We've talked about how happy people don't expect other people to be responsible for their happiness, that they don't lay the heavy burden of "make me happy" at someone else's feet, but own that responsibility themselves. They know that no one else has the power to "make them happy" on an unfailing basis, and that habitually allowing something external (a circumstance or a person) to be responsible for how you feel is to live life on an emotionally exhausting rollercoaster you can never get off. The flip side of this is also true. Happy people don't consistently pick up what is not theirs - though they empower themselves to be responsible for their own happiness, they also lovingly extend that favour to those around them.
They have figured out that just as it's not someone else's job to "make them happy" the converse is also true. It's not their job to make someone else consistently happy. I see this pattern with life's natural "givers". They want everyone around them to be happy - which is a natural and beautiful desire. The thing is, they can't help themselves in taking that desire and then turning it into their responsibility. "I'd like Bob to be happy" becomes "It's my job to keep Bob happy". Quite different. Can you see how exhausting the second premise is? At its core it's picking up responsibility for that which is not yours. It's also putting you in charge of something you cannot control. And, it's making your happiness dependent on creating happiness in another, which again makes your happiness dependent on a variable external to you.
Not only that (sorry, I'm on a roll here) but making yourself responsible for someone else's happiness can actually disempower the other person. Learning how to self regulate, boost and take responsibility for your own happiness - a vitally important life skill - can only be learned when we do it ourselves. It's like riding a bike. You can show someone how but you can't actually ride that bike for them. If they want to ride that bike any distance at all they need to get their own backside in the saddle and pedal it themselves.
When we take responsibility for someone else's happiness we disempower them and we assume more responsibility than is rightfully ours. We get tired and they get lazy. Their happiness-building muscles do not work out and grow stronger, and ours get tired through overuse. We need to step back. We cannot be forever filling someone else's cup.
A client blossoming and growing through her own work found she was constantly lifting up her perpetually negative partner. Jollying him along. Turning his negatives into positives. Lifting his mood with endless distractions. Trying to find the silver lining in the incessant moaning. It was bringing her down, tiring her out. He might lift and be happy and bright for an hour but then another complaint and she would start all over again.
Letting her put down the need to take responsibility for his emotional state was fascinating. She stopped the jollying along and stopped continually trying to lift his mood. She lovingly let him know that the vast majority of his conversation was negative and she was finding that tiring. She stopped back from the self-appointed role of cheerleader In chief.