9 Psychological Habits That Eliminate Happiness From Your Life
It is never too late to adopt new ways to make you happier.
Throughout our lives, we are confronted with too many people and the fact that we tend to put them in "categories" shows how much we believe that people behave in certain ways by their nature.
The truth is that many aspects of our personality develop over time through the psychological habits we have adopted, how we interpret events, the thoughts that run through our minds, and the explanations we give ourselves. us about how the world works.
Almost no one wants to see things negatively and yet it is not so unusual, especially for people who have experienced difficult times, more than they would like.
Do you want to have a more hopeful and optimistic outlook on life? See if you can minimize these psychological habits that make people unhappy.
1. When you do not forgive others
Forgiveness means allowing yourself to be free from the resentment of the feeling of injustice, accepting that something has happened but believing that you deserve to get over it. It is the declaration of your independence from the urge to take revenge on someone else, to stop thinking about how you will "make them pay for it" and to continue to allow it to erode your emotional well-being.
Forgiveness is releasing yourself in the healthiest, truest sense of the word. Forgiveness does not minimize the injustice that someone has done to you. It just lets you not get hurt by them anymore. Forgiveness is associated with reducing depression, anxiety, hostility, improving self-esteem, and even physical health. If one looks at its benefits, one will see that it is about being kind to yourself and not about doing something else.
2. When you do not forgive yourself
which you see the world with bitterness and all this because you feel unworthy to feel good.
In fact, forgiving yourself is associated with helping to reduce feelings of depression. If you find yourself overwhelmed by thoughts of past mistakes, start looking at them and exploring them: When is the worst? What emotions do they evoke? What makes them disappear?
If you are trapped in an endless battle with thoughts, trying to "rationalize" your exit from them, consider whether, instead, you can learn to accept their presence without validating them. I understand what I'm thinking. But he can't let it hurt me now, because I decide what to do from now on. "
3. The reasoning of All or Nothing
What the "all-or-nothing" reasoning from its definition says is that your outlook on life is rigid. It magnifies negativity by making it look bigger than it really is. It keeps your mind focused on what went wrong and not what went right, and that makes you see the bad in people, in things, and in life, more often than good.
Try if you can notice yourself making this mistake in everyday life: Do you feel uncomfortable by nature and prefer things to be black and white? This may be good for organizing a closet, but it may not be helpful when it comes to editing the bad things that happen.
4. When you have higher expectations of others than you do
In fact, we sometimes find it harder to deal with others when we see our own characteristics, such as things we don't like to admit or look at. We feel uncomfortable seeing these features in others. Like the classic hypocrite who protests against sins far less than he commits, he will certainly create a disconnect within us that causes stress, hostility, and negativity.
Examine what really happens when you're frustrated with someone, whether it's the stranger on the left lane or your dirty roommate. Do you see the overall picture? What if instead of accepting the negative energy, you chose to worry about the last time you made a mistake and how it might have seemed to others? Empathy for other people, even when you don't want to, can be a surprisingly powerful tool to dispel your anger.
5. When you think things will never get better
Life is, for most of us, a long journey of decades, with its ups and downs and many setbacks. The belief that there is a steady downward trajectory, hinders the beauty of everyday things and keeps you desperately and wrongly believing in negative ideas, giving them a power they do not deserve.
Imagine how much peace you can feel just by allowing yourself to believe that outside the world there are harmonious and beautiful things that you have not experienced. It takes work with yourself to see them, but they are there and always will be.
6. When you think you have less control over your life than you really have
But when the belief that we have no power remains even when, in fact, we have gained strength, we deny ourselves the ability to make our lives better. We also increase the likelihood of seeing the world as inherently discouraging, convincing ourselves that we cannot make a difference.
The more we can feel that we are in control of our own ship, the more we can build a life that suits us. Do you underestimate your ability to get out of this impasse, find a partner who will treat you well, or resolve your long-running quarrel peacefully with your brother? If so, do yourself a great disservice and increase your chances of letting the bad mentality beat you.
7. When we believe in the myth of arrival
It deprives us of the opportunity to find joy in our own terms. It makes us miss the proverbial journey because we are so over-focused on the destination. Worst of all, it prepares us for a frustrating crash, when we realize that it wasn't those 20 pounds that made us feel depressed, it was the fact that we were depressed, for different reasons that made us gain 20 pounds from the beginning.
8. When we overgrow
Sometimes this kind of thinking can even seem like paranoia: "Give it a go and it will take your head off" or "everyone will take advantage of you if you let them."
It is true that not every person is a model of virtue, but it is also true that there is a lot of goodness out there if you just let yourself discover it.
And just because there are scammers doesn't mean we should stop helping those who aren't. After all, when we help others, we feel a sense of well-being. So look at your beliefs to see if, from all the available data you have, you are overhauling the world in a dangerous or hostile environment, which may indicate a hostility that comes from within you.
9. When you do not show practical gratitude
Some people may think that gratitude or keeping a list of things you are grateful for is pseudo-emotional. But you'd rather be a little pseudo-emotional or be the person who lives his whole life without the mental and physical benefits to his health, among other things without depressive symptoms, with improved immune function and a healthy heart, related to gratitude;










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