In line with the previous section this deals with the problems arising from the bizarre conceptual construct of “a happy life” or “a happy ending” or anything of that ilk. The idea that the goal of your life is to be happy, to win, to triumph over what odds were set you, take or earn what you wanted and deserved or achieve whatever it was you were supposed to achieve and bask in the glow of your happy life.
We see and hear this pervasive attitude all the time but it has become so prevalent that we scarcely even notice it anymore, so accepting as we have become that happiness justifies all like some great and benevolent god made just for you and your circumstance. Statements like “as long as you’re happy” come thick and fast from the mouths of idiots all day every day, they use it to justify, to explain, to console to understand and yet if you think about it these things are absent from the phrase.
This idea that you’re “supposed” to be happy, or that whatever bullshit religion you ascribe to “wants” you to be happy and that if you aren’t happy then there is something clinically wrong with you strikes a very bad cord with me. For starters, with my very limited understanding of neural chemistry, I am going to make the educated guess that it is first and foremost physically impossible to be happy all of the time. In fact I’ll extend that statement to suggest that it is enormously improbable that short of serious chemical manipulation that you could keep someone happy for even the majority of time.
The human brain is an immensely complicated array of chemistry and electricity, culminating in some of the most complex phenomenon we can conceive, thought and emotions for example. The idea that you can put yourself, and in so doing your brain, into such a situation where it will be happy for all or even most of the time seems ludicrous to me. We are transient beings, reactive, unbalanced and above all else contextual and in so being incapable of self determination or governance, forever at the whims of our subconscious reaction and our conscious rationalisations. Even if we had everything we could dream of wanting we could not remain happy in this state. Eventually the once perfect conditions would become standard and the once extraordinary gift would become merely mediocre.
“Mans greatest advantage is the ability to act against his own advantage”
We would tire of perfection, our happiness would fade and somewhere in the haze of overwhelming indifference we would find new and miraculous joy in tearing our perfect world apart...
But this myth, to my mind, is not merely inaccurate and misleading but also debilitating and malicious. How can happiness hurt anyone? In its current guise as principal motivator it hurts everyone and perverts everything. It is responsible for the stagnation of civilisation as we have spent the majority of the last hundred years refining our indulgences rather than tackling our great crisis. It is responsible for the deaths of millions as in the interest of servicing our happiness our great nation states have perpetrated such awful atrocities against innocent populations that it turns the stomach to think of (E.g the 4.5 million people killed in the Congo between 1998 and 2003 which helped ensure the affordability of Sonys Playstation 2).
Happiness is not the answer to anything and I believe that it will not be until we stop our barbaric onslaught towards perpetually happy lives that we will find some semblance of actual peace.