Description
Pleasure fades. Purpose lasts. Chase the right one. Why chasing pleasure guarantees misery. You are running on a hedonic treadmill that leads nowhere. You chase the next high-the next promotion, the next date, the next purchase-but the joy vanishes instantly. This book explains the science of why pleasure-seeking reliably produces suffering.The problem is adaptation. Your brain normalizes every pleasure. The first bite of chocolate is ecstasy. The twentieth is boring. Your first million feels incredible. Your third feels ordinary. The evolutionary design made sense: satisfied hunters stop hunting.We examine the way out. Not through ascetic denial, but through meaning. Pleasure is fleeting. Purpose is lasting. Learn to distinguish between hedonic happiness (which fades) and eudaimonic happiness (which stays). Stop chasing. Start building.



