Daily Devotions for Busy Lives
You spend years chasing a goal, you finally reach it, and within months the old restlessness is back. This episode looks at why no achievement ever fully satisfies, what researchers call hedonic adaptation, and how Solomon explains the ache as something God built into you on purpose. You work toward something for years. A promotion, or a house you'd saved years for. You finally get it, you celebrate, and for a few months it feels good. Then, somewhere around the three-month mark, a familiar restlessness creeps back in, the one you were sure this achievement would cure. Most people don't have a name for that feeling, so they assume they aimed at the wrong thing, or that they need to want something bigger next time. It's a disorienting experience, and almost nobody puts it into words, so you can end up feeling like something is wrong with you. There's a name for it, and it isn't a character flaw. Psychologists call it hedonic adaptation, first described by Brickman and Campbell in 1971. Their finding was plain: people have a happiness baseline they return to no matter what happens. A positive event produces a spike, then life settles back to where it was. The famous example is lottery winners. People who won hundreds of thousands of dollars were, within a few months to a year, about as happy as they had been before the win. The thing that was supposed to change everything had changed almost nothing. Researchers point to two reasons. The pleasure of anything new fades as it becomes familiar, and reaching a goal raises your expectations without your noticing, so the thing you just got stops delivering and you start wanting more. The novelist Ian McEwan made the same point: the remarkable becomes routine faster than we expect, because humans adapt to nearly anything. The new house becomes just the house. What felt like relief becomes the next starting line. Scripture said all of this long before the psychologists. Solomon had more wealth and experience than almost anyone in history, and he wrote that none of it filled him. He called it meaningless, like chasing the wind. Ecclesiastes 5:10 puts it bluntly: those who love money will never have enough. He ran the experiment all the way to the end and came back with the same result the research did. The reframe is the encouraging part. That emptiness is by design. God built your heart so that no created thing could ever be enough, because if a house or a raise could satisfy you completely, you would stop there and never come looking for Him. So the restlessness after you reach the goal is doing its job. It points past the gift to the Giver. In this episode, Bart shares his own version of the pattern, the milestones he looked forward to and the elation that wore off every time, teaching him slowly that the things of this world were never built to fill him. The next thing won't settle it. Only God will. BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL DISCOVER: * Why the satisfaction from a big achievement fades faster than you expect * What hedonic adaptation research reveals about lottery winners and happiness * How to read your restlessness as a compass that points you toward God The next thing was never going to be enough. The restlessness is an invitation to come home to the only One who satisfies. Share This Episode: https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/260 [https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/260] Need Prayer? Leave me a voicemail: https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/voicemail [https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/voicemail] Want to keep these devotions coming? Please consider supporting this podcast. https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/support/ [https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/support/] Rate and Review https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/reviews/new/ [https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/reviews/new/] Connect with Bart Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/dailydevotionsforbusyliveshttps://www.facebook.com/dailydevotionsforbusylives [https://www.facebook.com/dailydevotionsforbusylives] Website: https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com [https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com] Feeling spiritually drained? Start here. Download your free copy of my eBook Making Time for Jesus https://daily-devotions-for-busy-lives.kit.com/b33aa395d1here: https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/subscribe [https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/subscribe]. Mentioned in this episode: Join Our Private Facebook Community If you're looking for a place to connect with other Daily Devotions listeners and pray for each other, I'd love for you to join our private Facebook community group. Come find us at https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/group
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