In this article
- • The Observer's Dilemma
- • The Survival Link: Why We're Wired This Way
- • A Personal Story
- • The Neuroscience of the Happiness Treadmill
- • Stepping Off the Treadmill
- • 1. Practice Savoring
- • 2. Gratitude as Neural Rewiring
- • 3. Process Over Outcome
- • 4. Inner vs. Outer Scorecard
- • A Final Thought
The Happiness Treadmill: Why Chasing Success Doesn't Work (And What Does)
Ever feel like you're always chasing the next big thing, only to find it doesn't bring the happiness you expected? This post explores the neuroscience behind the 'happiness treadmill'.
The Observer's Dilemma
Ever feel like you're always chasing the next big thing, only to find it doesn't bring the happiness you expected? You get the promotion — elation for a week, then back to normal. You buy the car — thrilling for a month, then it's just... a car. You hit the revenue target — celebration dinner, then immediately: "What's next?"
This isn't a character flaw. It's neuroscience.
The Survival Link: Why We're Wired This Way
From an evolutionary perspective, persistent satisfaction would have been dangerous. If our ancestors felt permanently content after finding one food source, they'd never explore, never innovate, never prepare for winter. The brain evolved to treat happiness as a temporary signal, not a permanent state.
Satisfaction is your brain's way of saying "good job, now find the next thing." It's a carrot on a stick — and the stick is attached to your own head.
A Personal Story
I remember the first time I experienced this viscerally. I'd been working toward a major career milestone for two years. When it finally happened, I expected to feel transformed. Instead, I felt... fine. Good, even. But not the fireworks I'd imagined.
Within a week, my mind had already constructed the next mountain to climb. That's when I started asking: "Is this the game? Is this all there is?"
The answer, I discovered, is both humbling and liberating.
The Neuroscience of the Happiness Treadmill
Several brain mechanisms conspire to keep us on the treadmill:
- Dopamine is about anticipation, not reward: Dopamine peaks during the pursuit of a goal, not upon achieving it. Studies show dopamine levels actually drop after reward receipt. The chase is literally more exciting than the catch.
- Hedonic adaptation: The brain quickly recalibrates its 'normal' baseline after positive changes. This is why lottery winners return to their pre-win happiness levels within 12-18 months.
- The anticipation gap: We're terrible at predicting what will make us happy (psychologists call this 'affective forecasting'). We overestimate the intensity and duration of future emotional states.
- The Default Mode Network (DMN): When your mind wanders (which it does 47% of the time), the DMN activates — and it tends to focus on future planning, social comparison, and rumination. All fuel for the treadmill.
Stepping Off the Treadmill
Stepping off doesn't mean giving up ambition. It means changing your relationship with achievement. Here's what the research suggests:
1. Practice Savoring
Deliberately extend positive experiences. When something good happens, pause. Feel it in your body. Describe it to yourself. Share it with someone. Savoring literally strengthens the neural circuits for positive emotion.
2. Gratitude as Neural Rewiring
A daily gratitude practice isn't feel-good fluff — it's neuroplasticity in action. Regularly noticing what's already good trains your brain's Reticular Activating System to filter for positives instead of deficits.
3. Process Over Outcome
Shift your identity from "I'm the person who achieves X" to "I'm the person who does Y daily." Attach your satisfaction to the practice, not the prize.
4. Inner vs. Outer Scorecard
Warren Buffett distinguishes between an outer scorecard (what others think) and an inner scorecard (what you know is true). The treadmill runs on external validation. Step off by defining success on your own terms.
A Final Thought
There's an old parable about a musician who's asked, "When will you be happy?" He replies, "I was happy before I started wanting to be happy."
The happiness treadmill isn't a problem to solve — it's a pattern to recognize. And in that recognition lies the freedom to choose: do you keep running, or do you step off and actually enjoy the view?
The treadmill only has power when you don't know you're on it.