The happiness that I’m talking about is that deep sense of well-being, comfort—not materialistic comfort but that deep sense of being at home with who and what you are. Occupying that space in a way that’s not dependent on the external environment, that’s not dependent on your Honda or your 65-million-dollar jet or where you live. It’s dependent on being fundamentally OK with who you are—no matter if you are experiencing tragedy, illness, death—you’re always at home with that. And when I’m at home, there’s a sense of spaciousness. So I can be happy at the same time I can be going through rage
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