Self

If You Keep Doing These 13 Things, You'll Be Eternally Unhappy

Photo: Dikushin Dmitry / Shutterstock
sad girl sitting on bed alone

By Heather Gray

Life is not in our control. What we can control, though, is how we respond to what we are given. T

he difference between happy people and chronically unhappy people is how they choose to exert the control they have in their own lives.

RELATED: 8 Personality Traits That Define A Mentally Strong Authentic Person

If you keep doing these 13 things, you'll be eternally unhappy:

1. Chronically unhappy people stop at the part where life is hard

They become distraught and frozen with inaction. They bemoan what life has handed them and become a victim of circumstance. They focus their lack of control on what happened to them, rather than on what they can do in response to whatever happened.

Chronically unhappy people take unforeseen events as proof that there’s no point in doing anything and that they have no real control over the situation at hand. They are unable to identify any action they could take that might make things better.

RELATED: 10 Signs You Or Someone You Know Has Low Emotional Intelligence

2. Chronically unhappy people lead with fear

They fear change. They fear vulnerability and rejection. Chronically unhappy people are afraid of things becoming worse or of what might be asked of them to make things better. They stop at that fear, rather than work through it.

3. Chronically unhappy people leave their emotional baggage unpacked

Chronically unhappy people just shut down when life happens. Like anyone, they’ve been knocked down by life but they fail to get back up. This is often because when they’re flat on the ground with their emotional baggage scattered around them, they fail to ask for or accept help in picking up the broken pieces.

They don’t talk about it, process it, or deal with it. They don’t go to therapy. They don’t work it out at the gym or talk it over with a friend.

Chronically unhappy people don’t allow themselves to heal completely and therefore, they never really live completely.

4. Chronically unhappy people look for ways that life sucks

They tell themselves that they are just preparing themselves for the worst. What they’re really doing is implementing a wall of defense mechanisms intended to keep themselves from experiencing more pain. In doing so, they screen life events and their interactions with others. They’re scanning for examples of when they’ve been screwed or when their needs haven’t been met.

Chronically unhappy people collect these examples as validation of their misery. They tune their lenses to find misery as proof positive for why, of course, they’re unhappy.

RELATED: 10 'Green Flags' To Look For That Indicate You're Becoming Your Best Self

5. Chronically unhappy people embrace the word “but”

Two words keep people from living the life they really want — Yeah….but….

Yeah, I could move further away from the city so I could have land for my dog but I’d have a horrible commute and I don’t have time for a change like that….

Yeah, that sounds like an amazing adventure but I’d waste money. What would I have to show for it at the end? I’ve been trying to save money….

When family and friends offer something they can do about the situation, chronically unhappy people immediately respond with a list of reasons why those things can’t happen or aren’t possible.

6. Chronically unhappy people find it impossible to say “Yes”

When new opportunities find themselves or cross their paths, chronically unhappy people will emphasize the obstacles and compromises involved with the new opportunity rather than saying yes.

New opportunities come with the risk of being hurt or disappointed. Their schedules and rituals are threatened and they prefer to keep things the same.

7. Chronically unhappy people don’t allow themselves fun

They may cite the needs of a busy family. They may explain that money is tight or that work sucks up all of their time. Regardless of their reasons, chronically unhappy people fail to have fun.

They don’t do things they enjoy, they forget about their hobbies, and they don’t see their friends on a regular basis. Chronically unhappy people surround themselves with their misery without making new memories to balance the stressors.

8. Chronically unhappy people resign themselves to dissatisfying relationships

Chronically unhappy people refuse to have “the talk”— the “I’m not happy in this relationship talk.”

Chronically unhappy people will tell you that they’ve already tried but their partners aren’t going to change. Talking about things will only make everything worse. They avoid talking about or acknowledging their own needs with the assumption that they just won’t get met anyway. They sit back and recount the times they’ve tried to no avail, rather than recognizing that they still have choices open to them.

RELATED: 4 Rare Psychological Skills Only True Masters Of The Universe Know

9. Chronically unhappy people stay in miserable job situations

Miserable professional situations don’t just make people miserable at work. They make people unhappy every time they think about work.

Chronically unhappy people buy into the idea that they are financially trapped in a miserable work situation. They cite all of the obstacles involved in finding a new job as reasons why they are forced to stay miserable.

10. Chronically unhappy people numb out to electronics

Admittedly, we are all adjusting to the evolving presence of various screens in our lives and even the happiest of us can get sucked in.

Chronically unhappy people use screen time as a barrier between themselves and the life they want. They numb out rather than deal.

They disconnect and exit from important relationships and aspects of their lives. They widen the distance between themselves and others and as a result end up isolated, which only further intensifies their unhappiness.

11. Chronically unhappy people allow toxic people to take up space

We all know toxic people in our lives. They might be overly critical or narcissistic. They suck the air out of the rooms they are in. Truth be told, sometimes chronically unhappy people can be toxic, themselves.

Chronically unhappy people let toxic people take up more space in their lives than they deserve. They absorb the negative energy of toxic people, rather than repelling it with healthier limits and boundaries.

If you ask why, chronically unhappy people will tell you it’s not worth confronting a toxic person, that it’s a conflict that won’t lead anywhere good. As a result, toxic people take up space in the lives of those chronically unhappy and only feed the dysfunctional cycle in that unhappy people find themselves.

12. Chronically unhappy people ignore their health

Sometimes, our health can fail us no matter how hard we try to stay well. When our bodies start to fail us, it isn’t long before everything else starts to feel harder than it normally would. Chronically unhappy people fail to value and insure their good health. They avoid exercise and pay little attention to their diet, how well they are sleeping, or how they’ve been feeling emotionally.

Chronically unhappy people will collect an assortment of pains or ailments but will fail to follow up with medical professionals. Their bodies become sluggish and it’s harder for them to get through the day but they just add these to the list of things they have to manage or put up with, rather than solve.

13. Chronically unhappy people fail to acknowledge the opportunities they have to create change

Chronically unhappy people will stop when it becomes apparent that the consequences of making a change will be too taxing or difficult. We all have the power of choice. We can speak up or we can stay silent. We can move toward change or we can stay the same. Chronically unhappy people fail to accept and take ownership of the control they have in their own lives.

Chronically unhappy people fail to recognize that once they’ve acknowledged that they could speak up, make a change, or chart a new direction, they are no longer trapped. They have looked at the options, considered them, and have chosen not to move.

Once they’ve examined the choices in their lives, they are no longer victims of other people or circumstances. They have chosen the hard that comes with staying miserable, rather than the hard that comes with speaking out or making a change. Chronically unhappy people refuse to see this as freeing or liberating. Instead, they go back to telling themselves stories that there is nothing they could do and believing themselves to be victims of their own lives.

RELATED: 3 Lessons Life As A Diplomat Taught Me About Conflict Resolution

Heather Gray is a writer, blogger, and clinically trained mindset and performance coach at Daughters NPD