Just excuses. You use external things to explain why you are not happy because you do not realise that happiness is a state of mind. An internal thing. It is how you respond to external events which determines your mood, not the events themselves. The funny thing about that is - you decide how you respond. So like I said before, if you want to be happy, decide to be! Simple.
I agree with you, except for the last part: it's simple, yet it takes a life to learn it. So it's not simple at all.
If life is about being happy now, but, let's just say for arguments sake, that you are not happy now - then doesn't it follow that you should strive, kicking and screaming even, to be happy?
No, because that would never bring you happiness. The more you struggle to seize happiness, the more it will escape you (add some trite metaphors about sand in your hand if so inclined). Stop
trying to be happy and
be happy.
So regardless of whether happiness comes to the person after some event in the future or whether it is in "the voyage" now, you seem to be implying that being happy does represent some kind of purpose in life.
I disagree. Happiness is not a purpose. It's a state of mind. A purpose implies a goal, a strategy, a path, a timeline. Happiness is the opposite of that.
However, if we want to discuss accurately, we must be very careful, because we are talking about two different types of "happiness", and it's incorrect to mix them up.
There is
happy-ness, the emotion of being
happy, fleeting and elusive. Beautiful, but addictive: you can only savour a drop of it at any time, and it will be gone before you know it. And then there is Happiness, the state of a complete mind. You can also call it peace, or whatever. Using the usual trite metaphors,
happy-ness is a dropper: you can't have more than one drop at a time; Happiness is the ocean: without beginning and without end, because it is simply
there.
So, going back to your question:
happy-ness can be a purpose, but it's a shallow one. You will be
happy for a moment, but then it's gone. On the other hand, Happiness can
never be a purpose, because by definition you can't
find it: in a sense, you have to be
found by it.
Moreover:
happy-ness can be a way to Happiness, but that's not the rule. As I said (but now I can say it with this new typographic convention) some people are Happy only when they are not
happy.
However, more seriously: I'm just conjuring some interesting stuff I've read about in my years, without much thought and formalism. I don't even really
believe all of it: but I find it very interesting and worth examining. But if you like to discuss philosophy, and especially Eastern Philosophy, there are many people here smarter and more educated than me on this topic that could explain things much better than me. Enjoy!