The Futile Pursuit of Happiness by Gertner “The Futile Pursuit of Happiness,” an article written by Jon Gertner, told that happiness is a futile thing. Printed in the New York Times Magazine, and published on September 7, 2003, it speaks about having high hopes for the future or finding happiness in the future would have no benefit. The author used research on happiness made by experts such as Daniel Gilbert, a professor in Psychology Department from Harvard University, and George Loewenstein, an economist from Carnegie-Mellon. He noted that our decisions in many circumstances are dependent on the emotional results from those circumstances. The author has noted that people don’t always know their requirements and start finding happiness in other places if they are unable to find them in one place. He goes on to state people adapt to the changing events of life, i.e. good and bad things becoming normal, as adaptation is a part of human development.
The article shows that sometimes people overestimate the unhappiness related to some incidences of life such as a situation in which a limb has been lost
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Today, it is. We are all too caught up in finding jobs we hate to earn money we are too busy to spend. Conversely, we may spend it too quickly while we are attempting to work our way up the corporate ladder, unable to spend time with our friends and family because we are too committed to the life we think we should be living. We spend our days mitigating disasters that have not happened yet. We plan for disasters that may never happen at all while assuming our response to them will be catastrophic, making us afraid and isolated. The fear and isolation only makes us work harder. If we relaxed, let go, and lived in a way that truly made us feel safe again, we would remember what it was like to feel happy, and understand that perhaps happiness in the future is not futile at