Jessica Weiss: Happiness Works
Episode Summary
In this episode, Chris Schembra sits down with Jessica Weiss to unpack a radical but practical idea: happiness at work isn’t something you wait for in a distant future, it’s something you actively create, even in imperfect conditions. Drawing from Jessica’s book Happiness Works, the conversation reframes happiness not as a fleeting mood or a vague “choice,” but as a set of tangible, science-backed tools anyone can use right now. They explore why the single most powerful first step toward happiness is simply finding a friend at work, how resilience is a muscle built through small, confidence-building decisions, and why “good enough” choices often lead to more satisfaction than endless optimization. Together, they dismantle common myths about happiness, connect gratitude and joy to long-term resilience, and show how depersonalizing failure and using feedback as data can transform setbacks into progress. The episode culminates in Jessica’s five-part framework—connection, resilience, optimism, trust, and progress—offered not as a rigid sequence, but as a buffet of tools listeners can draw from as needed. At a moment defined by burnout, uncertainty, and rapid change, this conversation makes a compelling case that happiness isn’t fluffy or naïve; it’s a strategic advantage for individuals, teams, and organizations alike.
10 Quotes
“Happiness isn’t something you wait for in the future; it’s something you build, even in imperfect conditions.”
“The fastest way to improve your happiness at work is shockingly simple: find a friend.”
“Happiness is not the absence of unhappiness; it’s having tools you can rely on when things get hard.”
“Resilience isn’t a personality trait. It’s a muscle, and you build it through small decisions.”
“Good enough decisions often create more happiness than perfect ones that take forever.”
“Happiness isn’t a choice. It’s strategies, tactics, and habits you practice every day.”
“Failure is inevitable. The real skill is learning how to depersonalize it and extract the lesson.”
“Trust is the foundation of feedback—if you don’t trust the source, the message won’t land.”
“Gratitude and joy aren’t just reflections; they’re mindset-shifting tools that build resilience.”
“You don’t need to change your entire life to be happier—small, consistent actions change the trajectory.”
10 Takeways
Happiness is actionable.
It’s not a vague feeling or personality trait—it’s built through repeatable tools and behaviors.
Connection comes first.
Having even one genuine friend at work dramatically improves engagement, wellbeing, and performance.
Resilience is built in micro-moments.
Small, quick decisions create confidence and momentum over time.
Perfection kills happiness.
“Maximizers” suffer more than “satisficers.” Aim for progress, not perfection.
Tools beat willpower.
Relying on “choosing happiness” isn’t sustainable. Systems and habits are.
Gratitude trains the brain.
Practices like joy journaling rewire attention toward presence, meaning, and resilience.
Depersonalizing failure is a superpower.
Treat setbacks as data, not identity, to grow faster and suffer less.
Trust enables honest feedback.
Without psychological safety and trust, feedback becomes noise or threat.
Progress fuels motivation.
Ending the day knowing you moved something forward is essential to long-term happiness.
Happiness scales across life stages.
From basic security to meaning and purpose, happiness tools apply at every level of Maslow’s hierarchy.