This was an inspiring book in some ways, but also annoying. The author admits that she is part of a new trend in books in which the author takes a year for self improvement. I liked that she seems fairly normal and doesn’t escape her regular routine to make some changes. Over time the book dragged though. I was quite impressed with the plethora of quotes throughout (she collects them), and tons of little ideas and research results I found interesting. I had to get past the fact that her personality seems a bit off-putting.
p. 52 The most reliable predictor of not being lonely is the amount of contact with women. Time spent with men doesn’t make a difference.
p. 62 “My Quaker grandparents, who were married 72 years, said that each married couple should have an outdoor game, like tennis or golf, and an indoor game, like Scrabble or gin, that they play together.”
p. 71 Enthusiasm is more important to mastery than innate ability, it turns out, because the single most important element in developing an expertise is your willingness to practice. Therefore, career experts argue, you’re better off pursuing a profession that comes easily and that you love, because that’s where you’ll be more eager to practice and thereby earn a competitive advantage.
p. 81 Benjamin Franklin, along with 12 friends, formed a club for mutual improvement that met weekly for 40 years.
p. 84 There is something nice about working in an office with a candle burning. It’s like seeing snow falling outside the window or having a dog snoozing on the carpet beside you. It’s a kind of silent presence in the room and very pleasant.
p. 85 Take pleasure in the gradual process made toward a goal, in the present. Called “pre-goal-attainment positive affect.”
p. 109 “Rosy prospection”, the anticipation of happiness is sometimes greater than the happiness actually experienced.
p. 120 “What did you like to do as a child? What you enjoyed as a ten-year-old is probably something you’d enjoy now.”
p. 126 Look at those things that do have a beauty to you now and look at them more and more.
... Our lives are in the space between Isaiah Berlin’s “We are doomed to choose and every choice may entail an irreparable loss” and Borges’s Garden of Forking Paths, where every choice produces a quantum explosion of alternate futures.
p. 132 I started a “Happiness Box” in which I’d collect all sorts of little trinkets meant to trigger happy thoughts and memories.
p. 153 The “fundamental attribution error” is a psychological phenomenon in which we tend to view other people’s actions as reflections of their characters and to overlook the power of situation to influence their actions, whereas with ourselves, we recognize the pressures of circumstance.
p. 156 Another reason not to say critical things about other people: “spontaneous trait transference.” Studies show that people unintentionally transfer to me the traits I ascribe to other people.
p. 169 The Epiphany of the Back Spasm. Money doesn’t buy happiness the way good health doesn’t buy happiness. When money or health is a problem, you think of little else; when it’s not a problem, you don’t think much about it.
p. 170 People’s basic psychological needs include the need to feel secure, to feel good at what they do, to be loved, to feel connected to others, and to have a strong sense of control.
p. 171 I wanted to spend money to stay in closer contact with my family and friends; to promote my energy and health; to create a more serene environment in my apartment; to work more efficiently; to eliminate sources of boredom, irritation, and marital conflict; to support causes that I thought important; and to have experiences that would enlarge me.
p. 185 People who give money to charity end up wealthier than those who don’t give to charity (?!).
p. 211 Doctor of the Church, the elite category of 33 supersaints that includes Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas.
p. 242 Shakers deliberately introduced a mistake into the things they made, to show that man shouldn’t aspire to the perfection of God. Flawed can be more perfect than perfection.
p. 250 Listening to music is one of the quickest, simplest ways to boost mood and energy and to induce a particular mood. Music stimulates the parts of the brain that trigger happiness, and it can relax the body—in fact, studies show that listening to a patient’s choice of music during medical procedures can lower the patient’s heart rate, blood pressure, and anxiety level.
p. 259 A small child typically laughs more than 400 times each day, and an adult—17 times.
Quotes:
Nietzsche “All truly great thoughts are conceived while walking.”
“The end of a melody is not its goal; but nonetheless, if the melody had not reached its end it would not have reached its goal either. A parable.”
William James “Action seems to follow feeling, but really action and feeling go together; and by regulating the action, which is under the more direct control of the will, we can indirectly regulate the feeling, which is not.”
Samuel Johnson “It is by studying little things that we attain the great art of having as little misery, and as much happiness as possible.”
“To live in perpetual want of little things is a state, not indeed of torture, but of constant vexation.”
“Abstinence is as easy to me as temperance would be difficult.”
G. K. Chesterton “It is easy to be heavy: hard to be light.” (or as the saying goes, “Dying is easy; comedy is hard.”)
“Happy wife, happy life” “If Mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.”
Business school truism “You manage what you measure.”
William Butler Yeats “Happiness is neither virtue nor pleasure nor this thing nor that, but simply growth. We are happy when we are growing.”
W. H. Auden “Between the ages of twenty and forty we are engaged in the process of discovering who we are, which involves learning the difference between accidental limitations which it is our duty to outgrow and the necessary limitations of our nature beyond which we cannot trespass with impunity.”
Matthew Arnold “All knowledge is interesting to a wise man.”
Andy Warhol “Either once only, or every day”
Simone Weil “Imaginary evil is romantic and varied; real evil is gloomy, monotonous, barren, boring. Imaginary good is boring; real good is always new, marvelous, intoxicating.”
Sarah Bernhardt “It is by spending of oneself that one becomes rich.”
Michel de Montaigne “The least strained and most natural ways of the soul are the most beautiful; the best occupations are the least forced.”
Robert Frost “The best way out is always through.”
J.M. Barrie “We set out to be wrecked.”
Saint Therese of Lisieux “I choose all.”
Francis Bacon/Heraclitus “Dry light is ever the best.”
Gertrude Stein “I like a room with a view but I like to sit with my back turned to it.”
Elias Canetti “Kant Catches Fire.”
Virginia Woolf “She always had the feeling that it was very, very dangerous to live even one day.”