3 Steps to Happiness

Imagine waking up every morning with a heart full of joy, a smile that won’t fade, and an unwavering sense of contentment. No matter what challenges life throws your way, you remain resilient, positive, and genuinely happy. Sounds impossible doesn’t it? 

 

We all yearn for lasting happiness, that elusive state of mind that seems to slip through our fingers in the midst of life’s ups and downs. Yet, the pursuit of happiness is not merely a pursuit; it’s an art, a skill, and a way of life. 

 

In this blog post, we’re going to unravel the secret to achieving and maintaining happiness, no matter what circumstances come your way.

 

Happiness is an emotion. It is also a state of being. You can feel happy and you can BE happy. 

Either way, as humans we’re always striving for this. We all want to feel and be happy. 

 

Happiness has been a personal search for me for the longest time. 

There was actually a point in my life where I didn’t even remember what it felt like to be happy anymore. If anyone asked me what is one thing I wanted in life, I’d say, I just want to feel happy again. I always felt that my happiness was dependent on my situation. It was dependent on the people around me and the things around me. And so it was an emotion that would come and go and I could never keep it long term. No matter how much I tried, I would find myself quickly changing emotional states. I couldn’t maintain my happiness for long. 

 

Growing up, there was a lot of ‘surviving’ in my family. We were constantly in a state of fight or flight and so I learned early on that being happy was just a temporary state and if I were in that state for too long, something bad would happen. 

I memorized the pattern that as soon as something good happens in life, something bad has to happen right away. 

I also memorized from my teachers that Allah tests those whom He loves. And so I felt that the only way I knew that Allah loved me was if I was in a state of difficulty. If I ever got to a place where life felt a bit easy, I would panic and search for something to worry about because I thought, ‘life can never be easy because this dunya is a test, there is no pleasure here, all the pleasure is in the Akhirah.’ 

 

I didn’t realize that I was training my brain to be afraid of happiness. I subconsciously began to run away from all the good in my life. I viewed everything as bad. I lived in a constant state of threat. 

 

A couple years ago, when life felt too difficult and what I felt was too many challenges that came my way, I found myself ‘never’ being happy. Not even for a few moments. I got to the point where I didn’t even remember what it meant to be happy. 

 

Everything changed when I found life coaching and became certified as a life coach. 

 

I learned so much about human behavior and the mind. I went deep into learning about personal development. 

For the first 25 years of my life, I didn’t know that I could change my brain. I didn’t know that it was a tool that Allah SWT has blessed us humans with and gave us control over it. I didn’t know that the mind is what controlled everything, after Allah SWT. 

 

Okay, now let me break it down real simple. 

 

Happiness is an emotion. Emotions are how our minds and bodies react to different things or situations. They include how we feel inside, what happens in our bodies, and what we show on the outside.

 

Where do emotions come from? ‘Emotions arise from activations of specialized neuronal populations in several parts of the cerebral cortex’ (link) 

The cerebral cortex is the brain’s outer covering, like its “thinking cap,” which helps us do things like think, see, talk, and move. 

 

So basically, emotions come from our mind. 

 

If we could control our mind, then theoretically we could control our emotions, and if we could control our emotions, then we could control our happiness. Because after all, happiness is an emotion. 

 

Thoughts cause emotions. 

 

What are thoughts? Simply put, they are sentences in your mind. 

 

For example, let’s say you’re at the hospital and your family member just had surgery and the doctor comes out and says the surgery went spectacular, automatically you will start to feel the emotion of happiness or relief. If I tell you, ‘Tomorrow, your pet will fall sick,’ (unless you’re afraid of animals, but even then, an animal falling sick is generally not a positive thing), you will start to feel the emotion of sadness or worry. 

 

Our thoughts are the driving force behind our emotions.

That is the power of the mind. 

Your entire life is based on your thoughts. This is why if you’ve ever learned about personal development, a phrase that is often repeated is, ‘perception is everything.’ Your perception is just a collection of your thoughts. 

 

So how do we control our mind for it to give us thoughts that lead to the emotion of happiness? 

All we have to do is think of what happiness is for us individually and reinforce that thought in all situations as much as possible to rewire the brain to give thoughts that lead to the emotion of happiness. 

 

The mind is a very powerful machine. It starts to get wired from the minute you are born into this world. 

And so it’s important to remember that if you’ve thought a certain way for ‘x’ number of years, it won’t change overnight. It will take deliberate action and time but once you change your brain, your life will change too. 

 

 

Step One:

Define happiness for yourself clearly.

Ask yourself, what will make me the most happy. This is something to think deep about. 

 

For me, this is where our beautiful religion comes in. 

And this is what I couldn’t find in all the life coaching material I went through.

 

For Muslims, happiness is pleasing Allah SWT. It’s as simple as that. 

 

The best way I have found to always be happy is to ask myself, ‘in this moment am I pleasing Allah SWT?’

 

If I can answer yes to this, then I am happy. 

 

The thought I repeat intentionally to myself is, ‘Allah is pleased with me, and that is all I need.’ 

 

Because if Allah is pleased with you, then what else do you really need? 

 

Aisha (RA) reported: The Messenger of Allah ﷺ, said, “Whoever seeks the pleasure of Allah by the displeasure of people, Allah will suffice him against the people. Whoever seeks the pleasure of people by the displeasure of Allah, Allah will leave him to the patronage of the people. Jami` at-Tirmidhi 2414

 

If we can truly embody the fact that seeking the pleasure of Allah SWT is the ultimate purpose of our lives here on Earth, then we can find happiness in every moment that we’re doing that. 

 

That is the thought that I have found to help me the most to consistently have the emotion of happiness.

 

 

Step Two:

Once you have thought deeply about what brings you happiness, frame it into a single thought. The thought I use is, ‘Allah is pleased with me, and that is all I need.’ The average mind has on average 60,000 thoughts per day. And 90% of them are repetitive. This means that everyday is only around 10% different than the previous day in terms of the thoughts that you have. And so having new thoughts takes deliberate action. It is simple, but not easy. The good news is that, once you think a thought enough times, it becomes part of the 90% repetitive ones. 

Step Three:

Once you have the intentional thought that brings you happiness, write it down on your phone, on your fridge, on your laptop, on your bathroom mirror, anywhere and everywhere and read it to yourself multiple times a day.

So once you have the intentional thought that brings you happiness, write it down on your phone, on your fridge, on your laptop, on your bathroom mirror, anywhere and everywhere and read it to yourself multiple times a day. 

 

Making the thought easy to access, repeat and remember is a critical step to wiring the thought into your brain. 

 

Now some people may think this sounds a little woo woo, repeating intentional thoughts to yourself. 

Well, guess what, this is another place where I fell in love with Islam even more. 

 

Narrated Abu Hurairah (RA) Allah’s Messenger (ﷺ) said:

“Whoever glorifies Allah (by saying Subhan-Allah) after every Salat (prayer) thirty-three times, and praises Allah (by saying Alhamdu-lillah) thirty-three times, and exalts Allah (by saying Allahu Akbar) thirty-three times, those are ninety-nine in all, and says to complete a hundred: La ilaha ill-Allahu, wahdahu la sharika lahu, lahul-mulku wa lahulhamdu, wa Huwa ‘ala kulli shai’in Qadir (There is nothing which deserves to be worshipped except Allah Alone Who has no partner; to Him belongs the kingdom, to Him praise is due, and He has power over everything), his sins will be forgiven, even if they are as abundant as the foam of the sea.” [Reported by Muslim].

 

This is a hadith about the dhikr we are encouraged to do after every salah, 5 times a day. 

Dhikr is just the act of repeating phrases. It is just repeating thoughts. 

 The thought of SubhanAllah. The thought of Alhamdullilah. The thought of Allahu Akbar.

 

By repeating these thoughts 100 times after every salah time 5 salahs, that’s 500 thoughts. 

This on top of the salah we pray which again is us saying multiple phrases, reading Qur’an, and more phrases being repeated. 

 

By repeating these phrases multiple times a day we are wiring our brain to keep them as repetitive thoughts. 

This is why dhikr is a daily action multiple times a day. 

 

So just like that, repeating an intentional thought such as ‘Allah is pleased with me, and that is all I need,’ will help with developing the emotion of happiness. 

Dhikr are thoughts. Allah tells us to praise Him, to do dhikr, to remember Him. They’re all thoughts at the end of the day. They’re phrases we’re thinking and saying. 

It is also to wire your brain to keep remembering Allah SWT. 

 

This is the same thing. It is just rewiring your brain with intentional thoughts. 

 

Now saying the dhikr is not enough, we have to understand it and feel it. The intention of dhikr is not to just repeat the phrases like robots. It is to truly understand it and link it to feelings. When you say Allahu Akbar, you really understand that Allah is the greatest. You feel that He is the higher power. The One in control. 

This is what makes the thought emotionally charged. This is what makes it to be so impactful in your life. 

And just like we have to truly embody dhikr, the last step for happiness is linking the thought to the emotion of happiness.

You have to really feel happiness when you say the thought. You have to emotionally charge the thought with happiness. 

Smile when you say the thought. Really try your best to feel happy when saying the thought. 

It’ll be weird in the beginning, but once you’ve done it enough times, your brain will associate the emotion of happiness to the new thought. So every time you have the thought, you will feel the emotion of happiness.

 

So to recap: 

Step 1: Define Happiness for Yourself

Step 2: Frame it into a Single Thought

Step 3: Write it down somewhere and keep repeating it

 

And that is how you can consistently always be happy. 

 

Until next time my friend,

Remember you got this because you have Allah

 

Your sister, 

Mariam

About the Author

Mariam Aslam is a life coach, Hafidha, and founder of the Resilient Muslimah. Her writing offers a unique blend of personal development, psychology, and Islamic teachings. Her aim is to provide Muslimahs with a fresh perspective on Islam beyond traditional interpretations. 

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