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Home » You Can Be Happy Without Changing Your Life: Cassie Holmes (Transcript)

You Can Be Happy Without Changing Your Life: Cassie Holmes (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Cassie Holmes’ talk titled “You Can Be Happy Without Changing Your Life” at TEDxManhattanBeach conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Time and Happiness

Time — time is critical because how you spend the hours of your days sum up to the years of your life. I’m a professor of happiness, and I study time, which is kind of ironic because, for my own personal happiness, time proved to be the single biggest barrier. I remember one day earlier in my career when I was an assistant professor at Wharton. I had traveled up to New York to give a talk, and that day, like so many, was just crazy hectic.

My presentation was sandwiched between back-to-back meetings from which I’m rushing to this colleague dinner and then frantically rushing to the train station to catch the very last train that would get me home to my four-month-old and my husband asleep in Philly.

Now, I did make the train that night, but I remember so vividly sinking into my seat, totally exhausted, and resting my forehead against the glass, watching the night lights whiz by. I was like, “I don’t know if I can keep up.” Between the pressures of work, wanting to be a good parent, wanting to be a good partner, a good friend, the never-ending pile of chores, there simply weren’t enough hours in the day to get it all done, let alone do any of it well, let alone to enjoy any of it along the way.

The Quest for More Time

And I wanted more time, not just so I could get more done. I wanted more time so that I could slow down and actually experience the hours that I was spending so that my entire life wouldn’t end up passing me by in this blur. I know now that what I was experiencing is time poverty, which is defined as the acute feeling of having too much to do and not enough time to do it. Even if you haven’t heard this term before, I suspect you know exactly what I’m talking about.

Show of hands, how many of you agree with the statement, ‘I never seem to have enough time to get everything done?’ A lot of us. And we’re not alone; my research team conducted a national poll that showed that nearly half of Americans feel this way. And it’s not just us in the U.S., folks across the globe report suffering from a hectic pace of life with too little time.

And on that night on the train, when I felt very time poor and not happy, I concluded that there was one obvious solution. I needed to quit my job and move to a sunny island somewhere, right? Because with all the hours of my days to relax and spend doing what I wanted, then surely I’d be happier.

Rethinking Happiness and Time

And I was like, “Is that true? Are people who have a whole lot more time, in fact, happier?” And this is an empirical question and one that I could test and probably should test before telling my boss that I quit and my husband that we should pack for life at the beach. So, I recruited a couple of my favorite collaborators and together we examined what’s the relationship between the amount of discretionary time people have and their happiness.

And across our studies, including an analysis of the American Time Use Survey, which captures how tens of thousands of working as well as non-working Americans spent a regular day, we found a consistent pattern of results. And it looked like this. It was an upside-down U-shape, like an arc or a rainbow. Yes, people with too little time, those with less than approximately two hours of discretionary time in the day, were less happy. But this didn’t surprise me because I knew all about the high level of stress that comes from being time-poor.

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The Surprising Truth About Time and Happiness

It was this other side that was surprising. Those with more than approximately five hours of discretionary time in the day were also less happy. And this is interesting because it shows there is such thing as having too much time. But how could that be, right? How could having loads of hours to relax and spend however you want to be associated with less happiness?

Well, it turns out we are driven to be at least a little productive. Research shows that people are averse to being idle. And so when we spend all the hours of the day, day in and day out, with nothing to show for it, it undermines our sense of purpose. And from that, we feel less satisfied. This is important to note because it cautions us on those days that feel so hectic.

Finding the Sweet Spot

The answer isn’t to quit everything and move to life, you know, sitting in a beach chair. These results point to something else that’s interesting too, namely, if we could just get to having two hours in the day to spend however we wanted, we’d reach that sweet spot for happiness.

Now, I will admit that at first, I’m like, “Two discretionary hours, that’s like an unreachable luxury.” But then when I did an honest accounting of my days, I realized that the target two hours wasn’t totally out of reach. Even during that hectic period of my life, I’d get to spend 15 minutes in the morning snuggling with my little one, 25 minutes talking to my best friend on my commute home from work, 30 minutes enjoying dinner and a glass of wine with my husband, and then 20 minutes singing my baby to sleep. This amounted to 90 minutes that I wouldn’t have wanted to spend in any other way.

And it wasn’t until I did this calculation that I realized just how joyful so many of my minutes already were.