Also, I was stunned by Milloy's statement: «Wealth is
what makes people happy, not pristine air.»
CZ: Numbers are important, but
what makes people happy?
The Greeks of Ancient Athens were always questioning their society and asking
what makes people happy, and Douglas Murray wonders whether the secular West has stopped asking those questions, and is the shallower for it.
A Book Review of The Geography of Bliss by Eric Weiner What The Geography Of Bliss Is All About... The author of this book is concerned with one thing, finding out
what makes people happy.
What makes people happy — and what makes them repeatedly visit, follow, donate and adopt — are happy animals, uplifting newsfeeds and community - centered shelters.
I've been reading about
what makes people happy, and one of the things that consistently makes people happy is doing something kind for others.
Deciding it's true, he resolves to find out
what makes people happy and try to apply it to himself.
I love to read about
what makes people happy!
They all take a look at this intangible thing of happiness; I AM centered around a personal story and Happy as a look across the globe on
what makes people happy.
He said politicians should concern themselves with «
what makes people happy, as well as what makes stock markets rise», adding that this was the «central challenge of our times».
The country isn't here to make economists happy, and most economists have no idea
what makes people happy.
It's filled with work - life balance tips, small business resources, how to motivate employees and find out
what makes people happy, and how social entrepreneurship is allowing people finally to say «I Love My Job!»
Over the last few years, I've studied
what makes people happy at work.
What makes people happy is work.
Everyone needs to learn that was is best is
what makes that person happy and not what others think.
Not exact matches
I want to do
what fulfills me, because if I'm
happy with myself, I can
make other
people happy.»
They put posters up, and they
make arbitrary decisions about
what's going to
make people happy.
«The companies that survive are the ones that work out
what they uniquely can give to the world — not just growth or money but their excellence, their respect for others, or their ability to
make people happy.»
Staying relevant as a leader in an organization means keeping a pulse on
people's work and
what will
make them
happy and productive.
You're almost part psychologist as a planner because you really need to go in and be really aware of where
people are coming from, and
what their little buzz points are,
what's going to irritate them,
what's going to
make them
happy.
It isn't because there aren't
people without jobs out there, but rather because many of those
people, either from birth or from discouragement of being without work, are not thinking about the bigger picture, «
making the employer
happy» as much as they are following
what they are told «fill in that sheet of numbers.»
It's part of the manager's role to help
people discover
what makes them
happy and they are great at.
InPowered's CEO Payman Nilforoush explains, «Nothing
makes a start up more productive than having
happy people who love
what they do!»
«
What we found was that attending to gratitude
made people happier.
Starting the day by showing gratitude for
what you might take for granted will
make you a
happier and more appreciative
person.
The following statistic alone should
make all employers more interested in boosting bliss: Truly cheerful employees spend about 80 % of their time at work doing
what they're there to do (even
happy people need an Instagram break); the least content spend only 40 % of their day on job - related activities, according to a survey by workplace happiness consultant and author Jessica Pryce - Jones.
«
People are
happy to chat with the bot, but we had to
make sure they knew
what it was at the start.»
One word that
makes us
happy: Progress [21:21] We grow because that helps us give more — share it with someone you love, it magnifies it [22:04] More excited about feeding one billion
people than any material thing, so much more meaning when it's not just about you [22:19] The challenge is our brain: it's looking for
what's wrong, because that helps you survive [22:30] Peak state = high energy, feel extraordinary, producing results is easy [22:46] Low energy state = say things and do things that hurt your relationship [23:39] Peak State = Beautiful state, Low - energy state = suffering state [24:08] Over achievers don't suffer, right?
But when it comes to spending that money,
people are often content to rely on their hunches about
what will
make them
happy.
Of course you have no proof of
what you claim, but I'm sure it
makes you very
happy to think that
people who don't believe exactly
what you do will suffer forever.
I was more ashamed of my Goodwill clothes than of not speaking English when I first came to America, because I knew that one day I would speak English well, but I did not know whether I would ever have
what other
people had — the material wealth that
made them
happy.
Trying to be someone else and trying to live up to expectations put on you by a Pastor or church moral police is
what leads
people to sneak to do things and feel guilty about doing the things that
make them
happy.
Do
what makes you
happy, respect other
people, and live your life.
M. Kelly is correct... Santa and Jesus are white... it is getting absolutely ridiculous to try and ruin everything because a minority of
people are not
happy... too bad... that's life... get over it... I am not afraid of these
people who try and
make me do
what they want by saying I am a bigot or whatever... I am just a realist.
All of it can
make people happy, but I'm interested in
what's actually real, and claims about gods don't impress me much in that regard.
What I'm not fine with is
people trying to
make us
happy with their religion.
Evolving morality is the version that is being argued here, the sort of evolution that says each
person evolves in his own way and then lives by
what he thinks will
make him
happy.
You can
make people do
what you want, but I want them to have a heart change as I am not
happy that some will go to eternal damnation because of their greed and lies.
Rather than taking some advice from
people, like, «Do
what will
make you
happy right now!»
Psychologists such as Daniel Gilbert and Sonja Lyubomirsky point out that even normal
people characteristically misjudge
what will
make them subjectively
happy.
Being bid to walk even as Jesus walked, we might start by trying to
make all
people happy, by so living as to let all men know
what it means to be free souls.
Many Christians have bought into this sort of thinking and living today, and
make decisions, not based on
what Scripture teaches, on
what is right or wrong, or on how their decision will affect other
people, but based solely on whether or not it will
make them personally
happy.
The first
person thinks we
make God
happy by
what we do, while the second
person argues that we
make God
happy by
what we believe.
What I do pay attention to is that the
people who work at In - and - Out are actually treated pretty swell for a fast food job, and that
makes me really
happy.
When I imagined
what it would be like to give generously without wondering
what is in it for me, to give up my grudges and learn to diffuse hatred with love, to stop judging other
people once and for all, to care for the poor and seek out the downtrodden, to finally believe that stuff can't
make me
happy, to give up my urge to gossip and manipulate, to worry less about
what other
people think, to refuse to retaliate no matter the cost, to be capable of forgiving to the point of death, to live as Jesus lived and love as Jesus loved, one word came to my mind: liberation.
Also now he said this about gay marriage — if it
makes people happy then let them do
what makes them
happy.
But this is different, and
what's interesting is
people's reactions to the film and
what they latch onto and
what films they say it's similar to is so wildly all over the place that it
makes me
happy they can't narrow it down to one thing.
You actually prove his point by the way, he said
people go to religion because of their fear of death and religion tells a variety of tales as to
what happens when we die which often
make people, as you say «
happy to know they will go to Heaven» and yet has no proof of an afterlife.
If my belief in God
makes me a
happy, caring, compassionate
person, then
what's the problem.
If certain ideas
make people happy and they believe no matter
what the world throws at them, then I think that is ok.