Thursday , March 28 2024
'Happy' is lifting people up around the globe. How gratifying it must be to know that his song is making people feel better (and without a prescription).

Why We All Should be Dancing to Pharrell’s Monster Hit ‘Happy’!

Four years ago, I wrote an article about the Black Eyed Peas song “Where is the Love.” I don’t usually follow contemporary rap or R&B, but the lyrics in this song reaching out for divine love was a powerful message. Pharrell Williams’s monster hit “Happy” is another song worth taking note of. From Slovakia to the Philippines, people are posting YouTube videos of others dancing to it. It’s become a world phenomenon.

In a recent interview with Oprah, Pharrell (as he prefers to be called) was shown a video that gave a sampling of the impact his song is having throughout the world and he wept. And why not? Can you imagine the feeling of bringing joy to so many? Especially since his objective was to write a song with purpose. In a recent Sunday Morning episode discussing his earlier work, he noted, “I realized along the way that there wasn’t enough purpose in my music…” There is now. “Happy” is lifting people up around the globe.

Medicine for the world

It’s widely known that music can be therapeutic and healthful and this song is obviously bringing a healthful uplift to millions. A recent comment on a YouTube “Happy” video stated, “To be Honest… this song just made the world happier. I [u]sed to have a serious sudden depression…This song’s actually my medicine.” Even French philosopher Voltaire once wrote, “I have decided to be happy because it’s good for my health.”

Correlations to the Bible

I admit that for months I saw the song as fun and upbeat, but didn’t really understanding the depth of the lyrics. “Because I’m happy Clap along if you feel like a room without a roof” As an architect, I couldn’t grasp why anyone would want to “feel like a room without a roof.” Then I saw that it symbolized letting the sun in, being unconfined and free! And consider the correlations to the Bible. The sun has long been used as a metaphor for God. In that context, “Happy” begins by encouraging us to trust in God’s goodness and then take a break. Consider how the song begins:

“It might seem crazy what I’m about to say… Sunshine she’s here, you can take a break”

Reversing the second line to read “You can take a break, Sunshine she’s here” could be a contemporary translation of the psalm “be still and know that I am God.” This passage has often helped me to calm my thought and counteract concerns that inhibit a happy outlook. The song’s upbeat chorus urging you to “Clap along” also parallels the Bible’s unrelenting encouragement to rejoice!

More than happy thoughts

“Because I’m happy.  Clap along if you feel like happiness is the truth”

His lyrics may seem deceptively simple, but Pharrell has touched a universal chord, a spiritual pulse that resonates with our innate recognition that being happy and expecting good are natural. Even current medical research has shown the health benefits of maintaining an expectancy of good and the importance of lifting thought to a more spiritual dimension.

“Can’t nothing bring me down.  My level’s too high”

Pharrell’s encouragement to keep thinking on a high level is significant. It reminds me of author John Kralik who had little to be happy about in his life. Yet, in his book he writes how he decided to lift his thinking to seek out and give thanks to whatever good he could find each day. This change of thought transformed his life.

In my own experience, I still recall those devastating words, “I see us as friends, but nothing more,” spoken by someone I loved and had hoped to marry.  Yet, I shook it off and replaced the “bad news” with a buoyant trust that if we were divinely meant for each other, nothing could prevent it. Four months later, my wife and I were married.

Author Mary Baker Eddy provides a further insight: “Are we really grateful for the good already received? Then we shall avail ourselves of the blessings we have, and thus be fitted to receive more.”

It’s great that Pharrell chose to bring more purpose to his music. How gratifying it must be to know that his song is making people feel better (and without a prescription). That news alone is worth getting up and dancing to!

©istockphoto.com, models for illustrative purposes only.

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About Bill Scott

Professionally, I'm a licensed architect in both Washington and California State. I love architecture, but when it comes to priorities, it’s hard to top good health. That’s why I’ve shifted my interest from the physical to the mental environment that we abide in. My articles focus on presenting helpful ideas regarding the important connection between what we think and our health. I’ve been writing for Blogcritics and other online and print publications since 2011 and I was published in the international medical/science journal, "Global Advances in Health and Medicine" in 2012. I also serve as the media and legislative liaison for Christian Science in Washington State. Feel free to contact me at: [email protected] or on Twitter @WilliamEdScott.

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