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Author: Christine Carter

Come on Retreat with me at Esalen!

Do you love your family but feel busy and overwhelmed by your life?  Are you in career or life transition?  Do you crave time for quiet reflection, rest, and renewal? Join me at a retreat dedicated to cultivating the most important happiness habits in ourselves and in our children. Hosted at the spectacular Esalen Institute in Big Sur, CA.

Raising Happiness Weekend Retreat

July 26 – 28 2013 at Esalen Institute, Big Sur, CA

Drawing on what psychology, sociology, and neuroscience reveal about the factors that create joy in our lives, I will teach the simple happiness skills I speak and blog most frequently about.

Topics include:

  • Why your own happiness is critical for your children’s success and happiness.
  • How to find more joy in your parenting and romantic relationships, even if you feel like you don’t have enough time.
  • How to eliminate happiness-killers from your relationships and daily life.

This workshop is appropriate for couples and for single parents interested in lowering stress and bringing greater joy into their lives. Parallel children’s programming is available for parents who would like to bring their 5-12 year-old kids.

Location Details

Esalen is a spectacularly beautiful retreat center on the Big Sur coastline of California.  Located on 120 acres of fertile land carved out between mountain and ocean and blessed by hot mineral springs gushing out of a seaside cliff, Esalen has provided retreat to more than 1 million people.

Cost & Registration

Registration is open on the Esalen website. I would be thrilled to meet you there. You are strongly encouraged to book your room today; accommodations are limited and sell out quickly!

What People Are Saying About the Raising Happiness Esalen Retreat

“My husband and I loved that retreat and it still [over a year later] reverberates in our lives. Most powerful was the acknowledgement of external stresses and what we could do to minimize those effects on our son.” — Anne in Los Angeles

Can’t Make It in July?

Consider enrolling in a Raising Happiness online class!  You will learn simple skills that set the stage for emotional health and confidence in our children, while helping parents become happier themselves.

Friday Inspiration


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I have so much admiration for the women who paved the way for our generation.

I’m particularly fond of the stories Ruth Bader-Ginsburg shares about her journey to the Supreme Court. This interview is an excerpt from the documentary “Makers.” Check out the other awesome videos here or watch the trailer:

How to Deal with Mean People

Hint: Don’t just turn the other cheek.

You, with your switching sides,
And your walk by lies and your humiliation
You, have pointed out my flaws again,
As if I don’t already see them.
I walk with my head down,
Trying to block you out cause I’ll never impress you…”
—Taylor Swift, “Mean”

“Why you gotta be so meeaann?” Taylor Swift croons in my car, accompanied rather loudly by five kids who are singing their hearts out. The song resonates with me, too, so much so that I find myself madly rummaging through my purse for my sunglasses, not wanting the carpool to see me choked up.

(Honestly, I’m not sure why I cry when I hear that song. I think I’m moved because it tells of a kid succeeding despite difficulty. If you haven’t heard it, listen here. I particularly like the end of this version.)

Anyway, one of the girls in my car (let’s call her Sally) has just revealed that she was once again the butt of a mean comment in PE. Everyone in the car feels her pain; unfortunately we’ve all been there.

Most of us use avoidance as our chief strategy for dealing with unkindness, steering clear of the mean person at all costs. But this strategy is neither practical nor effective, as it is often impossible to avoid a person completely and usually leaves us cowering in fear.

Fortunately, there is a better approach. From research on social and emotional well-being, here’s what I’ve learned about how to cope when someone gets nasty.

First, remember that you can control your response when someone does or says something mean. We may not be able to control much about our life circumstances, but with practice we can control how we respond to those circumstances.

I once got a horrible voicemail from a neighbor. In it, she called me a fraud and my blog a joke, and told me to stay away from her children. Though she seemed high-functioning to the outside world, she seemed pretty unstable to me.

My instinct was to fight back—to expose her craziness to the world, to tell everyone how insanely mean she was.

Sally had the opposite instinct around the girl who teased her in PE. She let this particular mean girl boss her around, hoping against hope that she would eventually relent.

Neither of these responses — attacking back or becoming a spineless doormat — are constructive ways to cope. The most effective response to meanness is compassion. Where there is meanness, there is often a lot of pain, both in the unkind person and for the person on the receiving end of a mean joke, comment, or email.

Take care of your own pain first. When I got the crazy-neighbor voicemail, I was shocked, and hurt (I cared what she thought of me), and, frankly, scared. Researcher Brene Brown, in her fantastic book Daring Greatly, advocates a response to a situation like this that I’ve been using instinctively since I was a kid: Before you attack back, let yourself feel what is going on. You can simply repeat to yourself, “Pain, pain, pain,” and breathe. Sometimes I have to say it out loud.

The key is not to deny what we are feeling, but rather to accept it. Take a moment to be mindful and narrate your emotions: This embarrassment is excruciating. I am so frightened right now. Hang in there with unpleasant feelings at least long enough to acknowledge them.

Often we don’t want to admit we are hurt by another person’s meanness; we want to let it go without letting it get to us. If you can do this, more power to you. But if you can’t, that’s okay, too. You will survive the discomfort of your hurt feelings. It is perfectly normal to feel bad when someone wounds you.

I offer two more strategies for dealing with nasty individuals in your life on this this post on my Greater Good blog.

Happiness Tip: Unplug

Turn off your cell phone — really and truly, totally off — for several hours today.

Technology can be addictive, and it can change the core of who we are as people. Researchers believe that when we are over-connected to technology (including our email, the Internet, and our cell phones) we can become more impatient, impulsive, forgetful — and even more self-centered. These qualities do not make us happier people or better parents.

Disconnecting from technology can help us reconnect with who we really are, what is truly important to us, and what really makes us happy.

Take Action: This week, designate time to fully unplug. Perhaps you unplug during dinner, or from 9:00 pm to 9:00 am.

Join the Discussion: When will you disconnect?

Encouraging Gratitude in Children

In this new video from Kids in the House, I discuss ways to encourage children to practice gratitude.

Gratitude is one of the 5 high-impact habits I encourage you to start now. Learn how to jumpstart a gratitude practice and the four other habits you should incorporate in your life with my newly relaunched online class: Happiness on Autopilot!

Register now, and take the class at your leisure — but be sure to RSVP for a free video coaching call with me on May 24 (space is limited).

Meditating with Kids

Loving-kindness meditation does far more than produce momentary good feelings.

Research convincingly shows that it actually puts people on “trajectories of growth,” leaving them better able to ward off depression and “become ever more satisfied with life.” This is probably because it increases a wide range of those resources that make for a meaningful and successful life, like having an increased sense of purpose, stronger social support, and less illness. Research even shows that loving-kindness meditation “changes the way people approach life” for the better.

Moreover, doing a simple loving-kindness meditation can make us feel less isolated and more connected to those around us: one study showed that a SINGLE SEVEN MINUTE loving-kindness meditation made people feel more connected to and positive about both loved ones and total strangers, and more accepting of themselves. Imagine what a regular practice could do! For more information about loving-kindness meditation, check out this post on my Greater Good blog.