Words matter. These are the best True Happiness Quotes from famous people such as Tobias Harris, Jon Jones, Kelsang Gyatso, Ellen G. White, Marie Osmond, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I always try to make sure that the workspace that I’m in – the NBA, there’s highs and lows – but I always make sure that I never let the highs and lows truly determine my true happiness as a person.
Just staying healthy, that is true wealth and true happiness.
The purpose of meditation is to make our mind calm and peaceful. If our mind is peaceful, we will be free from worries and mental discomfort, and so we will experience true happiness. But if our mind is not peaceful, we will find it very difficult to be happy, even if we are living in the very best conditions.
Religion will prove to the believer a comforter and a sure guide to the fountain of true happiness.
Being of service to others is what brings true happiness.
Leibniz dedicated his life to efforts to educate people to understand that true happiness is found by locating their identity in benefitting mankind and their posterity.
Whenever you choose power over love, you will never find true happiness.
Real and true happiness is having a relationship with God and not what makes us happy.
It’s good to be happy and tell us how cool your life is and how awesome you are on social media. That’s great because it inspires other people to be happy, too. But a lot of times, people are trying to be happy in the wrong ways – with money or with different things that are not true happiness.
I used to hold a unitary view, in which I proposed that only experienced happiness matters, and that life satisfaction is a fallible estimate of true happiness.
True happiness is… to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future.
If men have easy access to divorce, many will choose it thoughtlessly. They may not gain true happiness with their new trophy wives, but they certainly will not slide into the material indigence and emotional misery that awaits most divorced women.
The only true happiness comes from squandering ourselves for a purpose.
It’s enough to indulge and to be selfish but true happiness is really when you start giving back.
True happiness arises, in the first place, from the enjoyment of one’s self, and in the next, from the friendship and conversation of a few select companions.
True success, true happiness lies in freedom and fulfillment.
All true happiness, pure joy, sweet bounties, and unclouded pleasure are contained within the knowledge and love of God.
True happiness… is not attained through self-gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy purpose.
In my life I’ve learned that true happiness comes from giving. Helping others along the way makes you evaluate who you are. I think that love is what we’re all searching for. I haven’t come across anyone who didn’t become a better person through love.
Happiness, true happiness, is an inner quality. It is a state of mind. If your mind is at peace, you are happy. If your mind is at peace, but you have nothing else, you can be happy. If you have everything the world can give – pleasure, possessions, power – but lack peace of mind, you can never be happy.
People look to time in expectation that it will eventually make them happy, but you cannot find true happiness by looking toward the future.
I honestly believe true happiness lies in lowered expectations. In opening the door to let the air in.
I don’t like the word ‘balance.’ To me, that somehow conjures up conflict between work and family… as long as we think of these things as conflicting, we will never have happiness. True happiness comes from integration… of work, family, self, community.
True happiness comes from the joy of deeds well done, the zest of creating things new.
True refuge is that which allows us to be at home, at peace, to discover true happiness. The only thing that can give us true refuge is the awareness and love that is intrinsic to who we are. Ultimately, it’s our own true nature.
Existence is a strange bargain. Life owes us little; we owe it everything. The only true happiness comes from squandering ourselves for a purpose.
To enjoy good health, to bring true happiness to one’s family, to bring peace to all, one must first discipline and control one’s own mind. If a man can control his mind he can find the way to Enlightenment, and all wisdom and virtue will naturally come to him.
Of all forms of caution, caution in love is perhaps the most fatal to true happiness.
True happiness involves the full use of one’s power and talents.
True happiness consists not in the multitude of friends, but in the worth and choice.