Personal happiness and its paramaters
Personal happiness and its paramaters o189D
In achieving personal happiness, our relationships with family, friends, and colleagues are more important than work and wealth. Do you agree or disagree with this?
The increasing pressures of today’s money-driven world can often cause people to gravitate towards material items. However, true personal happiness is rarely achieved through professional endeavours or wealth. Although these things may be nice extras, I agree that healthy relationships with family, friends and colleagues are the true keys to personal happiness. This will be shown by analysing the often lonely lives of many wealthy celebrities as well as the advice of older people who speak from experience.
Firstly, the lives of wealthy celebrities often illustrate that money cannot buy happiness. For example, many tremendously wealthy pop icons, such as Robbie Williams and Kirsten Dunst, suffer from debilitating depression often linked to extraordinary lifestyles that make it difficult to maintain friendships. As such instances show, money cannot be labelled an infallible precursor to happiness. The manner in which it often isolates people suggests that human interaction in the form of family and friendships is much more likely than money to be at the foundation of lasting happiness in life.
The advice from many older people regularly reiterates this. For example, all four of my grandparents claim their relationships with family and friends are the experiences that brought them the greatest happiness in their lives. As this is a common viewpoint among the aged of all countries and cultures, and because the aged simply have more experience with life, such an opinion needs to be given precedence when discussing this topic. Thus, human relationships are much more likely to be precursors to personal happiness than money or professional pursuits.
As seen above, professional success and wealth cannot buy true happiness and this is a realisation that all too often comes in old age. This essay has shown that the health of relationships with family, friends and colleagues is the genuine catalyst to lasting happiness. Thus, keeping in touch with people is much more than just a courtesy.
In achieving
personal
happiness
, our
relationships
with
family
,
friends
, and colleagues are more
important
than work and wealth. Do you
agree
or disagree with this?
The increasing pressures of
today
’s money-driven world can
often
cause
people
to gravitate towards material items.
However
, true
personal
happiness
is rarely achieved through professional
endeavours
or wealth. Although these things may be nice extras, I
agree
that healthy
relationships
with
family
,
friends
and colleagues are the true keys to
personal
happiness
. This will
be shown
by
analysing
the
often
lonely
lives
of
many
wealthy celebrities
as well
as the advice of older
people
who speak from experience.
Firstly
, the
lives
of wealthy celebrities
often
illustrate that
money
cannot
buy
happiness
.
For example
,
many
tremendously
wealthy pop icons, such as Robbie Williams and Kirsten
Dunst
, suffer from debilitating depression
often
linked to extraordinary lifestyles that
make
it difficult to maintain friendships. As such instances
show
,
money
cannot
be labelled
an infallible precursor to
happiness
. The manner in which it
often
isolates
people
suggests
that human interaction in the form of
family
and friendships is much more likely than
money
to be at the foundation of lasting
happiness
in life.
The advice from
many
older
people
regularly
reiterates this.
For example
, all four of my grandparents claim their
relationships
with
family
and
friends
are the experiences that brought them the greatest
happiness
in their
lives
. As this is a common viewpoint among the aged of all countries and cultures, and
because
the aged
simply
have more experience with life, such an opinion needs to be
given
precedence when discussing this topic.
Thus
, human
relationships
are much more likely to be precursors to
personal
happiness
than
money
or professional pursuits.
As
seen
above, professional success and wealth cannot
buy
true
happiness
and this is a
realisation
that all too
often
comes
in
old
age. This essay has shown that the health of
relationships
with
family
,
friends
and colleagues is the genuine catalyst to lasting
happiness
.
Thus
, keeping in touch with
people
is
much more than
just
a courtesy.
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