yellow isn’t the only color

a journal page titled “redefining happiness” with a strip of yellow tape, smiley face stickers, and handwritten text in black ink. the writing redefines happiness as smaller, softer, and more attainable—focusing on micro-moments that bring relief instead of constant joy. examples listed include “the sunshine on my face,” “changing into comfy clothes after work,” “rosie jumping onto my back,” and “a moment where nothing hurts.” the tone is reflective and gentle, with neat handwriting and a yellow theme.

for a long time, happiness felt out of reach—like something loud and golden and far away.

in my head, happiness always looked like the color yellow: bright and shiny, something you couldn’t look away from.

i craved it. i chased it.

but no matter how hard i tried, i couldn’t find it.

i used to think happiness meant feeling amazing all the time. big joy. obvious joy.

now i know that’s not always possible—especially when you’re grieving, or healing, or just trying to make it through a regular tuesday.

so i started redefining it.

i started setting the bar lower. on purpose. not out of giving up, but out of survival. out of honesty.

i started noticing the micro-moments—the ones that don’t sparkle but still carry warmth.

the breeze in my hair. the sun on my face. sweatpants after a long day.

these are the moments where the pain feels less heavy. where i can breathe a little deeper. where life softens, just enough.

happiness isn’t always bright and shiny. sometimes it’s the soft cluck of chicken. sometimes it’s clean sheets, or a warm blanket, or the absence of struggle—even just for a minute.

this list is still growing.
so am i.