KEY POINTS-

  • People often believe that if you live a life that looks good on paper, you should be happy and grateful.
  • Even if you have everything that "should" make you happy, you can still be anxious and depressed.
  • There's much more to a positive human experience than being wealthy, successful at our jobs, and married.

Lately, it seems that we, as a culture, are having difficulty understanding the significance and impact of mental and emotional health concerns like anxiety, depression, feelings of helplessness, and suicide. Many people seem to believe that if you live a life that looks good on paper, you should be eternally happy and grateful—end of story. But the frightening reality is that when your life checks off all the boxes of what society says should make you happy, you can still feel anxious and sometimes helpless. And if, on top of that, you judge yourself and are judged by others for your experience, you can become even more susceptible to feeling isolated and in pain. There's much more to a positive human experience than being wealthy, successful at our jobs, getting married, and following a pre-prescribed path. There's feeling at home in our bodies, having thriving personal relationships, resolving trauma, repairing broken bonds, learning to manage the pitfalls of life, and living in ways that fit our values and principles. If those essential parts of our lives aren't being addressed, we're likely to feel depressed, lonely, anxious, and maybe even suicidal—no matter how much we might have to be grateful and happy about.

 

We aren't seeing the whole picture when we feel ungrateful or accuse others of it. Because a person's experience doesn't need to match how others say they should feel. You can be grateful and appreciative for what you have and still feel bad, sad, and lonely. You can love parts of your life and feel helpless and hurt by others. Often, when we don't have the material objects and success in life that we dream of, we believe this to be the cause of our suffering. And, of course, it may be a contributing variable. But it isn't the only reason. It might scare us to see people we believe to have it all struggling with their mental health because it robs us of our fairytale notion that money, love, and success will disappear all our pain. However, if we can sit still within our own experience for some time, we can see the cause of our sadness and recognize what needs to be worked on and reconciled. It's not about climbing the ladder, winning the race, or being the best; it's about forming connections, resolving our issues, speaking our truth, better managing our emotions, and living the life we want. It's about accepting our and others' experiences as they are instead of following some made-up prescription for how we should feel. We suffer not because we're ungrateful but because we have a hard time accepting things as they are. We suffer because we compare our lives to how others' lives appear to be or how we believe our lives are supposed to be.

 

If you or someone you care about is struggling with their mental or emotional health, even if they have much to be grateful for, don't point that out to make them feel better. They already know. And they're probably already suffering because they've told themselves that very thing. Work on listening and understanding instead. Show them acceptance. Listen to their truth with genuine curiosity and questions about their thoughts, feelings, and struggles. And practice accepting your experience and honoring your truth without judgment or comparison. The less we try to fix, negate, or deny our feelings, and the more we allow them into our lives with compassion and openness, the less power they have over us. When we can genuinely accept the seemingly complex emotions and issues we face, we become more thoughtful about how we want to deal with them. Understanding suffering as part of the human experience gives us access to natural gratefulness for all things, good and bad.

 

Once a person feels a sense of acceptance and empathy for their struggles with mental and emotional health concerns, they can have access to finding solutions, opening up their lens to what they have to look forward to and what steps need to be taken to make changes. We can't force people to be happy with what they have, but we can empathize with their experience and offer a calm presence of understanding, and be a guide to help with solutions when the time is right. So if someone you love is suffering, I know how hard it is to watch, but think about whether your attempted solutions to make them happy or feel less anxious or angry have helped them. If not, it's time to try something different. If we get more comfortable with mental and emotional health concerns, we allow less shame around them. The less shameful we are, the more curious we can be about what is going on and how helpful we can be.