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John Haynes’ photograph of the week: Mahatma Gandhi September 17, 2009

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Statue of Mahatma Gandhi: Tavistock Square, London. (Copyright John Haynes 2007)

 

Word/quote of the week September 17, 2009

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Word of the week: Meme  A unit of cultural transmission; meme includes stories, songs, skills. Culture, according to a theory of memetics, evolves by the process and selection of the memes.

Quote of the week:  ”I don’ think life has a meaning beyond what we put into it. It’s like vision. I mean one only projects colours onto objects – they’re not, of course, themselves coloured -one also projects meaning onto things. If you look at a painting, the viewer is projecting his own meaning into the paint, whatever the artist wants. And ditto with an oak tree; whatever God or Darwin decreed for it, you project meaning into it.”  Richard Gregory

The lineaments of gratified desire. September 10, 2009

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What is it men in women do require?


The lineaments of Gratified Desire
.

What is it women do in men require
?

The lineaments of Gratified Desire.

William Blake

Until I started writing this blog I thought I had memorized this quotation years ago and that Blake was right, although he was a gnomic who never quite meant what you think. But, I’ve just found out, after many years to my shame that firstly I didn’t know what lineaments were – I thought they were linty and comforting bandages – worst still that I had substituted a ‘most’ for the ‘do’: What is that men and women most require…which has dented my blogging because I was going to argue that what ‘we’ most of all require are healthy levels of self esteem, and the courage to be ourselves. I’ll come back to that after my desire diversion.

 Despite these reported lapses, I have worked out a paradox of desire, or perhaps that’s not true, I’ve worked it out in conjunction with an absent friend who’s still watching seals on that distant seashore and pondering the meanings of the universe, which is that the essence of desire’s compulsive energy to connect is met, no not met but fulfilled in the obstacle to its connection. Gratified desire is doomed – sooner or later to become dead desire, or domestic desire. It is the obstacle rather than the object that fertilises desire.

In the romances of archetypal lovers like Tristan and Isolde, Romeo and Juliet, Hero and Leander, Venus and Adonis and Achilles and Patroclus, desire is challenged by separation, suspended and then immortalised by death. I find Venus and Adonis the most tragic scenario because of its lack of symmetry between the lovers and because Adonis is adolescent he feels himself to be invincible to danger and as immortal as Venus. It’s still true that it’s the most original, beautiful, brave and intelligent adolescents who wont listen to their elders. (Which brings my grand children Dan and Portia instantly to mind.)

This paradox of desire is true of Amaldova’s  latest and perhaps greatest – although I have heard as many say his least successful – erotic testament, ‘Los Abrazos Rotos’, or ‘Broken Embraces’, where the collision of obessional desire(S) are suspended and then ruptured by violent acts of  sex, death and blindness. Here, there is no light; except with Almodovar there always is more light, but I don’t want to write a review of Broken Embraces although I am still thinking of little else, except that Penelope Cruz’s symphonic Spanish beauty stops me thinking at all. (Her Hollywood performances don’t work so well outside of her mother tongue, which enhances her sense of timing and wit.)

A link between Coriolanus and Almodovar’s film is that they both reveal the suffering of men whose parents have refused to recognise them, let alone love them for who they are. Isn’t that what we all desire most of all, to feel that we have been unconditionally loved.  Or is that just another unrealisable myth that keeps us in a state of longing. There is so much unconscious narcissism in love.

In my ‘Mother’ blog I talked about the elusive elixir of self-esteem, which I would identify as the lubricant of becoming oneself, and which is almost impossible to manufacture artificially. Some few do manage it but if you miss out on feeling unconditionally loved in childhood then it’s a lifetime’s work and hard going all along the way.

I’m drawn to the observations of ethologists, who were inspired by the ideas of Conrad Lorenz when he uncovered the concept of an ‘innate releasing pattern’ to explain our instinctive behaviours which are often only accomplished at specific life stages and afterwards become notoriously hard to recapitulate.

It’s one of the great wonders of life that self- esteem is so vital to human wellbeing and yet it is so often absent even where you would expect to find it. Success is rarely related to self esteem, but often grows out of its absence and an inflated desire to get the zeitgeist to prick up its ears in compensation for the absence of a more private gleam of admiration in the parental eye.  

In ‘Broken Embraces’ what I understood to be personal clues from Almodovar’s life are barely concealed within his maze of imagery;  an underplayed moment of personal pathos and revelation was costumed in the geeky  and sexually ruined son of the tycoon Ernesto Martel, whose life is fuelled by revenge for  humiliation at the hands of his father for being unworthy of his loving embrace. That’s why unconditional love matters: it is the antidote to stunted emotions. And then, I thought of Almodovar’s compatriot Lorca and his torment at disappointing his father and then, how astonishing it must feel to grow up knowing that you are unconditionally loved, and then how terrible it is to know that so often, but not always, because nothing is for always, that broken embraces are so easy to contaminate one dysfunctional generation with another.

And that is why learning how to live and love matters more than anything.

Word/quote of the week September 10, 2009

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Word of the week: Lineament:  To trace lines, 1772: A portion of the body considered with regard to its contour, a distinctive feature.

Quote of the week:  He who would do good to another must do it in Minute Particulars: General Good is the plea of the scoundrel, hypocrite, and flatterer.  For Art and Science cannot exist but in minutely organized Particulars. William Blake, ‘Jerusalem’ 111, 55: 60-8.

John Haynes’ picture of the week: Allen Ginsberg, ‘Mantra’ September 10, 2009

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Allen Ginsberg, ‘Mantra’, 1965, ‘The Dialectics of Liberation’. ( Copyright John Haynes 1965)

Allen Ginsberg( best)

‘O, mother, mother, what have you done?’ September 5, 2009

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It’s not only the anti-psychiatrist R.D. Laing and the sprite Peter Pan who blamed mothers for universal ills. In an emotional crescendo, Shakespeare’s hero Coriolanus howls ‘O mother, mother what have you done?’

Coriolanus’ fall from hero to exile is caused by a revengeful narcissism, which makes him seem arrogant rather than vulnerable when – victorious in battle – he refuses to expose his wounds to the marketplace as custom demands. (You can find descriptions of his wounds in Plutarch’s Lives but not an account of his relationship with his suffocating mother.) Shakespeare was not keen on mothers: often they are most present by their absence. He doesn’t manage ‘a good enough one’, let alone a loving mother, anywhere. I’ve just thought of Queen Constance in King John, but she must be the exception. And, there’s Hermione but she’s too vulnerable. When I think about Coriolanus’ inability to expose his wounds it provokes other thoughts in me, which cluster around differences between concrete acts of self-harm and psychic equivalents. It’s common for some adolescents who self harm to bear their cuttings like jewelry, at least when among their peers. I’ve just been reading some Chaucer  with Dan and in the commentary I was much intrigued to read that in the early Medieval period it was commonly regarded that body cutting was a means of enhancing spiritual energy.

If one is positioned to talk to adolescents about their self harm they will often explain that seeing their blood run free gives them a sense of being alive, (often in contrast to feeling emotionally dead) and that allows them to feel empowered. My daughter Tanya is a psychotherapist with extensive experience in working with self harmers. I was once listening to her give a public lecture and at the end one of the mums asked her what was her most frequent piece of advice. Quickly, she replied, ‘Don’t interfere, don’t over-react and make sure you have lashings of lint, antiseptic and plaster visible  in an accessible drawer.’ I’ve had little professional experience of physical acts of self-harm although it is not a phenomenon limited to adolescents and more often it’s the boys who carry it on into manhood.

I will never forget Princess Diana disclosing – if not revealing – her self harmed thighs on Panorama. In fact she was probably doing it for her mother who left Diana comforting her small brother when she disappeared from their lives without warning. Diana probably went on invisibly crying inside for her mother all her life. Diana’s mother filed for the custody of her children but then her own mother, Lady Fermoy testified against her and in favour of her husband and an enforced reign of terror began. Diana was crying because she was abandoned and didn’t know why and Coriolanus was crying because he was impinged on and both were traumatized forever.

One of the saddest things I’ve read was when I was editing a book on Diana’s death, and I read her will online in which her last will and testament reinvests her mother’s authority: ‘Should any child of mine be under age at the date of the death of the survivor of myself and my husband, I appoint my mother and my brother Earl Spencer to be the guardians of that child and I express the wish that should I predecease my husband he will consult my mother with regard to the upbringing …of our children’.

 Flesh wounds can heal in a way that psychic wounds although invisible, often do not. They have the capacity to eat their way into the brain, through people’s lives and erode their self-esteem. It’s true that some words are immortal and it’s usually the insulting ones. There should be a recipe book for cooking, bottling and pickling the elusive essences of self-esteem. Absent mothers, wronged mothers, impinging mothers, blind mothers, vain mothers all suffocate their young. It’s a more sophisticated form of what other animals sometimes do. But, who doesn’t long for the mother of  their dreams, and maybe a few even have them. After all even Peter Pan never stopped wanting one.

John Haynes’ photo of the week, Krapp’s Last Tape September 3, 2009

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KrappsLastTapePinter new 411 PofW

Harold Pinter in Krapp’s Last Tape by Samuel Beckett

Copyright John Haynes 2006

Word/Quote of the week September 3, 2009

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Triskaidekaphobia: a morbid fear of the number thirteen. In some cases this fear is exacerbated by the thought of Friday 13th.

All his life, the composer Arnold Schoenberg wrestled with numerology, and he held an intense fear of the number 13. (For example, he named his unfinished opera Moses und Aron , instead of Moses und Aaron so that the title would have 12 rather than 13 letters.) A certain discomfort stemming from his birth date, September 13, haunted him, and indeed intensified during his later years. Perhaps he foresaw that he would die at age 76 (7 + 6 = 13, a fact not lost on Schoenberg) on Friday 13 July, 1951.

Quote of the week: William Wordsworth, The Prelude, Book 1:

Dust as we are, the immortal spirit grows

Like harmony in music; there is a dark

Inscrutable workmanship that reconciles

Discordant elements, making them cling together

In one society. How strange that all 

The terrors, pains and early miseries,

Regrets, vexations, lassitudes interfused

Within my mind, should e’er have born a part,

And that a needful part, in making up

The calm existence that is mine when I 

Am worthy of myself.


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