It's a real burden to want to be happy all the time. In fact, it's such a burden that we often think others should help us to shoulder it - we look to others to "make" us happy, which is a Sisyphean task (at best). Not only that, but it's a thankless task, because we feel so entitled to be happy that when others "make" us happy, we take it for granted. It can easily be the case that we only tell others about it when they're not making us happy - this is our angry itch.
With this mindset of expecting others to make us happy and punishing them when we're unhappy, it's no surprise that it's such a burden and that repeated scratching doesn't really ease the itch. We become the cruel taskmasters of others' impossible tasks.
The real shame is that others can make us happy easily, without our micro-management or prodding. All we need to do is cultivate mudita, sometimes translated as empathetic joy. It is the opposite of schadenfreude (taking pleasure in others' suffering). Instead, we take pleasure in others' successes, happiness, good fortune, and enjoyment.
It is significant that the four divine abodes (lovingkindness, compassion, empathetic joy, and equanimity) are considered to be antidotes to three poisons (plus one). Cultivating lovingkindness toward others counteracts irritation and aggression. Cultivating compassion toward others counteracts indifference. Cultivating empathetic joy counteracts greediness and jealousy. Cultivating equanimity counteracts worry about the past and future.
At some points in our path, we can have a very selfish attitude toward the four divine abodes. "Why should I spend so much energy trying to feel good about others when I have so much work to do on myself first?" This attitude is misplaced selfishness - it's trying to scratch the angry itch that we can't really reach. If we truly wanted to be successfully selfish, meditating on lovingkindness, compassion, empathetic joy, and equanimity will help us to feel better about ourselves. Specific to mudita, if we learn to feel and share in others' joys, we then have many people helping us to feel happy, and they are doing it without our making them feel they should! It's like the students who park outside my house to "share" my wireless internet connection (because I don't password protect it). They get what they want just by being near someone who has it. You can be happy just by sharing in the happiness that is going on all around you all day. Finally, that itch can be scratched, and no one has to work to reach it!
This post originally appeared on the Inderdependence Project blog.

It is surprisingly difficult to take someone else’s point of view, actually. I have a little demonstration that I like to do in my college classes. I get two volunteers from the class to come up front, and I make them sit back to back. I give them each a baggie with about 10 or 12 Lego pieces in it. The pieces are all distinctly different from each other – different shapes, sizes, and colors. I tell one of the students to build whatever he or she wants but to describe it along the way so that the other student can build exactly the same thing. The other student is not allowed to speak, ask questions, or make any noise – just to listen and build the same thing. This really should not be that hard… it’s only 10 easily identifiable pieces. Yet, in over 10 years of doing this exercise, the students have NEVER built the same thing. This demonstrates how deeply egocentric we are. When I see something, it seems so intuitively understandable to me that I can’t even guess how you might see it differently.