Don’t seek joy, C. S. Lewis says, rather focus on beauty outside you, and joy will find you:
I smuggled in the assumption that what I wanted was a ‘thrill,’ a state of my own mind. And there lies the deadly error. Only when your whole attention and desire are fixed on something else –- whether a distant mountain, or the past, or the gods of Asgard –- does the ‘thrill’ arise. It is a byproduct. Its very existence presupposes that you desire not it but something other and outer.
(Quoted from page 162 of Surprised by Joy, by C. S. Lewis. Harcourt Brace, 1955.)
For a brief biography of C. S. Lewis, click here. For images of or relating to C. S. Lewis, click here.
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