Matthieu Ricard is helping us redefine happiness in a culture convinced that it’s a passive experience. The French-born Tibetan Buddhist monk reframes happiness not as pleasure but as practice that requires discipline — akin to marathon training or learning chess. He asks, “What are the inner conditions that foster a genuine sense of flourishing, of fulfillment?”
Ricard is the author of “Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life’s Most Important Skill” and “Altruism: The Power of Compassion to Change Yourself and the World.”
Find the transcript at onbeing.org.
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The Universe Participates in the Mystery of God | Guy Consolmagno and George Coyne
I Feel, Therefore I Am | Eve Ensler
We Reclaim Abandoned Spaces | Shane Claiborne
We Choose Our Own Tribes | Seth Godin
Spirituality Is Enfolded Into the Act of Living | Sylvia Boorstein
The Good in the Other, the Doubt in Ourselves | Frances Kissling
The Inner World Is a Great, Undiscovered Terrain | Pico Iyer
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The Paradox of Suffering and Love | Kate Braestrup
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The Hidden Hand of the Equations | Brian Greene
The Desire to Know Each Other | Elizabeth Alexander
Compassion for Our Bodies | Matthew Sanford
Beauty Is an Edge of Becoming | John O'Donohue
Mapping Meaning in a Digital Age | Maria Popova
Courage Is Born from Struggle | Brené Brown
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