Adding Up To Happiness

Solutions to many of our most perplexing personal problems can often be found by applying a kind of creative arithmetic

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Solutions to many of our most perplexing personal problems can often be found by applying a kind of creative arithmetic

Over lunch recently, an old friend and I talked about life. She admitted that she’d been lonely since her husband died. “Yet I can’t complain,” she said. “I had a good marriage. The kids are on their own. My job isn’t exactly thrilling, but it’s secure, and I retire in 15 years. So what else is there?”What else indeed! A woman of 50—able, experienced, attractive—assuming, in effect, that her life is over. I’ve seen this often, and in much younger people—the resigned conviction that change is impossible. What many of us fail to realize is that it’s possible at any age to improve the quality of our life.

But we have to initiate the process ourselves. By taking a new job or moving to a new locale, we can propel ourselves, forcibly and excitingly, into the stream of life. It’s like pruning an overgrown tree: The result is new growth and more fruit. A widow I know sold her house and bought a van so she could travel the country showing her silverwork at craft fairs. She has made friends from Maine to Florida; she winters in the south and summers in the north and looks 10 years younger. “There’s so much I haven’t seen yet,” she said. “It’s not too late.”

It’s almost never too late to do, on some scale, what you’ve always wanted to do. The key is to move forwards, to make changes. The path many of my acquaintances have taken to greater happiness may be thought of as a kind of creative arithmetic, with additions, subtractions, multiplications and divisions. Chances are these steps will work for you, too.

Add to your life by trying something new. Remember the first-day-of- school challenge? That annual shake-up obliged you to mix, reach out, discover. Last winter, I decided to take a plumbing course. Like most girls of my generation, I had been programmed to be hopeless with tools, but very soon I found I was intr...

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