It seems very hard for humans to accept things as they are. We tend to see ourselves as fixers and view our lives and the world as a set of problems to be solved. That's what progress is all about. Everything can and must be improved. Much misery comes this way.
'The universe is sacred. You cannot improve it. If you try to change it, you will ruin it' (Dao De Ching). This kind of thing doesn't go down well with most people. The other Krishnamurti (U.G.) believed that the human self was composed of nothing but the demand to bring about change in itself and the world. One interpretation of the Adam and Eve myth is that eating the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was precisely this: deciding to change things according to ideas of good and bad. Now we're back to having preferences.
Don't we always give life our best shot? In the relative world of comparisons we cannot avoid measuring our lives against hypothetical alternatives but don't we always simply do what we can at the time? Is it even the case that 'we' do anything at all, or do 'we' simply claim ownership of things done? The older I get the more it seems to me that this is so. It isn't a popular view because it seems to rob us of a sense of self-determination without which we may believe our lives to be void and meaningless, but I don't think it does. It's the tyranny of a self that is somehow thought to be master of its own destiny that strikes me as horrific. You can't win in the game of success and failure. The Zen master Lin Chi talked of the person of 'no rank' inside us all. We can't escape the dimension of rank, but it's there that we suffer. Perhaps the secret of lasting happiness is to find that person of no rank, for whom success and failure are meaningless fictions.
Very nice post. I was at my meditation group last w/e, and we were talking about this - that when we were young, there was this fierce determination to achieve, which in the case of meditation, meant getting somewhere, that is not here!
Anywho, I have wandered the highways and byways about this for decades, and remembered Lenin's great question, 'what is to be done?', and I thought that there is nothing to be done. Of course, sometimes there is, just to be awkward. Ego and no ego.
Also, Shaker's point about not minding about happiness and unhappiness, I think this is very relevant, and seems to arrive with great age! You can't expect anyone under 50 to think like this, except unusual people.