June 15, 2026

When You've Finally Got What You Wanted and You're Still Not Satisfied

When You've Finally Got What You Wanted and You're Still Not Satisfied
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconAmazon Music podcast player iconPocketCasts podcast player icon
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconAmazon Music podcast player iconPocketCasts podcast player icon

Discover why the satisfaction after achievement often fades, leaving a familiar restlessness. This episode explores hedonic adaptation and ancient wisdom, revealing that this ache is by divine design to point you toward true fulfillment in God, not temporary success.

Key Takeaways

  • The temporary nature of happiness after major achievements is a psychological phenomenon called hedonic adaptation.
  • Ancient wisdom from Solomon confirms that material wealth and worldly success cannot provide lasting satisfaction.
  • Your inherent restlessness after achieving goals is not a flaw, but a divine signal pointing you toward God.
  • Instead of seeking the 'next thing,' learn to direct your dissatisfaction as a compass toward the ultimate fulfillment found only in God.

Have you ever spent years striving for a significant achievement, only to find that the elation fades within months, leaving you with the same old restlessness? This episode delves into the profound reasons why no worldly accomplishment can ever fully satisfy us. We'll explore what psychologists term "hedonic adaptation" and uncover how ancient wisdom, from King Solomon himself, explains this deep-seated ache as something intentionally woven into our very being by God.

The Cycle of Achievement and Dissatisfaction

Imagine working tirelessly for years towards a promotion, or finally saving enough for that dream home. You reach the goal, you celebrate, and for a brief period, it feels incredible. Yet, around the three-month mark, a familiar sense of dissatisfaction often creeps back in – the very feeling you were certain this achievement would conquer. Without a name for this experience, many mistakenly believe they pursued the wrong goal or need to aim for something even bigger next time. This can be a disorienting and isolating experience, leading to the unsettling thought that there might be something wrong with you.

Understanding Hedonic Adaptation

Fortunately, this feeling isn't a personal failing. Psychologists have a term for it: hedonic adaptation. First described by Brickman and Campbell in 1971, this research reveals a fundamental human tendency: we all have a baseline level of happiness to which we inevitably return, regardless of external events. A major positive event might cause a temporary spike in happiness, but life tends to settle back to its original equilibrium. A classic illustration is the phenomenon observed in lottery winners. Studies have shown that individuals who win substantial sums of money often report being no happier than they were before winning, just a few months to a year later. The life-altering event, it turns out, changed almost nothing about their fundamental sense of well-being.

Researchers point to two primary reasons for this adaptation:

  • Familiarity Breeds Indifference: The initial pleasure derived from something new naturally wanes as it becomes a familiar part of our lives.
  • Rising Expectations: Achieving a goal often subtly raises our expectations, meaning the newly acquired possession or status fails to deliver the sustained satisfaction we anticipated, prompting us to desire more.

The novelist Ian McEwan echoed this sentiment, noting that the remarkable becomes routine far more quickly than we anticipate because humans are remarkably adept at adapting to almost anything. The new house simply becomes "the house," and what once felt like a hard-won relief morphs into the starting line for the next pursuit.

Solomon's Ancient Wisdom on Lasting Fulfillment

Long before modern psychology, Scripture addressed this very human experience. King Solomon, who possessed more wealth, wisdom, and experience than almost any person in history, concluded that none of his worldly achievements could provide lasting fulfillment. He famously described such pursuits as "meaningless, like chasing the wind." Ecclesiastes 5:10 states it plainly: "Whoever loves money will never have enough." Solomon conducted the ultimate experiment, exploring every avenue of worldly success, and arrived at the same conclusion as today's research.

The Divine Design of Restlessness

Here lies the most encouraging reframe: this inherent emptiness and restlessness is not a flaw, but by design. God intentionally crafted our hearts so that no created thing—no amount of wealth, status, or achievement—could ever provide complete satisfaction. If earthly possessions could fully satisfy us, we would likely cease seeking anything beyond them, never truly looking for Him. Therefore, the restlessness we experience after achieving a goal serves a vital purpose: it acts as a spiritual compass, pointing us beyond the gift to the Giver.

In this episode, Dr. Bart Leger shares personal reflections on this pattern, recounting milestones he once eagerly anticipated, only to feel the elation fade each time. These experiences gradually taught him that worldly pursuits were never designed to fill the deepest needs of his soul. The next acquisition, the next promotion, the next milestone will not bring lasting contentment. Only God can.

Finding True Satisfaction

The feeling of dissatisfaction after achievement isn't a sign that you aimed too low or picked the wrong goal; it's a powerful indicator that you are designed for something more. It's an invitation to turn your gaze from temporary comforts to the eternal source of fulfillment. The "next thing" was never going to be enough. Your restlessness is an invitation to come home to the only One who truly satisfies.

Share This Episode:

https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/260

Need Prayer? Leave me a voicemail:

https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/voicemail

Want to keep these devotions coming? Please consider supporting this podcast.

https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/support/

Rate and Review

https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/reviews/new/

Connect with Bart

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/dailydevotionsforbusylives

Website: https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com

Feeling spiritually drained? Start here. Download your free copy of my eBook Making Time for Jesus here: https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/subscribe.

Join Our Private Facebook Community

If you're looking for a place to connect with other Daily Devotions listeners and pray for each other, I'd love for you to join our private Facebook community group. Come find us at https://www.dailydevotionsforbusylives.com/group

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do I feel unsatisfied after achieving a goal?

This is often due to hedonic adaptation, where the pleasure of new achievements fades over time, returning you to a baseline happiness level.

What is hedonic adaptation?

Hedonic adaptation is the psychological process where humans quickly get used to positive or negative events and return to their original emotional state.

Can achievements and possessions bring lasting satisfaction?

No, research and ancient wisdom suggest that while achievements provide temporary joy, they cannot offer lasting satisfaction; true fulfillment comes from God.

How does dissatisfaction point me to God?

The restlessness you feel after achieving goals is designed by God to prevent you from settling for created things and to draw you to seek Him for true satisfaction.

Bart Leger:

Think about the last time you got something you had

Bart Leger:

worked for for a long time. Maybe it was a promotion or a

Bart Leger:

new house. Maybe it was the number on the scale you'd been

Bart Leger:

chasing for two years and you finally got there. You

Bart Leger:

celebrated. And then somewhere around the three-month mark or

Bart Leger:

maybe sooner, you notice something familiar, a

Bart Leger:

restlessness that was supposed to be gone by now. And then

Bart Leger:

we're off to the next new Psychologists who study this

Bart Leger:

have a name for it. They call it hedonic adaptation, first

Bart Leger:

described by researchers Brickman and Campbell in 1971.

Bart Leger:

Their core finding was plain: human beings have a happiness

Bart Leger:

baseline they return to, regardless of what happens to

Bart Leger:

them. Positive events produce a spike. Then life settles back to

Bart Leger:

where it was. The new house becomes just the house. What was

Bart Leger:

relief becomes a new starting line. Brickman and Campbell

Bart Leger:

studied lottery winners, people who had won hundreds of

Bart Leger:

thousands of dollars.

Bart Leger:

Within a few months to a year after winning their happiness

Bart Leger:

levels had returned to where they were before the win, in

Bart Leger:

some even less. The thing that was supposed to change

Bart Leger:

everything had changed almost nothing.

Bart Leger:

come back to what research says about why. But first,

Bart Leger:

welcome to daily devotions for busy lives I'm Bart Leger. If

Bart Leger:

you finally got the thing you chased and felt let down by how

Bart Leger:

little it changed. So let's talk about why. And I know this

Bart Leger:

pattern. Over the I've looked forward to plenty of milestones.

Bart Leger:

The award or the raise I was sure would make a difference

Bart Leger:

once I had it. And every single time, the elation wore off

Bart Leger:

faster than I Life went back to normal. And before long I was

Bart Leger:

eyeing the next level or the next achievement telling myself

Bart Leger:

that one would do it. I've had to learn slowly that the things

Bart Leger:

of this world were never built to fill me up. They keep

Bart Leger:

promising and they keep coming up short. Maybe you know the

Bart Leger:

feeling. You worked towards something for years and you

Bart Leger:

finally got it. What a little while, everything was Then the

Bart Leger:

restlessness crept back. The same one you thought the

Bart Leger:

achievement would cure. Most people really don't have a name

Bart Leger:

for that, so they draw the wrong conclusion. Well, they picked

Bart Leger:

the wrong goal or they need to aim higher next time. So they

Bart Leger:

start the chase over. Sure, the next thing was going to make the

Bart Leger:

difference and it never quite does. This is old news to the

Bart Leger:

Bible. The wisest, wealthiest man who ever lived ran the whole

Bart Leger:

experiment and wrote down the results. Listen to Ecclesiastes,

Bart Leger:

5-10, "Those who love money will never have enough. How

Bart Leger:

meaningless to think that wealth brings true happiness." Solomon

Bart Leger:

had everything, or just about everything. Wealth beyond

Bart Leger:

counting and anything else he wanted, he simply reached out

Bart Leger:

and took. And at the end of it, he wrote that none of it

Bart Leger:

satisfied him completely. None of it filled him. He kept using

Bart Leger:

one word, meaningless. Like chasing the Vanity. Emptiness.

Bart Leger:

You close your hand around it and there's nothing there. Just

Bart Leger:

like trying to grab smoke. Here's the part that most of us

Bart Leger:

miss. That emptiness is by design. God built your heart so

Bart Leger:

that no created thing would ever be enough. Because if a or a

Bart Leger:

raise could satisfy you completely, then you'd stop

Bart Leger:

there. You'd settle for the gift and never come looking for the

Bart Leger:

giver. So the restlessness you feel after you get the is doing

Bart Leger:

its job. It's a signal. Trying to point you somewhere created

Bart Leger:

things can't take you. That changes what you do with the

Bart Leger:

feeling. You can let the restlessness turn you toward God,

Bart Leger:

which is what it was made to do. Augustine said it centuries "Our

Bart Leger:

hearts are restless until they rest in Him. The next promotion

Bart Leger:

won't settle it. Only God will." The researchers identified two

Bart Leger:

mechanisms behind the pattern. First, positive emotions from

Bart Leger:

any new circumstances fade as the new becomes familiar. Second,

Bart Leger:

achieving a goal raises your expectations so the thing you

Bart Leger:

just obtained stops producing the satisfaction it once did,

Bart Leger:

and you begin wanting something more. The novelist Ian McEwen

Bart Leger:

described it this way:

Bart Leger:

Solomon wrote the same thing, about 3,000 years earlier. He

Bart Leger:

had more wealth and accumulated experience than almost any

Bart Leger:

person in human history, and he sat down and wrote that none of

Bart Leger:

it filled him. He called it vanity. Ecclesiastes 5: 10 puts

Bart Leger:

it plainly:

Bart Leger:

the human heart to be restless in the face of created things

Bart Leger:

because He never intended for any created thing to be The

Bart Leger:

restlessness you feel is a compass and it's pointing

Bart Leger:

somewhere. Here's today's challenge.

Bart Leger:

The restlessness that's still there and aim it on purpose.

Bart Leger:

Spend 10 minutes with God today. Skip the request list. Just tell

Bart Leger:

Him you've noticed how the created things keep coming up

Bart Leger:

empty and ask Him to be what they couldn't. Father, thank you

Bart Leger:

for making us in a way that nothing less than you can

Bart Leger:

satisfy. Father, we've chased a lot of things and we felt them

Bart Leger:

fade in our hands. For the one listening who finally got what

Bart Leger:

they wanted and found it wasn't enough, help them see the

Bart Leger:

emptiness for what it is, an arrow pointing home to you.

Bart Leger:

Still the urge to chase the next thing and draw us to rest in you

Bart Leger:

where the restlessness finally ends. In Jesus' name. Amen. If

Bart Leger:

Daily Devotions for Busy Lives has been an encouragement to you,

Bart Leger:

would you take a minute and leave a rating and review? It

Bart Leger:

helps more people find these devotions and it only takes a

Bart Leger:

moment. I'd be so Thanks for joining me on Daily Devotions

Bart Leger:

for Busy Lives. Remember, the restlessness you feel after you

Bart Leger:

get the thing is an invitation to come home to the only one who

Bart Leger:

truly satisfies. Come back next time for more encouragement to

Bart Leger:

help you live grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and

Bart Leger:

have a great day.