6 Responses to “The 7 Lessons Children Teach Adults About Living Happily”

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  1. Great suggestions! I would also recommend to be as curious as a child. Ask questions and keep learning. You never know what you will discover!

    • Courtney, welcome to my blog. A first class suggestions I must say which I hadn’t considered. It’s true we get less curious overall and you have reminded me to keep my curiosity alive for which I thank you.

  2. This is a wonderful post, John, and incorporates a lot of the ideas I had in mind when I wrote my own guest post this week on “wonder” over at The Calm Space. (Unfortunately, though, due to word limits, I couldn’t go into all of these as much as I’d hoped.)

    One of the things I’m aware of in reading your list is that I laugh far too rarely, and I LOVE to laugh. This must be remedied … and soon. I DO escape into neverland quite regularly, though. I love reading, especially fantasy and contemporary novels that incorporate magical realism … these keep my imagination active.

    • Chania, I love when you talk about your “escape into neverland” and books with “magical realism”. You have an evocative imagination which propels you places which I think is stupendous. When you come back though look out for that laughing and let rip.

  3. This is truly a feel good post John.

    Children are zen masters. If we can only connect with our own inner child. I think we all have one.

    Loved the part about being in the now. I don’t think kids have any sense of time. When they’re playing they don’t keep checking their watches to see if it’s time to move on. Usually an adult has to nag them to go eat or do whatever they should be doing. To me being lost in what you do is a source of true joy and presence.

    Thank you for this wonderful list.

    • What a great statement Manal that children are zen masters. Robin Sharma says the same about cats. The masters are everywhere around us teaching us all the time. Being lost (time wise) is being found in something else and I agree it breeds much joy and elation. Thank you for your insights.