A Quote by Mignon McLaughlin

Many things can make you miserable for weeks; few can bring you a whole day of happiness. — © Mignon McLaughlin
Many things can make you miserable for weeks; few can bring you a whole day of happiness.
Simply to have all the necessities of life and three meals a day will not bring happiness. Happiness is hidden in the unnecessary and in those impractical things that bring delight to the inner person.
Few things are needful to make the wise man happy, but nothing satisfies the fool; - and this is the reason why so many of mankind are miserable.
Why should I bring happiness to those I loathe by obliterating myself, when I can make them miserable just by existing?
You'll see, you'll come to understand. These big things, these terrible things, are not the important ones. If they were, how could one go on living? No, it is the small, little things that make up a day, that bring fullness and happiness to a life.
It is a miserable state of mind to have few things to desire and many things to fear.
Wealth, taste and leisure can bring many things but they do not bring happiness.
I believe compassion to be one of the few things we can practice that will bring immediate and long-term happiness to our lives. I'm not talking about the short-term gratification of pleasures like sex, drugs or gambling (though I'm not knocking them), but something that will bring true and lasting happiness. The kind that sticks.
I mean, happiness is a slippery thing. What makes you happy one day can make you miserable the next.
Money cannot buy happiness, but it can make you awfully comfortable while you're being miserable. Nothing prevents happiness like the memory of happiness.
I have known a few good marriages, but very few. And others look to me like they're pretty miserable. I don't really think that's a recipe for happiness.
I have to feel that I'm going somewhere all the time. By definition, if you have this urge to go places, then you can't be 100 percent happy where you are. It's not like I enjoy being miserable for weeks on end. But I think it's good to be miserable for about one day every third week - that's ideal for me.
Few things are needed to make a wise man happy; nothing can make a fool content; that is why most men are miserable.
When you understand yourself, that very day you have understood the whole of humanity. Then nobody can make you miserable.
I bought me a spy-glass some weeks since. I buy but a few things, and those not till long after I begin to want them, so that when I do get them I am prepared to make a perfect use of them and extract their whole sweet.
Money, if it does not bring you happiness, will at least help you be miserable in comfort.
In 2008, after holding down a day job for all of six weeks, I gave up on the whole job thing to pursue an online business. At the time, I had absolutely no clue what I was doing, but I figured if I was going to be broke and miserable, I might as well be while working on my own terms.
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