I am one of the 75% in Britain who havn’t seen The King’s Speech movie. Our local cinema has been showing it several times a day to meet the demand. I really must go.
But I would not have thought of any link with the Wounded Healer until I read Pythia Peay’s interview for the Huffington Post Academy Awards 2011: Which Myth Will America Choose? with Jungian analyst and psychiatrist John Beebe, lifelong moviegoer as well as psychological teacher, who in his lectures often draws on movies as a way to illuminate Jung's theory of psychological types and to discuss the drama of therapy.
And I would not have linked this immediately with President Barack Obama either.
Now I know President Obama understands empathy. In his superb book, The Audacity of Hope, writing on the difficulties he sometimes experienced in his relationship with his grandfather, he observed ‘that sometimes he really did have a point, and that in insisting on getting my own way all the time, without regard to his feelings or needs, I was in some way diminishing myself.’ He goes on to say: ‘I believe a stronger sense of empathy would tilt the balance of our current politics in favor of those people who are struggling in this society. After all, if they are like us, then their struggles are our own. If we fail to help, we diminish ourselves.” He reaffirmed this message later on the campaign trail, when he spoke of those he had met ‘whose dreams and struggles become my own; they will stay with me in the White House.’
This is the message of a Wounded Healer.
John Beebe takes this further. He does not think it's accidental that "The King's Speech" film came out at a time when a lot of people were worried that Obama was not speaking out enough.
“Obama, who is not interested in resurrecting the hero myth, is post-heroic. He's interested in the archetype of the good parent. He wants us to be better parents, and he wants to protect the infrastructure and take responsibility for the country. But at the same time, Obama has had a reluctance to be assertive in the bully pulpit. Some have felt that he was being too cautious, and that he needed to come forward. He finally came through in the beautiful speech he gave in Tucson and in his State of the Union 2011 address. After hearing from their president, the public brought his ratings up.
King George VI of England needed to master his fear of public speaking,” Beebe continues, “in order to help his people deal with their fears at the terrifying moment that World War II began. By combining courage to lead with the humility needed to face his speech problem, he became a "wounded healer" who helped his country -- the right king for his people at their most trying time. So "The King's Speech" drew on the historical precedent to the situation Obama faced of someone who worked on his reluctance to speak out in order to become an effective father figure for his country -- an example of a collective issue being mirrored and resolved in a brilliant film.”
It’s really worth going to read the full interview between Beebe and Peay, and catching up on Obama’s speeches. Obama at his oratorical best.
"The penalty good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." attributed to Plato
"Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing." attributed to Edmund Burke
Showing posts with label The King's Speech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The King's Speech. Show all posts
Sunday, 27 February 2011
Saturday, 8 January 2011
Making the World a better place - The Big Issue

The idea was launched by John Bird and Gordon Roddick, co-founder with his late wife Anita Roddick of Body Shop. John and Gordon saw a scheme on the streets of New York, where the homeless were given a free magazine and allowed to keep the proceeds of sale. They saw no future in this model, believing that this simply perpetuated the begging ethos. So they founded the Big Issue. With this model the homeless buy the magazine for £1 and sell it for £2. They therefore have the makings of their own small business, having to make decisions from day to day about how many magazines they will be able to sell, how much of their proceeds they should reinvest in to stock and how much is available for their food etc. They have the opportunity to interact with the public everyday, to engage with humankind; and that is essential for self esteem, confidence and human flourishing. And there are many success stories about those who have lifted themselves up from their life of poverty, cold, hunger, begging, through starting off with selling The Big Issue.
Another article in The Big Issue for January 3-9, 2011 is 36 Ways to Make the World a Better Place in 2011. Way Number 1 is to promote The Big Issue to help these people regain their spirit, bounce back from their often desperate situation, “sow the seeds of their own salvation.” (p. 9)
So don’t walk by, looking down at the pavement when you see one of these “small business” entrepreneurs. Buy their magazine. It’s only £2. Read it on the bus or the train or the tram as you travel home, give it to others to read when you have finished with it, let them see that it is interesting whilst serving such a worthwhile purpose. Help The Big Issue to make the world a better place in 2011.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
It's Time you knew - by Transition Rachel at YouTube
Sunset

with vapor trails