Title says it all. I'm about to enter my PhD in Psychology and for the life of me I still can't find a reasonable answer to this question.
Happiness is a rather overrated emotion and we often tell people to 'be happy' as if that is the solution to all the problems. It teaches us the least and is not any more important than anger, pride, guilt, sorrow or envy; however I often wonder why people consciously sabotage themselves from experiencing it.
The examples are common enough:
The man/woman who finds a loving partner but drives him away or settles for a lesser partner. The person who cannot feel pride or joy in their achievements or who refuses to even pursue them. The defeatists, the self-loathing and the down right hopeless.
I've been attempting to approach this as academically as possible, and every conclusion I've reach has a gaping flaw. So I'm reaching out to the internet; my brain is racked and I'm out of ideas, I've come up with some although I don't feel satisfied with any of them (see below).
So what do you think? Can you think of/recall an example that could shed some light on this?
Happiness is a rather overrated emotion and we often tell people to 'be happy' as if that is the solution to all the problems. It teaches us the least and is not any more important than anger, pride, guilt, sorrow or envy; however I often wonder why people consciously sabotage themselves from experiencing it.
The examples are common enough:
The man/woman who finds a loving partner but drives him away or settles for a lesser partner. The person who cannot feel pride or joy in their achievements or who refuses to even pursue them. The defeatists, the self-loathing and the down right hopeless.
I've been attempting to approach this as academically as possible, and every conclusion I've reach has a gaping flaw. So I'm reaching out to the internet; my brain is racked and I'm out of ideas, I've come up with some although I don't feel satisfied with any of them (see below).
So what do you think? Can you think of/recall an example that could shed some light on this?
They are afraid of happiness: My immediate thought and it makes the most sense; they believe that happiness is fleeting and can pass as quickly as it comes therefore they do not bother with the emotion in the first place since the disappointment would hurt more than the state they are in now. However with many people their actions are consciously self-sabotaging, they go well out of their way, with the knowledge of the damage they are inflicting, to ensure that they never feel the emotion. If their reasoning is based around what they believe will result in the least amount of discomfort or distress than why take that course of action when you know self-sabotage is worse than happiness?
It is a psychological disorder such as Generalized Anxiety Disorder or Depression: Already considered and considering how under diagnosed GAD is, only 1 in 20 GP's can properly identify it, it may account for a proportion of the cases of 'anti-happiness' however I don't want to get ahead of myself and lay blame on mass malfunctioning cognitive faculties.
Attention seeking behaviour or martyr orientated rationale: Are people secretly happy being miserable? For some people, undoubtedly so. But is rather cynical to believe this is a majority of the case. Television and cinema (which can sometimes being interesting character studies) don't often reveal a masochistic desire to be the root cause of self-sabotage.
Emotions are retarded: Yeah, possibly.
All of some combination of the above?
It is a psychological disorder such as Generalized Anxiety Disorder or Depression: Already considered and considering how under diagnosed GAD is, only 1 in 20 GP's can properly identify it, it may account for a proportion of the cases of 'anti-happiness' however I don't want to get ahead of myself and lay blame on mass malfunctioning cognitive faculties.
Attention seeking behaviour or martyr orientated rationale: Are people secretly happy being miserable? For some people, undoubtedly so. But is rather cynical to believe this is a majority of the case. Television and cinema (which can sometimes being interesting character studies) don't often reveal a masochistic desire to be the root cause of self-sabotage.
Emotions are retarded: Yeah, possibly.
All of some combination of the above?