Quiet Happiness: Pain, Memory, and the Judgment of Life in Dostoevsky- (2025 in Retrospect)
Note: This text was originally written in Spanish and is presented here in English translation. Introduction Happiness rarely presents itself as a sharply defined event. In most lives, it neither bursts forth nor announces itself; instead, it accompanies the ordinary course of existence in a discreet manner. While pain leaves marks, demands attention, and imprints itself upon memory, happiness often passes silently, as a background condition that sustains without imposing itself. When human beings turn their gaze back upon their own history, they tend to recognize with precision what wounded them, yet struggle to identify those moments when life was, quite simply, in balance. This mismatch between lived experience and retrospective judgment, already formulated in Antiquity, runs through the work of Fyodor Dostoevsky. It allows us to think of happiness not as the absence of suffering, but as something that, precisely because it does not demand to be named, ends up being forgotten....