Happiness
"Dad, everyone is looking for happiness. But what is meant
by happiness?" This was one of the questions a wise boy in
India, Sveta-ketu, put to his father many centuries ago.
"One of the signs of happiness, son, is that a person
who has it becomes active. A person who does not find happiness
does not feel like being active. His mind is cramped, his will
is weak. What is vast and infinite brings happiness. There is
no true joy in what is small or finite. I can tell you that the
Infinite alone is happiness; but you must desire to understand
this Infinite, my son."
"I want to understand it, Dad," said Sveta-ketu.
"Good," said his father. "Then you must listen
carefully to what I say and think deeply about it:
"When a person sees that nothing and no one is separate
from him, that he is one with all the people, animals, and objects
in the universe, when a person sees and hears and knows nothing
else -- that is the Infinite.
"But, if one sees or feels some other thing, obstructing
him, separating him, then that is the finite. He has not yet found
the Infinite.
"The Infinite never passes away; it lasts forever; but
what is finite will pass away."
Chhandogya Upanishad
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