I sometimes realize,
always with a slight shock, that I have spent amazing amounts of time and energy
seeking happiness in precisely the wrong places. I’ve thought of happiness, I
guess, as something made of matter – something I can find in hot fudge sauce or
a certain kind of house or the hottest new handheld device. I’ve searched for
happiness by helping myself to more chips and wine, and by buying the
best-looking watchbands and bow ties and computer cases. Happiness, I’ve
thought, is a thoroughly material phenomenon, something I can select off a
shelf and stockpile and use just for myself. Fortunately, what I sometimes see clearly is that this pointless
approach has provided, not happiness, but an increasing sense of confusion and
loss. It has sent me in circles and ups and downs, dashing around in a fever,
and always finding, not happiness, but a whole lot of unusable emptiness. It
has shown me, in occasional flashes, that finding happiness is something wholly
different than finding the latest laptop. I’ve seen, in these moments of
lucky clarity, that happiness has always had its home right inside me,
and is endless in its resources. Happiness is as close as my breath and the
blood that unceasingly moves through my body. It has no start or finish, and is
impossible to be lessened or destroyed. It delivers itself to me every second
with wide-open arms. I don’t have to buy it, just believe in it.
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