Somewhere along the way, I realized I was chasing something I couldnโt quite hold onto. A fleeting feeling. A short burst of joy. A highlight moment that would disappear as quickly as it arrived. I called it happiness.
But happiness, I learned, is slippery. Itโs often conditionalโ”Iโll be happy when I finish this project,” or “Iโll be happy once I hit that milestone.” And while those highs felt good, they never lasted. The finish line always moved. The bar kept rising.
In contrast, contentment crept in during the quiet moments: sitting under the kotatsu on a cold winter night, sipping tea while snow blanketed the garden; walking through a narrow path in the countryside, camera in hand, no rush to capture anything perfect. Contentment wasnโt loud. It didnโt announce itself. But it stayed longer.
Happiness is a mood. Contentment is a state.
The more I chased happiness, the more I noticed how easily it slipped through my fingers. But when I allowed myself to simply beโto be present, to be grateful, to be stillโcontentment would settle in like an old friend. It didnโt depend on achievements. It didnโt care about external validation. It grew quietly through small, ordinary joys.
Living in Japan taught me that. Here, the changing seasons are a reminder that life isnโt always about chasing the next thingโitโs about noticing whatโs right in front of you. The plum blossoms in late winter. The cicadas buzzing in the summer heat. The crunch of fallen leaves in autumn. None of these shout for attention. Yet they hold something precious: presence.
Iโm not saying donโt aim high or donโt dream big. I still do. But the foundation Iโm building now isnโt made of adrenaline spikes or achievement highs. Itโs made of routines, rituals, and awareness. Itโs morning kriya and evening walks. Itโs FPV flights where I donโt care about getting the perfect shotโIโm just happy I flew.
Thereโs a kind of quiet power in contentment. It doesnโt beg for more. It simply says, “This is enough. I am enough.”
And paradoxically, thatโs when the deepest happiness arrivesโnot chased, but welcomed.
โ
Have you felt the difference between chasing happiness and being content? Iโd love to hear your reflections.








Leave a comment