David Joel Miller, LMFT, LPCC 

Staying in touch with David Joel Miller.

Want the latest blog posts as they are published? Subscribe to this blog.

For more information about my writing journey, my books, and other creative activities, please subscribe to my blog at davidjoelmillerwriter.com

Seven David Joel Miller Books are available on Amazon now! And more are on the way.

For more about my books, please visit my Amazon Author Page – David Joel Miller

For information about my work in mental health, substance abuse, and having a happy life, please check out https://counselorssoapbox.com

For videos, see: Counselorssoapbox YouTube Video Channel

Overcome sadness by collecting special moments.

Special Moment
Photo courtesy of Pixabay.com

Overcome sadness by collecting special moments.

By David Joel Miller, MS, Licensed Therapist & Counselor.

The human brain has a negativity bias.

The human brain has a preference for remembering the negative and forgetting the positive. Whether that’s by design or the result of experience through millions of years of evolution, I will leave it to others to decide. But I can see how this negativity bias could benefit human survival and how it is causing a lot of pain and suffering today. Let me try to illustrate this with a couple of hypothetical stories.

Please hang with me to the end of these parables when I explain how you can overcome negativity bias and become a happier, more positive person by collecting special moments.

The story of the red berries.

Imagine, if you can, being a human living in the forest or jungle before the advent of electricity, refrigerators, canned goods, or any practical way to store food through the winter. You might’ve figured out how to dry certain seeds, but drying berries was very impractical.

One day, you’re walking through the jungle and find some bushes covered with bright red berries. You try a few, and they are tasty. So, you eat as many as you can. Imagine the time before the Industrial Revolution and modern civilization when humans typically went hungry through most of the winter. Hence, the preference in earlier times was for women with a little meat on their bones who might survive the lean times and be able to care for the children.

As an aside here, I read somewhere once that the human brain has twenty-two circuits to tell us we are hungry. When hungry, we get headaches, our stomach growls, we may feel weak, and so on. As I remember it, we only have eight circuits, which feedback to tell the brain we have had enough to eat. Hence, humans tend to continue to gain weight whenever food is available and only lose it when there is famine. Not a terribly adaptive quality in this modern industrial era.

The following day, you are walking again through the hypothetical jungle again. There’s no need to remember what the berries looked like because while they were tasty, you ate them all, and there are no more to be had. Hence, we tend to forget many positive experiences which may be challenging to repeat.

But, in our hypothetical tale, let’s say that you became violently ill, threw up those berries, and almost died. Can you see now why you might, having had a negative experience, remember those berries for the rest of your life? This negativity bias carries over into many other human activities where we remember one unpleasant event but forget large numbers of positive events.

What color were the flowers?

I was working at an agency that saw many children. Often, their parents showed up wanting to know how the child was doing. I noticed a definite negativity bias on the part of the parents toward the whole process. But I wasn’t quite sure how to overcome that bias.

One day, on my way to work, I noticed as I walked in the front door that the landscapers had replaced flowers in front of the building with some new plants that were in bright bloom. I hurried in and got to work, knowing the first family would be there to see the child in minutes.

Partway into the conversation, I realized that these parents could tell me everything the child did wrong, as well as what the teacher and the professionals were doing wrong, but had difficulty describing anything about the situation that was good or right. And then it struck me. I suffered from that same negativity bias. I had seen those brightly colored flowers when I came to work that morning, but now caught up in the problems of the day, I couldn’t remember what those flowers looked like or what color they were.

During my lunch hour, I went outside and looked at those flowers again. I spent anywhere from thirty seconds to several minutes examining each one. I discovered that thirty seconds of looking at something positive was the bare minimum for me to remember it later. And the longer I looked at a particular flowering plant, the more likely I was to remember it hours, days, even years later.

The way you overcome negativity bias is to pay more attention to the positive.

Whenever something good happens in your life, spend some time consciously looking at it, staring at it, and committing it to memory. So many of life’s special moments go by unnoticed. Become a collector of those special moments, and the whole nature of your life will become more positive and filled with special moments.

This technique is especially useful with children and partners.

One simple rule of parenting is to always “catch your child doing something right.” The more you notice the positive things your child does and compliment them on it, the more likely they are to repeat that behavior. When children are doing something you don’t like, ignoring it whenever possible is likely to extinguish the behavior. It’s worth noticing that some children who will only get attention when they do something wrong behave badly more often simply to get that extra attention.

If you want a happy, more satisfying life full of contentment, become a collector of special moments. Consider writing them down. The more attention you pay to the positive in life, the more you will realize that positive things are happening all around you every day. If only you would collect that positivity and save it up against the next rainy day.

Does David Joel Miller see clients for counseling and coaching?

Yes, I do. I can see private pay clients if they live in California, where I am licensed. If you’re interested in information about that, please email me or use the contact me form.

Staying in touch with David Joel Miller.

Want the latest blog posts as they are published? Subscribe to this blog.

For more information about my writing journey, my books, and other creative activities, please subscribe to my blog at davidjoelmillerwriter.com

Seven David Joel Miller Books are available on Amazon now! And more are on the way.

For more about my books, please visit my Amazon Author Page – David Joel Miller

For information about my work in mental health, substance abuse, and having a happy life, please check out https://counselorssoapbox.com