What would it take to make you happy? To feel content? To feel satisfied with life?
We use different words to talk about this, but almost everybody instinctively knows what I’m talking about. Most of us have some story we tell ourselves about what it would take for us to feel at peace with our lives.
Some people think more money would make them happy. Others care little about money but crave the love and acceptance they’ve always needed. Others want power or social status. They want others to see them some particular way. They think if they had a particular house or car or boat — or something — they would be able to be content with the world and at peace with their lives.
I’m no different. I’ve had money in the past, but found it brought little peace. At this point in my life, I’d love to have more money, but I know it wouldn’t change my satisfaction with life. It wouldn’t give me the peace I crave.
My holy grail right now is connection — to be loved, accepted, valued and understood. Some deep part of me believes I would be happy — would have peace, find contentment, whatever you want to call it — if I simply had a family and some deep community connection. I have a beautiful and loving picture of what that life could look like. And I feel as though it would change everything.
But I have the nagging intuition that I’m wrong. In my gut, I have the terrible feeling that if I can’t be happy or content or at peace right now — when I’m alone and lack many of the things I want — I wouldn’t find those things if all my dreams suddenly came true.

If authentic connection is absent, we crave love and a human touch
Beauty queen’s suicide leaves me pondering lesson of Richard Cory
My fears are less about death than about my own ‘unlived’ life
Shame almost got me fired — and shame still haunts me years later
After 50 years of lonely pursuit and disappointment, boy finally gets girl
Free phone wasn’t worth keeping,
Does the delusion that most people agree with us explain the appeal of majoritarian systems?
Is Obama playing politics with war on terror? Of course, just as Bush did
What if emotional baggage we carry isn’t really our core issue?