
There is a specific type of discomfort that appears in the absence of difficulty rather than during it. The disagreement with a spouse eventually ends. The strain on finances lessens. Something truly quieter replaces the challenging years of a complex relationship or a chaotic home. And somewhere in the middle of that silence, rather than a sense of relief, something more complex emerges: a low level of awareness, a sense of waiting, and the perception that the good thing is either fleeting or, more unsettlingly, undeserved. Happiness is present. Nevertheless, the tendency is to keep it at a distance.
This is a term used by psychologists. It is known as aversion to happiness, or more accurately, fear of happiness, according to researchers Mohsen Joshanloo and Dan Weijers, who have spent years examining cross-cultural reactions to joy. It characterizes a reluctance to fully experience positive emotion due to the subconscious belief that happiness will be reversed or punished. In its milder manifestations, it manifests as the enduring feeling that something positive is about to come to an end. Stronger versions of it cause people to actively oppose the very emotional states they claim to desire. It turns out that there is frequently a big difference between what people want and what they let themselves feel.
| Topic | Why Peace Feels Unfamiliar After Years of Chaos — and Why Happiness Is Hard to Trust |
| Clinical Terms | Aversion to Happiness (Fear of Happiness); Hedonic Adaptation; Nervous System Dysregulation — each describing different layers of why calm and joy feel unsafe or unsustainable |
| Fear of Happiness Research | Identified by researchers Joshanloo and Weijers; four core beliefs: happiness causes bad events, makes you a bad person, harms others when expressed, or is itself harmful to pursue |
| Hedonic Adaptation | Concept from Brickman and Campbell (1971); humans drift back to a stable happiness baseline regardless of positive or negative events — joy from material gains fades predictably |
| Common Roots | Chaotic or unpredictable childhood, depression history (joy becomes unfamiliar), trauma, perfectionism, low self-worth, avoidant or anxious attachment styles |
| Cultural Variation | Fear of happiness levels vary significantly across cultures; multi-national studies found Turkey and USA among the highest; Portugal and Poland among the lowest |
| What Actually Lasts | Research (Easterlin, 2003; Lai et al., 2020) shows durable happiness comes from close relationships, prosocial behavior, and personally meaningful activity — not achievement or financial gain |
| Management Approaches | Mindful, non-judgmental noticing of joy; redefining happiness as a passing emotion rather than a permanent state; building trust without expectation; focusing on small daily moments |
| Reference | BetterHelp — Reasons You Might Be Resisting Happiness (betterhelp.com) |
Perhaps the most well-known example of this is the “other shoe” dynamic. It’s the sense that being extremely happy puts you at risk of disappointment, both literally and figuratively. Individuals who hold this belief have a tendency to control their own happiness by keeping it at a lower register, being mentally ready for reversal, and viewing happy times as something to control rather than live in. The pattern appears across fourteen national groups in cross-cultural studies, and while different cultures express it in different ways, few are completely immune to it. This is what makes research in this field so striking.
The fact that there is a valid observation ingrained in the fear contributes to the difficulty of deciphering this. Happiness does wane. This is physiology, not pessimism. In 1971, Philip Brickman and Donald Campbell defined the mechanism as hedonic adaptation, which refers to people’s propensity to revert to a stable emotional baseline regardless of their experiences, whether favorable or unfavorable. The excitement that comes with a raise, a new relationship, a long-awaited vacation, or good news gradually fades. It nearly always does. Not acknowledging this reality is the issue. The issue is what people do with the recognition, which is frequently to limit their enjoyment in advance to prevent the eventual contraction.
This restriction doesn’t feel like a choice to those who grew up in unpredictable homes where moods were erratic, happy times preceded challenging ones with dubious dependability, and safety was never fully established. It seems accurate. The nervous system views peace as a temporary state rather than a destination because it has learned that calm comes before chaos. The body maintains its previous perception of the situation even when circumstances drastically change as an adult. The system braces when Joy shows up. When writing about depression and happiness, a therapist in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, put it simply: after extended periods of hardship, happiness becomes unfamiliar, and the unfamiliar is perceived as dangerous. It is difficult for the brain to tell the difference between “I haven’t felt this before” and “this isn’t safe.”
This has a self-worth component that many people have hidden beneath the surface. Positive emotional experiences can be strongly filtered by the conviction that one does not deserve happiness. It results in subtle forms of self-sabotage that are actually hard to detect in real time, such as picking fights during stable times, finding reasons to be nervous when things are going well, and mentally practicing the impending catastrophe. Often, those who engage in this behavior are unaware that they are doing it. Instead of seeing it as an internal campaign against their own well-being, they perceive it as appropriate caution.
Here, it is worthwhile to take into account what the research on enduring happiness indicates. Economists and psychologists who research the subject, such as Easterlin in the 1970s and Lai and colleagues more recently, claim that the types of happiness that truly endure typically have very little to do with the accomplishments or possessions people most anxiously pursue. Status markers, money, and promotions all cause real but fleeting spikes. Relational experiences—close relationships, helping others, and doing personally meaningful things—produce more long-lasting positive experiences. It appears that when directed toward external validation, the hedonic treadmill operates at its fastest speed. Turning it toward something more intrinsic causes it to slow down significantly.
Observing how pervasive this pattern is, one gets the impression that the cultural discourse surrounding happiness contributes to its worsening. Particularly in Western frameworks, happiness is viewed as a goal to be attained and maintained—the prize for making enough effort. This framing creates a clear failure condition: something must have gone wrong if happiness isn’t sustained. Instead of treating joy as a permanent resident, a more truthful framing might treat it as a recurring visitor that, if circumstances permit, appears on a somewhat regular basis without being asked to stay permanently. not pursued. Not hoarded. simply observed when they are there, without looking for the exits right away, to see what will stop it.
The practical change, which is genuinely challenging, entails learning to accept good experiences without putting a time limit on them, to experience a positive emotion without simultaneously building the case that it won’t last. This direction is frequently indicated by mindfulness-based approaches: observing the happy moment without passing judgment, without making plans for its end, and without viewing it as proof that something will soon be taken away. It is not necessary to have faith that good things endure forever to have that kind of presence. All you need to do is trust that it’s okay to be there for them while they’re here.

