ajax18 wrote:It isn't anything to me when people squabble. I'm just pointing out that it seems that one can measure what a person truly believes more by how they act than what they proclaim.
The difficulty I have found in judging people's beliefs based on their actions is that for many actions there are a multitude of rational aexplanations that may be given, of which at least some may not necessarily be inconsistent or incompatible with one's proclaimed beliefs--though I do think there is some value at times in using deductive reasoning such as this in some cases.
I'm not sure if I understand the idea of happiness. Sometimes it seems that everything has it's oppposite and the universe must always return to a balance. So if you were lucky enough to experience happiness at one point, you'll inevitably be unlucky enough to experience an equal amount of unhappiness at another. We appreciate the good times and suffer through the bad.
It seems that for almost anything good, we can think of a disadvantage that comes along with it, that at least reduces it back to zero at some point. For anything bad, we can also see a silver lining, that at least moves it back up to zero at some point. It sounds depressing, but I'm not sure any other explanation makes sense.
I enjoy listening to Dennis Prager's "Happiness Hour" on the radio, and a week-or-so ago he made what I thought to be a salient point similar to yours. He remarked about how, during his youth, he travelled around India, and was struck not only by the pervasive and abject poverty, but also by the stupifying amount of genuine happiness on the faces of most the people. He concluded from that that happiness is not inextricably tied to personal wealth.
However, he went on to observe that perhaps part of the reason the Indians may have failed to raise themselves up out of their impoverished conditions, and make life-improving advancements, was because they were happy with what they had.
From that, I concluded that a certain level of discontentment (the yang to the happiness ying--or the opposition that you mentioned) is need for progression. It is good for us to experience unhappiness and discontentment from time to time so as to progress towards full and lasting happiness, or to become the very best we can be.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-