Friday, March 21, 2014

Make Happiness Your Priority@@

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Would you have known? Yesterday was the International Day of Happiness which was established by the United Nations in 2012. It´s supposed being celebrated throughout the world every year on March 20
Hm? Were you celebrating it? Were you, your friends, colleagues, or team members happier, because it was the International Day of Happiness?

Well, unfortunately most likely many of us were not. And one might also wonder, if there aren´t more important things the UN and other institutions should focus on. Have those happiness preachers not realized that today´s world is confronted with more serious topics: Wars, civil conflicts, income disparities, social inequalities, environmental issues, etc. Can we just "smile away“ all of those major risks? And what about our own daily chores and challenges? Let´s be a little bit happy and all will be good? Are you kidding?
I guess you get my point! We can act sarcastically by arguing against the word and the concept "happiness.“ Alternatively, and that´s more the approach I favor, we can be positive, audacious, and open-minded about its broader meaning and purpose.
The way I´d like to define happiness has nothing to do with daydreaming, trying to escape reality, or seeing life through rose-colored glasses. In fact, I consider happiness and the well-being of people as a fundamental human right. The pursuit of happiness is a beautiful goal to strive for. And it should become one of our main objectives in life. Well aligned with, and not hiding behind, economic growth and social responsibility.
NEVER GIVE UP ON YOUR DREAMS

The International Day of Happiness should remind organizations and individuals to look for ways to raise the awareness about the importance of happiness. And to assist yourself and others in becoming happier.


Governmental and non-governmental organizations as well as every one of us should make a contribution through education, training, coaching, or awareness-raising activities. It´s worth it! Numerous studies have shown that happy people are healthier, more confident, more creative, more dynamic, more productive, more satisfied, more powerful, and more resilient. As such, creating happy and meaningful lives does counteract depression, fear, ruthlessness, frustration, and crime.

Recent research proves that a vast majority of people would prefer to live in a society with the greatest happines rather than the greatest wealth. The Kingdom of Bhutan designed the concept of Gross National Happiness (GNH) to measure quality of life and social progress in a more holistic manner than only the economic indicator of gross domestic product (GDP). The country´s Gross National Happiness Commission is charged reviewing policy decisions and allocation of resources by putting also emphasis on the well-being of its people. Another alternative metric is the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) which also takes fuller account of the health of a nation by incorporating environmental and social factors which are not measured by GDP.


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