Happiness is not something you achieve. It's not something you do or someplace you get to. Happiness is something you inhabit.
The Constitution guarantees us our rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That's all. It doesn't guarantee our rights to charity.
I learned to accept the audience's happiness for me, which is one of the hardest things for me to learn.
I'm constantly tortured, and that's why I say happiness is irrelevant. Happiness is for children and yuppies.
Clothes are my drug. I love Camden market - I have so many vintage pieces from there it's unbelievable. Clothes are really important to me, they give me that feeling of happiness. I love being a bit free with it all and not giving myself rules.
There are going to be priorities and multiple dimensions of your life, and how you integrate that is how you find happiness.
When you care about people's happiness and productivity, you give them what brings out the best in them and their creativity. And if you give them a choice, they'll say, 'I want an iPhone,' or 'I want a Mac.' We think we can win a lot of corporate decisions at that level.
I should be writing songs about happiness all day long, but a lot of my songs get inspired from that place of unworthiness and shame, which really goes with mental illness.
People look to time in expectation that it will eventually make them happy, but you cannot find true happiness by looking toward the future.
The happiness and peace attained by those satisfied by the nectar of spiritual tranquillity is not attained by greedy persons restlessly moving here and there.
Bosses should sanction the nap rather than expect workers to power on all day without repose. They might even find that workers' happiness - or what management types refer to as 'employee satisfaction results' - might improve.