The natural state of the consciousness is in Eden, which is Hebrew for "bliss." In Sanskrit, this is Nirvana, which means "cessation" of suffering. When we have no desire for pleasure we naturally abide in happiness and contentment, enjoying all the benefits of being.
"The secret of the happiness of the Inner God of each creature consists in the relationship of him with himself... The correct divine state is, beyond all doubt, that of supreme happiness, desire, and sexual enjoyment which remains invariable through the Aeons and which comes from the relationship of the divinity with itself... At the most distant extremity, the seven cosmos that shine gloriously in infinite space entwine sexually... Why should the Microcosm man be an exception? He and She always adore each other... You know this... Therefore, sexual enjoyment is a legitimate right of humans and comes as we have already said from the relationship of divinity with itself. In other words, we emphasize transcendental reality by saying that sexual enjoyment is terribly divine." - Samael Aun Weor, The Mystery of the Golden Blossom
Pleasure or enjoyment is not the problem. The problem is in our psychological relationship with pleasure.
"Pleasure never endures long enough, this is why the thirst for pleasure is the ailment that makes the intellectual animals most pitiable." - Samael Aun Weor, Fundamental Education
"Whosoever has awakened the consciousness lives awake in the Superior Worlds. We feel the mystical beatitude of the ineffable Light while in the supra-sensible worlds. Then, the past, the present, and the future harmonize within an eternal Now. There is no better pleasure than feeling one’s soul detached. Then we taste the divine nectar of eternity, and we enter through the doors of the temples filled with joy and amidst the ineffable melodies of the great mysteries." - Samael Aun Weor, The Aquarian Message
“Nothing is easier than self-deceit. For what each man wishes, that he also believes.” —Demosthenes
"Do not worry; cultivate the habit of being happy." —Samael Aun Weor