“Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be successful.” -Albert Schweitzer
Last week, I was part of the studio audience for a taping of the Jay Leno show. One of the guests was Glee’s Jane Lynch, who I learned has a new book out called Happy Accidents.
What struck me during her interview was her confession of struggling with chronic anxiety throughout most of her rise to fame. She always felt apprehensive about her decisions, unsure of whether or not she was doing the right things to succeed as an actress.
In retrospect, she realizes that all that stress did nothing to lead her where she is now, and that all she really needed to do was to take the chances in front of her—because all those “happy accidents” added up to make her dream come true.
While listening to her speak, I couldn’t help but wonder what conclusions she’d have formed at this point in her life if she hadn’t succeeded on a massive scale. It’s a lot easier to relax when you feel like you’ve done what you intended to do. It’s easier to be kind to yourself when you feel proud of yourself.
If things had worked out differently, she may very well feel the same; judging from the interview, she’s gleaned a lot of wisdom in her 51 years. Still, this got me thinking.
The challenge for most of us is learning to adopt that calm, accepting mindset when we’re midway through the climb, wherever it is where headed. The reality is there are no guarantees about the heights we’ll reach–we can never know for certain where our “accidents” will take us.
Perhaps happiness is appreciating and enjoying those detours, regardless of where they lead.
Maybe it’s more than just believing in our ability to succeed; maybe happiness is believing in our ability to be content and satisfied whether we do or not.
Today if you feel fixated on the success you want to achieve, remember: the greatest success is doing what you love and believing that’s enough.
Photo by kurvenalbn

About Lori Deschene
Lori Deschene is the founder of Tiny Buddha. She started the site after struggling with depression, bulimia, c-PTSD, and toxic shame so she could recycle her former pain into something useful and inspire others to do the same. You can find her books, including Tiny Buddha’s Gratitude Journal and Tiny Buddha’s Worry Journal, here and learn more about her eCourse, Recreate Your Life Story, if you’re ready to transform your life and become the person you want to be.
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Good article Lori, thanks for sharing, it’s true happiness comes from enjoying the journey and process not waiting for the end goal/destination or results.
Another good one!
Direct to the core.
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Great article! I quoted you in my blog (at the bottom):
http://grasshopperyogi.blogspot.com/2011/09/yoga-is-journey.html
Thank again!
Thank you–I’m glad you enjoyed it!
You are most welcome. =)
Thanks for the link, Allison. I’m glad you found this post helpful!
This post found me in the midst of a “climb” as you put it — thanks for the reminder that its the journey that matters not just the destination. blessings – so enjoy your blog and tweets!
You’re welcome, Laurie. I think this is one of those things that we all need to be reminded of from time to time. =)
[…] the rest here: Tiny Wisdom: Stressing and Pushing for Success | Tiny Buddha … This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged and-believing, doing-what, fixated-on-the, […]
“Perhaps happiness is appreciating and enjoying those detours, regardless of where they lead.” Beautifully put – thank you for the reminder :o)
You are most welcome =)
Again you put together thoughts so well, I love your blogs- and appreciate very much !
I just can’t believe how impeccable the timing always seems to be with these posts. What amazing wisdom, and such motivation for me to start tackling the loads of writing I need to do this weekend (rather than stressing out, not knowing where to start, like I’ve been doing all morning!).
yah gotta have faith in myself. if i’m happy doing what i’m doing then even if the world doubts me i should carry on 🙂
thanks for the reminder!
Thanks Joanne. =)
You are most welcome!