Hedonic adaptation (also called the hedonic treadmill) is a psychological phenomenon in which people quickly get used to changes in life—both positive and negative—so their level of happiness tends to return close to its usual baseline.
Simply put: you get something you really want → you feel a big boost in happiness → after some time, it becomes normal.
Examples:
- You buy a new car → for the first month you’re excited, then it becomes “just a car.”
- You get a salary raise → you feel relief and satisfaction, but soon you adapt to the new income level and new desires appear.
- You enter a romantic relationship → the initial excitement and infatuation naturally fade, and the relationship becomes part of everyday life.
It also works with negative events:
- After a breakup or failure, people often think they will feel terrible forever, but over time they usually emotionally adapt.
Why does this happen?
- The nervous system is designed to detect change, not constant states.
- What is new grabs attention; what is familiar fades into the background.
- Expectations rise along with circumstances. Once you reach one goal, a new target often replaces it.
This is why people can mistakenly believe:
- “I’ll finally be happy when I get X.”
Then they get X, adapt, and start chasing Y instead.
This doesn’t mean achievements, money, love, or success are meaningless. It means they often don’t provide a permanent increase in happiness by themselves.
Ways people try to reduce hedonic adaptation:
- practicing gratitude (noticing what has already become “normal”)
- introducing variety and novelty intentionally
- focusing on meaning, growth, relationships, and contribution—not only pleasure or acquisition
- avoiding constant upward comparison with others
A core lesson from hedonic adaptation is: external improvements can improve life, but the mind is very good at turning yesterday’s dream into today’s baseline.