Vee
Senior Member
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Posts: 473
Port Alberni, B.C.
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Been thinking about Vajra's post about how people behave like they love famous people but only want a piece of them and don't really care. I don't agree with that, but I have heard many people say that. I know there are a crowd of journalists, media moguls, newscasters, and lots of "fans" out there (and a lot of those people use drugs and alcohol so their feelings are seldom properly accessed anyway) who do completely USE these individuals who have struggled so hard to develop their blazing talent so they can succeed.
It is true to some extent. But I don't think it is nearly as true as the stars themselves and the public are led to believe.
Once, back in 1994, when the ice skater Nancy Kerrigan got hit on the ice by Tonya Harding who wanted her out of the competition, and that whole disgusting plot was exposed, I felt so dreadful for Nancy, and then when she did compete and of course we all were so concerned for her, and she fell just once in her big skate, my heart nearly stopped.
When they interviewed her later, she said with great bitterness, I know you all were just watching HOPING I would fall, she said, her voice full of pain and rage.
Well, I was speechless to hear that from her lips. Let me tell you, when any ice skater falls, I come so close to having a heart attack, I am sure, that when I die it will be from watching ice skating on tv and one of them falls. My whole body goes into such stress reaction when a skater falls, I almost need help myself.
I want to rush out there myself(I can't skate so it would not help) and pick them up and dust them off. But by the time I have thought it, they are up and skating again as though nothing happened, and I never can think how they can learn to do that. It's amazing.
The thing is, too, that at the end of the day, whoever we are, we go home alone and step into our home alone, and if we are lucky and smart, there is someone waiting for us inside that door who is happy to see us, and if we are currently not so lucky, we have to keep ourselves going through a quiet evening...and we have to know we are loved, because love is the chicken soup that heals the trials of life. If we feel lost and unloved, it is a motivating force to drive us to be better and get out further and reach out to others and do things for others so we connect better.
Small or large, famous or not, we all have those same chores every day in life. It's harder when young to have those inner skills in place. Maybe we should be teaching those skills to our young, talented upcoming stars.
The point is, stars often think we don't care but they would be amazed by how many fans really really love them and would give them their last dollar if it would help them get better at something or fix something that is wrong. If anyone out there was around when Elvis was destroying himself, and you knew how to fix him if you could go back in time, are you telling me you wouldn't drop everthing to rush back thirty years and whip him into proper shape?? Of course most of us would. He was worth it!
Well, having said that, I didn't know much about Heath Ledger and I haven't seen Brokeback Mountain because I don't usually rush to see really sad movies, but I would guess to have that much success when young would be hard to deal with. In fact, to have that much talent when that young would be hard to deal with all by itself! I haven't gone in to attempt contact yet because I am full of the cold and can't even think straight, which is probably in evidence from this post. But I will try soon as I pick up energy again.
Hope this was on topic...there is a retrieval in there somewhere, honestly. Vee
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