
Day 135: The Philosophy of Happiness: What Actually Makes Life Good | Dying Every Day
Dying Every Day (Stoicism in a Year) · Perennial Leader Project
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Welcome back to Dying Every Day. This is Day 135.
Most people build happiness like a house on sand—on approval, outcomes, comfort, and conditions. It looks solid when the weather is calm. But when circumstances change—as they always do—the foundation gives way.
Seneca insists the mistake is not bad luck, but bad architecture. “You ask me what is the foundation of a happy life?” he writes. And his answer is not comfort, success, or favorable fortune. It is internal: “a soul that is strong, upright, under control.”
Not a life without trouble—but a soul that can meet trouble without being diminished by it.
Happiness, in this Stoic sense, isn't a mood you just fall into when things go well. It's a foundation—a way of constructing a life that doesn't fall apart when circumstances change.
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