- Your partner
- Your kids
- Your friends
- Your job/employer
- Your hobbies
The operative word here is "depend."
We depend on food, water, and oxygen for survival.
When it comes the examples listed above, they can certainly enhance our lives, but life satisfaction shouldn't depend on any one of them.
As we all know, things and people can change at the drop of a hat:
- Your partner could cheat on or fall out of love with you
- Your kids may distance themselves from you (or even grow to dislike you) as they get older
- Shifting priorities may water down your relationships
- You can be laid off at any given moment, or you may come to hate your job over time
- You can throw your back, rendering you unable to play football or other games you may enjoy
- The car, watch, or mug you love so much could break unexpectedly
I'm not saying these things will most definitely happen, but there's always the possibility that a person or situation may change when least expected -- and not always favorably.
While we should strive to get the most out of our relationships and hobbies, we should never depend on them so heavily that if something were to go awry, we would feel overcome by deep sadness. (This, of course, doesn't apply to circumstances like death and illness, for which grieving is completely justified.)
We should try our best to cultivate a slew of interests and relationships so that if we hit roadblocks with one of them, we can redirect our energies to a different one.
Indeed, life is all about remaining flexible -- and adapting to changing circumstances.
We should always appreciate the things and people we love, but we should never assume that they will remain the same forever. More importantly, we should never feel that we cannot be happy without them.
As I've stressed in various posts, happiness stems from within. Attaching your happiness to things and people is a recipe for disappointment.
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Buda