UPSC Essay Theme: The Nature of Happiness & Good Life

Legacy IAS — UPSC Essay Theme Series — Complete Handbook

The Nature of Happiness
& The Good Life

Everything for every essay on this theme — hedonic vs eudaimonic happiness explained, 7 PYQs mapped, 6 anecdotes with UPSC angles, 5 dimensions, 6 quotes, Kabir’s doha, 3 books, 4 ready conclusions, and 6 mistakes to avoid. By the Legacy IAS Research Team.

7 PYQs Mapped (2013–2024) 6 Anecdotes With UPSC Angles 5 Dimensions of Analysis 6 Quotes + Kabir Doha Harvard 85-Year Study 3 Books + 4 Ready Conclusions

Legacy IAS Research Team  |  UPSC CSE Mains 2026  |  Essay Paper — Section A & B

Part 1 — Understanding the Theme

What Is Happiness? What Is The Good Life?

This theme explores one of humanity’s oldest and most personal questions: not just “what makes me happy?” but the deeper question — “what makes a life well-lived?” The UPSC expects you to distinguish between momentary pleasure and lasting flourishing, and to connect that distinction to India’s specific social, economic, and political reality.

⚡ HEDONIC HAPPINESS

What it is: A temporary emotional state of joy, pleasure, or satisfaction derived from external events — a pay raise, a good meal, a film, a social media “like.” It is intense but fades quickly.

The problem: The hedonic treadmill — as our circumstances improve, our expectations rise equally, and we return to a baseline level of happiness. More consumption requires more consumption to maintain the same emotional state.

Key question: If pleasure fades, is pleasure the right goal?

🌱 EUDAIMONIC HAPPINESS

What it is: A state of “human flourishing” — the ancient Greek word eudaimonia means living well and doing well. It comes not from pleasure but from living a life of virtue, purpose, meaningful relationships, and realising one’s full potential.

The insight: Eudaimonic happiness is not something you feel in a moment — it is something you recognise when you look back at a life. It is the happiness of Sisyphus walking back down the hill, fully conscious of his fate, and choosing to find meaning in the struggle.

Key question: What kind of life, lived fully, would I be proud of?

✗ PLEASURE-SEEKING (HEDONIC) — What Most People Chase
Scroll Instagram for 3 hours → temporary dopamine → emptiness → scroll more. Buy a new phone → excitement → adapts → need a newer one. Chase salary hikes → lifestyle inflation → need another hike. This is the hedonic treadmill. You run fast to stay in the same place.
✓ FLOURISHING (EUDAIMONIC) — What Endures
Teach a student who struggles → meaning → grows over years. Maintain a difficult friendship honestly → depth → lasting. Work for something larger than yourself → purpose → identity. This is what the Good Life is built from. The Harvard 85-year study found relationships — not wealth — predict late-life happiness.
🏛 Thinking Like Socrates — The Question He Would Ask
“You seek a happy life for yourself. But you are also a citizen of Athens. Can any person live a truly good life in a city that is unjust, corrupt, and decaying? If the ship is sinking, can any single passenger truly be safe and flourish? Therefore, to understand what constitutes a good life for one person, must we not first understand what constitutes a good and just society for all? An individual’s happiness is inseparable from the justice of the society in which they live.
The Core Tension This Theme Explores: Modern economics defines progress through GDP — aggregate material production. This theme asks whether GDP is a reliable proxy for what people actually want — to live a good life. Finland tops the World Happiness Report despite having a far lower GDP than the US. India’s NMHS (National Mental Health Survey) shows rising depression alongside rising GDP. The tension between economic metrics and human flourishing is this theme’s central question for India.
Part 2 — PYQ Mapping (2013–2024)

Every UPSC Essay on This Theme — Mapped and Categorised

This theme appears consistently across both sections of the UPSC Essay paper. The philosophical topics ask about the nature of happiness and the good life; the applied topics ask how specific contemporary forces — social media, competition, GDP measurement — affect India’s collective well-being.

🔭 Philosophical Topics
  • 2024There is no path to happiness; happiness is the path
  • 2021Philosophy of wantlessness is Utopian, while materialism is a chimera
  • 2018A good life is one inspired by love and guided by knowledge
  • 2017Joy is the simplest form of gratitude
  • 2015Lending hands to someone is better than giving a dime
🇮🇳 Applied / India Topics
  • 2024Social media is triggering ‘Fear of Missing Out’ among youth, precipitating depression and loneliness
  • 2014Is the growing level of competition good for the youth?
  • 2013GDP along with Gross Domestic Happiness would be the right indices for judging the well-being of a country
  • 2011All that glitters is not gold
Pattern for 2026: Expect topics around India’s mental health crisis (NMHS data shows 10% prevalence), the “quiet quitting” and anti-hustle culture trend among Indian youth, the Bhutan GNH model vs India’s GDP focus, AI and meaningful work, or urban loneliness in India’s megacities. All of these are happiness-and-good-life topics in current Indian dress.
Part 3 — Six Anecdotes With UPSC Essay Angles

Ready-to-Use Anecdotes — Specific, Memorable, and Directly Deployable

These are your opening weapons. Each anecdote is grounded in evidence and connected to a concrete UPSC essay topic. The UPSC angle shows you exactly how to connect it to the theme.

🗿 The Myth of Sisyphus — Finding Meaning in the Struggle

For his pride against the gods, King Sisyphus was condemned to an eternity of absurd labour: push a massive boulder up a steep hill, watch it roll back down just as he nears the top, and begin again — forever. On the surface, this is a metaphor for futility and despair.

The philosopher Albert Camus reimagined Sisyphus not as a tragic figure but as an absurd hero. The moment Sisyphus walks back down the hill to retrieve his stone — fully conscious of his fate and choosing to find meaning in the struggle itself — he is free. “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”

UPSC angle: The Sisyphus myth is the most powerful available counter to the happiness-as-destination fallacy. India’s civil servants — facing structural constraints, bureaucratic resistance, and incomplete information — live a Sisyphean professional life. The UPSC itself asks aspirants to push the boulder for years. Camus’s insight: meaning is found not in reaching the summit but in the conscious engagement with the struggle. This directly supports the 2024 PYQ “happiness is the path” and the 2018 topic “a good life inspired by love and guided by knowledge.”
→ USE FOR: “No path to happiness; happiness is the path” (2024) · “Joy is simplest form of gratitude” (2017) · Any simplicity-and-purpose essay
🎣 The Mexican Fisherman — The Good Life Already Lived

A successful American investment banker on vacation in a small Mexican village watches a fisherman return with a small but decent catch. He advises the fisherman: “If you worked longer, caught more fish, bought a bigger boat, then a fleet, then a corporation, then after 20 years you could retire and move to a small coastal village, fish a little, sleep in late, and spend time with your family.”

The fisherman smiles: “But that is what I am doing now.”

UPSC angle: This parable is the sharpest available critique of the growth-as-ends fallacy. The banker’s 20-year plan ends at the fisherman’s starting point. In India’s context: the Slow Living movement among urban professionals, the growing number of IIT graduates returning to farming, and Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness model all embody the fisherman’s insight — that the destination of development may already be embedded in certain pre-modern or non-urban ways of life that development is destroying. The 2013 PYQ on GDP and GDH is exactly this question at a national scale.
→ USE FOR: “GDP + GDH” (2013) · “Philosophy of wantlessness” (2021) · “No path to happiness” (2024)
🎬 Anand (1971) — The Good Life Is Not About Length

In Hrishikesh Mukherjee’s masterpiece, Anand is dying from terminal cancer. He has months, not years. He knows this. And yet he chooses to live every remaining moment with joy, generosity, laughter, and an infectious positive spirit — spreading warmth to everyone he meets, changing the lives of the people around him.

His famous line: “Zindagi badi honi chahiye, lambi nahin” — Life should be great, not long. The film’s doctor-narrator, initially a pessimist, is transformed by Anand’s example into someone who finds meaning in the act of caring for others.

UPSC angle: Anand is India’s most beloved cinematic statement on the good life — and it is directly applicable to the 2024 PYQ “happiness is the path.” Anand does not pursue happiness; he lives it at every moment, regardless of circumstances. His dying is more alive than most people’s living. This is eudaimonic happiness in its purest form: a life measured not by its duration or its accumulation but by its depth of engagement and its generosity of spirit. Perfect for any conclusion about happiness, purpose, or meaningful living.
→ USE FOR: “No path to happiness” (2024) · “Good life inspired by love and knowledge” (2018) · Any conclusion
🔬 The Harvard 85-Year Study — Science Confirms What Wisdom Already Knew

The Harvard Study of Adult Development — begun in 1938 and now spanning 85 years, two generations, and over 1,300 participants — is the longest longitudinal study of human happiness ever conducted. Its conclusion, published by director Robert Waldinger in 2023: “Good relationships keep us happier and healthier. Period.”

Not money. Not fame. Not achievement. Not IQ. The single strongest predictor of late-life happiness, health, and longevity was the quality of a person’s relationships — specifically, the security and depth of their close connections.

UPSC angle: The Harvard Study is the empirical proof that India’s traditional social structures — the joint family, the community-embedded life, the intergenerational household — may have been delivering something that Western-model urbanisation is destroying. India’s declining joint family rate (52% to 70% nuclear families between 2001–2021) and its documented rise in urban loneliness (NMHS 2016) suggest that development is dismantling the very infrastructure that produces the good life. The Harvard Study gives India’s traditional collectivism a scientific validation it rarely receives in policy discourse.
→ USE FOR: “Social media FOMO” (2024) · “Good life love and knowledge” (2018) · “GDP and GDH” (2013)
🧘 The Buddha’s Renunciation — Neither Extreme Leads to the Good Life

Siddhartha Gautama was born to a king, raised in unimaginable luxury, protected from all suffering. At 29, he left everything — his palace, his wife, his infant son — to become a wandering ascetic, eating almost nothing, mortifying his body. He pursued both extremes: maximum pleasure, then maximum deprivation. Neither produced liberation.

His insight under the Bodhi tree: the Middle Path (Majjhima Patipada) — a way of life that avoids both the extreme of sensual indulgence and the extreme of self-mortification. Contentment through moderation, awareness, and compassionate engagement with the world.

UPSC angle: The Buddha’s Middle Path is the most precise ancient formulation of the 2021 PYQ: “Philosophy of wantlessness is Utopian, while materialism is a chimera.” Total wantlessness (the ascetic extreme) is Utopian — unsustainable and inhuman. Pure materialism (the hedonic extreme) is a chimera — it promises satisfaction but delivers the treadmill. The Middle Path — enough, mindfully held, used in service of others — is the resolution. Kabir’s doha (“Give me just enough”) articulates the same insight from India’s Bhakti tradition.
→ USE FOR: “Philosophy of wantlessness is Utopian” (2021) · “No path to happiness” (2024) · Any contentment essay
📱 The FOMO Epidemic — How Algorithms Engineer Unhappiness

Instagram, Reels, and TikTok are engineered — not incidentally but deliberately — to produce dopamine loops: short bursts of pleasure (a like, a share, a funny video) that fade quickly and require immediate replacement. The average Indian spends 4.7 hours per day on social media (2024 DataReportal). The National Mental Health Survey found depression and anxiety rates among Indian youth aged 13–25 have doubled since 2017.

The mechanism: social comparison algorithms specifically surface content that makes users feel their lives are inadequate — triggering Fear of Missing Out (FOMO). The platform profits from the emotional gap between perceived perfection and lived reality. Users consume more to close a gap that consumption widens.

UPSC angle: The FOMO epidemic is the hedonic treadmill at algorithmic scale — engineered by corporations, experienced by millions, and producing documentable harm to India’s youth mental health. The 2024 UPSC essay directly names this phenomenon. India’s response — the TRAI’s recommendations on children’s digital safety, the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 — are regulatory attempts to interrupt an attention economy that profits from manufactured unhappiness. The question: can regulation protect the good life from an algorithm?
→ USE FOR: “Social media FOMO” (2024) — the direct PYQ · “Growing competition good for youth?” (2014)
Part 4 — Five Dimensions of Analysis

How Happiness & The Good Life Unfolds Across Every Dimension

UPSC examiners reward essays that examine a theme from multiple angles. Each entry below gives you a complete India example with the happiness/good-life framework applied, ready for a body paragraph.

🏛POLITICAL
Finland and the World Happiness Report — Political Choices Create National Flourishing

For seven consecutive years, Finland has topped the World Happiness Report — not through the highest GDP, not through the greatest military power, but through deliberate political choices that create the conditions for flourishing. These include: a comprehensive social safety net that eliminates anxiety about basic needs; exceptionally low corruption (Transparency International Rank: 2); and remarkably high social trust — Finns trust strangers, institutions, and government to a degree that is almost incomprehensible in most democracies.

The political insight: happiness is not a private achievement — it is a public good. The state’s role is not merely to create the conditions for economic growth but to create the conditions for human flourishing. India connect: India’s National Mental Health Policy (2014) recognises mental health as a public health priority. India’s Aspirational Districts Programme, which measures progress across health, education, and governance simultaneously, is a partial step toward a GDH framework. But India’s budgetary allocation for mental health remains below 1% of the health budget — the gap between stated aspiration and funded reality is the theme’s Indian version.

Keywords: World Happiness Report · Social Trust · Welfare State · Good Governance · Quality of Life
PYQ 2013 — GDP + GDH PYQ 2018 — Good life
📊ECONOMIC
The Hedonic Treadmill of India’s Consumption Economy

India’s GDP has grown eightfold since 1991, creating the world’s second-largest middle class. India’s middle-class consumer expenditure has risen dramatically. And India’s subjective well-being — measured by the National Mental Health Survey — is declining. More consumption, less flourishing. This is the hedonic treadmill at national scale.

The mechanism of lifestyle inflation: as incomes rise, aspirations and expenses rise proportionally, and the initial satisfaction from a new purchase — a car, a flat, a child’s private school — fades and is replaced by a need for a better car, a bigger flat, a more prestigious school. The happiness gap is not closed by consumption; it is maintained by consumption as a feature of the business model.

Bhutan’s alternative: The Kingdom of Bhutan constitutionally mandates Gross National Happiness (GNH) as a development objective alongside GDP. GNH measures psychological well-being, cultural resilience, time use, ecological diversity, and good governance alongside economic production. Bhutan’s model — however limited by its scale and specific political context — represents the most institutionalised attempt to replace the hedonic treadmill with a eudaimonic development framework.

Keywords: Hedonic Treadmill · Lifestyle Inflation · Bhutan GNH · Consumerism · Subjective Well-being
PYQ 2013 — GDP + GDH PYQ 2021 — Wantlessness vs materialism
👥SOCIAL
The Slow Living Movement — India’s Urban Professionals Redefine the Good Life

A significant social trend among India’s urban professionals is the “slow living” or “downshifting” movement. Rejecting the high-stress, high-consumption corporate lifestyle, increasing numbers of educated Indians are deliberately choosing smaller cities, lower-paying but more meaningful careers, minimalist consumption, and more time with family and community.

India’s reverse migration during and after the COVID-19 pandemic — when millions returned to smaller cities and found they did not want to leave — accelerated this trend. Platforms like “Remote Indian” report a 300% increase in enquiries about rural property purchases by urban professionals since 2021. This is not mere nostalgia; it is a deliberate philosophical choice to trade hedonic goods (salary, status, city life) for eudaimonic ones (meaningful work, community, connection to nature).

Keywords: Slow Living · Downshifting · Minimalism · Post-COVID Reverse Migration · Intentional Living
PYQ 2024 — Social media FOMO PYQ 2021 — Wantlessness
💻TECHNOLOGY
Social Media’s Dopamine Economy — Engineered Unhappiness at Scale

Social media platforms are happiness extraction machines — not happiness creation machines. The distinction is crucial. They generate enormous user engagement, advertising revenue, and network effects by engineering dopamine loops that produce intense but brief pleasure (a like, a viral post, a shocking video) followed by immediate desire for more. They are optimised not for user well-being but for time-on-platform — which is maximised by emotional arousal, including anxiety, outrage, and envy.

The data on India’s youth is alarming: the Indian Psychiatry Society reports that mental health consultations among under-25s increased by 20% annually between 2019–2024. NIMHANS research shows a direct correlation between daily social media use exceeding 3 hours and anxiety/depression symptoms in Indian adolescents. India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 has provisions restricting data use for minors — a regulatory acknowledgment that the platform business model is incompatible with youth mental health.

Keywords: Dopamine Loop · Attention Economy · FOMO · Digital Well-being · DPDP Act 2023
PYQ 2024 — Social media FOMO (Direct) PYQ 2014 — Competition and youth
🌿ENVIRON­MENTAL
Shinrin-yoku and India’s Forest Connection — Nature as the Foundation of Well-Being

The Japanese practice of Shinrin-yoku (“forest bathing”) — spending quiet, mindful time in forests without specific goals — is now globally recognised as a clinical intervention for stress reduction, immune enhancement, and improved mood. Research from Japan’s Chiba University shows measurable reduction in cortisol (stress hormone) levels after just 15 minutes of forest exposure. The practice is now promoted in Uttarakhand’s forest reserves and in Kerala’s ecotherapy programmes as a wellness tourism offering.

India’s deeper tradition: India has its own versions of this insight. The Aranya — the forest as a space for spiritual retreat and philosophical reflection — is central to Indian civilisational tradition. The Taittiriya Upanishad describes the forest as the guru of gurus. Gandhi’s Sabarmati Ashram on the Sabarmati riverbank was a deliberate choice to locate the political work of national liberation within a natural, simple environment. The insight: connection to the natural world is not a luxury but a component of the good life.

Keywords: Shinrin-yoku · Forest Bathing · Ecopsychology · Nature Therapy · Biophilia
PYQ 2018 — Good life love and knowledge PYQ 2021 — Wantlessness
Part 5 — Six Quotes With Explanation and UPSC Use

Six Quotes — Each Explained and Connected to India

Never use a quote in UPSC without connecting it to something real and specific. Every quote below is explained in terms of the theme’s keywords and connected to a specific India example or PYQ.

“Happiness is not something ready-made. It comes from your own actions.”

— Dalai Lama XIV
Happiness is an active state — cultivated through deliberate choices and ethical conduct, not a passive gift from external circumstances. India connect: The Dalai Lama’s Buddhist philosophical tradition connects directly to India’s own Bhakti and Advaita traditions — all of which locate the source of well-being in inner discipline rather than outer circumstance. India’s Yoga tradition, formally recognised by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage and now practiced by 300 million people globally, is the systematic technology of this insight.
✦ PYQ 2024 — “No path to happiness; happiness is the path” | Any inner-life happiness essay

“A good life is built on good relationships.”

— Robert Waldinger, The Good Life (Harvard Study, 2023)
The 85-year Harvard Study’s single most important finding: the quality of relationships — not wealth, intelligence, or achievement — is the strongest predictor of late-life happiness, health, and longevity. India connect: India’s joint family system — currently declining as nuclear families rise — was a naturally occurring relationship infrastructure. India’s declining joint family rate and its documented rise in urban loneliness represent the destruction of the social capital that the Harvard Study identifies as the foundation of the good life.
✦ PYQ 2018 — “Good life inspired by love” | Social media FOMO (2024)

“The secret of happiness is not in doing what one likes, but in liking what one does.”

— J.M. Barrie (author of Peter Pan)
This quote captures the eudaimonic insight: happiness follows engagement and mastery, not the pursuit of pleasure. The carpenter who loves their craft, the farmer who knows their land, the teacher who sees their students grow — all find happiness not by choosing pleasurable work but by choosing to find meaning in the work they do. India connect: India’s MSME sector — 63 million small enterprises, most family-owned and craft-based — embeds this form of work-as-meaning in its structure. The artisan of Varanasi who weaves silk is not optimising for maximum hedonic output; he is living inside a tradition that creates meaning.
✦ PYQ 2017 — “Joy is simplest form of gratitude” | Any work-meaning-happiness essay

“For every minute you are angry, you lose sixty seconds of happiness.”

— Ralph Waldo Emerson
Joy and resentment cannot occupy the same moment. The choice of emotional response — always present, rarely acknowledged — is the most fundamental happiness practice available to any person. India connect: India’s NMHS (National Mental Health Survey 2016) found that despite living through one of the fastest economic transformations in human history, Indian adults report no increase in life satisfaction over the same period. The survey attributes this partly to the anxiety and competitive resentment generated by rapid social mobility — where economic progress and psychological suffering coexist. Emerson’s insight: the growth of anger (at inequality, at injustice, at competition) is itself an obstacle to the flourishing that development is supposed to produce.
✦ PYQ 2024 — FOMO essay | PYQ 2014 — Competition and youth

“It is not the man who has too little who is poor, but the man who hankers after more.”

— Seneca, Letters from a Stoic
Poverty is not a condition of insufficiency but a condition of insatiable desire. The Stoic insight connects directly to the hedonic treadmill — the problem is not inadequate resources but an appetite that grows faster than resources can satisfy. India connect: This is the 2021 UPSC essay topic stated in Latin. “Philosophy of wantlessness is Utopian” (complete elimination of desire is inhuman) “while materialism is a chimera” (the pursuit of desire through material accumulation never reaches satisfaction). Seneca’s “enough” is the resolution: conscious sufficiency rather than either extreme.
✦ PYQ 2021 — “Wantlessness is Utopian, materialism is a chimera” — direct application

“The good life is one inspired by love and guided by knowledge.”

— Bertrand Russell (UPSC Essay Paper 2018 — the topic itself)
Love (care, compassion, connection) provides the motivational foundation; knowledge provides the rational framework through which love can be expressed effectively. Neither alone is sufficient — love without knowledge produces well-intentioned harm; knowledge without love produces technically accomplished but morally empty achievement. India connect: India’s constitutional vision — Preamble’s fraternity (love) + fundamental rights (knowledge of one’s claims) — is Russell’s good life written into law. The Supreme Court’s development of the right to education, health, privacy, and dignity as fundamental rights is the attempt to make Russell’s formula India’s legal reality.
✦ PYQ 2018 — Direct essay topic | Any good-life framework essay
Part 6 — Kabir’s Doha and the Lesson of Enough

Kabir’s Most Relevant Doha for This Theme — With Full Interpretation

This doha is the single most powerful Indian philosophical statement on contentment, sufficiency, and the good life available for UPSC essays. Use it in introduction, body, or conclusion — it works in all three positions.

🎭 Kabir Doha — Sant Kabir Das (c. 1440–1518)
Sai itna dijiye, jaame kutumb samaay.
Main bhi bhookha na rahun, sadhu na bhookha jaay. साईं इतना दीजिए, जामे कुटुम समाय।
मैं भी भूखा ना रहूँ, साधु न भूखा जाय।
— Sant Kabir Das · Bijak / Dohe collection · 15th Century
What it means: “O Lord, give me just so much that my family can be sustained. I should not remain hungry, nor should the holy man (the guest, the stranger) who comes to my door go hungry either.”

Happiness-and-Good-Life reading: Kabir’s prayer is not for wealth, not for abundance, not for the maximum — it is for enough. Enough to sustain the family. Enough to share with the stranger. The good life, in Kabir’s vision, is defined not by accumulation but by sufficiency-with-generosity. This is the precise resolution of the 2021 PYQ: wantlessness (asking for nothing) is Utopian — Kabir asks for enough. Materialism (asking for more and more) is a chimera — Kabir specifies the limit. The Middle Path, expressed in the most accessible possible poetic form.

UPSC use: Use in conclusions for: “Philosophy of wantlessness is Utopian” (2021) — Kabir defines the precise middle point; “No path to happiness; happiness is the path” (2024) — Kabir’s prayer is itself the path, not a destination; “GDP and GDH” (2013) — India’s traditional standard of sufficiency as an alternative economic philosophy; “Joy is simplest form of gratitude” (2017) — the doha is itself an act of gratitude for the minimal sufficient life.

How to use it correctly: Transliteration → Hindi script → English translation → two analytical sentences connecting it to the essay’s specific argument. Never drop the doha alone without the analytical connection.
The “Enough” Framework — India’s Alternative to the GDP Model: Kabir’s doha gives you a philosophical vocabulary for India’s alternative development vision. “Enough” is not the same as “less.” It is a conscious determination of sufficiency that includes sharing — the family sustained, the guest fed. This is India’s philosophical contribution to the global happiness discourse: not the Bhutanese GNH (which is a state measurement framework) but the citizen’s personal philosophy of what constitutes a sufficient and therefore good life.
Part 7 — Three Books Mapped to Three Keywords

One Book Per Keyword — Used Correctly, Not Just Named

Only reference a book if you can state its argument correctly and connect it to India. A book named without its argument scores nothing. A book whose argument is precisely stated and linked to India scores significantly.

😊 The Nature of Happiness
The Art of Happiness
Dalai Lama XIV & Howard Cutler
“Happiness is not something ready-made. It comes from your own actions.”
The Dalai Lama argues that happiness is the product of inner mental discipline — cultivated through self-awareness, compassion, and ethical conduct — rather than external circumstances. The shift from “happiness depends on what happens to me” to “happiness is what I cultivate regardless of what happens” is the book’s core philosophical move. India connect: India’s Yoga tradition — from Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras to modern mindfulness-based interventions now being piloted in Indian government schools — is the systematic training in exactly the inner discipline the Dalai Lama describes. The 2022 AYUSH Ministry’s National Mental Health Programme integrating Yoga and meditation is a policy expression of this insight.
🌱 The Good Life
The Good Life: Lessons from the World’s Longest Study on Happiness
Robert Waldinger & Marc Schulz
“A good life is built on good relationships.”
Waldinger’s 2023 book synthesises the Harvard Study’s 85-year findings. The conclusion is unambiguous: the quality, security, and depth of close relationships — not wealth, education, achievement, or any other variable — is the single strongest predictor of life satisfaction, physical health, and longevity in the study’s participants. India connect: India’s joint family system — which provided emotional security, mutual support, and the intergenerational relationships the Harvard Study identifies as particularly important for late-life well-being — is declining rapidly. The policy question: how does India urbanise without destroying the relationship infrastructure that has historically provided what the Harvard Study says is essential for flourishing?
🧠 Mind & Choice
The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less
Barry Schwartz
“The secret to happiness is low expectations” — or more precisely: freedom from the tyranny of maximising.
Schwartz argues that the explosion of consumer choices in modern economies — far from producing greater happiness — produces paralysis, decision fatigue, and regret. When you can choose from 200 brands of shampoo, you blame yourself for the one that doesn’t work perfectly. The “maximiser” (who always seeks the best option) is measurably less happy than the “satisficer” (who chooses good enough and moves on). Abundance of choice produces anxiety, not joy. India connect: India’s e-commerce explosion (Amazon India, Flipkart, Blinkit) has brought this paradox to 300 million middle-class Indian consumers. The cultural shift from “we have what we have” to “we can choose from anything available anywhere” is not obviously producing greater well-being — it may be producing greater dissatisfaction with whatever is chosen.
Part 8 — Ready-to-Write Essay Lines

Introduction and Body Lines — Models to Study and Adapt

These are models, not templates. Understand why every sentence is there, then write your own version using a different anecdote or example. The structure is the lesson.

Introduction — PYQ 2024: “There Is No Path to Happiness; Happiness Is the Path”
Structure: Specific to Universal — Sisyphus + India The myth of Sisyphus — condemned to push his boulder up the hill for eternity, watching it roll back just as he nears the top — is usually read as a metaphor for futility. The philosopher Albert Camus read it differently. At the moment Sisyphus walks back down the hill to retrieve his stone — fully conscious of his fate, choosing to find meaning in the struggle itself — he is free. Camus’s conclusion: “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.” Not happy because the boulder reaches the top. Happy because the walking itself — done consciously, with full engagement — is the life. India’s UPSC aspirant, pushing their own boulder for three to seven years of preparation, knows this truth in their bones. The question this essay addresses is whether Indian society has constructed systems — economic, social, technological — that allow citizens to walk their hill with the conscious engagement that Camus describes as happiness, or whether it has built systems that convince them happiness is waiting at the summit, and leaves them perpetually dissatisfied with the walking.
Why it works: Sisyphus (specific myth) → Camus’s reframe (the argument) → India UPSC connection (makes it personal and relevant) → essay’s central question (what the body will address). ~150 words, exactly right for the introduction.
Introduction — PYQ 2021: “Philosophy of Wantlessness Is Utopian While Materialism Is a Chimera”
Structure: Paradox Opening — Both Extremes Fail, Buddha’s Middle Path Siddhartha Gautama tried both. Born to a king, he lived in perfect abundance for twenty-nine years — protected from illness, ageing, and death by a father who built three palaces for three seasons. Then he left everything, becoming a wandering ascetic who ate almost nothing and mortified his body. He had experienced the fullest possible hedonic happiness and the fullest possible wantlessness. Neither produced liberation. His insight under the Bodhi tree — the Middle Path — was the rejection of both extremes as philosophical errors. Wantlessness, in its pure form, is inhuman: Siddhartha nearly died. Materialism, in its pure form, had produced a palace life so isolated from reality that he did not know death existed until he was twenty-nine. The essay title’s two claims are, in this light, less a paradox than a diagnosis: both the philosophy that renounces all wanting and the philosophy that satisfies all wanting lead not to the good life but away from it. This essay argues that the good life lies on the Middle Path — not between the two extremes, but above them.
Why it works: Opens with specific biographical narrative (Siddhartha) → explains both extremes through his experience → shows why both fail → states the essay’s thesis (“not between but above”). The thesis is sophisticated enough to generate a genuinely interesting essay.
Body Paragraph — Economic Dimension: The Hedonic Treadmill and India’s GDP Story
Structure: TEAL — Topic → Evidence → Analysis → Link Economically, India’s last three decades offer a controlled experiment in whether material growth produces the good life. India’s GDP has grown eightfold since 1991, creating the world’s second-largest middle class, generating more billionaires than any Asian nation except China, and lifting 415 million people above the World Bank’s poverty line. These are extraordinary achievements by any measure. Yet the National Mental Health Survey (2016) found that 10.6% of India’s population — approximately 150 million people — live with a diagnosable mental disorder, with depression and anxiety showing the steepest increases precisely in the most economically dynamic urban areas and among the most economically mobile demographic groups. Bhutan, whose GDP per capita is a fraction of India’s, consistently outranks India on subjective well-being measures. The pattern — more production, less flourishing — is the hedonic treadmill at national scale: as collective incomes rise, collective aspirations rise faster, and the gap between what people have and what they feel they need widens rather than narrows. The question India’s development framework must address is not whether growth is desirable but whether GDP, as currently measured, captures anything important about the life that growth is supposed to enable.
Why it works: Specific data (eightfold GDP, 415M poverty reduction) → contradictory data (NMHS mental health) → Bhutan comparison → analysis (hedonic treadmill named and explained) → link (GDP measurement question). Four-part paragraph, nothing wasted.
Part 9 — Four Ready Conclusions

Four Conclusion Types — Each for a Different Essay Approach

Choose the conclusion that matches your essay’s body argument. A conclusion that contradicts the body loses marks regardless of how well-written it is.

🔄 Synthesising
In the end, the pursuit of happiness can be a fleeting chase, while the pursuit of a Good Life provides a more enduring foundation. A Good Life is a construct of purpose, virtue, and meaning, from which happiness emerges as a welcome but not essential byproduct. It is the difference between seeking pleasure and building a life of substance. The Harvard Study confirmed what Kabir knew five centuries ago and what Anand demonstrated on screen in 1971: the person who lives fully — with love, with purpose, with enough — does not need to chase happiness. Happiness follows them.
🔭 Forward-Looking
Social media and modern consumerism have increasingly conflated happiness with curated perfection and material acquisition. The future of well-being may depend on our collective ability to reclaim the definition of a Good Life — one based on authentic connection, personal growth, and inner contentment rather than external validation and endless consumption. India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 is a beginning. But the deeper reform needed is cultural — a national conversation about whether GDP is an adequate measure of the life we are actually trying to build, and whether Kabir’s “just enough to share” might be a wiser national aspiration than the next trillion in output.
🇮🇳 Application-Oriented
As India continues its journey of development, it stands at a crossroads. It can choose to measure progress solely by economic metrics like GDP — and produce a nation of people who are richer and unhappier, as the National Mental Health Survey data suggests is already happening. Or it can pioneer a more holistic model of the Good Life — one that includes community well-being, mental health infrastructure, environmental sustainability, and the protection of the relationship networks that the Harvard Study identifies as the actual foundation of flourishing. This choice will define India’s soul for the century to come. Zindagi badi honi chahiye, lambi nahin — and great, Anand knew, means full, not wealthy.
🏛 Philosophical — Eudaimonia
The ancient Greeks had a word for it: Eudaimonia. Not the fleeting emotion of happiness, but the profound state of human flourishing achieved by living a life of virtue and purpose. Perhaps the Good Life is not a destination to be reached — not a number in the bank account, not a rank on a list, not a summit on a hill — but the quality of the journey itself, walked with integrity, courage, and intention. India’s wisdom tradition has always known this. Sai itna dijiye — just enough. The boulder may always roll back. But the one who walks back down the hill with open eyes and a willing heart is already living the Good Life. One must imagine them happy.
Part 10 — Six Mistakes to Avoid

How to Write This Theme Without Sounding Generic

These six mistakes appear in most average-scoring essays on this theme. Each is paired with the specific fix that will distinguish your essay.

MISTAKE 01
Defining Happiness Without the Hedonic/Eudaimonic Distinction
Most aspirants write “happiness means different things to different people” and then list several definitions without examining the fundamental philosophical distinction. This appears to address the topic but actually evades its core question.
Fix: Introduce the hedonic/eudaimonic distinction in the introduction and use it as the structural spine of the essay. Every body paragraph should be about either why hedonic happiness fails (treadmill, FOMO, comparison) or why eudaimonic flourishing succeeds (relationships, purpose, meaning). This gives the essay a genuine analytical framework.
MISTAKE 02
The “Balance Between Materialism and Spiritualism” Trap
“India needs to balance material development with spiritual values.” This is the most common and most forgettable conclusion for this theme. It resolves the tension by accepting both poles equally — which is not an argument but an avoidance of argument.
Fix: Use the Buddha’s Middle Path or Kabir’s doha to name the resolution specifically. The resolution is not “balance” but “enough” — a specific, conscious, sufficiency-with-generosity that is different from both extremes. “Enough to sustain my family, enough to share with the stranger” is a specific claim. “Balance” is not.
MISTAKE 03
Using Only Western Examples — No India Data
Essays that cite only Aristotle, Camus, and the Harvard Study miss the opportunity to ground the philosophical argument in India’s specific social and economic reality — where the stakes of getting the happiness question wrong are most acute.
Fix: Include at minimum: NMHS (National Mental Health Survey) data on depression trends; Bhutan’s GNH model as India’s neighbourhood alternative; India’s joint family decline and its Harvard Study implication; and either Kabir’s doha or the Anand film as India’s own philosophical statements. One Western framework + one India-specific evidence point + one India philosophical tradition = a complete paragraph.
MISTAKE 04
Treating GDP and Happiness as Simply Uncorrelated
“GDP does not measure happiness” — stated as a simple fact without explaining why or what the relationship actually is. This is true but underdeveloped. The examiner already knows GDP doesn’t measure happiness; the essay must explain the specific mechanism by which growth can undermine well-being.
Fix: Name the hedonic treadmill explicitly. Explain that as GDP grows, aspirations grow faster (lifestyle inflation), and the happiness-gap is maintained or widened despite increasing absolute prosperity. Use NMHS data and Bhutan comparison. Then propose the GDH framework as the alternative. This turns a cliché into an argument.
MISTAKE 05
The FOMO Essay That Only Blames Social Media
For the 2024 PYQ on social media and FOMO, most essays blame social media platforms and suggest digital detox as the solution. This is incomplete — it treats a structural problem as a behavioural one and misses the business model dimension.
Fix: Explain the attention economy’s profit mechanism (dopamine loops → time on platform → advertising revenue). Connect to India’s regulatory response (DPDP Act 2023). Propose institutional solutions: mandatory algorithm transparency, age restrictions backed by verification, school media literacy curricula. Individual blame → structural analysis → institutional solution. That is the UPSC framework.
MISTAKE 06
Concluding with “Money Cannot Buy Happiness”
“Thus, we can conclude that money cannot buy happiness and that true happiness comes from within.” This sentence appears in thousands of UPSC essays annually. It says nothing the examiner does not already know. It scores nothing that knowing it does not already guarantee.
Fix: Replace with the Anand film’s line: Zindagi badi honi chahiye, lambi nahin. Then: “India faces a choice between a development model that produces longer lives and shorter meanings, and one that produces lives of sufficient depth that their brevity is felt as fullness rather than loss. Kabir knew the answer in the 15th century. The Harvard Study confirmed it in 2023. The UPSC has been asking us to articulate it since 2013.” This conclusion demonstrates cultural literacy, intellectual synthesis, and genuine conviction — the three qualities that distinguish the essays that score highest.
Faculty Insight — What Top-Scoring Essays on This Theme Do
Sadhana Mains Mentorship — Essay Evaluation Notes
INSIGHT A
The Mexican Fisherman + Harvard Study = Your Most Powerful Combination
In our evaluation of thousands of practice essays at Legacy IAS, the most memorable essays on this theme combine two elements: the Mexican Fisherman parable (philosophy of sufficiency) with the Harvard Study’s empirical finding (relationships predict happiness). Together, they make both a philosophical and a scientific argument for the same conclusion — and the combination signals both cultural depth and empirical grounding. Open with the Fisherman; deploy the Harvard Study in the body; return to the fisherman’s smile in the conclusion.
INSIGHT B
Anand (1971) Is India’s Most Underused Essay Example
Every UPSC aspirant has seen Anand. Almost none use it in the essay paper. The film’s central philosophical claim — that a life of brief, conscious, generous engagement is more “good” than a long, healthy, but purposeless one — is the eudaimonic argument made cinematically. “Zindagi badi honi chahiye, lambi nahin” is one of Indian cinema’s most philosophically precise lines. In a conclusion, it carries more emotional and intellectual weight than any Western quote on the same theme. Use it. It will be remembered.
INSIGHT C
The GDP + GDH Essay Is a Policy Essay, Not Just a Philosophy Essay
The 2013 PYQ “GDP along with GDH would be the right indices” is deceptively applied — it requires specific knowledge of what GDH actually measures and why GDP fails to capture it. Use Bhutan’s nine domains of GNH: psychological well-being, cultural resilience, time use, community vitality, ecological diversity, governance, living standards, health, and education. GDP measures only the last. Knowing this converts a vague “happiness over money” essay into a specific policy proposal — and specific policy proposals score significantly higher than vague philosophical observations.
INSIGHT D
Practice the Same Theme for Three Different 2024 Topics
Both 2024 PYQs on this theme (“No path to happiness” and “Social media FOMO”) use the same philosophical toolkit but require different emphasis. “No path to happiness” → emphasise the journey vs destination distinction (Sisyphus, Anand, Waldinger’s relationships). “Social media FOMO” → emphasise the attention economy’s structural manipulation of happiness psychology (dopamine loops, DPDP Act, NIMHANS data). Same toolkit. Different focal point. Practice both essays under timed conditions in Legacy IAS Sadhana Mains Mentorship before entering the examination hall.
Legacy IAS  ·  Sadhana Mains Mentorship  ·  legacyias.com  ·  9606900005  ·  #1535, 39th Cross Rd, Jayanagar, Bengaluru – 560041

Know the Theme. Write the Essay. Score the Marks.

Legacy IAS integrates theme-based preparation like this into structured essay writing practice — so every anecdote, dimension, quote, and conclusion becomes an argument that works under timed exam conditions. Join the Sadhana Mains Mentorship.

Join Sadhana Mains Mentorship — Legacy IAS Legacy IAS — Where Aspirants Become Rankers

Book a Free Demo Class

June 2026
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930  
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.