The theme of our gathering on Sunday 8 May was “Happiness –
Don’t let it get you down”.
So we looked at various definitions of happiness, starting
with the Hellenistic Epicurean, Sceptic and Stoic schools of philosophy. In essence, Epicureans defined happiness in
terms of experiencing pleasure; Sceptics, in terms of honour, in terms of
living according to conscience; and Stoics, in terms of evenness of flow of
life, i.e. no exaggerated elation or exaggerated disappointment.
We were invited to contemplate in our period of silence how we
personally describe or define happiness.
And we were invited to consider that every path cannot be smooth all the
time, and, rather than detracting from it, the rough patches actually
enrich the overall human experience via poignancy. As an illustration
of this we heard from the closing chapters of The
Return of the King by J. R. R. Tolkien, a man who knew suffering first-hand
from his experiences of the Great War.
He was able to write the memorable words, “I will not say: do not weep; for not all tears are an evil.”
We sang the tune of Amazing Grace but to some words speaking
to the changing seasons, the river merging with the sea, birth and death, and each
verse closing with the words “Though never twice the same”. Our gathering ended with
the blessing below:
“May the Great Tree spread above you,
And the River run on through you,
May the Star shine soft upon you,
And bathe you in its splendour,
Unto the edge of day.”