Happiness,
to me is an outward expression of an inward emotion. True happiness is letting
the joy, fear, hope, and sadness of life flow from the inside outward. It’s raw
but its real and that’s what makes it beautiful.
Our
spiritual journey does not start with a clean slate. We carry with us a
prepackaged set of values and preconceived ideas which, unless confronted and
redirected, will soon scuttle our journey, or else turn it into pharisaism, the
occupational hazard of religious and spiritual people.
The
developmental character of human life has become much better known in the last
hundred years, and it has enormous implications for the spiritual journey. Our
personal histories are computerized, so to speak, in the bio-computers of our
brains and nervous systems. Our memory banks have on file everything that
occurred from the womb to the present, especially memories with strong
emotional charges.
We
may not remember the events of early childhood, but the emotions do. When
events occur later in life that resemble those once felt to be harmful,
dangerous, or rejecting, the same feelings surface. The human heart is
designed for unlimited happiness - for limitless truth and for limitless love -
and nothing less can satisfy. We travel down various roads that promise
happiness but can't provide it because they are only partial goods. Since the
emotional programs from early childhood are already in place, our search for
happiness in adult life tends to be programmed by child-like expectations that
cannot possibly be realized.
We
come now to the heart of the problem of the human condition. Jesus addressed
this problem head-on in the gospel. What was his first word when beginning his
ministry? "Repent." To repent is not to take on afflictive penances
like fasting, vigils, flagellation or whatever else appeals. It means to change
the direction in which you are looking for happiness.
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