Are you happy?

Entertained, happiness builds up if I am winning, and vice versa. Happy is when I finally finish something.
 
I think it's possible to be happy while being entertained and also to be happy without being entertained. I also think it's possible to be unhappy and entertained or unhappy and not entertained.
 
I'm happy most of the time. If I'm playing a game or whatever, I'm entertained, but that doesn't make me happy. OTOH, if I'm not happy, playing a game is more distracting than entertaining, though we could argue about the difference. So... yes and no?
 
I'm happy if I'm having fun, so if Iim being entertained, I'm happy.
If really cool awesome breathtaking moments are happening during gameplay or if after I beat a game I soak up everything I just experienced, its like, woah.
But I rarely play games anymore...
 
Wow, some many people here are/seem deppressed... but I wouldn't say Im happpy either, when I play/watch/read. Just entertained. But happiness really isn't that important to me. I have virtually no emotions.
 
Video games, movies, books and all of that help us fill the time between moments of happiness.
So are you saying that whenever we take time reading a book or watch a movie and play video games that we are not really happy?:mischief:
 
80% of the time I'm in my 'meh' mode, where I am basically indifferent to whatever is going on. About 15% of the time I'm genuinely happy, and the other 5% of the time I'm either feeling quite depressed, or really pissed off (or both). Right now I'm closer to happy than unhappy in 'meh' mode, mostly thanks to Collingwood's brilliant 3 point win in the AFL today. (Well, technically yesterday now, since its 2am, but whatever)
 
BOOM! headshot

Makes me happy indeed.
 
Just entertained. If I had a Girl Friend, I would the happiest guy on the planet :sigh:.

I used to feel like you, once, when I was infatuated with a certain girl. I have not yet let go of the infatuation completely, but there is a conclusion to which I have come.

Introspection and a simple understanding of the nature of the world has taught me that happiness cannot come from another human.

Though you, as an experiencer of the world, may be incomplete without knowing of relationships, you, the person, are no less without a SO.

You must learn this - you will not find happiness in your relationship with another. You may find temporary relief, but not lasting happiness or contentment. This is living life second-hand, based on what others perceive of you, or react to you, not based on your own definitions.



To quote Swami Vivekananda:

The whole gist of this teaching is that you should work like a master and not as a slave; work incessantly, but do not do slave's work. Do you not see how everybody works? Nobody can be altogether at rest; ninety-nine per cent of mankind work like slaves, and the result is misery; it is all selfish work. Work through freedom! Work through love! The word "love" is very difficult to understand; love never comes until there is freedom. There is no true love possible in the slave. If you buy a slave and tie him down in chains and make him work for you, he will work like a drudge, but there will be no love in him. So when we ourselves work for the things of the world as slaves, there can be no love in us, and our work is not true work. This is true of work done for relatives and friends, and is true of work done for our own selves. Selfish work is slave's work; and here is a test. Every act of love brings happiness; there is no act of love which does not bring peace and blessedness as its reaction. Real existence, real knowledge, and real love are eternally connected with one another, the three in one: where one of them is, the others also must be; they are the three aspects of the One without a second — the Existence - Knowledge - Bliss. When that existence becomes relative, we see it as the world; that knowledge becomes in its turn modified into the knowledge of the things of the world; and that bliss forms the foundation of all true love known to the heart of man. Therefore true love can never react so as to cause pain either to the lover or to the beloved. Suppose a man loves a woman; he wishes to have her all to himself and feels extremely jealous about her every movement; he wants her to sit near him, to stand near him, and to eat and move at his bidding. He is a slave to her and wishes to have her as his slave. That is not love; it is a kind of morbid affection of the slave, insinuating itself as love. It cannot be love, because it is painful; if she does not do what he wants, it brings him pain. With love there is no painful reaction; love only brings a reaction of bliss; if it does not, it is not love; it is mistaking something else for love. When you have succeeded in loving your husband, your wife, your children, the whole world, the universe, in such a manner that there is no reaction of pain or jealousy, no selfish feeling, then you are in a fit state to be unattached.

Krishna says, "Look at Me, Arjuna! If I stop from work for one moment, the whole universe will die. I have nothing to gain from work; I am the one Lord, but why do I work? Because I love the world." God is unattached because He loves; that real love makes us unattached. Wherever there is attachment, the clinging to the things of the world, you must know that it is all physical attraction between sets of particles of matter — something that attracts two bodies nearer and nearer all the time and, if they cannot get near enough, produces pain; but where there is real love, it does not rest on physical attachment at all. Such lovers may be a thousand miles away from one another, but their love will be all the same; it does not die, and will never produce any painful reaction.




You still think that a relationship will bring love. Learn that as long as you are attached to the concept of the relationship, you cannot truly love. Let go of attachment, and love shall come on its own.


And for your reference, this is a quote on Karma Yoga, which you had earlier expressed an interest in.
 
So are you saying that whenever we take time reading a book or watch a movie and play video games that we are not really happy?:mischief:

Are all these not temporary means to make us forget ourselves? The contentment we feel during these times is because we have forgotten the reality, we move into a different world, where there are none of the problems which we face in our life. They are escapism (as is this talking and debating on CFC OT).
 
You must be happy within your self to attract anyone anyway.
 
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