Happy Is Up; Sad Is Down

conceptual-metaphor Embodied ExperienceEmbodied Experience

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguistics

What It Brings

The first orientational metaphor Lakoff and Johnson introduce, and the one that most clearly demonstrates how spatial orientation structures emotional concepts. Happiness is up. Sadness is down. This is not a poetic flourish — it is the default cognitive mapping between vertical space and affective state, so deeply embedded that English speakers cannot describe mood without invoking it.

Key structural parallels:

The Osaka archive lists this under “Euphoric States Are Up” as a restricted subcase, with examples like “He’s really high” and “She’s coming down.” Lakoff and Johnson use the broader HAPPY IS UP / SAD IS DOWN pairing.

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson introduce HAPPY IS UP in Chapter 4 of Metaphors We Live By as the first of a series of orientational metaphors. They argue that it is grounded in physical experience: drooping posture correlates with sadness, erect posture with positive emotional state. This grounding distinguishes orientational metaphors from structural ones — they are not arbitrary mappings but motivated by the body’s relationship to space and gravity.

The metaphor is paired with its inverse: SAD IS DOWN. Lakoff and Johnson always discuss both poles, noting that the coherence of the system depends on the pairing. You cannot have HAPPY IS UP without SAD IS DOWN, because the vertical axis requires two endpoints.

References

Related Mappings