The common belief that steals our joy

By Ingrid Fetell Lee

I used to bring work to the nail salon. Sometimes just a notebook with a few scribbles of a blog post I was working on. Sometimes a book and some index cards. Sometimes a stack of printed out journal articles with titles like “Positive Affect and Markers of Inflammation: Discrete Positive Emotions Predict Lower Levels of Inflammatory Cytokines.” While the women around me flipped through issues of US Weekly and Elle, I squinted at blocks of 8-point type and diagrams of brain regions.

It wasn’t just the nail salon, either. If I was meeting a friend at a museum, I brought a notebook along in case I got there early and had a half hour to write. On vacation, I brought a laptop with me as a matter of course. Sometimes, I even took work to a bar. (The next day, I could see the effects of the wine on the page, my handwriting getting bigger and looser after the first glass kicked in.)

At the time, I thought this made me dedicated. I cared about my work so much that it only seemed natural to bring it with me everywhere. I was influenced by books like Steven Pressfield’s The War of Art, which describes the natural resistance we have to creative work and suggests discipline as the way to overcome it. (It’s a useful book, but read with care.) I also had read many stories of accomplished people who revealed that the secret to their success was commitment, which sounded purposeful, but was really just code for “working all the time.” Jerry Seinfeld famously induced himself to write every single day by putting an X on a calendar. At a certain point, you just don’t want to “break the chain,” he said. Martha Stewart famously sleeps only 4 hours a night, and is rumored to sleep with the lights on so she can immediately get back to work when she wakes up. Danielle Steele, author of 179 books and the holder of a Guinness world record for having a book on the New York Times bestseller list longer than any other author, has a sign in her office that reads, “There are no miracles. There is only discipline.” She produces seven books a year by working 22 hours a day. (No, that’s not a typo.)

I, on the other hand, need a relatively human seven hours of sleep a night. I never had much success at waking up at 4 or 5am to write, and I like to be out and about doing things. Taking work along for the ride was a habit acquired during the time when I worked a full-time job and my writing was a side project that I needed to fit into my leisure time. Reading books about neuroscience in a restaurant or a park helped me make progress on the book that would become Joyful at a time when I didn’t really feel like I was making progress at anything in life.

And yet, I rarely got much done on these excursions. I might read one page of an academic paper, then start to glaze over. I would take out my phone and scroll Instagram for a few minutes, then steer my attention back to the papers again, and slog through another page. Suddenly, my pedicure was over, and I hurried back to my desk on rainbow-painted feet, feeling guilty about how unproductive I’d been during my so-called “break.”

I was always exhausted in those days, and always feeling guilty. Each morning I started out with an optimistic to do list that by the middle of the day felt unachievable. I would set word counts and then miss them. I would tell myself I’d finish writing a chapter and then get stuck on a single paragraph for two hours. I had big goals for my work, and each day, as my productivity lagged, it felt as if I was watching myself fail — not just to complete my self-assigned tasks, but to live up to my potential. So when it was time for a break, the work I carried in my bag was like a shield against guilt — even if I never actually did much of it. I intended to work. That was what mattered.

It would be easy to label my behavior a classic case of workaholism and move on. But I think that explanation is a little too tidy. Because when we lean into one part of our lives hard, it’s rarely just about what we’re moving toward. Often, it’s also about what we’re trying to avoid. I was addicted to work, certainly, but I was also avoiding joy. (Let’s pause for a moment to appreciate the irony of a person who is writing a book about joy avoiding it for themselves. Oof.)

Why would I avoid joy? I’ve come to realize it’s because a part of me never felt like I deserved it. I grew up on the idea that work is synonymous with purpose, that it is our contribution to society, and that a strong work ethic is essential to being a good person. Joy was a reward, something you earned as a result of your hard work. In my mind, to deserve joy, I had to earn it by working hard and achieving my goals. But as Devon Price points out in their book Laziness Does Not Exist, there is always more work to do, and always new goals to achieve. No matter how hard we work, it’s easy to feel like we never really deserve joy.

I’ve found that this notion of “deserving joy” tends to make people a little squirrely (myself included). Ask someone point blank if they feel they deserve joy, and they’re likely to say, “Of course I do!” Yet our behavior reveals many ways in which we force ourselves to earn joy, not just by working, but through other actions we consider worthy. How many of these sound familiar to you?

  • You allow yourself dessert only on days when you’ve “been good” by eating healthy foods and exercising. (Or you allow your kids dessert only if they’ve eaten their dinner first.)
  • A friend invites you to an impromptu dinner party, but you’re got a number of emails in your inbox that are waiting for replies, and you feel you need to stay and answer them instead.
  • You struggle to let yourself do a puzzle or a craft project if the house is a mess. You feel like you need to clean up first.
  • You have a tendency to choose leisure activities that are “productive.” Instead of playing an instrument, you choose something that you could turn into a side hustle.
  • You feel guilty that you’re not volunteering enough or giving more money to the causes that matter to you. Doing something nice for yourself feels selfish, but you’re too tired to volunteer, so you end up doomscrolling. (At least then you don’t feel so guilty.)
  • You only read serious non-fiction books because they feel like self-improvement. Reading purely for pleasure feels frivolous and self-indulgent.
  • Seeing a partner lounging on the sofa in the middle of the day makes you feel annoyed. Even if they’ve finished everything on their to do list, it still feels weird to see them just sitting around resting.
  • Your to do list doesn’t disappear when you’ve finished all your work. It actually gets longer, as you realize how much more you could be fitting into your time.

These behaviors may seem disconnected, but they’re united by the common idea that joy is not something we are inherently worthy of, but rather we’re entitled to it only when we have done another thing that we consider virtuous. This notion is pervasive in our culture. Work is how we earn leisure. Eating healthy and exercise are how we earn dessert. Generosity is how we earn time for ourselves. Virtue is how we earn joy.

The conditioning that has shaped this value system runs deep. The Protestant work ethic venerates labor by promising eternal reward. (Work now, joy later.) Work is morally good, while play and rest are seen as lazy or wasteful. Capitalism reinforces this idea by measuring our value as humans by our capacity to work and produce. Joy has no inherent value in our society, unless it entails consumption, which further promotes economic activity. Even the way we gain vacation in a corporate structure reflects this: we “earn” vacation days through work as if they are a perk being granted, rather than a right to which we are entitled.

Related to this is a strain of moral thought dating back to Medieval Christianity that equates sacrifice and abstaining from pleasure with goodness, while enjoyment is self-indulgent and bad. We can see this line of thought in the contemporary embrace of eudaimonia, a kind of happiness that emphasizes meaning and fulfillment, over hedonia or hedonism, a more pleasure-centric happiness that is dismissed as self-indulgent by comparison. Diet culture imposes a similar moral structure on our bodies, assigning positive moral value to salads and spinning, and negative value to sugar and fat.

The problems with this value system are numerous. For starters, it sidelines joy, turning it into a luxury we can earn only through “necessary” activities like work. Time with family and friends, celebrations, a walk in nature, playing music, putting together a puzzle — these are tangential to the real purpose of life, which is to contribute to society through work. So we start to view these activities as non-essential extras that we fit into our spare time when we have it.

But even then, we’re not free to simply enjoy our joys. Because within this value system, joy is a moral negative. If work is good, then not working is bad. Play and pleasure aren’t valuable in their own right. Just the opposite: they are wasteful and undesirable. The influence of this can be seen in the movement to justify rest and leisure by painting them as something that enables us to work more effectively and be productive members of society. This is an attempt to reclaim joy that works within the existing value system, trying to make joy purposeful rather than questioning why we feel it needs a purpose at all.

By definition, then, all joy is something to feel guilty about, unless it comes from a virtuous activity such as work. We can’t hope to erase this guilt — only to offset it by engaging in behaviors that will cancel out our indulgence. The phrase “Work hard, play hard,” is one manifestation of this offsetting behavior. So are detoxes, which are a kind of purification rite through which diet culture tells us to atone for eating “bad” foods. The splurge and save cycles many of us go through in managing our money can also reflect this pattern.

And if this belief system creates guilt when we turn it inward on ourselves, turned outward it looks a lot like judgment. We’re constantly judging others as deserving or not based on our perception of their virtue. Fat people face this stigma constantly, being seen as lazy or lacking in self-control based on their appearance. While it’s considered acceptable and even cool for a thin person to enjoy an ice cream sundae (because she’s assumed to have “earned it” based on her diet and exercise choices), a fat person is seen as indulgent for doing the same thing. Similarly, people living in poverty are seen as undeserving of even the smallest joys (which is why public housing rarely has color or nature as part of its design), while people who are wealthy are excused for even the wildest excesses because it’s “their money” and they’re entitled to do what they want with it. Never mind if they didn’t actually earn it. The capitalist equation of value with money means that having money, no matter how it was acquired, is seen as being entitled to the pleasures it affords.

So how do we break out of this joy-killing system? How do we free ourselves from the guilt and the judgment that makes it impossible for us to enjoy our lives, and let others enjoy theirs too?

The answer lies in a radical shift in our understanding of what joy is, and what makes us worthy of it. Instead of seeing joy as a reward, we need to see it as an essential part of human life, one that is not an outcome but a vital input to our flourishing. And we need to see all human beings as worthy of joy, unconditionally, not based on their work ethic, or their income, or their contribution to society. The unhoused person living on the street corner, the lazy loafer, and the subway busker — all are worthy of joy, just as much as the multi-millionaire, the charity worker, and the nurse.

I recognize this shift is hard to make. We have so much programming that tells us that some people are more deserving than others, and that our worth is tied to our work. But as long as joy is conditional, it will always be something we need to earn. And no matter how hard we work, or how good we are, there will always be the possibility that we could’ve worked harder, could’ve been better. As long as joy is conditional, there will always be a reason to deny it to ourselves.

You deserve joy. Just as you are. You always have. And you always will.

Image: Jesse Bowser via unsplash

October 16th, 2021

Share:

Lost your spark?

The Joy Jumpstart is a 7-day, self-guided program to help you break out of a rut and reconnect with what makes you feel truly alive.

    Discussion (23 Comments)

  1. Manisha on October 16, 2021

    I’m thinking about your article in the context of an immigrant experience where first generations are so committed to work. Second generations are usually caught in the same paradigm as a way to pay back or honor the work of those before them. Where does it end? Thank you. I really enjoyed this read!

    Reply
  2. annoesjka on October 16, 2021

    Thank you for writing this! So, so true. I wish they would teach kids this in school (in Europe as well). The idea of actually avoiding joy by staying productive (or pretending to be working that is) is a whole new way of looking at it, for me. I am going to reframe that in my mind! Thanks again for this.

    Reply
  3. Ik on October 16, 2021

    Pretty profound article. As much as I agree , the whole society is so deeply and widely ingrained into this ” work first then enjoy” mindset that it is super challenging, almost impossible to have and practice an alternative value system.

    Reply
  4. Kristen Gough on October 16, 2021

    Those scenarios you mentioned hit home real hard to this gal! Seeing my partner on the couch on a Saturday afternoon always drives me nuts and I couldn’t pinpoint why 😆

    Reply
  5. Ingrid Huebner on October 16, 2021

    Ah, yes….the Protestant work ethic. This article depicts me, for I am torn between believing that I DO deserve joy, and simultaneously believe I need to “earn” it. My favorite quote is the one by E. B. White. in which he bemoans the fact that [he] “gets up in the morning torn between wanting to save the world and wanting to savor the world…..and that makes it difficult to plan the day.” That’s the paradigm I find myself caught in, and am trying to believe that I deserve every little moment of joy that appears for all of us constantly throughout our days, if we are but willing to look for it. Thank you for writing and posting this!

    Reply
  6. lmayne on October 16, 2021

    Yes-This! Such an important perspective shift that I wish I would have understood decades earlier in my life. Let’s normalize joy and prioritize its accessibility for everyone.

    Reply
  7. Cindy Neal on October 16, 2021

    Growing up, we were constantly judged on productivity. Now the word makes my hair stand on end. I’m 69 years old and have JUST begun to allow myself the freedom to do nothing. Or read. Or draw. Or take a walk. What? My mother would say. What did you accomplish? It’s hard to leave behind, but I allow myself time and (finally) don’t feel guilty. It does help to have someone nonjudgmental to talk to. We’ve lived through a tough few years. Find the joy!

    Reply
  8. Lucie on October 17, 2021

    Thank you. So much truth in your words. Very timely as well – I’ve been wrestling with this for awhile. I was raised to work hard and be productive at all times. Doing “nothing” was inconceivable and judged. I realize that I raised my children in a similar way and now have the task to demonstrate my understanding of the importance to allow life to be experienced for the simplicity of joy. 

    Reply
  9. Karen on October 17, 2021

    Thank you for sharing your insight, Ingrid.  The concept of ‘work before play’ is so ingrained in so many. At 58 I am finally allowing myself (even the word ‘allowing’ is telltale) to appreciate joyful moments for what they are. With three grown children, who we raised with the same message that you describe, I now see the error of my ways. This article is timely, with Christmas (oftentimes stressful) on the horizon. Let’s embrace the joy! Thanks again.

    Reply
  10. fw on October 17, 2021

    Thanks for this…. just a very big THANKS! I needed to hear this.

    Reply
  11. Emily on October 17, 2021

    Thank you for such a timely article, Ingrid! I struggle with taking a true lunch break and your article helped me understand why. The hard part is going to be changing my behavior but I am committed to showing myself my worth and to embrace joy by taking a true break. Thank you so much for your work! 

    Reply
  12. Kelly Papapavlou on October 18, 2021

    CORRECTION
    Am I wrong to believe that this article somehow opposes your previous article titled “5 gifts to give your future shelf”? and that this article also goes against the well-grounded ‘Delay gratification” concepts that are much embedded in our everyday tasks? would I sound cynical to say that my 13 – years old son expresses exactly the same arguments when I am the joy-killer asking him to leave his 3-hours gaming to practise his History for 20 min?
    Alas, where is the borderline?

    Reply
    1. Ingrid Fetell Lee on October 20, 2021

      Interesting question, Kelly! I don’t see them as contradictory. Deserving joy is about our worth as human beings, and does not preclude delaying gratification. As adults we learn to balance joy now vs. joy later. Children and teenagers, who are still developing the ability to balance present and future desires, need us to set reasonable boundaries where they can’t set them themselves. They also need to know that they are worthy of joy simply because they exist – that they don’t have to work to be worthy of joy. If we don’t do the history homework, that’s a problem for many reasons. But we’re just as entitled to the the gaming as we are to the learning – even though we’d never think of it that way. And a kid obsessed with history homework would be celebrated, while a kid who only wants to play games would be denigrated – but neither is healthy. Our moral association of work and study as good and play as bad obscures this.

      Reply
  13. Jennifer on October 18, 2021

    I love this article and all the responses! The concept brings up so many connections for me.
    1. I’m reminded of a story about a soup kitchen where china and linens were used to honor and uplift those who came to eat.

    2. Researcher BJ Fogg’s reminder that people are more likely to change their behavior when they feel good about themselves.

    3. Educator Richard Villa sharing a circle diagram showing 4 aspects of student fulfillment: generosity; belonging, independence and mastery.

    Could the trouble with the current mindset, as described in the article, be the way we look at work and joy…linear, either/ or, one versus the other, ranking in a hierarchy? Might it be helpful to look at them more as layers or circles or interlocking parts of a pattern?

    Work can be joyful and can certainly bring a sense of generosity and mastery; but it doesn’t necessarily need to come first, nor will it ever be done.  Imagine what a difference could be made allowing ample space for joy❤️

    Reply
  14. Erica on October 19, 2021

    Thank you so much for this post! I highly recommend everyone read the Laziness Lie and wake up to how you have been programmed by capitalism and the patriarchy to believe that your worth is tied to working hard. The rich are simply reaping the benefits of everyone else working themselves to exhaustion. Capitalism must be dismantled and humans  given the right to simply be humans and follow their joy. We are not “human capital” to be brainwashed and exploited into working non-stop. The proliferation of “entertainment” like social media is a symptom of our very real disconnect from ourselves, nature and our reason for being on this earth. I also highly recommend checking out the work of Toi Smith @toimarie to wake up and realize the systems of oppression in place that are stealing our opportunity to experience joy.

    Reply
  15. Scott Talbot on October 20, 2021

    Isn’t it a matter of choosing the kind of joy you wish to have? I can experience the short-lived joy of an immense hot fudge sundae now, or the joy of a slimmer, healthier body and a sense of self control tomorrow. Generally, choosing the path of self-discipline (discomfort, pain, inconvenience) leads to greater rewards and greater joy.

    Reply
    1. Ingrid Fetell Lee on October 20, 2021

      I once believed this. But who says being thin and “having self-control” is more joyful than the sundae? Personally, I missed out on a lot of joy because the world told me I was more worthy when I was small and skinny. I’m done with it. Discomfort, pain, and inconvenience can lie along the path to great rewards, but the idea that they “generally” do is simply not true. And there is a lot of freedom in realizing that you don’t always have to make the hard choice – or that sometimes, what is making the experience hard is socially constructed difficulty (our every-man-for-himself economy, for example) and not an innate feature of the human experience.

      Reply
  16. Ina on October 20, 2021

    I love your work, is it too much to ask for a podcast? 🥳😇 just reading the articles/blog posts would be amazing 😁 love from an audible  that enjoyed your audio book ☀️

    Reply
  17. Kaelyn on October 23, 2021

    I feel like somehow you embodied all my feelings and thoughts when you wrote this article. It’s hard to unwind all that complication and believe we actually deserve joy without earning it. Something to work toward. Thank you. 

    Reply
  18. Linda B on October 25, 2021

    I am so interested in what you have to say, and will be pondering it for days to come. Here are a few thoughts to add to the pot:

    I am about 2 1/2 years into retirement, which gives me an interesting vantage point to consider both joy and self-denial. My career in education gave me so much joy, and also I drove myself to exhaustion way too often in trying to make the perfect lessons for my students, and beyond that, trying so much to support my colleagues and the students’ parents. I have few regrets, looking back, because the work really did bring me immense opportunities to be in the moment joyfully and creatively. . .Since I retired, I have been learning to live much more in the moment, I have to admit, “following my nose” as to what I do (or don’t do!) on a given day. Still, I find that there are days I miss the feeling of “being productive”–and I am trying to observe that phenomenon as objectively as I can. . . . In another aspect of life, I will note that I personally feel better physically when I do not overindulge in sugar, alcohol, or rich food on a regular basis (they all can make me feel sluggish, or worse, give me migraines.) A side result of this is that I am as thin as I was in my twenties (after having gained 40 pounds over time); and find I like being able to move through the world in this body as I age. I still let myself have treats–just less of them. It’s a balancing act. . . AND, in addition to all I’ve just said, I know I can do better at allowing opportunities for pleasure and joy. It is all too easy for me to get hooked into taking care of others’ happiness first. I want to try to observe this tendency more carefully. . .and allow more joy for ME.

    Reply
  19. Zaeobi on October 26, 2021

    This idea of ‘work hard, play later’ is even embodied in the concept of retirement – keep working until the point where you can relax. Only, once you reach that point, you often find there is always something more you could have done to ‘prepare’ (e.g. keep working to earn more money)…

    Reply
  20. Kelly on November 18, 2021

    Wonderful post, Ingrid; I too am often guilty of doing work during a pedicure (and any other sliver of ‘free time’ I might find – ugh!), and everything you wrote here resonated with me…yipes!

    On top of needing to feel ‘worthy’ of joy only after all work is done, I also continue to work through the inner conflict of allowing myself to really deeply experience joy, after growing up with a mom who struggled with serious depression that continued through to my mid-30s, when she ultimately died of suicide. I’ve done lots of internal work to move past that heartbreaking experience which was many years ago now, but your posts are always welcome reminders of all the reasons it’s important to both allow and to create joy for ourselves. Life is meant for joyful living! 🙂

    I first stumbled upon your work sometime this past year by watching your TED talk as company during a solo dinner, and have since been enjoying your posts each time they come out. I also read “Joyful” just this month, which was so well done; you’re an exceptional writer! So I also just wanted to write to offer a big & sincere **thank you** for all the work you do on the subject of joy. It’s so important…and so very much appreciated.

    Thank you….and I wish you much continued success & joy! 🙂

    Reply

Leave a Comment

What's killing your joy? Take this 3-minute quiz to find out.
Free Resource

Find more joy every day

Our free workbook has 5 simple strategies that will make life better right now.

You'll also receive periodic updates on new things from The Aesthetics of Joy. We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe at any time.