People who consistently help others often seem steadier. Less overwhelmed. Less defeated by setbacks. Not because their lives are easier, but because their attention isn’t fixed entirely on themselves.
That raises an old question. Is the purpose of life to be happy or to help others?
From the beginning, happiness is instinctive. Newborns seek comfort. Warmth. Safety. Joy. They don’t yet understand gratitude or service. They simply receive.
Over time, something shifts. Children begin to recognize that what brings them joy comes through others. Love arrives before understanding. Care is felt before it is explained.
Affection matters. Being seen and supported shapes confidence, resilience, and emotional health. And over a lifetime, a quiet pattern becomes visible: gratitude doesn’t follow happiness. It makes happiness possible.
Gratitude is not a feeling we wait for. It’s a practice. A posture. A willingness to notice what we’ve been given and respond in kind.
As adults, happiness becomes less about what we acquire and more about what we contribute. Service changes its meaning when it isn’t transactional. When help is offered without expectation. When the intent is simply to ease another person’s burden.
That’s often where happiness shows up, not afterward, but in the act itself.
Mark Twain once said, “The two most important days in your life are the day you were born and the day you find out why.” For many people, that second day involves someone else.
Happiness may be our first instinct. But meaning is what sustains it.
I explore these ideas of meaning, gratitude, and presence more fully in What Matters.
