Happiness Is Not a DIY Project – Reflections on Liz Strömquist’s The Oracle

Happiness Is Not a DIY Project – Reflections on Liz Strömquist’s The Oracle

Nathalies Book Pick: Happiness Is Not a DIY Project – Reflections on Liz Strömquist’s The Oracle

We live in a time where one is made to feel – or rather, made to believe – that happiness is a do-it-yourself project.
You just need to know your goals, never give up, always believe in yourself, fall down, get back up, straighten your crown – and bam: everything will be fine. Happiness, they say, lies entirely in your own hands.

Sounds great. Hardly works. But hey – the self-help industry has to make a living somehow!
What usually remains instead is the nagging sense of always falling short, of doing something wrong. And if you fail in the Body-Mind-Soul optimization contest and can’t deliver the instagrammable life? Well, then you simply haven’t found the right guru yet! Exactly this madness is dissected by Liz Strömquist in The Oracle – witty, sharp, and both historically and scientifically grounded.

From Fortuna to “Fake it till you make it”

Back in ancient Greece, happiness was the realm of the goddess Tyche – better known by her Roman name, Fortuna. She was moody and unpredictable: sometimes she favored you, sometimes she didn’t. Today, by contrast, we’re told to take charge ourselves, to manage life according to an often endless to-do list. Small wonder that more and more young people are depressed, trying to learn from role models who themselves collapse under the same impossible demands.

And me?

I’ve been working as a coach for over 20 years. After reading the book, I briefly felt embarrassed about the name of my company and even considered a rebranding. Instead, I reminded myself of what I actually do – and why I now also offer therapy.

I don’t hand out quick tips from the latest hyped-up self-help literature. I work with Positive Psychology, which – unlike Instagram – goes back to the Greeks. For them, happiness didn’t mean “always think positive,” but rather the search for a meaningful life: learning to live with fate, chance, and unpredictability.

To this I add insights from Analytical Psychology, which views life as an organic process of growth in which we come closer to ourselves – precisely through our ruptures and contradictions. And finally, what Buddhism teaches: mindfulness, humility, and the art of not controlling life, but meeting it.

Hard Work Instead of Happiness Formulas

That’s hard work – no seven steps to success, no quick fix in pill form, no predictable process. Few things have reconciled me more with life than practicing kindness toward myself, learning to accept my imperfect world, and even cherish it. And this, for me, is where most self-help formulas fail: they squeeze happiness into neat little recipes while ignoring that life is complicated, contradictory, and at times simply painfully unfair.

I prefer to hold on to Rilke:

“I live my life in widening rings
that reach out across the world.
I may not complete the last one,
but I give myself to it.”

There’s more comfort and truth in that than in any glossy “Believe in yourself” poster.

And honestly? If the goddess of fortune, Tyche, still existed today, she’d probably already have an Instagram account under the handle @its_all_random.

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Why coaching alone often is not enough!

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Coaching or Psychotherapy? Why Sometimes More Is Needed

By Nathalie Buschor, Psychotherapist & Coach in Zurich

Coaching is trending. Today, almost every company offers executive coaching for managers. And in nearly every area of life, coaching is available: business, relationships, health, self-development.

Coaching can be extremely valuable – no question. It can create clarity, support decision-making, and move people into action. I myself have worked for many years as a coach with executives and leaders, and I deeply value this solution-focused, goal-oriented approach.

And yet: coaching has its limits.

Many challenges that people face are more complex than a career decision or a leadership goal. They are rooted more deeply – in biography, relationship experiences, and unconscious patterns.

When conflicts repeat, exhaustion lingers, relationships collapse, or inner pressure builds, a new mindset or clever tool is often not enough. At that point, what is needed is psychotherapy – deeper psychological support.

The difference between coaching and psychotherapy

Psychotherapists complete a full university degree in psychology, followed by a state-recognized, multi-year training. This includes personal therapy, supervision, theory, and clinical practice – usually lasting ten years or more.

The goal is not just professional knowledge, but the ability to safely and responsibly guide people through emotionally challenging processes.

By contrast, many coaching certifications are unregulated. They sometimes last only a few weeks or months and focus on practical goals rather than emotional depth. This is not “bad” – but often insufficient when deeper psychological issues are at play.

Why the combination matters

In my own practice for psychotherapy and coaching in Zurich, I combine both:

  • Coaching, when clarity, strategy, and action are needed.

  • Psychotherapy, when deeper questions, recurring patterns, or emotional wounds require attention.

Because lasting change happens where outer steps and inner processes connect. It is not enough to change behavior if the underlying patterns remain untouched.

Many people who first seek coaching actually need something more:

  • A safe space for genuine self-exploration

  • The opportunity to process past wounds

  • A deeper understanding of their inner experience – beyond efficiency and optimization

What we can learn

Coaching is not a substitute for therapy. And therapy is not a weakness. In fact, people who achieve a lot and carry great responsibility benefit most when they can also carry themselves inwardly.

We live in a time when mental health is finally being destigmatized. That is a positive step. But it should not be watered down – by quick formats, light certificates, and the illusion that change can be achieved with just a few tools.

Sometimes it takes more. Depth. Time. Training. Experience. Humanity.


About the Author
Nathalie Buschor is a psychotherapist and coach in Zurich. She combines depth psychology, cognitive behavioral therapy, and systemic approaches with many years of experience in business, leadership, coaching, and personal development.

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