The 31 Types of Happiness: Expanding How We Experience Joy Beyond Feeling “Happy”
Happiness is more than joy. Discover the 31 types of happiness and how peace, relief, and meaning support emotional well-being and resilience.
Do you ever wonder why happiness feels so elusive, even when life looks objectively “fine”?
Why moments of peace, relief, or quiet satisfaction do not always register as happiness?
Or why the pressure to feel joyful can actually deepen exhaustion, monotony, or negative thinking?
Many people struggle not because happiness is absent, but because it is narrowly defined. When happiness is measured solely in terms of excitement, pleasure, or positivity, much of the emotional richness of human experience is overlooked.
Recent psychological research suggests that happiness is not a single emotion, but a constellation of distinct emotional states (Rossi, 2018). Some researchers identify 31 different types of happiness, each reflecting a unique way the nervous system experiences safety, meaning, or pleasure (Porges,2022). When we expand how we define happiness, it becomes more accessible, realistic, and emotionally sustainable (O’Brien, 2008).
At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we help individuals and couples reconnect with joy by understanding how trauma, stress, and nervous system dysregulation shape emotional experience, and by broadening the ways happiness can be felt, noticed, and embodied.
Why We Struggle to Feel Happy
Searches like why am I not happy, why life feels monotonous, and why can’t I feel joy are increasingly common. Many people describe a sense of emotional flatness, boredom, or quiet dissatisfaction rather than acute distress.
This often stems from:
— Chronic stress or burnout
— Trauma or prolonged nervous system activation
— Depression or anhedonia
— Cultural pressure to feel happy all the time
— Narrow definitions of what happiness should look like
From a neuroscience perspective, happiness is closely tied to the regulation of the nervous system. When the brain is in a state of threat, overwhelm, or emotional fatigue, high arousal joy may feel inaccessible. However, lower arousal forms of happiness often remain available but go unrecognized.
Expanding the Definition of Happiness
Traditional views of happiness emphasize pleasure, excitement, or achievement. While these forms of happiness matter, they account for only a small part of how humans experience well-being.
Researchers and psychologists have identified 31 distinct types of happiness, ranging from high-energy joy to quiet, reflective, or restorative states. Some forms of happiness are fleeting, while others are deeply stabilizing.
When happiness is expanded beyond constant positivity, people often realize they experience it far more often than they thought.
The 31 Types of Happiness
Below is a framework that organizes different forms of happiness across emotional, relational, and somatic experiences. Not all types are available at all times, and that is part of their wisdom.
Restorative and Regulating Happiness
These forms are especially accessible during stress, grief, or recovery.
1) Contentment – a sense of enoughness
2) Relief – release after tension or fear
3) Peacefulness – nervous system calm
4) Safety – feeling protected and grounded
5) Ease – absence of urgency
6) Comfort – physical or emotional soothing
7) Stability – predictability and steadiness
Reflective and Meaning-Based Happiness
These forms deepen emotional resilience and identity.
1) Gratitude – appreciation without comparison
2) Meaning – connection to purpose
3) Belonging – being accepted as you are
4) Connection – emotional attunement with others
5) Nostalgia – warmth tied to memory
6) Pride – grounded self-respect
7) Fulfillment – alignment with values
Playful and Energizing Happiness
These forms often come in brief, spontaneous moments.
1) Amusement – lighthearted enjoyment
2) Playfulness – creativity and spontaneity
3) Joy – expansive positive emotion
4) Excitement – anticipation and novelty
5) Wonder – awe and curiosity
6) Delight – sensory pleasure
Relational and Intimate Happiness
These forms are central to sexuality, intimacy, and attachment.
1) Affection – warmth toward others
2) Love – emotional and relational bonding
3) Tenderness – gentle closeness
4) Trust – emotional safety with another
5) Erotic aliveness – embodied pleasure and desire
Self-Based and Integrative Happiness
These forms support long-term well-being.
1) Self-acceptance – peace with who you are
2) Autonomy – freedom and agency
3) Confidence – embodied self-trust
4) Hope – openness toward the future
5) Vitality – aliveness in the body
6) Integration – feeling whole rather than fragmented
Why Some Types of Happiness Are More Accessible Than Others
The nervous system determines which types of happiness are available at any given time. High arousal joy requires energy, safety, and emotional bandwidth. During periods of stress, grief, or trauma recovery, the nervous system may prioritize regulation over excitement.
This is not a failure. It is an adaptation.
For example:
— Someone experiencing burnout may find relief or contentment more accessible than joy
— Someone healing from trauma may experience safety and connection before excitement
— Someone struggling with depression may notice comfort or nostalgia before pleasure
Recognizing these forms as valid happiness reduces shame and expands emotional awareness.
Measuring Happiness Shapes How Much We Experience
One of the most important insights from happiness research is that the amount of happiness we experience is often based on how we measure it (Frey, 2018).
If happiness is defined only as:
— Feeling upbeat
— Being productive
— Feeling excited
— Feeling positive
Then, many meaningful emotional experiences are excluded.
When happiness is expanded to include calm, meaning, connection, and relief, people often discover that happiness is present more frequently, even in quiet or ordinary moments.
Trauma, Negative Thinking, and Emotional Narrowing
Trauma and chronic stress can narrow emotional range. The brain becomes vigilant, prioritizing threat detection over emotional nuance. This can lead to negative thinking patterns and difficulty recognizing subtle positive states.
Somatic and trauma-informed therapy helps by:
— Regulating the nervous system
— Expanding interoceptive awareness
— Increasing emotional granularity
— Helping clients notice small shifts in state
When emotional awareness widens, happiness becomes easier to recognize without forcing it. Relearning Happiness Through the Body Happiness is not only cognitive. It is embodied.
The body often experiences happiness before the mind labels it. A slower breath, relaxed shoulders, warmth in the chest, or a softening of the jaw may signal contentment or peace.
At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we integrate somatic therapy, attachment-based work, and neuroscience-informed interventions to help clients reconnect with embodied happiness, especially when joy feels distant.
Practical Ways to Expand Your Experience of Happiness
— Notice low intensity positive states such as relief or ease
— Name different types of happiness when they appear
— Release comparison between your happiness and others
— Allow happiness to be quiet and non-performative
— Track how your body signals safety or comfort
Over time, this practice shifts attention away from what is missing and toward what is already present.
A Spectrum of Experiences
Happiness is not a single emotion or permanent state. It is a spectrum of experiences shaped by nervous system regulation, meaning, connection, and embodiment.
When we expand how we define happiness, it becomes more accessible, compassionate, and sustainable, especially during seasons of monotony, healing, or emotional fatigue.
At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we help individuals and couples rediscover happiness by honoring all the ways it can show up, including peace, relief, intimacy, and meaning.
Reach out to schedule a complimentary 20-minute consultation with our team of therapists, trauma specialists, somatic practitioners, or relationship experts, and start working towards integrative, embodied healing today.
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References
Fredrickson, B. L. (2001). The role of positive emotions in positive psychology. American Psychologist, 56(3), 218–226.
Frey, B. S. (2018). Happiness can be measured. In Economics of happiness (pp. 5-11). Cham: Springer International Publishing.
Friedman, S. (2026, January 17). The Society of Happy People is hunting for happiness all week long participate in the daily challenges. Nice News.
O'Brien, C. (2008). Sustainable happiness: How happiness studies can contribute to a more sustainable future. Canadian Psychology/Psychologie canadienne, 49(4), 289.
Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W. W. Norton & Company.
Porges, S. W. (2022). Polyvagal theory: A science of safety. Frontiers in integrative neuroscience, 16, 871227.
Rossi, M. (2018). Happiness, pleasures, and emotions. Philosophical Psychology, 31(6), 898-919.
Siegel, D. J. (2020). The developing mind. Guilford Press.