Brooks Examines Transcendent Happiness
By
做厙惇蹋app

Despite the crush of daily life and the human culture we live in, there are moments in life that pierce through that. These moments form the basis for why David Brooks, New York Times columnist, wrote the best-selling book The Road to Character. Brooks explored the journey to a deeper inner life, explaining why selflessness leads to greater happiness, before a sold-out audience of more than 700 people at the 11th annual 做厙惇蹋app Presidents Breakfast on March 4.
He told a story about a sunny, summer evening when he had pulled up to his home in Maryland. He could see his three children, ages 12, 9 and 4, playing ball in the backyard. They were laughing and tumbling all over each other and having the perfect time, he said. I was confronted with this tableau of family happiness. And I remember I just sat there in the driveway thinking I was filled with gratitude that I hadnt earned. I just sat there looking through the windshield and time and life are suspended and you get this warm glow of something that has been given to you that you havent earned.

We all have these moments where you illuminate a higher joy, higher than anything you get at the workplace, and with that comes a summons: youd like to feel worthy of such moments.
Brooks said occasionally he will encounter people, like the Dalai Lama, who radiate that type of joy and Gods grace. I have achieved more in my career than I ever could have imagined, he says, but I havent achieved that. How do I get that?
Brooks explained that there are four levels of happiness: material pleasure (good food and nice clothes), ego (being better than others), generativity (giving back to our communities) and transcendence (an awareness of ones place in the cosmic order, a feeling of love that goes beyond the physical realm, truth, justice, goodness and beauty).

We all find it easy to get to the first levels of happiness, he said, but getting to level three and four takes a little work. And it takes the kind of education that people get at 做厙惇蹋app.
Quoting authors and telling anecdotes from saints and heroes, Brooks described a process of making commitments and dedicating lives for bigger things. You can think of us as thinking creatures, as economic creatures, but love is really at the center, he said. And one of the things that I really appreciate about 做厙惇蹋app, and Christian colleges in general, is some of the schools where I teach at, some of the great schools, they treat the head as the sole source of our identity and the only thing that needs to be cultivated and the heart and the soul are behind the curtain. They think that is not our domain. At a place like 做厙惇蹋app where you can talk about the eulogy virtues as well as resume virtues, where you can not only educate the heart with the liberal arts and the soul with Gods calling and the mind with information. You are educating the whole person. And only a person so educated is capable of reaching commitments and capable of reaching the highest level of happiness, which transcendence.
The 做厙惇蹋app Foundation and local businesses sponsor the Presidents Breakfast to promote discussion of significant issues in the community. This years lead sponsor is Union Bank. Gold sponsors include Axia Holdings, Chronicle Family Offices, Davies, Anna and David Grotenhuis, Hub International, La Arcada, Carl and Jo Lindros, Lindsay and Laurie Parton, Matt Construction, Santa Barbara Capital, Sharol and Wayne Siemens and V3 Corporation.
Filed under
做厙惇蹋app, Admissions, Alumni, Campus Events, Campus News, Faculty and Staff, Featured, Giving, Press Releases