- July 1, 2026
- Updated 3:32 am
Understanding Happiness with Gretchen Rubin
Gretchen Rubin, host of the Happier podcast, suggests happiness involves growing in the right direction rather than just attaining joy. She emphasizes the importance of self-awareness in contributing to happiness.
What is happiness? Is it feeling good constantly or having a positive outlook? Or is it feeling satisfied with where you are in life? Many people contemplate these questions when striving to be happier, says Rubin, author of books like The Happiness Project. Instead of seeking an elusive emotion, she advises asking: “Will this make me happier?” The answer often provides clarity.
Choices that enhance happiness, either short-term or long-term, guide you toward a life of joy and contentment. Rubin, whose upcoming book Secrets of Adulthood releases in April, offers insights on making these choices. Understanding oneself is crucial. Knowing your preferences and tendencies helps in adopting habits like reading more, exercising, or cutting back on negative behaviors. Self-awareness simplifies aligning personal goals with your circumstances.
You developed and wrote a book about a framework called the Four Tendencies to help people understand their personality type and what might make them happy. Tell me about the concept.
Rubin introduced the Four Tendencies, a framework to understand personality types. It categorizes individuals based on how they deal with external and internal expectations, shaping them into upholders, questioners, obligers, or rebels.
Upholders: Meet both external and internal expectations with ease.
Questioners: Evaluate expectations and act if rational.
Obligers: Meet external expectations but struggle with internal ones.
Rebels: Resist all expectations, valuing personal freedom.
Knowing your type grants insights into maintaining habits that enhance personal happiness.
People often envision major life changes like new jobs or relationships as keys to happiness. However, these events rarely lead to a dramatic transformation, as we adapt them into our existing worldview. Yet, shifting from a disliked job to a preferred one can significantly impact happiness.
Sometimes we get energy from very small things. On the Happier podcast, I often talk about something called the ‘one-minute rule.’ This is the idea that if you can do something in a minute without delay, you should just go ahead and do it. It gets rid of the clutter that’s on the surface of life. And sometimes getting that little stuff out of the way makes you feel more prepared to take on the big stuff.
Rubin highlights the “one-minute rule”—accomplishing tasks that take under a minute instantly—to clear life’s clutter, preparing for more significant challenges. Many seek a singular solution for happiness, yet no universal method exists. Self-knowledge helps discern effective strategies.
While meditation or gratitude journals benefit some, Rubin notes these practices weren’t suitable for her. Each person must find their happiness tools. Happiness doesn’t always feel joyful; sometimes fulfilling values converge with happiness despite discomfort, such as visiting a sick friend.
The producer is Sam Yellowhorse Kesler. This digital story was edited by Malaka Gharib, with visual editing by Beck Harlan. We’d love your feedback. Contact us at [email protected] or via voicemail at 202-216-9823. Tune in to Life Kit on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and subscribe to our newsletter. Stay updated with us on Instagram: @nprlifekit.
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