Fnord wrote:
Disclaimer: This is a personal account of purely subjective experiences.
Likewise. I am not like anyone else, so no doubt have a skewed view of things. I have been generally very unhappy since the age of 9. But with me there is always a good reason. When things go well I am very happy, but things seldom go well. I have noticed this a lot with others. People who are depressed for a long time usually have a good reason for it. They/we have nobody to talk to, no job (or a horrible one), are trapped somewhere we don't want to be, and see our efforts fail year after year. Being depressed is therefore perfectly rational. The solution is to get the thing you want. But if that was easy there would be no unhappy people.Life is just tough and we have to use our brains to work out how to make it easier. And sometimes it takes a whole lifetime and we still don't succeed. That is life.
I should maybe clarify.
Getting what you want makes you happy. Not
having what you want - it's the process of change that we like. Once we have it we don't stay happy, we usually want something else. Also, I am well aware that chemical imbalances play a huge part. We are physical beings so ultimately all our feelings have physical channels. But science does not yet know what buttons to press. The easiest ay to be happy then is either to take massive drugs (which have long term negative consequences) or to get what you want. And the easiest way to get what you want is to change what you want. If you can see life differently so that easy to obtain things become desirable (like health or nature), you have it made.