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Author: Christine Carter

The Sweet Spot Manifesto - Christine Carter

Happiness Tip: Find a Manifesto (Free Download)

Before I wrote The Sweet Spot, I needed a manifesto — something to organize my passion for the project. I started keeping lists of phrases and pieces of advice that captured my thoughts. When I was done writing the book, it was fun to go back and look at all the little lists and edit them down into this manifesto. I hope you are inspired to download the beautiful printable version my publisher created.

If this manifesto doesn’t do it for you, find one that does! Or create your own. Having go-to sources for inspiration and motivation can guide us towards those thoughts and behaviors that bring us the most meaning, fulfillment, and satisfaction.

The Sweet Spot Manifesto

Life might be short, or it might be long. Either way, better to enjoy it.
If you are tired, rest.
If you can’t solve a problem, take a walk.
If you feel overwhelmed, stop checking your phone.
Forgive yourself, again.
Focus on the journey, not the achievement.
More is not necessarily better.
Learn to apologize.
Repair your mistakes.
Let yourself feel what you feel.
Smile at the barista.
Chat with folks on the train.
Chase meaning, not happiness.
Look for opportunities to show compassion and generosity.
Develop good habits; you won’t need so much willpower that way.
Consider that your worry isn’t legitimate.
Say no strategically.
Say yes with abandon.
Accept that you’re divergent. Go with it.
Embrace the better-than-nothing plan.
Remember when you’ve been brave before.
Understand that happiness is only the cart; love is the horse.

Click here to download your own printable Sweet Spot Manifesto. 

Photo courtesy of Jon Jordan.

Happiness Tip: Stop Checking Your Freaking Phone

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Photo by Andres Rodriguez

I would love some help figuring out a tiny habit to help me unplug from my phone. It’s the first thing I reach for in the morning, when I’m stopped at red lights, when I get home from work–my brain has become used to checking my email, text messages, facebook, playing plants vs. zombies constantly. It’s hard because I use my phone for so many things throughout the day (except of course as a phone!), so it’s constant presence makes it hard to forget it’s there at the times that I’m not really using it. Any ideas?”

–Pamela

Pamela, you’ve got a great goal for the New Year. Two new studies support your sense that you will be happier (and less stressed) if you check your phone less. A study of college students at Kent State University found that people who check their phones frequently tend to experience higher levels of distress during their leisure time (when they intend to relax!).

In another study, Elizabeth Dunn and Kostadin Kushlev regulated how frequently participants checked their email throughout the day. Those aiming to reduce their email checking to only three times a day (vs. an average of 15 times) were less tense and less stressed overall.

Unfortunately, it usually doesn’t work to just will ourselves to stop a compulsive behavior. We check our phones and our email because it provides us with what researchers call “variable-ratio” reinforcement–once in a while we get an email or message that is particularly rewarding, and that once in a while is enough to keep us checking compulsively. (Slot machines also provide variable-ratio rewards.)

Instead of willing ourselves to just check less often, we can configure our devices and work time so that we are tempted less often. The goal is to check email, social media, and messages on your phone just a few times a day–intentionally, not impulsively. Our devices are thus returned to their status as tools we use strategically— not slot machines that randomly demand our energy and attention.

Take Action. Here’s a plan to lower your stress and tension:

1. Make a strategic decision about when you will check your email and messages. I check my email quickly before work to delete or unsubscribe from junk and respond to anything urgent. I respond to everything else in my work email at 3:00pm and my home email at 7:45pm. I actually block this time out on my calendar as a recurring task, and then move it around as necessary — that way I check strategically, not impulsively. I look at (and maybe post to) social media once in the morning before work, if I have time, and then I close it for the day. I respond to texts and voicemails once mid-morning and once mid-afternoon (between calls and meetings).

2. Tell your family and colleagues that you are establishing a strategic checking schedule. Worried that people will see you as unresponsive or slacking at work? Leslie Perlow’s research indicates otherwise; in fact, your colleagues will likely notice your increased productivity and see you as more collaborative, efficient, and effective when you reduce constant phone and email monitoring.

3. Remove distractions. Set your mobile devices to automatically go into sleep mode an hour before you go to bed until your first pre-determined checking time. Consider removing email from your phone, or at least moving it to a back “page” of apps, so that you don’t see it if you are turning off your alarm or using another app. I think of this as hiding the Halloween candy: If you wanted to eat less candy, you wouldn’t put a bowl of it on your bedside table, bathroom counter, kitchen table, dashboard, and desk at work–right? So don’t do that with the slot machine that is your smartphone. While you are on your computer working (or in the car driving), keep your email program closed. Turn all notifications off. Put your phone in sleep mode. This may seem drastic, but trust me. Your life is about to get way better.

4. Focus on other things. Now, do your most important work or something that brings you peace, or joy. Replace checking your smartphone constantly with something better. I set reminders for two-minute relaxation breaks three times a day, when I take a dozen deep breaths (breathing in for 5 seconds, and out for 5 seconds). This triggers my vagus nerve, inducing a feeling of calm, and reversing the ill-effects of stress.

5. Savor the benefits of this effort. You will likely start sleeping better. You’ll be more focused, productive, and efficient at work. You’ll have a heck of a lot more time to do the things that really matter in your life, things that bring lasting happiness. But none of those benefits really matter unless you take the time to enjoy them. Studies by Fred Bryant suggest that by consciously and deliberately savoring positive events in our life, we can increase the amount of happiness we derive from them in the short and long run. So enjoy being less stressed and less tense–relish your new life.

Join the Discussion: What do you struggle with the most in trying not to check your phone and email constantly? What has worked best for you in creating a strategic checking schedule? If you need help, post a comment here.

Need more structure? This is a pretty hardcore Happiness Tip (usually they are much less dramatic.) If you want more support in making a change like this one, please sign up for my free online class. You’ll get a worksheet and an email everyday for 21 days that will give you more help establishing good habits like this one.

Five Foolproof Ways to Feel More Joy in 2015

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Photo by Jorge Sanmartín Maïssa

These first few weeks in January are a precious time for setting getting ourselves on a path toward more joy in the year ahead. But that can be a surprisingly tricky task–too often, we pursue happiness in ways that don’t actually bring us greater joy, fulfillment, or satisfaction. So how do we set out on the right path?

To answer that question, I recently spoke with one of my all-time favorite happiness experts, Buddhist teacher James Baraz, author of Awakening Joy. (He teaches a great online happiness class by the same title, which I highly recommend.)

Here is a condensed version of our conversation. I hope it spurs some ideas for happiness habits you can pursue in 2015.

CC: What are some common “happiness mistakes” we often make at this time of year, and how can we avoid them?

JB: Our intention to change backfires when we make too many resolutions, or when we make resolutions that really aren’t achievable.

Unrealistic expectations create a pass-fail test that is too easy to fail. Initial enthusiasm quickly disappears with the thought, “Who was I kidding?”

Changing a habit takes time. It’s important to realize that most resolutions are an ongoing process.

I find it helpful to really take in the good feeling that accompanies each (even minor) success. Take a few moments to let a minor win register fully in your body and your mind. Then build on that success. Instead of thinking, I’m someone who will never be able to change, it’s much more effective to think of yourself as someone who’s in the process of learning a new way to do something. Believing that you can change is crucial.

CC: What are some of the best habits we can establish to experience more joy?

JB: I have five favorite ways to “awaken joy,” but the most important is to not try too much at once. Find the one that really speaks to you.

  1. I think the most direct way to awaken joy comes from a grateful heart, which means really being there for all the blessings in your life. Reflecting on your blessings regularly and appreciating them in the moment is powerful. Expressing your gratitude in words or actions to others when you sincerely feel it transforms appreciation from a fleeting thought into a living and shared connection.
  2. Identify the activities that make you happy–maybe dancing or going for a regular walk in nature–and schedule time to do those things with the people you love. Connecting with others is a powerful source of well-being.
  3. Express your caring in a fulfilling activity. This might mean being there for a loved one or volunteering for something that touches your heart. Finding ways to make a contribution to others gives our lives greater meaning.
  4. Talk kindly to yourself. The kinder you are to yourself, the kinder you’ll be to others.
  5. Spend some regular time with a creative outlet like singing, art, or writing. It makes you feel alive. Singing has always been my feel-good therapy.

There are many more I could add. The Awakening Joy course focuses on 10 different ways to cultivate true well-being in your life.

CC: What role do you think learning about your own happiness plays? Or about learning to be happy?

JB: If you don’t get clear within yourself about where true happiness lies for you, you’re at the mercy of what everybody else thinks, including the advertisers and the Joneses.

It helps to ask ourselves: “What do I need right now for my well-being, or to really thrive?” The answer will often be different in any one moment. We might need to reach out to a friend, or take a break, or recommit to a goal.

Often all we need is a little time to connect with what’s true for us in the moment. But we typically don’t pause to ask ourselves what we need, and so we look outside ourselves for happiness. The wisdom and truth we’re looking for is always already inside us.

CC: There is a big difference between knowing what to do to be happier and actually doing those things. What advice do you have for people who know what to do but have a hard time doing it?

JB: Get in touch with your intention. Intention is different from wishing and hoping, and it’s different from having a goal.

Everything issues forth from the power of our intentions. Start with a vision, and then make a heartfelt decision to do your part. Let go of any timetable you might have in mind. Take what steps you can, then allow yourself to experience the well-being you create, recognize it when comes. Savor it. Do it in baby steps, which means noticing even the littlest successes.

Be kind to yourself in this process. Self-judgment just gets in the way. Be aware of the thoughts and beliefs that sabotage you, and hold them with great compassion–as you would a child who doesn’t know any better.

CC: I think my most important happiness habit is a daily practice of acceptance and gratitude. What is yours?

JB: Remembering how blessed I am is also my top practice for well-being. Expressing my appreciation makes the benefits of gratitude even stronger. I often reflect on the fact that there are a finite number of moments in my life and this one has never been here before and will never be here again.

A daily mindfulness meditation practice is a big help. As my colleague Jack Kornfield likes to say, the signs in Las Vegas casinos read, “You must be present to win.” And it’s the same in living our life. The more I’m present for my life, the more alive I feel.

If you need more support creating positive change in your life and crafting achievable resolutions, sign up here for my online class, Cracking the Habit Code.  I’ll send one helpful daily email each day for 21 days–a short tip, and a worksheet you can complete in a few minutes.

Win a FREE copy of my new book!
Every day as we count down to the release of my new book The Sweet Spot: How to Find Your Groove at Home and Work I’ll be mailing out an EARLY copy to a lucky reader every day! Enter to win here…

7  Easy Things You Can Do to Enjoy Today (and Tomorrow) More

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Photo by Tom Fahy

  1. Take a good old-fashioned recess in the middle of the day. For every 60-90 minutes that you focus, take a 10-15 break. Go outside and play! Or at least sit inside and daydream.
  2. Increase your ratio of positive to negative emotions by watching a silly youtube video, expressing gratitude to someone, or reading something inspiring. (Yes, you get credit for watching funny animal videos!)
  3. Establish a tiny time-saving habit. Put your keys by the door where you will be sure to find them. Set up your coffee machine at night. Sometimes a small effort today can have a big impact tomorrow! Allow yourself to feel gleeful when you succeed.
  4. Establish a happiness habit. Do a daily crossword puzzle if that does it for you. Read a favorite magazine at lunchtime. Throw the ball for your dog every morning. What would make you really happy if you did it every day?
  5. Take 10 minutes to do nothing. Unplug from your phones and computer. Sit down in a room where you can be alone. Stare into space. It’s fine if you feel bored — you’ll be more productive later.
  6. Smile at the barista and strike up a short conversation. Or with the people sharing your elevator. Or with the crossing-guard.
  7. Repair a minor crack in an important relationship. Call your mom and invite her to lunch, even though your last conversation with her was tense. Find something nice to say to your spouse, even though he can be frustrating.

Sign up to receive my weekly Happiness Tips emails and we’ll send along a link to download a beautiful printable version of this list — “7 Easy Things You Can Do to Enjoy Today (and Tomorrow) More.”





If this list resonates with you, I hope you’ll consider pre-ordering my new book, The Sweet Spot: How to Find Your Groove at Home and Work. In it, I go into a great deal more detail about overcoming overwhelm and other stress.

May you be happy,