The famous entertainer, Jimmy Durante once sang a
song, “Make Someone Happy.” This was in an era in which, perhaps, we were less
sophisticated about relationships. There was an emphasis on finding the love of
your life, marrying that person, having children with that
person… and then, living “happily ever after” with them.
If we play the song today, at first listen, it seems
to be a happy little ditty, an innocent tune.
But I hear something potentially darker, even self-negating.
“It's so important
to
Make someone happy,
Make just one
someone happy;
Make just one heart the heart you sing to.
One smile that
cheers you,
One face that lights when it nears you,
One girl you're ev'rything to.
Fame if you win
it,
Comes and goes in a minute.
Where's the real
stuff in life to cling to?
Love is the
answer,
Someone to love
is the answer.
Once you've found
her, build your world around her.
Make someone
happy,
Make just one
someone happy,
And you will be happy, too.”
See anything?
Let’s explore these lyrics a little more.
“It's so
important to
Make someone happy…”
Innocuous
sentiment.
What’s the harm
in that?
Can’t we all
agree that, yes, it is important to spread joy to others? But do we make others
happy, at our expense?
Ah, there’s the
dilemma.
For how many of
us sacrifice ourselves, hurt ourselves, all in the name of making someone
happy?
What do we
swallow, suppress, hide, lie about or refuse to discuss?
Think about it.
“…Make just one someone happy…”
Why can’t that “just
someone” be you and me? Why does it always have to be someone else “other?”
Here’s where we
seem to place tremendous value on external “other” validation. Something isn’t
real unless and until it’s outside of us, garnering the impact and
acclaim of someone else. “Making someone happy” falls under that heading.
“…Make just one heart the heart you sing to,
One smile that
cheers you,
One face that lights when it nears you…”
Again, why can’t
that be you and me?
Why does it
always have to be someone else “other?”
And here’s
another sticky point: why is there all emphasis placed on creating a happy
moment? What if, for example, we needed to have a “come to Jesus” discussion
about less pleasant, but necessary, issues like money and interpersonal
challenges?
Many of us may
have never heard Durante’s song lyrics, yet, how many of us place sole
importance on making everything happy, at the expense of other important- and
needed- emotions and circumstances?
How many times
have issues not been appropriately handled because the jolly smile was what was
viewed as the most important thing to achieve?
“…One girl you're ev'rything to…”
Oh, dear! Here we
go! Unrealistic “Everything?” Really?
Yes, I suppose,
once upon a time, there existed the concept that a person was your everything.
And, in the first infatuated stages of love, that can feel real. It can feel
doable.
But eventually,
life (and love) moves on… at least it should move on, anyway. Bills need
to get paid. Someone needs to go to the dentist. There are obligations, PTA
meetings, someone needs to take Fluffy to the vet for her shots. The stuff of
life.
And let’s not
forget the other relationships we have in our lives: family, friends,
co-workers, etc. There are numerous ways for each of us to find fulfillment,
besides lumping it all on one single person. Doing just that is unfair and a
recipe for failure.
Just wait. The
“everything” promise, attached to any single human being, is a countdown clock
for disappointment and heartbreak.
And, on a side
note, expecting “the little woman” to fulfill every need, hope and dream, is
misogynistic and unrealistic. Before we dismiss this as merely, an
anachronistic lyric of its time, we still, if we’re honest, catch ourselves
expecting nothing short of everything from the females in our lives: our
mothers, wives, girlfriends, some “Superwoman,” who will magically swoop in and
fix all of our problems.
Where’s that
countdown clock of imminent failure? I hear it ticking.
“…Fame if you win
it,
Comes and goes in a minute….”
Agreed.
“…Where's the real stuff in life to cling to?...”
Is “other” more
real than us, all by ourselves?
What value,
exactly, do we place on doing the deeply personal work involving ourselves? Therapy,
facing issues, working on our personal growth? Any points for that?
Or, is it all
about finding that perfect, “love of your life,” expecting him or her to
perfect your “everything?”
Everything is
meaningless and on pause until that happens? Really?
“…Love is the answer…”
Okay, sure. It is
an answer…
But, as wonderful
as love can be, there are other worthwhile things as well: personal
development, goalsetting, discovery and adventure. These things can exist
without the “love of a life” happening.
Just saying.
“…Someone to love is the answer…”
Again, if we pin
all importance, all meaning of life, onto one sole individual to love, we’re
setting ourselves up for disappointment. Loving connection with a person is
important, but it should never replace us doing our own work, the hard work of
personal inventory, growth, developing healthy self-esteem, spirituality, goals
and talents. “Loving someone” isn’t going to cut it if we have nothing, in and
of ourselves, to offer that someone.
And of course, we
need to love ourselves before we seek that “other” someone to love. Doing that
work is a big part of “the answer.”
“…Once you've found her, build your world around her…”
Again, could you please
build your own world around yourself first?
Our sense of self
must first be there. How will we know who is the fitting person for us to love
if we are completely clueless about who we are?
We tend,
especially in this culture, to believe that we are some unfinished half of a
puzzle, just waiting to find our corresponding soul mate, the completing other
half of the puzzle.
Our dream man.
Our dream woman.
And they are out
there. Oh, yes! We just need to keep looking for them. Meanwhile, we
neglect to discover and know ourselves.
And because of
that neglect, we are far from the dream, ourselves. In fact, if
we’re being honest, our clueless puzzle pieces, woefully ignorant of what truly
makes us tick, are NIGHTMARES to behold!
We have failed to
build our own world around who we truly are, single, autonomous.
“…Make someone
happy…”
How about having
it be you first, without any other “them?”
“…Make just one someone happy…”
Again, how about having it be you, all by yourself, first?
“…And you will be happy, too…”
Let’s just
eliminate the middleman.
It’s not about
being selfish, self-indulgent or Narcissistic. It’s about taking care of who we
are, in real ways, without involving someone else. There are certain
things that are our responsibility… and no one else’s.
Unfortunately, we
often abdicate that throne, while saddling someone else with the burden of “making
us happy.” When we do this, inevitably, sooner or later, everyone in the
picture will be miserable.
Love oneself.
Know oneself.
Tend to thine own
garden.
You cannot pour
from an empty cup.
We hear these
things frequently because there is always truth in them. It’s about
first things being first.
We need to make
ourselves happy first… and then find ways to spread THAT around!
Let’s start
singing those lyrics.
Copyright © 2022 by Sheryle Cruse
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