And then I came across a
review of this book on Amazon which really made me giggle – and if you love
this like me you can scroll down to the comment below it where we get a
fantastically alternative view of Little Miss Sunshine. Enjoy ;)
Mr Happy - A Young
Person's Guide To Individuation
By Hamilton Richardson
In his third work, Mr Happy,
Hargreaves takes us on a Jungian journey to the integrated self.
The story starts by
introducing us to the supposedly perfect life that our eponymous hero appears
to live - the tranquilized bliss and counterfeit euphoria of Happyland. Yet
what is it that leads Mr Happy to wander away from an existence that, if truly
flawless, should suffice to satisfy and sustain him? Why this need to venture
deep into the mysterious unknown of the forest? To open a door in a tree-trunk
and descend a staircase beneath the ground to the deepest recesses of the
unconscious?
Here lays the crux of this
exploration of analytical psychology - the defining happiness of our central
character is revealed as nothing more than a persona. His name and outward
appearance are a mask to the outside world and from himself. It is the very
inauthenticity of this state of affairs that drives him on the voyage to seek
out and confront the root of the dissonance that this generates within him.
For indeed, what does he come
face-to-face with at the foot of these stairs but his own repressed sadness?
This comes in the form of his miserable alter ego - physically identical, polar
opposite in mood. It is only through this confrontation with the shadow that
his unsustainable persona can find authentic resolution and true integration of
the self be achieved. These archetypes are quite literally brought to light as
Mr Happy coaxes Mr Miserable up to the surface and into view of the conscious
mind in a climax of now genuine peace and bliss.
In a knowing nod to his
source material, Hargreaves depicts Mr Happy as round - a shape he shares with
the mandala.
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