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Sunday, 19 January 2014

August: Osage County and Surviving the Aftermath of our Childhood

by Christopher Barr

 

“Feelings of love and gratitude arise directly and spontaneously in the baby in response to the love and care of his mother.”  - Psychoanalyst, Melanie Klein




“Thank god we can’t tell the future, we’d never get out of bed.”





August: Osage County is a heartbreaking and hard film to watch but a therapeutically rewarding one.  It’s the story of the lives of three sisters that had to go back to their Oklahoma house where they all grew up in because of the death of their father, while there they have to deal with their, cancer-stricken, pill-popping highly dysfunctional mother who raised them.

The Weston family and those that married into that family are subjected to various uncomfortable and sometimes humiliating encounters with the formidable matriarch of the house, the venomous and vindictive Violet, played masterfully by Meryl Streep, whose husband killed himself to likely be free of her tormenting manipulative ways.  Violet is a vicious, hateful woman but not evil, she’s a product of her psychotic parents.  She’s what happens to a mother who doesn’t lead a fulfilling life, she’s an unhappy person.  Yes, she brought up three children and that’s hard and there’s a lot of sacrifice, but life is hard and taking the path to enlightenment doesn’t always necessitate a pilgrimage on foot in Northern India, reading books has always been a great start.

This film is not in any way about a functional family, generally those families involve one or both parents being educated in some capacity, that’s not to say that all functional families require this attribute but it’s usually a must for any kind of serviceable hope.

“If we are to teach real peace in this world, and if we are to carry on a real war against war, we shall have to begin with the children.”  - Gandhi

The true fallacy within the family is uneducated, uninformed people having children that are by default, uneducated, uniformed people.  My mother was a mean/caring mother, a nurturing/distant person and that was the biggest problem a child should have to endure.  Psychological child abuse generally comes in the form of an inconsistent upbringing, where your mother or father or both are at one point loving, funny and protective and then the next point tell you you’re a mistake, they hate you and they wish you were never born.

A child is still trying to find their footing in this world, learning its language, its customs, its laws and also trying to understand him or herself, their own motor skills and their own tastes.  Parents are your first line of defence in a world you know nothing about, and a world that can be potentially harmful to you.  Whether it’s from dangerous people, improperly cooked food or the common cold, your parents are your only method of survival for the most part.

So to have a parent beat you with a belt or tell you you’re no good for nothing, and then moments later tell you how sorry they are and it won’t happen again, only for it to happen again three hours later, is mentally abusive to a growing child.  That type of household breeds children who fear their own behaviour because they believe in their little minds at the time, that they are the cause of their parents’ misery.  They learn to hate themselves; they learn to hate who they become.

Now grown up, they likely will have to struggle in social situations or become funny to mask their fear, either way, they have to fight to navigate the social world because they, as an adult, still carry the psychological burden the younger version of themselves carried, when they didn’t know whether to leave mom alone or to tell her they loved her, fearing a slap in the face or a reminder of what a waste they are.

There are varying degrees, but this is most people.  On a more broad scope, being born and brought up in this world is its own form of child abuse.  If you have a child that wants to do what it wants to do and you stop that child from running into traffic, that’s a good thing, a protective thing, but that doesn’t translate well in the mind of the child.  The child wants to do what it wants to do, rules be damned.  The job of the parent, as protector, is limiting the scope of a child’s freedom for its own protection.  As an adult we can all absolutely agree, we don’t want children all running into traffic because they want to.

This makes us all neurotic and unsettled in our environments as we get older.  What we do to combat such a psychological paralysis certainly varies from person to person, family to family but the one thing is for sure, this cannot be escaped or forgotten, drugs and alcohol notwithstanding.  This is who we are, this is where we are from, now this may not entirely define us, as we might have escaped the trappings of our parental heritage and got an education, and have been able to see the reality of who we are and where we are from.  But like in The Eagles’ tune Hotel California, “You can check out but you can never leave”.

The one thing I suppose we should be thankful for our upbringing, other than we survived it, is our defining characters.  All our little bumps and grinds are the leaves on our trees, stemming from the roots of our backgrounds, our childhoods.  Some would certainly disagree such as all the paranoid people out there, and those people that can’t love because of the Stockholm Syndrome-type childhood they escaped, and wish never to return to in the form of a relationship or marriage.  If they are to return to it as an adult they risk and fear repetition, they don’t want to find out how far the apple has fallen from the tree so to speak.  Tragically, more times than not, people become the parents they loathed because as children, we are copy magnets and our parents are what we end up copying.

“It is easier to build strong children than repair broken men.”                                       – Frederick Douglass

The tragedy of some of our parents is they didn’t get out of their own parental trap.  The one that their parents sucked them into, they have also the methodical ability to drag their own children down with them.  In my own experience, and from what I understand many other peoples, my mother begrudged her children for their youth and their freedom, she recriminated and resented my sister for her youthful beauty so in turn punishment had to be assigned.  Rather than dealing with her own journey in her own life she, fueled by immaturity and ignorance, sabotaged the happiness of those around her, even that of her husband, my father.  

We are tethered to this abusive past and often are bound by the duty of family to remain later in life, as adults, maybe not in their homes but in their lives, until our parents die off.  As children we took the abuse with the same spoon we took the joyful times because it’s all we knew and it’s all we had.  As adults, guilt lingers as we are reminded of our messed up childhoods but also that our parents are who gave life to us in the first place, ingratitude is not the approach one ought to take when analyzing their own childhood.

August: Osage County is about the destruction, ignorant and uneducated people can bring to their family units.  The fact they were unable to psychologically understand the dispositions of their own family members is a testament to that ignorance.  The mother, Violet Weston, was a woman that made so many mistakes and barely understood why, then just went into denial and blamed her daughters and those around her for the problems they possess and why she is living such a horrible existence.  Shifting the blame often allows one to reconcile with their own self image.

To put this as blatantly as possible, if we continue bringing up stupid children because their stupid parents are too dumb to know better, then we are lost as a civilization for prosperous growth as we move forward into the future.  Ignorance is a disease, a virus that is contracted in the very beginning stages of life.  Most grow up without ever having the opportunity to cure themselves or be cured by others.  Some, unfortunately very few, grow up and are influenced or spontaneously pulled away from the virus and cured.  Only after the cure can one see the truth behind the psychological lie as an ever growing work in progress.  It’s sad but in most of these cases you have to save yourself and run for the hills or at least maintain a proper distance, and that’s certainly not what family is about but one must give up the loyalty of ignorance in order to survive the challenges of growth.   Julia Roberts’ quite bitter character, Barbara Weston, at the end of the film tearfully realizes that very sacrifice.



“Nature knows no pause in progress and development, and attaches her curse on all inaction.”   - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe






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