What Harvard Says About Real Happiness
π The hard truth: success often makes people the loneliest. The famous Harvard Grant Study found that relationships β not achievements β predict long-term happiness. High achievers who chased career over connection often ended up divorced, alcoholic, or dying earlier. Add in imposter syndrome and burnout, and winning can feel more like losing.
π Donβt just chase success β chase meaning. If this resonates, like, comment, and subscribe for more raw insights on psychology, faith, and mental health.
π Watch more unfiltered truths here:
This video is for general educational purposes and is not a substitute for professional medical or mental health advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are in crisis or having thoughts of harming yourself, call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or go to your nearest emergency room.

About Michael
I'm Michael, a mental health creator, recovered alcoholic, future therapist, and the host of Sober Psychology. After realizing how much of the traditional mental health conversation misses the mark, I decided to build a space dedicated to raw, unfiltered self-examination and personal healing. My approach combines psychological principles with brutal honesty and hard truths, cutting through the noise to help people navigate their own growth. No toxic positivity, no hidden shameβjust real conversations about what it actually takes to heal.