The Happiness Problem

by Sam Wren-Lewis

Publisher: Policy Press Published: 2019-11-28 Category: Politics & Democracy

What if our collective obsession with happiness has become a political problem rather than a personal solution? What if the very frameworks we use to understand wellbeing have been quietly co-opted to serve interests that have little to do with genuine human flourishing?

Contemporary Western societies have witnessed an explosion of interest in happiness and wellbeing over the past few decades. From positive psychology workshops to corporate mindfulness programs, from government wellbeing indices to self-help bestsellers, the pursuit of happiness has become ubiquitous. Yet beneath this cheerful surface lies a troubling paradox: despite unprecedented access to happiness advice and interventions, rates of anxiety, depression, and psychological distress continue to climb. Something fundamental has gone wrong with how we think about and pursue happiness.

At the heart of this exploration lies a radical proposition: happiness has been transformed from a natural human aspiration into an ideology that serves particular political and economic interests. When wellbeing becomes something to be measured, optimized, and managed at scale, it ceases to be about authentic human experience and becomes instead a tool of governance and control. The frameworks that promise liberation often deliver subtle forms of constraint.

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