The typical greeting for the Jewish New Year is Shana Tova. This has typically been translated as as Happy New Year. However, it actually means Good Year.
If someone has a good year, they have achieved their purpose and fulfilled what they are meant to be.
Therefore, I wish all my family and friends a healthy, prosperous and good year!
What’s
the best wish for the new year?
Ever notice that Jews don’t traditionally wish each other
“happy new year”?
Instead we say the Hebrew phrase “shanah tovah” which
— in spite of the mistaken translation that appears on almost all greeting
cards — has no connection at all to the expression “have a happy new year.”
Shanah tovah conveys the hope for a good year rather than a happy one.
And the reason for that distinction contains great significance.
This past January, the Atlantic Monthly had a
fascinating article titled There’s More to Life than Being Happy. The
author, Emily Esfahani Smith, points out how researchers are beginning to
caution against the pursuit of mere happiness. They found that a meaningful
life and a happy life overlap in certain ways, but are ultimately very
different. Leading a happy life, the psychologists found, is associated with
being a "taker" while leading a meaningful life corresponds with
being a "giver."
"Happiness without meaning characterizes a relatively
shallow, self-absorbed or even selfish life, in which things go well, needs and
desire are easily satisfied and difficult or taxing entanglements are
avoided," the author writes.
Happy people get
joy from receiving while people leading meaningful lives get joy from giving to
others.
She quotes Kathleen Vohs, one of the authors of a new study
to be published this year in The Journal of Positive Psychology: "Happy
people get joy from receiving benefits from others while people leading
meaningful lives get a lot of joy from giving to others." In other words,
meaning transcends the self while happiness is all about giving the self what
it wants.
According to Roy Baumeister, the lead researcher of the
study, “What sets human beings apart from animals is not the pursuit of
happiness, which occurs all across the natural world, but the pursuit of
meaning, which is unique to humans.”
Long before all of these studies, Jews somehow understood
this intuitively. Happy is good, but good is better.
To hope for a happy new year is to give primacy to the ideal of
a hedonistic culture whose greatest goal is “to have a good time.” To seek a good
year however is to recognize the superiority of meaning over the joy of the
moment.
The word “good” has special meaning in the Torah. The first
time we find it used is in the series of sentences where God, after each day of
creation, views his handiwork and proclaims it “good”. More, when God completed
his work he saw all that he had done “and behold it was very good.”
What does that mean? In what way was the world good? Surely
it was not in any moral sense that it was being praised. The commentators offer
a profound insight. The word good indicates that every part of creation
fulfilled God’s purpose: it was good because it was what it was meant to be.
That is the deepest meaning of the word good when it is
applied to us and to our lives. We are good when we achieve our purpose; our
lives are good when they fulfill what they are meant to be.
We know many people of whom it can be said that they had
good lives in spite of their having had to endure great unhappiness. Indeed,
the truly great chose lives of sacrifice over pleasure and left a legacy of
inspiration and achievement that they never could have accomplished had they
been solely concerned with personal gratification.
A shanah tovah, a good year, from a spiritual
perspective, is far more blessed than a simply happy one.
Meaning Leads to Happiness
A shanah tovah may not emphasize happiness, yet it is
the most certain way to ultimately achieve happiness.
Because another powerful idea discovered by contemporary
psychologists is that happiness most often is the byproduct of a meaningful
life. It’s precisely when we don’t go looking for it and are willing to set it
aside in the interest of a loftier goal that we find it unexpectedly landing on
us with a force that we never considered possible.
Happiness is the
byproduct of a meaningful life.
You would think that acquiring ever more money would make
people happier. There are millions of people ready to testify from their own
experience that it just isn’t so. But if getting more won’t do it, what will?
Social scientists have come to a significant conclusion: while having money
doesn’t automatically lead to happiness, giving it away almost always achieves
that goal!
The prestigious Science magazine (March, 2008)
tells us that new research reveals when individuals dole out money for gifts
for friends or charitable donations they get a boost in happiness while those
who spend on themselves get no such cheery lift. “We wanted to test our theory
that how people spend their money is at least as important as how much money
they earn,” said Elizabeth Dunn, a psychologist at the University of British
Columbia. What they discovered was that personal spending had no link with a
person’s happiness, while spending on others and
charity was significantly related to a boost in happiness.
“Regardless of how much income each person made,” Dunn said,
“those who spent money on others reported greater happiness, while those who
spent more on themselves did not.”
In a fascinating experiment, researchers gave college
students a $5 or $20 bill, asking them to spend the money by that evening. Half the
participants were instructed to spend the money on themselves, and the
remaining students were told to spend it on others. Participants who spent the
windfall on others — which included toys for siblings and meals eaten with
friends — reported feeling happier at the end of the day than those who spent
the money on themselves. Spending as little as $5 on other people produced a
measurable surge in happiness on a given day, while purchasing supposedly
pleasure -gratifying personal items produced almost no change in mood.
“It doesn’t surprise
me at all that people find giving money away very rewarding,” Aaron Ahuvia,
associate professor of marketing at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, explained.
“People spend a lot of money to make their lives feel meaningful, significant
and important. When you give away money you are making that same kind of
purchase, only you are doing it in a more effective way.” He added, “What
you’re really trying to buy is meaning to life.”
Meaning is our ultimate goal; in our pursuit of the “good”
life we will discover the reward of true happiness.
So shana tova, may you have a year filled with
meaning and purpose. And happiness that will surely follow.
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