Joy, Pleasure, and Happiness

The House of Feeling!
Joy, Pleasure, and Happiness are not interchangeable—they are siblings in the house of feeling, each with its own rhythm and role.
Pleasure is sensory and immediate, often sparked by external stimuli. It is fleeting, surface-level, like a sip of cold water on a hot day—refreshing, but momentary.
Joy is spontaneous and radiant, often shared. It bursts forth like a child’s laughter, illuminating the soul for a brief, brilliant moment.
Happiness, by contrast, is reflective and stable. It arises from within, sustained over time, like a well-tended garden that blooms through quiet care and intention.
Pleasure flickers, joy dances, happiness glows steady. Together, they form the architecture of emotional life—a trio of candles lighting the house of feeling.

Yet most of us remain distant from these feelings—not because they are rare, but because we chase them wrongly.
We confuse pleasure with joy and end up overstimulated but undernourished.
We seek happiness as a destination, not a discipline.
Most of all, we treat these feelings as rewards, when they are really companions. They walk beside those who move with intention, simplicity, and reverence.

Yes to this, well said.
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