To attain success, everyone has a purpose of life. The purpose motivates us to achieve a goal, and when the goal is reached we enjoy a momentary happiness and go on to reach other goals. Unfortunately, this process is never ending. To attain the ultimate satisfaction, we run every day without taking note of the small things in life. Basically, life follows an algorithm; a set of steps that are followed to obtain your expected results. We are born, go to school, go to college, get a degree, get a job and attain satisfaction through our children. Despite the fact that the process seems mundane, it is practical. Through this system of reckoning, where do people find happiness? I know many of my friends go searching for happiness in malls. They adore the pleasant endorphins they get from buying a new pair of shoes. To be honest, I feel the same way. However, the pleasure is evanescent. After I come back home from the mall with my new pair of shoes, I would be disappointed why I didn’t buy the red sweater on sale. Eventually, when I get that red sweater, I would not be satisfied by the fact that it eluded my expectations. The buying cycle continues, and at the end, I would have paid for items that did not reciprocate the happiness I
To attain success, everyone has a purpose of life. The purpose motivates us to achieve a goal, and when the goal is reached we enjoy a momentary happiness and go on to reach other goals. Unfortunately, this process is never ending. To attain the ultimate satisfaction, we run every day without taking note of the small things in life. Basically, life follows an algorithm; a set of steps that are followed to obtain your expected results. We are born, go to school, go to college, get a degree, get a job and attain satisfaction through our children. Despite the fact that the process seems mundane, it is practical. Through this system of reckoning, where do people find happiness? I know many of my friends go searching for happiness in malls. They adore the pleasant endorphins they get from buying a new pair of shoes. To be honest, I feel the same way. However, the pleasure is evanescent. After I come back home from the mall with my new pair of shoes, I would be disappointed why I didn’t buy the red sweater on sale. Eventually, when I get that red sweater, I would not be satisfied by the fact that it eluded my expectations. The buying cycle continues, and at the end, I would have paid for items that did not reciprocate the happiness I