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11 answers

Yes, and No.
For there are 2 issues here- happiness, and 'ordinary people' that are subjective and difficult to define.

The Miller of the Dee works all day, looks aftrer his family, sleeps well, has enough to eat, and is ready to face the next day- he is a happy, contented man.

There is however, the young mother and housewife, who has her baby and husband and home to look after, but is raring to do something special, but has no time to do it- she is blind to her happiness, and makes herself unhappy with frustration.

There is then the achiever, who struggles to achieve something- he finds happiness for a while, but once again starts upon another achieving journey, and till that is done, is troubled.

For, achievement is not a destination- it is a milepost in a journey.

So what makes the difference between happiness and discontent ? Is it achievement, and non-achievement ?
Not really.
The difference is in having , or not having a journey of life. Being static is certainly unhappiness.

Even the 'ordinary' person, when he has a continuing path to walk on, learning, imbibing, changing, improving- it does not have to be from books only- it can be from experience, from people, from travel, from cinema, from friends, from meditation, contemplation, TV, radio or internet- he is on the road to happiness.
Sue-Venu

2007-04-20 16:34:30 · answer #1 · answered by sue-venu tenneti 1 · 0 0

It would depend on the definition of great achievers. I assume you mean people you are listed in encyclopedias and what not. But does inventing the the car or being the fastest runner really mean you have achieved a lot. I think a good movie for you would be Citizen Kane. People may see you as successful and even envy you but that doesn't determine how you see yourself. You may go after money but what you really need is a loving family. Happiness is really determined by a perceived thought of meaning. If your life is not a waste you will be happier. Many ordinary people see this added value of their existence and are happy. I am not sure if there is a correlation between society's view of success and happiness. I hope there isn't or the world will become on giant rat race (even more so than it already is).

2007-04-20 16:01:52 · answer #2 · answered by gordongecko 2 · 0 0

Define Great Achievement. Some so called 'great achievers' never mastered a washing machine, or cooking a meal for themselves without burning the pan, yet they did something that affected lives and someone wrote about them. But everyone is a great achiever in one form or another, no matter how many lives they affect, and anyone who is social affects lives with their achievements in life. I got on the eco bandwagon and lowered my electricity bill by 3/4s. There's an achievement, and I can wash and cook at the same time without burning anything. But you'll likely never see my name in the Encyclopedia Britanica. So f*ckin' what! I spend less money on utility bills and have more money to save or play with. Does that make me a happy great achiever? Happier than Einstein maybe? Who knows. You don't. I am darn happy with that though. Great achievement is an individual thing, and everybody does it. You just don't read about it all. As for happiness, not everybody finds that, whether they're famous or not. And fame has been known to lead to depression and suicide. I don't think Einstein was happier than me. But then I didn't know the man or anyone who knew him, and probably neither did you, so we can't be certain.

2007-04-20 17:21:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Achievement isn't a guarantee of happiness. Great achievers may be happy or they may be very unhappy. The key to happiness is to love yourself. Some overachievers actually hate themselves. This is what motivates them to try to be the best, to knock themselves out to be on top yet they still feel a void & are never satisfied. No amount of success, wealth, power or accolades can ever fill the void.

Throughout my education, I was driven to be the best. I always had straight A's & won awards but was never happy & still never felt good enough. I thought that once I reached the top I'd be happy but it wasn't the case. When you don't love yourself, nothing is ever enough.

The key to loving yourself is realizing that you have worth not because of what you do or have but because of who you are. You have worth as a human being. You are a miracle of nature. You deserve to love & be loved. Especially by yourself. Perfection is an impossible goal & if you strive for it, you set yourself up for disappointment & failure. Great achievers (over-achievers) may be among the most unhappy people because they're trying too hard to do it all, they expect too much of themselves, they create stress & misery for themselves & aren't able to sit back & enjoy their lives, they're too busy trying to do more, achieve more, have more & it will never be enough.

2007-04-20 15:58:02 · answer #4 · answered by amp 6 · 2 0

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2016-10-18 02:50:04 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Not always. Great scientist, writers and philosophers suffered during the most of their lives. They either abused drugs or spent countless hours sequestered in an isolated room working for countless hours. However, there are great achievers who enjoyed an opulent life.

2007-04-20 16:04:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes.
Great achievers are smart and understand the basic concept of happiness. They are the ones with friends and happy families. They don't make the same mistake twice and that is important in life

2007-04-20 16:02:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

We cannot judge that. A poor man gets a shelter and food he is very happy. similarly the great achievers is also happy. the happiness is different to each other person.

2007-04-21 00:20:06 · answer #8 · answered by geet 4 · 0 0

Yes.
Great achievers are smart and understand the basic concept of happiness. They are the ones with friends and happy families. They don't make the same mistake twice and that is important in life.

2007-04-20 15:55:06 · answer #9 · answered by sunflowerdaisy94 3 · 0 2

yes, but not happier ( i know of no scientific scale), the joy, reward /pleasure, gratification, would certainly be there.

2007-04-20 17:21:19 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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