Ananda
आनन्द (ananda)
Bliss - not fleeting pleasure but the fullness said to be inherent in the nature of reality itself.
Ananda is often translated simply as bliss or happiness, but the word in its classical use describes something distinct from ordinary pleasure, which depends on circumstance and is always temporary.
In Vedantic thought, ananda is one of three qualities said to characterize ultimate reality itself, alongside being (sat) and consciousness (chit). It is not something acquired from outside but is described as already inherent, obscured rather than absent, in the same way clarity is obscured by clouds rather than destroyed by them.
This distinction matters for practice: a happiness pursued as an acquisition, dependent on getting the right circumstances, is fundamentally different from a fullness understood as already present and simply uncovered. The second is considerably more stable, since it does not depend on circumstance holding still.