Stop Chasing Happiness—It's a Trap ================================== Sam and Sophie dive into Russ Harris's *The Happiness Trap* and why trying to feel good all the time actually makes us miserable. They talk about defusing from negative thoughts, making space for difficult emotions, and the difference between goals and values. ---------------------------------------- SAM: Hey there, welcome back to 7 Minute Books. I'm Sam, and today we're talking about by Russ Harris. Sophie, I have to ask, did this one hit a little close to home for you too? SOPHIE: Oh, absolutely. Hi everyone. So this book basically flips everything we think we know about happiness on its head. Russ Harris is a doctor and therapist, and he says the more we chase happiness, the more it slips away. And honestly? That felt like a punch in the gut at first. SAM: Right? I was like, wait, isn't the whole point of life to be happy? But then he explains this thing called the 'happiness trap.' It's this cycle where we desperately try to control our feelings, avoid sadness, push away anxiety, and that struggle actually makes us more miserable. SOPHIE: Exactly. He compares it to holding a beach ball underwater. The harder you push, the more it wants to pop up. And that's what most of us do every day. We distract ourselves with work, TV, social media, food, anything to avoid feeling bad. SAM: Yeah, and I'm definitely guilty of that. But the book says the solution isn't to get rid of negative thoughts. It's to change our relationship with them. There's this idea of 'defusion', like stepping back from your thoughts and seeing them as just words, not facts. SOPHIE: Yes! And he has this great exercise where you take a thought like 'I'm so stupid' and repeat it in a silly voice. It sounds ridiculous, but it actually works. It strips the thought of its power. SAM: I tried that with 'this is going to be a disaster', I sang it to 'Happy Birthday.' And suddenly I was like, 'Oh, it's just a sentence.' It's not the truth. That was kind of freeing. SOPHIE: Right. And then there's 'expansion,' which is the opposite of avoidance. Instead of tensing up against anxiety, you breathe into it, make space for it. He uses this bus metaphor, you're the driver, and your difficult feelings are just passengers shouting directions. SAM: I love that. You don't have to kick them off the bus. You just acknowledge them and keep driving where you want to go. Which brings us to values, the heart of the book. SOPHIE: Yes. Harris says we're taught to chase goals thinking they'll make us happy. Get the promotion, buy the house, get married, and then we'll feel good. But happiness is a feeling, and feelings are temporary. Instead, he says we should live by our values. SAM: And values aren't destinations, they're directions. Like 'being a loving partner' or 'being courageous.' You never finish being kind. And when you act in line with your values, you get this deep sense of fulfillment, even if you're anxious or sad in the moment. SOPHIE: That's the big shift. It's not about feeling good, it's about living a meaningful life. And to do that, you have to be willing to feel the hard stuff. That's what he calls 'willingness', choosing to make space for pain because it's in service of something bigger. SAM: Yeah, and that's hard. But the book also talks about the 'observing self', the part of you that just notices thoughts and feelings without getting caught up in them. It's like the sky that holds the weather. The storms come and go, but the sky stays. SOPHIE: That's such a powerful image. And it ties into mindfulness, which Harris presents not as a relaxation technique, but as a way to be fully present. It's the foundation for defusion and expansion. SAM: One thing that really stuck with me is that acceptance isn't passive. It's not giving up. It's actively embracing reality as it is so you can move forward. That's a game-changer. SOPHIE: Totally. And the whole book is a call to stop fighting your own mind. You're not broken. Your anxiety and sadness are just part of being human. The trap is believing you should be free of them. SAM: So the takeaway for me is, stop trying to be happy, start trying to be alive. Feel everything fully, even the painful stuff. That's where the richness is. SOPHIE: And if you want to go deeper, the whole library's over at 7minutebooks.com/app, with over six thousand fiction and nonfiction titles you can read or listen to in any language. It starts at $2.99 a month, $9.99 a year, or $19.99 for lifetime access. SAM: Perfect. Sophie, final thought? SOPHIE: Just that happiness isn't the goal, a full life is. And that means making room for everything. Thanks for listening, and we'll see you in the next one.