Browse through our collection of quotes tagged with Happiness.
Your ability to see beauty and possibility is proportionate to the level at which you embrace gratitude.
Steve Maraboli
Never again will I underestimate the greatness inside of me just because of the hate and limited thinking inside of others.
Dancing and running shake up the chemistry of happiness.
Mason Cooley
We are more interested in making others believe we are happy than in trying to be happy ourselves.
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
We are never so happy nor so unhappy as we imagine.
Our happiness depends on wisdom all the way.
Sophocles
It's no shame in reaching second or third base if you aimed for first base.
Stephen Richards
What we call the secret of happiness is no more a secret than our willingness to choose life.
Leo Buscaglia
Joy comes from using your potential.
Will Schultz
Men can only be happy when they do not assume that the object of life is happiness
George Orwell
The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance; The wise grows it under his feet.
J. Robert Oppenheimer
The secret of happiness and prosperity in this world, as in the world to come, lies in thinking of the welfare of others first, and not taking one's self too seriously.
J. Kindleberger
I'm fulfilled in what I do... I never thought that a lot of money or fine clothes -- the finer things of life -- would make you happy. My concept of happiness is to be filled in a spiritual sense.
Coretta Scott King
Happiness is a conscious choice, not an automatic response.
Mildred Barthel
Happiness comes more from loving than being loved; and often when our affection seems wounded it is only our vanity bleeding. To love, and to be hurt often, and to love again -- this is the brave and happy life.
J.E Buckrose
I can sympathize with people's pains, but not with their pleasures. There is something curiously boring about somebody else's happiness.
Aldous Huxley
Yet, as great joy, especially after a sudden change and revolution of circumstances, is apt to be silent, and dwells rather in the heart than on the tongue...http://www.literaturepage.com/read/tom-jones-914.html
Henry Fielding, The History of T
It is the chiefest point of happiness that a man is willing to be what he is.
Desiderius Erasmus
Happiness includes chiefly the idea of satisfaction after full honest effort. No one can possibly be satisfied and no one can be happy who feels that in some paramount affairs he failed to take up the challenge of life.
Arnold Bennett
I always cheer up immensely if an attack is particularly wounding because I think, well, if they attack one personally, it means they have not a single political argument left.
Margaret Thatcher