Parents’
efforts at helping their children gain happiness are undermined
by the distorted messages that popular culture communicates
to parents about happiness; that happiness can be found in
wealth, celebrity, power, and physical attractiveness. Yet
research and anecdotal accounts of people who have these attributes
show that pursuit of these “false idols” can actually
cause unhappiness.
By
understanding how happiness develops, you can help your children
find true happiness. The real causes of happiness are all
within your children’s control so they can actively
do things that foster their own happiness.
Self-Esteem
Self-esteem
is a powerful contributor to happiness. Self-esteem gives
children a sense of security from which they can engage the
world, which enables them to approach life with confidence.
Self-esteem also offers children a strong sense of competence,
in which they view themselves as able people who can master
important aspects of their lives. This faith in their abilities
facilitates success, which can cultivate happiness. It also
reduces worry and anxiety, which can cause unhappiness.
Positive
Attitude
We’ve
all seen children who just have a great attitude about things.
They’re positive, optimistic, and hopeful. They see
a world filled with sunlight and warmth rather than clouds
and cold. These children tend to be happy because they see
the “glass half-full,” meaning they expect good
things to happen to them. Children with positive attitudes
are also more likely to express gratitude. Children who appreciate
the opportunities they’re given and convey genuine gratitude
to those who help them have been found to be happy people.
Passion
Another
essential contributor to your children’s happiness is
a passion for something in their lives, be it writing, soccer,
or another avenue. Passionate children are happy children
because there is something in their lives that they absolutely
love to do. Children’s passions engage, absorb, and
thrill them. For example, the reader who savors every word
of the books she reads or the cellist who listens to Yo Yo
Ma for hours on end. Just being involved in any way in the
activities for which they have a passion makes them happy.
Popular
culture doesn’t want your children to be passionate
about their lives. It wants your children to connect to things
that make it more money, for example, a passion for video
games and shopping. In a short time, children get bored with
their purchases and need to buy more stuff in the misguided
belief they will feel passion for them. Parents exacerbate
this dependence by choosing the expedient route for entertaining
their children—handing them over to popular culture—rather
than finding activities that engage their children, from which
they might find a passion.
Balance
The
unhappiest children I work with are those who lead unbalanced
lives. They spend most of their time in one activity and their
self-esteem is based on how they do in that activity. The
problem with devotion to one activity is that things will
not always go well, there will be times when children have
setbacks and failures, and they will experience boredom, disenchantment,
and frustration. If the one activity is all that your children
have to feel good about themselves, you are at risk for unhappiness.
Popular
culture wants your children to be imbalanced. Children see
young stars, like the soccer player, Freddie Abdu, or the
actress, Hilary Duff are told by popular culture that they
must sacrifice balance and, for example, join “all-star”
traveling sports teams or take piano or dance classes five
days a week to become superstars. Children who are out of
balance are at risk of falling over—metaphorically—and
being very unhappy.
Balanced
children derive happiness from many outlets, for example,
sports, involvement in spiritual or cultural activities, or
reading. Children who have balance in their lives will still
have experiences where things don’t go well, but, because
their self-esteem is not based solely on one activity and
other parts of their lives bring them happiness, they’re
still able to maintain their happiness.
Be
a Human Being
Popular
culture doesn’t want to raise human beings. Instead,
it wants to create “human consumings” whose primary
purpose in life is to spend and devour. Human consumings buy,
buy, and buy in the mistaken belief that it will bring them
happiness. You can observe ravenous young human consumings
every day in the malls, buying clothes and shoes “they
absolutely must have!”
Happy
children are human beings, not human consumings. Being involves
children finding happiness not in things, but in experiences,
relationships, and activities that offer meaning, satisfaction,
and joy. The ability to just be grounds happy children in
who they are rather than what they own, and gives them control
over what brings them happiness.
Relationships
One
of the most robust findings in the research on happiness is
that people who have strong relationships tend to be the happiest
people. The opportunity to give and receive love, friendship,
and support from family, friends, schoolmates, and others
is essential to happiness. Positive feedback from others—love,
respect, encouragement—is the most readily available
source of happiness. Social relationships may also reduce
stress, increase feelings of security, and generate other
positive emotions, all of which are conducive to happiness.
Popular
culture doesn’t want your children to have healthy relationships.
It preys on isolated and lonely children who are desperate
for any kind of connection with others. Children who have
good relationships have less of a need for attention, stimulation,
and acceptance. They’re less vulnerable to appeals from
popular culture that may make them feel important or popular.
Giving
to Others
We
often look for happiness in the wrong places. We’re
preoccupied with looking inside ourselves to find happiness
with psychotherapy, meditation, and self-help books to uncover
our internal obstacles to happiness. Or people look for happiness
outside of themselves in the form of consumerism, drug and
alcohol use, and other forms of gratification. But happiness
can’t be found down either of those roads.
Your
children will ultimately find happiness outside of themselves,
by giving of themselves to others. There is something profoundly
nourishing about putting others’ needs ahead of our
own and helping others find happiness. Giving to others somehow
touches us in a very deep way and provides a feeling of meaning,
satisfaction, and joy that can’t be found elsewhere.
In putting their own needs aside to help others, children’s
own deepest needs are met.
About
the Author:
Jim Taylor, PhD, is the author of eight books including
his latest, Your Children are Under Attack: How Popular Culture
is Destroying Your Kids’ Values, and How You Can Protect
Them (Sourcebooks, March 2005), from which this article is
adopted, and Positive Pushing: How to Raise a Successful and
Happy Child (Hyperion, 2003). He has worked with young people,
parents, and educators for 20 years. He has been a consultant
and frequent speaker to numerous elementary and secondary
schools, youth-sports programs, and performing-arts organizations
around the country. Dr. Taylor has appeared on NBC’s
Today Show, Fox New Channel’s Fox & Friends, UPN’s
Life & Style, ABC's World News This Weekend, and major
television network affiliates, and has participated in many
radio shows and national print publications. Sign up for Dr.
Taylor's free quarterly newsletter, Kids & Culture Alert
at www.drjimtaylor.com.