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Finding happiness in 2021

April 6, 2021 by Andrew Marshall 2 Comments

Gloria came across this article recently when she was clearing out a drawer and said, “This is just right for now – you should put it in your blog”. So here it is! It’s from one of our old newsletters that I used to put together – written in July 2004.


Happiness arises – or fades – in the mind

All happiness arises purely in the mind – nowhere else. All problems stem from the mind. Whether we are content, happy or miserable depends on the state of our mind. It is not the outer circumstances that govern how we think and feel, but how we view those circumstances.

Where we go wrong and cause ourselves much pain and grief is by seeking happiness through pleasurable things. As a result, desires and expectations arise like mushrooms, often to be replaced by disappointments when they are not met or do not last.

Good old days, or the best is yet to come?

The tendency of the mind is to look back at past pleasures and happiness and seek to repeat them in the future. It also looks back at past pain, and fears its repetition. So we remain on the treadmill creating a lifetime of highs and lows.

We cannot attain lasting happiness whilst the mind is looking forward or back, nor can we find it outside ourselves. That might seem a tall order but there is an easy solution: live fully aware in the present moment. If we do that, our mind is not imagining the future, nor is it looking back. What is past is past and the future is never certain. As the words of one incisive Buddhist sutra say: The past no longer is and the future has not yet come. Looking deeply at life in the here and now, the person who practises this dwells in stability and freedom.

Happiness could be in a sandwich

How do we live in the present moment? By being aware of what we are doing and not thinking of other things while we are doing it. For example, when eating, our awareness should be on eating what we are eating now, not on what we might be eating in a moment or how it compares to a meal we had last week. It means not having our attention on something else. That may sound difficult but it isn’t really. It takes a little effort to break our bad habits, but once we experience the joy of eating with full awareness, we will not want to do it any other way.

Exactly the same principle applies to all our activity – brushing teeth, walking, writing, driving, having a conversation (yes – listening with full awareness!) and so on. If we practise living in the present moment, we will find without fail that life becomes fuller and richer and our fears will have no fertile ground in which to grow.


Much has happened in the seventeen years since penning this, yet so much is the same. This article was the seed from which my first book The Great Little Book of Happiness grew. I take no credit – it is all based on very old truths, discovered by others much wiser and more eloquent, but if it helps anyone, that’s good.


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Filed Under: Happiness Tagged With: bliss, cause and effect, choice, consciousness, fulfilment, guilt, happiness, impermanence, mind, mindfulness, suffering, wisdom, zen

How’s your Monster Mash?

October 24, 2015 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Our biggest and best creation of all is a true monster. Our most successful masterpiece is a mash-up of characteristics that is at the root of all our problems. We may think it is our friend but our ego is a disaster area and is bad, very bad, for our inner well-being.Monster ego

The ego is not necessarily, or even usually, a matter of big-headedness but is the result of a strengthened sense of “I” which in turn leads to a strong sense of “me” and “mine”. So “I” have “my” property; “I” have “my” standards and reputation; “I” have “my” wants, feelings and emotions. That means “I” have things that can be lost, stolen, damaged or destroyed.

Because the “I” is based on an incorrect view, it is vulnerable. So “I” create a world around “me”, an imaginary world with imaginary boundaries and, like a child playing games, “I” am convinced it is all real. Until I doubt the reality of this world of mine, I go through life pursuing those things that will maintain and even strengthen my imaginary world. Things that threaten my world cause me fear or even anger; when things are lost, I bear disappointment and pain.

But the ego cannot let up and cannot admit failure. It continually builds up new pictures, new desires that, when fulfilled, seem to make everything all right – for a while. Round and round we all go. And it does go on – on and on – until something within us begins to dawn: Uncle Ego isn’t such a good guy. The games he has us playing aren’t making us happy after all.

If we look at the hardship and suffering in the world, with a little reflection we can see that most of it stems from the actions, words and omissions of egos. With crazed minds, people blow each other up because “my” way of life, or “my” religion is the right way and everyone else is wrong. Crime in society is motivated by what “I” want. Economies are out of balance, often resulting in poverty and subject to the whims of the stock markets. Even tensions in families and workplaces arise because of conflicting wants and expectations of many “I’s”. In short, it is the ego that gives rise to all our negative ways of thinking and negative emotions such as pride, anger, hatred, jealousy and greed. It really does have to go.

Adapted from The Great Little Book of Happiness

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Related posts:

  1. It really is a matter of choice
  2. Forgiveness is doing yourself a favour
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Filed Under: Happiness Tagged With: ego, hardship, poverty, selfishness, selflessness, suffering, unhappiness

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