Of course no one says to accept a wretched condition -- if you find yourself in this situation, please do something to get out of it. Contentment requires work. Don't just accept your situation, work on it, until you can honestly tell yourself "I'm okay". — Caldwell
Much of this is a matter of definition, but contentment can exist without happiness. Take the person who can have a number of serious health issues but has made peace with them. They can be content, but not necessarily happy. — synthesis
"Has made peace with them" is not gonna cut it for this happiness -- this is not contentment, but acceptance when all else failed. — Caldwell
If you agree with this, then my point was, by having "made peace with them [sources of unhappiness]" you have now removed any obstacle to achieving "happiness" and are now on the path toward it. At the very least making it considerably more reachable. — Outlander
I think we're losing signal here. What's a perfect wold to you? — Caldwell
If happiness results in sadness, why be happy? — synthesis
If happiness results in sadness, why be happy? — synthesis
If you are asking WHY .... aren't you already depressed/sad? — Cate
What brings happiness? How is happiness experienced/created? — Cate
The pursuit of happiness that defines much of Western culture doesn't really seem to be thought out very well. — synthesis
Happiness results from an experience that is pleasurable. It is the emotional pleasure that the experience provides that makes us happy. Conversely sadness results from displeasurable ( painful ) experience. Every moment of life is an experience, so every moment of life is either pleasurable or displeasurable or something in between. We are a pain averse, pleasure seeking creature. The pain -pleasure spectrum that we land upon as a function of experience is what provides impetus to life, in my opinion. — Pop
The question is, when should we give up? — TheMadFool
In it's place is left (fill in the blank). — synthesis
If you seek contentment, you can be 100% with happiness when it comes and 100% with sadness when it comes. The key is letting each go, otherwise you will fall into the cycle of birth and death of both over and over and over... — synthesis
In Yogic logic happiness is not dependent upon external causes, but can be elicited at will, with some practice. — Pop
I see. Are you 100% with happiness or 100% with sadness? — TheMadFool
@Anand-HaqqThe more you ask for happiness, the more you will be in suffering
Happiness is not a result, happiness is a way of life. — Anand-Haqq
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