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We would all like to be happy, right? And there is no shortage of advice on the internet about how to get there, often by buying someone’s book or online course. The trouble is, does any of that advice actually work? Is there anything behind the claims?
After selling our business last year, I had a “void” that I imagine many experience in their early phase of retirement. I was keen to work again, and sent out lots of applications. None of them were succeeding. I worked in a role for about a month ……. and despised it! Whilst I had more time on my hands and was feeling a little lost, I thought it would be a good time look for evidence-based ways to feel better.
Long story short, I completed a really interesting and completely free course by Dr. Laurie Santos.
Dr. Santos is a Professor of Psychology at Yale University, which is a pretty good start for my “evidence based” criteria. She created a course called “Psychology and the Good Life” which became Yale’s most popular course and had nearly 1 in 4 Yale students enrolled. I completed the on-line version of that course, and found it really interesting. It leads you through all the things that we think we will make us happy but don’t – better grades, more money, a better job. Then, more importantly, it provides a long list of techniques that are shown empirically to work. It guides you through these techniques, and at the conclusion steers you towards making your favoured practice a daily habit.
My choice was simple – writing a daily entry in a gratitude journal. Each day I take time to right a paragraph or so about three things that I am grateful for. These can be large, globally important things, or small things like a pleasant personal interaction. I find it to be a wonderful habit that keeps me feeling realistically optimistic about the world and my life in it.
Yeah, but how does this relate to Humble Dollar, you might ask? Well, some of my entries are about the fortunate financial situation that our family finds itself in. And importantly, how that financial good fortune has a material impact on our lives in terms of security, flexibility and reduced stress.
This all got me thinking about the three things that I am most thankful for when it comes to our financial journey thus far. After some contemplation, my top three:
1. We won the genetic lottery. We were born in Australia during a prosperous time for our country. We received free schooling up to the end of high school, then low-cost university education. We lived with very good, low cost healthcare and a stable political climate. None of this was our doing, we were just incredibly lucky.
2. We have parents that passed on financial habits that have served us well. We generally value saving over spending, but not to the extreme of a miserable, frugal existence. None of this was spelled out to us in a handbook, we were just fortunate to have parents that taught by example.
3. We have not suffered any large, traumatic events in our life. Like everyone, we have lost loved ones, had our hardships and had to grit our teeth to get through. But we haven’t had major illness that affected our earning potential. We haven’t had divorce, or bankruptcy or myriad other curveballs that can really throw you off course.
All of this leaves me with two feelings – huge gratitude for our good fortune, and enormous admiration for those that have not have our favourable luck but still managed to carve out a happy, healthy life.
I guess I’d flunk that online course, because “better grades, more money, and a better job” DID make me VERY happy! 🙂
Thanks for posting, reminds me of one of my favorite quotes: “It is impossible to be in a bad mood when you are grateful!”
Matthew Kelly
”We lived with very good, low cost healthcare”
While per AI, “Estimates suggest that between 500,000 and 650,000 families in the U.S. turn to bankruptcy annually due to medical issues and debt, which accounts for over 60% of all personal bankruptcies.”
What a great system we have!
Take a look at this I wrote today for a better understanding of healthcare in the US. https://quinnscommentary.net/2026/02/22/not-to-worry-a-great-new-health-plan-is-weeks-away-or-months-or-when-is-it-if-ever/
That is a bit misleading. Actual bankruptcy just from healthcare bills is not that prevalent. When bankruptcy is filed, health care may be listed as one item, but the other things listed are the drivers.
Nevertheless the insurance or lack thereof is far from great and we are currently making it worse and setting a snowball of adverse selection in motion.
A 2021 census bureau report showed that 20 million people (nearly 1 in 12 adults) owe medical debt. The SIPP survey suggests people in the United States owe at least $220 billion in medical debt. Approximately 14 million people (6% of adults) in the U.S. owe over $1,000 in medical debt and about 3 million people (1% of adults) owe medical debt of more than $10,000.
Medical debt is a huge problem in this country.
There is no disputing what you write here. I too have written many times about how grateful we are and how the absence of any significant adverse events in our lives has been a big factor.
I worked fifty years and never lost my job, received a raise every one of those fifty years, steady promotions and enjoyed many financial benefits.
However, let’s not make the mistake thinking that good fortune is the sole or even main cause of our favorable situation in life, financial or otherwise.
What the individual does with what they have to work with matters most in my opinion. Certainly there are many examples of people starting life disadvantaged and becoming successful and also the opposite of people as you describe who misused or abused the advantages they had.
I see this the same way I see budgeting. The budget does nothing on its own. What matters is it being developed properly and mostly using it as intended. Or, think of it this way. A worker who has a 401k with good match, an HSA, etc. but doesn’t use either and heads to retirement unprepared.
Life is the same way. Life is not fair to everyone, but the successful find a way to maximize their situation.
Can anyone out do that!
A raise every year for 50 years?
Being self employed for 46 years, no way in H im giving myself a raise every year.
Quinn, I certainly dont always agree with you, but your contributions make me think, which is why I subscribe to HD.
Carry on.
That’s my only goal. 👍
If I had been born in Somalia (average life expectancy 59.6 years, average daily income $3.09 – source gapminder.com) then no matter how hard I worked, there is no way I would have the life I have today.
With a global view, it really doesn’t make sense that with hard work anyone can rise above whatever limitations they are born with. In many parts of the world, the hurdles are just enormous.
I feel like a key to gratitude is looking beyond the local or national, and considering the lives of people all around the world.
We are talking about individual achievements, individual initiatives overcoming obstacles. Sometimes you have to find a way out of a bad environment as people have been doing throughout history.
In reality, I am where I am because some ancestors did that in the 1840s.
My dad’s life story is similar to yours; his family was downright poor. It demonstrates the potential we all have to succeed both personally and professionally. Still, guys like you and my dad are outliers, at least in my experience. Children born into poverty, broken families, with under or un-educated parents are much less likely to end up being HR professionals, or, like my dad, the national secretary treasurer of a labor union. Members of minorities have additional barriers to success. We see examples of people rising above these things, but for millions of people these walls are impenetrable.
Yes, you are right, less opportunity to break out and more difficult no doubt about it, but it can and is done and it’s usually up to the individual effort or maximizing talents and skills, interpersonal skills included.
Here are a couple of my favorite examples of getting it wrong “ that’s not my job” it’s five o’clock, time to go” “ I can’t I’m on break” “I can’t work overtime, I’m busy tonight”
Even these days social media is full of whining and complaining about “THEY” doing this or that. One person today was complaining about the 40 hour week because it didn’t give them anytime for fun.
I have little tolerance for-none actually- for this behavior as I look down from my 80 years of experience hill dealing with people.
I once hired a young man mostly to give him a start. It was an entry level job filing, not fun but necessary. Twice I caught him in the file room sleeping. Then I found him sleeping at his desk in the main office. I lost it. I kicked the desk to wake him and yelled he was fired, get out. The thing is I didn’t even have the authority to fire anyone back then.
After he was gone we discover many of the important records were not filed, but rather shoved behind cabinets, thrown out or placed in wrong file cabinets.
I have many other stories. 😱 of people being their own worst enemy.
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Agreed, Dick. I used to call it the “I quit looking for work when you hired me” attitude.
You may know that Jonathan wrote often about happiness and the research pertaining to it. So, your piece fits well on HD. And you have a great list. Thanks, Greg.
Thanks Edmund, I really appreciate this feedback.