| | The wisest words on this thread were Andy's:
Branden's statement is not just silly, it is pernicious. It sucks all the meaning out of what makes a hero. ...
The practitioners of today's therapeutic culture, like Branden, have also resurrected the hero. However, their hero is anything but extraordinary. For them a hero is most anyone who deals with a problem, typically self-inflicted, with a Stuart Smalley navel-gazing declaration, "I like me!" They have deformed the hero into the epitome of banality. They have stripped him all virtue so that any of us can claim to be one.
That's what this Oprah Winfrey culture is all about. Anyone who makes a public confession of any kind of flaw, especially if it's self-cultivated, is a hero. It's what Brandbourne were trying to impose on me. "Confess to being an alcoholic, & we'll hail you as a hero & support you through your (public) therapy." Well, one problem: I'm not an alcoholic. And if I were, I wouldn't acquiesce to that cheap filth, any more than I'd expect Brandbourne to expose their medical/psychological details to the world.
"Alcoholic" to them is someone who calls things for what they are. As opposed to their abject, cowardly "never-cause-offence" imperative.
You must excuse me, SOLOists. As a non-American, it's taken me a little while to realise how corrupt & pervasive this "culture of therapy" is, even though I've been sounding alarm bells about it for some time.
But laying aside my personal reasons for objecting to Branden's stricture about what makes a hero ... I object to it because it's the antithesis of heroism. Heroism is tapping into the best within & kicking ass with it. A first-hand virtue. Branden says it consists in seducing your enemy ... not a confused ally, but an enemy. On whose terms? Not specified. Meaning, by default, on your enemy's terms. A second-hand, self-sacrificing "virtue." Sick, sick, sick. A point that has somehow eluded most posters on this thread.
Linz
(Edited by Lindsay Perigo on 8/26, 3:28am)
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