T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
529.1 | Fulltime happiness means success ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Thu Nov 15 1990 04:29 | 7 |
| Success :== "being able to sleep well EVERY night"
It isn't money, or power, or freedom, by themselves. To me, it's your
personal "mixture" of all of these that makes *you* successful, in
*your* mind. What floats my boat might not float yours .... 8^)
Jerry
|
529.2 | Who knows? | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Thu Nov 15 1990 09:19 | 9 |
| Success is in the eyes of the beholder... my view of success might
totally different from others. Money is nothing by itself, power does
not exist without money, freedom without power or money is hard to find
because we need money for our personal needs (nourishment, clothes,
etc) so, as Jerry said, we need all that plus PEACE OF MIND, SELF
STEEM, HONESTY, and SENSE OF HUMOR to fully enjoy "SUCCESS". A
successful person is not necessarily rich, or anarchist, or religious,
but might have a bit of all... happiness plays a big part into success
and might even intermingle! of course this is my humble opinion...
|
529.3 | | ASABET::RAINEY | | Thu Nov 15 1990 09:26 | 9 |
| Ditto the first two. Each person usually has their own ideal
of what they consider to be a success. Some people define
their successes in terms of what they've accomplished/gained
in matierial goods, others use more "spiritual" type of measurement.
Basically, it comes down, IMO to keeping your peace of mind and
knowing you have chosen the right path for you.
Christine
|
529.4 | speaking as a die-hard hedonist | TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Thu Nov 15 1990 10:05 | 10 |
| Very simple: success=happiness. If you aren't happy, you aren't
successful. If you are happy, you are successful. If what it takes to
make you happy is lots of money, then success means lots of money; if
what it takes is a big family, or a job you enjoy, or devoting your
life to God, then those are the measures of success. But it all comes
back to happiness.
D! who is always sucessful in whatever she does, regardless of how well
she does them, because she is always happy
|
529.5 | ...and the wisdom | MR4DEC::HAROUTIAN | | Thu Nov 15 1990 10:41 | 4 |
| Success is the serenity to accept what I cannot change, the courage to
change what I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
Lynn
|
529.6 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | but you're *french* vanilla... | Thu Nov 15 1990 10:49 | 13 |
| Success is respect, it's when people come to you for your opinion in
your areas of expertise, it's when you have the rank, title, and money
that are appropriate for your expertise.....but that's all got to do
with work.
Success as a human being is the feeing that you've done your life as
well as you could, you make decisions toward the good side of karma,
you help people when and where you can, you have friends that care
about you and trust you and respect you, and you can look forward to
each day and the wonders it will bring, even if they're little ones...
-Jody
|
529.7 | The secret of MY SUCCESS!!! | NYEM1::COHEN | at least I'm enjoyin' the ride | Thu Nov 15 1990 14:21 | 7 |
| Success is being at peace...with yourself, with your family, with your
friends, with your lovers, and with those people around who are
different than you are.
Jill
|
529.8 | | FRAGLE::WASKOM | | Thu Nov 15 1990 14:30 | 17 |
| My mom told me, after my Dad's 40th high school reunion (I think), that
she was intrigued by how much the definition of "success" had changed
among that group of men over the years. And how, as the definitions
had broadened and the men had become more accepting of their choices,
how more and more of them had turned up at the reunions. Early on,
their definitions had dealt with the dollars they earned and their
relative position within the work world's hierarchy. Later, they
started to look at the "happiness" and "contributing" measures of
success.
For me, success comes in doing what I do well. In being a force for
positive viewpoints and optimistic expectations. In encouraging
myself and others to make the most of their abilities and talents. In
embracing the wonder and diversity of us all, and in the world around
us.
Alison
|
529.9 | Like a constant purr | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Nov 15 1990 16:09 | 11 |
| Success is feeling that "thrum" of satisfaction underlying your
every feeling and thought, behind your every deed and rest from
a deed.
Others may call this "happiness" or "being at peace". That's fine;
we've said the same thing. I haven't used those terms (this time)
because for me for myself, the term "happiness" seems to refer to
something more, um, superficial than what I mean, and the term
"being at peace" sounds too passive.
Ann B.
|
529.10 | never regret | TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Thu Nov 15 1990 16:32 | 28 |
| >Success is feeling that "thrum" of satisfaction underlying your every
>feeling and thought, behind your every deed and rest from a deed.
Thrum. Yeah, I like that. That's what I meant by happiness.
----
My best friend has a slightly different perspective. Her goal for her
life (and the measure by which she judges its success) is this: to
experience in life constant contentness, punctuated by frequent periods
of ecstacy.
mere happiness isn't enough, she must have experiences she calls
"ecstatic". This doesn't mean just physical ecstacy, like sex or
something, but experiences so amazing and mindboggling that they are
akin to an "emotional orgasm". From eatting the most incredibly
chocolate cake she's ever tasted, to the feeling of free-fall when you
jump out of a plane, to falling in love, etc.
Her goal is a variation on mine (or mine on hers) which is...the
measure of the successfulness of my life is how many things i can look
back on and say "Damn, I'm glad I did that!"
Her philosophy, and mine, tie into the "touchstone" which says "You
will never regret the things you *did* do so much as you will regret
the ones you didn't."
D!
|
529.11 | hmmmm | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Mon Nov 19 1990 12:59 | 72 |
| RE:
> My best friend has a slightly different perspective. Her goal for her
> life (and the measure by which she judges its success) is this: to
> experience in life constant contentness, punctuated by frequent periods
> of ecstacy.
>
> mere happiness isn't enough, she must have experiences she calls
> "ecstatic". This doesn't mean just physical ecstacy, like sex or
> something, but experiences so amazing and mindboggling that they are
> akin to an "emotional orgasm". From eatting the most incredibly
> chocolate cake she's ever tasted, to the feeling of free-fall when you
> jump out of a plane, to falling in love, etc.
I'll take a stab at an alternate view. For me, it is important to be
centered and aware no matter what the external cirmunstances are. So
if the situation has a happy feeling with it, then that's fine. If
the situation has a sad, or angry feeling, then that's fine too. My
faith is that in cultivating just this present moment, then all the
other stuff will take care of itself. That means knowing what to do,
how to act, how to respond to each moment with compassion for all. It
is a fairly difficult thing in my experience. But when it happens, it
is a wonderful thing.
I'm too old different experience that is out there. When does it end? One can
spend one's whole life pursuing pleasure but it can not always be a
pleasureable feeling or circumstances, can it? I mean, there is
always suffering, old age, and death awaiting us.
So, a different question is what can I contribute??? That is for me
the interesting question. And when one has a great thrill or great
pleasure, doesn't the mind want to hold on it, to want to capture and
keep it? And then you are unhappy when the expereince is no longer
there? Sure, I'll take what comes my way, I like pleasure but some of
the most important things I've learned have come out of so-called
negitive situations. Every moment has very important message for us
in my view. Only we're not really listening most of the time.
Nowadays I am the most "happy" when being of service to others and
not when seeking to satisfy my own self-centered desires. Now the 5%
of the time when I can actually do this feels great but what about the
other 95% of time when I'm being a dink or a pain to someone else?
Of course, now I want to capture this feeling all the time so I am
unhappy when I can not be of service all the time!!! ;-) In never
ends, does it, this mind that is always chasing after things, seeking
securuty, permanance, safetly, unchanging pleasure and avoiding "bad"
feelings? Probally I need to throw away this idea of being of service
and just do it!
What is success? A pre-conceived idea about how I SHOULD be? And
when I compare myself with this idea, I get a happy feeling and when I
compare and I don't measure up, an unhappy feeling arises? I'd like
to throw it all out! All ideas about what should be? In awareness of
this very moment, what to do is clear!!! No need for an
post-experiencal idea about it! And aren't be trained from an early
age with all kinds of ideas about what sucess is? And it's different
for men and women, isn't it? For men, its success, power, and status,
sexual power and all kinds of things? On the side, we are somehow
also supposed to be a "good person". How that is possible with all
these other goals in not clear to me. Now people reject the standard
view of success and make up different systems. The hippie culture has
a different one, different "alternate" religions have different ones,
different subcultures, political communities, everyone has a different
idea ob it. But I think underneath all this stuff, we all know what
to do and we don't even have to think about it or have a lot of ideas
about it. For me, getting in this mode is a question of queiting down
the mind, there are other methods. So, I wish everyone well in
finding out their job in life is.
john
|
529.12 | give me life on the edge | TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Mon Nov 19 1990 16:05 | 22 |
| A thought...
John points out that one cannot have happiness all the time - that
sadness and hurt exist. This is true. And this may seem very bizarre,
but I get happiness from unhappiness...
Wait, wait, it isn't emotional masochism...or, maybe it is, in the
sense of the word I use. I enjoy *strength* of emotion - make me happy
or make me sad, just don't make me bored. I am most *me* when I feel
*alive* - emotion makes me feel alive, regardless of the exact nature
of the emotion.
So while I prefer pleasure to pain, I prefer pain to neutrality. In
the end, I don't regret experiences that cause me pain...I regret a
lack of experiences that cause me nothing.
I think life is a sine wave...there are ups and downs. You can vary
the frequency and the amplitude, but in the end, it always averages to
zero. I like my life the best when it has a high frequency and a high
amplitude.
D!
|
529.13 | Agreed | ARCHER::CAMPBELL_K | Letting go, with love | Mon Nov 19 1990 16:22 | 14 |
| D!
I agree with you. I very much enjoy feeling the full range of
emotions. I have often taken comfort in my pain. But never
really understood why, or was able to either admit or explain it.
If you listen to the Carly Simon song Give Me All Night, it touches
upon that concept. There's a line that says something like "And if
I cry, my tears'll fill a waterfall"
That's me!
Kim
|
529.14 | Roller Coaster of Life! | SUBWAY::FORSYTH | LAFALOT | Mon Nov 19 1990 16:32 | 11 |
| D!
I agree with you, and what you siad reminded me of a conversation I
had with a friend of mine a few years ago. I was arguing for a "wavy"
life as opposed to an "even" life, and my friend prefered the "even".
I said she was crazy - that's too boring. Pain is not enjoyable
to me at the time (even though I am "alive" with emotion) but it
makes the good times even better.
Laf
|
529.15 | Opposites | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Mon Nov 19 1990 18:07 | 7 |
| Re: Last few
I agree too! In my philosophy pleasure is born from pain, peace is
born from conflict and life is born from death. IMO you can't truly
experience one without the other.
Mary
|
529.16 | another view | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Mon Nov 19 1990 18:36 | 7 |
|
really?
gee, i'm as much of a fan of true, intense emotion as the next guy.
but i'm not sure i'd elevate that to a philosophy of 'pleasure is
born from pain' etc. i'm inclined to think that it's quite possible
to come to serenity without going by way of conflict.
|
529.17 | Hurting is Part of Growing | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Mon Nov 19 1990 22:16 | 10 |
| It's hard to find great blues singers who have never had any reason
to sing the blues.
My most interesting friends are those who have graduated with me; from
the school of hard knocks. Live and learn. I don't find that plastic
bubbles, although warm and lovely, create an enviromnent of interesting
conversation and depth of spirit.
Kate
|
529.18 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Nov 20 1990 08:56 | 11 |
| re .16, I agree with you Joe. I'd rather keep my intense emotions on
the happy side.
I never really wanted to sing the blues anyway. :-)
Lorna
P.S. I also can't help but wonder if people who think pain, misery and
unhappiness is necessary for a full life, have ever really experienced
it.... Just a thought....
|
529.20 | an additional thought... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Nov 20 1990 11:26 | 21 |
| re .19, to me, that's just making the best of things, something we
should all do in order to remain happy, sane people. I agree that we
are all the sum of our experiences (as a friend mentioned to me
recently in a mail conversation), and I don't regret certain possible
mistakes I may have made, or negative experiences because of this.
But, I still wouldn't go so far as to say that I hope for future pain
so that future happiness will be all the more sweet! Of course, that
doesn't mean that I won't take any chances either.
I realize that I have known some wonderful people who may have had
certain negative experiences that contributed to making them be the
people they are today. But, there are also serial killers and mass
murderers and child abusers who had previous negative experiences, as
well. I don't think we can be assured that just because someone feels
pain, or experiences tragedy that they will be a better person because
of it. I would still rather a world where people didn't have to suffer
(in the supposed hope that they may turn out to be better people in the
long run).
Lorna
|
529.21 | You don't know what you've got till its gone! | SUBWAY::FORSYTH | LAFALOT | Tue Nov 20 1990 11:55 | 11 |
| When I say I prefer a "wavy" life, (i.e. with pain) I am talking about
pain that come from living..but not real tragedy caused by a murderer
etc. I suppose I should qualify that by saying that I think "pain" is
necessary to enjoy the good times. NOT that painful times should be as
frequent as good time (or neutral ones either), just there enough to
remind us to be thankful for the good ones....
You never really appreciate good health until you lose it for a while!
Laf
|
529.22 | Make hay while the sun shines | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Tue Nov 20 1990 12:41 | 13 |
| Re:20
I don't hope for future pain, but when pain comes my way, as I know it
will, I view it as an opportunity for growth as opposed to a time for
regrets. I don't wish for storms, but when they come I am strengthened
by weathering the storm and not letting it batter me about. When the
storm is over, I can enjoy the sunshine better without having to spend
time licking my wounds after being battered by the storm. In fact,
I consider this to be one of the most important things I've learned in
life so far, because I didn't used to have this attitude. I wasted a
lot of time licking my wounds.
Mary
|
529.23 | a different theory wrt pain and pleasure | TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Tue Nov 20 1990 13:18 | 29 |
| To clarify...
My view on life pain wrt success is not (as other people have stated)
that you must have pain to appreciate pleasure, or the greater the pain
you live through, the more you appreciate the pleasure...
Rather, I feel that for every pleasure there is a pain. That is not
something good, nor bad...it just is, like gravity and taxes. One can
hope for pleasure or hope for pain to your hearts content, but the law
of the sine wave is unalterable.
My point is that I (and I have no idea if other people experience life
this way) enjoy all strong emotions, whether "negative" (pain) or
"positive" (pleasure). I prefer pleasure, don't get me wrong. But the
truth is (I believe) that each pleasure comes with pain, and that life
becomes much better if you can learn to enjoy the pain, too.
I don't believe that my pain makes my pleasure "more" pleasureable...in
fact, it might even make it less, with the awareness of possible
impending pain.
(As an example of taking "pleasure" from pain - ever had a really good
cry? I mean, the kind you throw your whole self into, where you cry
from your gut and soul? You are crying because you are in pain...but
just the act of crying, of the sheer *strength* of your emotion is
somehow uplifiting. Then again, maybe I'm the only one who has
experienced this.)
D!
|
529.24 | sine off | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Tue Nov 20 1990 13:58 | 18 |
| This is a great topic! (Although it may have gotten slightly off topic)
I love hearing different perspectives on how people experience their
emotions.
I guess I can't identify with D! on actually enjoying a good cry. I
never enjoy the pain, it really does hurt. For a good part of my life
I experienced mostly pain or non pain. I found it difficult to
actually experience pleasure with the same intensity as I experienced
pain. I think this is called anhedonia. It may sound odd to some, but
that's how I experienced my emotions. I found I was able to experience
higher intensity of pleasure by changing my attitude about pain.
I guess you could say my sine wave had dropped below the x-axis and I
had to bring it up to where the peaks are positive and the valleys are
negative.
Mary
|
529.25 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Tue Nov 20 1990 15:41 | 59 |
| Well, I am going to try a different tack on the pain/pleasure thing
that may encompass all the viewpoints.
In my view, there's very likely going to be pain, suffering, boredom.
anger, greed, desire, and sadness in your life. And also there will
be pleasure, happiness, contentedness, joy. You can't get out of the
pain part because we all get our share (if only on the physical
level). I try to focus on my relationship with these different
things. My faith is that in examining my relationships with these
different feelings and really being with these things, that the right
action will be apparent on whether to change my situation or not. In
my experience, I (and others) spend a lot of time running away from
the so-called bad things (by denial or projection for example) and
trying to hold on to and capture the so-called good experiences (which
doesn't seem to work either). What I'm interested in an acceptance
(in the sense of not running away from) of every moment, every
situation and the faith is that what to do will (or not to do) will
become apparent.
I think this is what so-called centerness is all about. Have you seen
people with this quality? They seem to experience their emotions
directly but they don't make a big problem out of them. I think that
the problem comes in when we analyze, theorize, and generally try to
outthink our current situation. What has been helpful to me to is
take a deep breath and just experience what is happening before trying
to force my thoughts on the present situation and reality.
So, anyways, I try to examine my relationships with these emotions.
Hopefully, pain is OK, pleasure is OK, boredom is OK and what to do
becomes clear when there is some spaciousness in the mind for the
possibilities in things before I get all carried away in my thoughts
which have a tendency to trigger more emotions etc and pretty soon I'm
reacting from habit. Do you know what I mean? It's like you may as
well be watching yourself do things, there is no possibility of a new
and fresh response which this moment, which is totally different and
unique from all others, may offer.
It's interesting to me to try this principle out and see it in action.
It's really wonderful to see what can happen when there is space to do
things freshly. When reactions are programmed in so strong, you can
see what happens, no? People get locked into conflicts and can't
escape. There is no room for escape because thought and feelings are
intertwined in a hard mass. So, one sentance and the reaction has
already formed in the mind and the response seems automatic. But if
it is slowed down, then maybe there is, in fact, room from something
new.
Anyways, I guess we've gotten way off the topic of success. Here's
an interesting question I like to ask myself. How much of what I view
of success is conditioning that I've gotten (like make good money, be
secure, get married, have kids) and how much is really what comes from
my own direction and intuitive sense of what needs to be done. I
guess not everyone is interested in such things and accepts the social
norms but I find it to be quite interesting and want to start from
scratch, to examine everything and find out what is left when the
onion of social conditioning is peeled off.
john
|
529.26 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Tue Nov 20 1990 18:03 | 10 |
| re: .25
It sounds like you described pain avoidance, pleasure seeking and
centeredness, but I think there is something else you may have
overlooked -- passivity. A defeated state of inactivity where pleasure
is not sought nor is pain avoided. Funny thing is, pain finds you
whether you look for it or not. Pleasure doesn't usually work that
way.
Mary
|
529.27 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sun Nov 25 1990 19:56 | 11 |
| The Zen view (and one that I share) is that without darkness there is
no light, withought evil there can be no good, and that in any light
there is a little darkness. That is the reason that the Yin-yang is
dual dark and light, and the dark has a spot of light in it, and the
light has a spot of dark in it.
"Heaven is a place where nothing ever happens."
The Talking Heads
-- Charles
|
529.28 | still circling | POETIC::LEEDBERG | Justice and License | Mon Nov 26 1990 11:00 | 40 |
|
(I am still here - for now anyway)
This discussion about pain and pleasure, joy and sadness and
good and evil, reminds me that most of western thought and for
that matter some of eastern throught is wrapped up in the
concept of a dichotomy of entities. That is that there are
ones and zeros - and that is all. Yes I know that we all will
acknowledge the grey areas but we really don't think that way.
We think up or down or right or left or male or female.
Where in truth we all know that this is not so, that infact
the grey areas are the most interesting and the most plentiful,
it is not clear to me why we continue to use the dichotomy as
the basis.
I am going to take John's idea about centerness one step further
and speak from my experience.
To me centerness is living, be-ing, knowing that one is in
the grey area and that only rarely does one get to be at a point
of clarity. One should cherish those rare moments, for soon one
is back into the greys again. Then one is able to recognize
that one is part of the process and not the purpose of the
process. This is centerness.
On a lighter topic: about taking the package or not, I am looking
at all my options, I am evaluating everthing, I am doing research
(you know all the up front work) and when it comes time to decide
I will flip a coin (and will keep flipping it until I get the
answer I want).
_peggy
(-)
|
Trust in the goddess is trust in myself
Only I know what is best for me
|
529.30 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | another friend of Dr. Bob's | Mon Nov 26 1990 13:11 | 4 |
| Congratulations! eagles! It takes a great deal of skill to shoot well,
and even more love to do it for a loss! (*8
E Grace
|
529.31 | false dichotomy | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Mon Nov 26 1990 13:28 | 5 |
|
re:.28
yes, peggy! it's this overwhelming 'either or' mentality that makes
me suspicious.
|
529.33 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the odd get even | Mon Nov 26 1990 14:02 | 6 |
| Way to go, Eagles!
And what a great flick to choose to go see....
-Jody
|
529.34 | So it was a good weekend... | ROOK::GLEESON | Ms. Dvorak | Mon Nov 26 1990 17:18 | 5 |
| re .32...
Does 2nd place count as success too? :)
|
529.36 | How do *you* measure success? | NETMAN::BASTION | I don't bite, I just growl a lot | Tue Nov 27 1990 09:42 | 11 |
| re .34
Sure, if that achievement is a success for *you*. (If you had never
placed before, and then achieved 2nd place, that would be quite an
accomplishment.)
It all depends on how you measure success.
Judi
|
529.37 | not the whole story, but definitely a component | TLE::RANDALL | Where's the snow? | Thu Jan 10 1991 17:25 | 7 |
| Getting my first novel published.
And then the second one.
And then having someone actually *buy* it!
--bonnie
|
529.38 | Not another one! | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jan 11 1991 09:49 | 3 |
| Not the whole story? You mean it's a trilogy?!
Ann B. :-)
|
529.39 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Fri Jan 11 1991 10:03 | 5 |
|
re .37:
Whoa, Bonnie! Good stuff! Congrats.
|
529.40 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Fri Jan 11 1991 13:24 | 1 |
| But what's it called so we'll know what to look for??? liesl
|
529.41 | patience, children | TLE::RANDALL | Where's the snow? | Fri Jan 11 1991 17:14 | 8 |
| It ain't published yet, so don't hold your breath. Be assured
that should the thing be accepted (I'm finishing the first draft
now) you-all will be the first to know.
In fact, you won't be able to hold me down.
--b
|