At what age you became happy/content/ satisfied with your life ?
I heard something like mid 30's is the average for INTP's... pretty late.
At what age you became happy/content/ satisfied with your life ?
I heard something like mid 30's is the average for INTP's... pretty late.
I'm in my middle 40s and I haven't found anything resembling contentment.At what age you became happy/content/ satisfied with your life ?
I heard something like mid 30's is the average for INTP's... pretty late.
What if you have no, or extremely few needs or desires, and thus skip over the part where you obtain or fulfill them entirely? Is that also happiness? What if everything you do and everything that happens, is merely an experience? Is Valium, then, still necessary?What is happiness? According to a book I'm reading, The Adjusted American, "Happiness is the emotional state that accompanies need satisfaction." Once I figure out what my needs are exactly and how exactly to best meet them, then perhaps I'll be happy, if this definition is correct. Until then, I'll be subsisting on plenty of Valium. Of course, such a chemical crutch could preclude my ability to identify what meets my needs. *sigh*
But then, why not just say, "To hell with that definition,"
What if you have no, or extremely few needs or desires, and thus skip over the part where you obtain or fulfill them entirely? Is that also happiness? What if everything you do and everything that happens, is merely an experience? Is Valium, then, still necessary?
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I'm thinking in terms of Buddhist and similar philosophies that reject materialism, so long as the basics of food, shelter, etc are met.Well, then, according to the definition, you'd obviously be happy if you were meeting your extremely few needs. If you skip over them in the case of having few needs, you wouldn't be happy
If one has no needs, I'd imagine that person would be dead and thus the question becomes irrelevant, but then perhaps that depends on the definition of "need" or whether it is possible for a human to exist with no needs.
What do you mean by "merely an experience." Do you mean an experience stripped, for example, of meaning, ego, interpretation?
I'm thinking in terms of Buddhist and similar philosophies that reject materialism, so long as the basics of food, shelter, etc are met.
As far as experience, I mean more like letting your emotions run free. Being detached from desire to the point you're able to say "oh, that was cool" or "oh, that sucked" about... everything, and just keep moving on, watching the show. It doesn't have to be stripped of any of the three you mentioned. For example, interpretation can bring pleasure, but pleasure doesn't need to be a necessity, just icing on the cake when it happens.
Though one just has to know, since "for sure" implies doubt and rumination![]()
In my experience, anxiety and paranoia become a factor when my focus wanders too far from the basics; status, wealth, etc. For example, I don't fear being without any necessities anywhere on the planet, being homeless, etc; but I go through bouts of fear of other people, professors, social norms. I believe a large part of this is knowledge (i.e. I'm not a yuppie cut off from our animalistic mechanisms of basic survival), and what reinforces what little faith I have in humanity is the fact that information can be shared with little effort.If, however, you have a level of anxiety that overrides your ability to meet the basics due to panic attacks and anxiety, then perhaps Valium is required for need fulfillment to ascertain those basics, in which case emotions -- namely, debilitating anxiety -- become important to need satisfaction.
Of course, this all goes back to identifying what your needs are, which is a difficult process as previously stated.
In my experience, anxiety and paranoia become a factor when my focus wanders too far from the basics; status, wealth, etc. For example, I don't fear being without any necessities anywhere on the planet, being homeless, etc; but I go through bouts of fear of other people, professors, social norms. I believe a large part of this is knowledge (i.e. I'm not a yuppie cut off from our animalistic mechanisms of basic survival), and what reinforces what little faith I have in humanity is the fact that information can be shared with little effort.
Perhaps happiness is the ability to subjectively construct a ceiling somewhere inside Maslow's hierarchy of needs. Someone with a lower ceiling might see X as an experience, while someone with a slightly higher ceiling might see it as a necessity.
Thanks. This has been productive![]()