Your Joyful Mindful Life

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“Whether we have happiness or not depends on the seeds in our consciousness. If our seeds of compassion, understanding, and love are strong, those qualities will be able to manifest in us. If the seeds of anger, hostility, and sadness in us are strong, then we will experience much suffering…. With understanding and love, we will know how to water our own beautiful seeds and those of others, and we will recognize seeds of suffering and find ways to transform them.”

Thich Nhat Hanh


In many ways, everything we’ve learned in Brilliant Mindful YOU! — and everything that probably brought us here — is about the search for a happy and meaningful life.

For most of its history as a discipline, the field of psychology has focused on the things that can go wrong in the human experience — the disorders and dysfunctions of the mind. Only recently has the field of positive psychology gained traction, seeking to answer questions like “What makes life meaningful and satisfying?” and “What makes happy people happy?”

And happily ?, we’re starting to get some research-based answers!

First of all, the research tells us there are many pathways to happiness — some people find happiness through kindness and service, others through justice and democracy, some through living a virtuous life, and still others through a good nap and a cup of coffee.

Second of all, the research tells us happiness is good for us. When we are happy, we are more productive and creative. Happy people are healthier, too — they have fewer strokes and fatal accidents, and have reduced rates of cardiovascular disease and allergic reactions. In fact, happy aging adds an average of 7.5 years to your life!

Finally, the Greater Good Science Center (GGSC) at the University of Berkeley has given us a “happiness equation”!

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Cultivate positive emotions, add social connections, reduce stress and, ta-da! Happiness!

And don’t a lot of those practices look familiar?

How wonderful that science has distilled for us a short list of daily tools we can use to make our lives more joyful! Specifically, we can:

1. practice compassion (see week 6)

2. practice gratitude (see previous lesson)

3. cultivate awe

The GGSC defines awe as the feeling we get when we are in the presence of something vast, something that is beyond our ordinary frame of reference that we don’t immediately understand. It’s an experience that cannot fit into our existing schemas, and requires an adjustment in our way of thinking.

There are many things that can inspire awe, but the most common occurrences of awe happen in nature, likely due to the sense of vastness. Another common source of awe is witnessing unexpected goodness or nobility in others.

Research shows that we generally experience feelings of awe twice a week, and that when we do, our sense of self-importance and feelings of entitlement go down, and we are more inclined to act with generosity. It also reduces inflammation in our bodies!

Bottom line — if you want to experience awe, spend some time in nature. Look at a tree, sit by a body of water, or stare up at the sky.

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4. connect with others (refer to week 6 lessons on mindful communication)

We are social mammals. We need to be connected to other people. Having strong social connections adds 10 years to your life expectancy (as big of a benefit as quitting smoking!) We can practice cooperating with others.

5. practice forgiveness (see the last lesson in week 6)

6. touch

Touch is our most ancient system for soothing and regulating emotions. It’s why babies want to be snuggled and swaddled. It’s through touch that we develop a sense of trust and safety in the world. So be a hugger.

7. practice mindfulness (have we talked about this? ?)

8. play

We tend to downplay “play” in the west, compared to the ethical and religious systems in the east (think of the goofiness of Zen koans and images of the laughing Buddha). But primates and mammals play all the time. Just watch your dog or your cat or your kids. Play is natural to us, and it enhances our health. So tell jokes, play a game, watch a funny movie. Just play.

9. use narrative (see weeks 2 and 5)

Our sense of self is essentially a collection of the stories — the narratives — we tell ourselves. How do we explain the content of our lives? How do we interpret setbacks? With mindfulness, we can see these stories and understand the ways in which they help us and harm us.

If you were a novel, what would the themes be? What are the conflicts? Who are the main characters? What are the major turning points? What’s the most unexpected plot twist? How would you make sense of the suffering and tension and elation and joy and redemption in your life story?

Research shows that people who have a more coherent life narrative are happier and healthier. They have lower rates of anxiety and depression, higher levels of wellbeing, and better immune functioning.

So even if you’re not a writer, you ARE a novel. Could you write one chapter?


We are playful, compassionate, social, and grateful story-tellers. We are meant to live with purpose and meaning and joy.

Which practices are currently part of your happiness formula? Which ones would you like to cultivate?

In the next lesson, we’ll dive into how we can utilize these practices and create a mindfulness and self-care plan for living our mindful, joyful life!

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