Skip to content
The Times USA
Menu
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • NATIONAL NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • INTERNATIONAL NEWS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • PRICE OF BUSINESS SHOW AUDIOS
Menu

Why Happiness Is the Ultimate Currency

Posted on March 12, 2019March 12, 2019 by admin

By the Price of Business Show, Hosted by Kevin Price.  The Price of Business is a media partner of this site.

My friend Avi is a great barber. His customers, myself included, refer to his golden hands—his ability to satisfy my son’s desire to look like Ronaldo, or a woman’s desire before her daughter’s wedding to look like Grace Kelly. Putting his phenomenal skills together with his sound business sense, Avi could have easily expanded his business far beyond his little salon.

So I asked him one day why he chose not to grow his business by adding a bigger place in a more central location in the city, or by opening other branches. Avi said he’d thought about it several times but in the end decided against it: “I asked myself, is this something I really want, or is it something others think I should do?” He went on to describe the can-must link that’s so pervasive in our culture: the belief that if you can grow, you must grow. But why?

Avi explained that over a decade ago, he understood that no matter how much he had—a bigger house, a faster car, a fatter bank account—he would always want more. He could choose to continue in the rat race and never satisfy his desires, or he could stop the race and be satisfied with what he had. He went on to quote a Jewish source, the Chapters of the Fathers: “Who is rich? He who is happy with his lot.”

Cutting hair in his small salon gives Avi the emotional gratification no amount of money could buy. His daily experiences were worth more than all of the gold in Fort Knox because happiness, not wealth or prestige, is the ultimate currency.

What, for you, is worth all of the gold in Fort Knox? Can you envision something in your life that would provide you with an abundance of happiness? To identify sources of the ultimate currency in your life, follow these four steps:

Step 1: Record your daily activities. For a week (or two), keep a record of your daily activities. Throughout the day, write down how you’ve spent your time, from a twenty-minute session responding to e-mails to a night of binge-watching TV. This record doesn’t need to be a precise, minute-by-minute account of your day, but it should give you a sense of what your days tend to look like.

Step 2: Assign meaning and pleasure. Once your activity list is complete, create a table that lists each activity, how much meaning and pleasure the activity provides, and how long you typically spend doing it. Indicate whether you’d like to spend more or less time on each activity by adding a “+” for more time or a “++” for a lot more time. If you’d like to spend less time on the activity, put a “−” next to it; for a lot less time, write “−−.” If you’re satisfied with time you’re investing in a particular activity, or if changing the amount of time you spend isn’t possible for one reason or another, add an “=” next to it.

Step 3: Highlight activities with high-yield happiness. Which of your activities provide the most happiness in the least about of time? Are there things you don’t do now, but would yield significant profits in the ultimate currency? Would going to the movies once a week contribute to your well-being? Would it make you happier to devote four hours a week to your favorite charity and to work out three times a week? If you have many constraints and can’t introduce significant changes, make the most of what you have.

Step 4: Introduce happiness boosters. What happiness boosters—brief activities that provide both meaning and pleasure—could you introduce into your life? If your commute to work is a drag but is unavoidable, try to infuse it with meaning and pleasure. For instance, you could listen to audio books or your favorite music for part of the ride. Alternatively, take the train and use the time to read. Then, as much as possible, ritualize these changes.

One of the many lessons I learned from my barber is that material wealth is not a prerequisite for the ultimate currency, and that dollars and cents are no substitute for meaning and pleasure. As the psychologist Carl Jung once said, “The least of things with a meaning is worth more in life than the greatest of things without it.”

*  *  *

Tal Ben-Shahar, PhD, taught the largest course at Harvard, Positive Psychology, and the third-largest, The Psychology of Leadership, attracting 1,400 students per semester—approximately 20 percent of all Harvard undergraduates. For the last fifteen years, he has taught leadership, happiness, and mindfulness to audiences around the world. He is the co-founder of the Happiness Studies Academy and author of six books, including his newest release, Short Cuts to Happiness, and the international bestsellers Happier and Being Happy, which have been translated into more than twenty-five languages. Learn more at talbenshahar.com.

You Might Also Like...

  • Why It’s Not HR’s Job to Make Us Get Along

      By Jennifer K. Crittenden, Special for THE TIME USA Recently, I attended a workshop about…

  • They Say Bernie Sanders has Avoided a Debate with His GOP Opponent, this May be Why

    On Monday, Bernie Sanders showed why he has avoided debating Lawrence Zupan, the Republican nominee…

  • The PA Profession Continues to Grow

    For the fourth year, the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA) has published…

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Celebrating 25 Years of the Price of Business Show

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ViFPGoK-ks

VIDEO: This Week’s Best of our Network

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUpXVeHBKYQ

GDPR Compliance

USABR does not collect data on its visitors.  For more information visit: https://www.usabusinessradio.com/contact-us/

Contact

Contact articles@usabusinessradio.net for more information on articles on this site. BMuyco@usabusinessradio.net for all other information.

Recent Articles

  • Departure of Seven Michigan State Presidents in Ten Years Points to Systemic Issue
  • The Structural Failures Behind America’s Motorcycle Fatality Problem
  • Inside the Numbers: How Sexual Abuse in U.S. Prisons Persists Despite Two Decades of Reform
  • The Uneven Map of Drunk Driving in America: What Simmrin Law Group’s Data Reveals About Risk, Law, and Behavior
  • The Hidden Geography of Cyclist Danger: What the Data Shows About Where Riders Face the Greatest Risks

Also in TTUSA

  • Potential Gains and Losses for North Korea in Support of Russia
  • Video Captures Some of the Worst “Red-Light Running” of 2018
  • Key Benefits of Local SEO
  • Once Sci-Fi, this New Technology is Promising in Restoring Damaged Nerves and More
  • The Original Series at The Daily Blaze

RSS The Daily Blaze

  • Military Radiation Exposure: Servicemembers and Veterans Seek Recognition, Care
  • When AI Awakens: Humanity’s Fight for the Future
  • AI Fear Grabs College Students As They Graduate in 2026
  • Trump Has Weighed In on the US Senate Race in Texas
  • Why Wholesale Cardboard Boxes Matter More as Carrier Surcharges Rise 9%

RSS USA Business Radio

  • Could Loneliness Be As Dangerous as Smoking?
  • National “1B Unit Book Challenge” Launches to Fuel Community Leadership and Nonprofit Funding
  • Hostage Funds: Why $829 Billion in Private Equity Capital Is Structurally Trapped
  • The Economics of the Four Day Workweek
  • Change, Resilience, and the Enneagram, Oh My!

RSS USA Daily Times

  • The Fatty Acid Burn Switch and the Glucose Cycle
  • How Entertainment Franchises Are Reshaping the Snack Aisle
  • Get Organized Day Is April 26. But if We Aren’t Organized Yet, What Are the Chances This Year Will Be Different?
  • Kwong v. United States: A New Legal Precedent for Taxpayers
  • Culture Scholar – Part Two: From Survival to Systems

RSS USA Daily Chronicles.

  • Reclaiming Every Dollar: The Pandemic-Era Interest Freeze
  • The Value Acceleration Journey: How Privately Held Businesses Intentionally Build Enterprise Value
  • Smart Food Choices To Prevent Diabetes
  • When Empathy Backfires: The Leadership Relational Trap
  • How To Make Doula Services Affordable

RSS Price of Business

  • Military Radiation Exposure: Servicemembers and Veterans Seek Recognition, Care
  • Departure of Seven Michigan State Presidents in Ten Years Points to Systemic Issue
  • The Economics of the Four Day Workweek
  • Outsourcing Financial Services: Why It’s Becoming a Business Standard
  • How Wade Lyons Sees Organizational Culture Through Recruiting

RSS US Daily Review

  • The Role of Promotional Items in Reducing Employee Burnout and Boosting Retention
  • Faith Meets Fantasy: The LitRPG Revolution
  • How a Quiet Morning Prayer Became a #1 Bestseller in Three Countries
  • Pelvic Floor Health: Why It Matters More Than Most People Realize
  • Constantly on Alert: When Stress Becomes the New Normal

PoB Digital Network

US Daily Review

USA Business Radio

USA Daily Chronicles

USA Daily Times

The Daily Blaze

The Times USA

Price of Business

Privacy Policy

https://www.thetimesusa.com/privacy-policy-2/

© 2026 The Times USA | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme