I've found some lists of things to do that will make one happy.
Six Unconventional, Scientific Ways to Be Happier
- Throw Your Negative Thoughts Into the Trash (Literally)
- Use Your Imagination
- Stop Buying Possessions, Start Buying Experiences
- Give
- Train Your Brain Like a Monk
- Focus
Ten Simple Things You Can Do to Be Happier, Backed by Science
- Exercise More
- Sleep More
- Move Closer to Work
- Spend Time with Friends and Family
- Go Outside
- Help Others
- Practice Smiling
- Plan a Trip
- Meditate
- Practice Gratitude
Some of that might be relevant if already healthy and in financial solvency. Mostly it's just idealistic hoo ha that verges close to "fake it till it happens". Speaking as a person who has been through that list numerous times in life an never once felt "happy" afterwards.
Not that, for a short while, I never had it as being around other animals, watching an learning from them, about them, at reality has done this. But this also requires substantial good health and definitely requires substantial wealth to accomplish, or else the work other people that aren't out for themselves, wh8ch is also impossible to find without good health and wealth to tart with but ok, you do you. Happiness is purely subjective to begin with, so if it works for ya, go ahead with it. I wouldn't have posted it as if it will work for all as you seem to intimate, but I understand that it's relative to what works, not to some simplistic, idealistic list I don't for a minute see in any reliable research work.
They inevitably fall back to, if it evidently already works and doesn't cause harm to anybody else, then that's what we'll try first, then if it fails, well move to whatever else works for that individual or that they suggest until we see that it works or again move on, potentially until the whole list is exhausted. Ideally, anyway. Usually it's more along the lines of, "take this pill every day, and this one or two every night and I'll see you in a month without any conversation whatsoever, because there's hundreds more to dole out pills to on the list and we don't know how to ask questions, blah blah, rinse an repeat".
CBT is shit if the focus is on "talk therapy" versus actual instruction on coping mechanisms that are healthy, or you already understand the cognitive an behavioral issues and made efforts to change them ,but again had no real health and finances to begin with, cuz that shit gets expensive even without meds involved.
There are people who fall through the cracks, and those that willingly ump through them, no matter hat is done, even if on offer, which it actually isn't in a lot of cases because it's being more restricted and more of a money driver by insurance companies or getting cut off in areas with high crime and violence by legislatures at the state level that are being overlooked by the federal level, and yeah, much more complex an issue than the hokey fell good slogans y'all are putting up.
But hey, I put a collective 10 years in crisis intervention an mental health advocacy plus residential group home counseling, so I've only got experience in the industry plus educational training in psychology and philosophy.
So obviously, the hokum's right.