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Just a simple mom trying to make my way in the (expanded) universe
date posted: Nov 09, 2006 5:52 PM  |  updated: Nov 16, 2006 8:36 PM
"I had this bubble built around us . . . "
This week, I have been showing the film Glory to my Black Studies class. (For those who may not know, it's a Civil War piece about Massachusetts' 54th regiment, the 1st all-Black regiment in US history, and the 1st of many to fight for the North.) No matter how many times I watch this film, the sight of these men (and boys, because many of them were barely that) scattering the fields of the final battle scene - a battle which, incidentally, they didn't even win - makes me cry like a fool.

Now my students, they're another story altogether - they're not big crybabies like me, and it takes a lot more to move them to tears. These guys have grown up with Violence and Death sitting on either side of them -at the dinner table while they watch the news, on the sofa while they play their video games, and, sometimes, on some of the more hectic Brooklyn blocks where anger, poverty, and frustration all too often prove to be a combustible combination. But - I'm happy to report - my crew was still moved by what they saw today. (One guy even admitted that he had already watched the ending at home, and he had to struggle to fight back tears as he watched these soldiers fall.)

Why am I happy that I made my kids cry? Simple. If they're crying, Violence and Death haven't obstructed their view of Compassion.

Think about it. How many times have we watched our favorite stories from a GFFA and been so busy following the storylines of our favorite characters from said galaxy that the explosions of X-wings and TIE fighters don't even register anymore? As we 'sit back and enjoy our feature presentation', marvel at the cinematography, figure out who shot who first, we eventually allow the constant warfare and subsequent losses to become insignificant, almost impersonal. We forget that each burst of fireworks on the Coruscant skyline represents the loss of someone's son, husband, daughter, brother. But somehow, our heroes and heroines miraculously manage to dodge enough enemy fire to miraculously make it to the next episode.

Now, fast forward to the Expanded Universe. In Hollywood, we know our favorites will return for the sequels because we read in People that the multi-film deal has already been signed. But in the wonderful world of words on a page, anything is possible. And this is both a thrilling and terrifying premise. Books take us past the fast-paced action and into the minds and souls of our characters as they deal with the far-reaching consequences of the decisions we watched them make in the films. And, eventually, they take us to a point in the saga where even the most beloved of these characters must be claimed by Death. It happens, and it sucks, and we cry. But this is why we love this saga. It reflects life, in all of its depth and complexity. Like us, its characters grow, and their reactions to the loss of their loved ones gives them - and us - a chance to gain a deeper understanding of their inner selves.

Take Han Solo. When he loses Chewie during the events of Vector Prime, Han Solo - smuggler, warrior, hero of the rebellion - crumbles into little pieces. Now, the drinking, anger, and lashing out I would have expected; after all, how else do you react when your partner and best friend is gone, and you can't accept it, can't figure out how you're supposed to go on? What surprised me was the way he opens up to his wife in his pain. He admits to her that as if the loss of Chewie wasn't enough, he now has to deal with a whole new reality - a world where his loved ones aren't invulnerable anymore, where his wife, children, and extended family could just as easily become casualties of the struggle to defend their way of life as Chewie had:

"I never thought - " Han began quietly, his voice breaking apart . . . "I had built this bubble around us . . . you, me, Chewie, the kids, Luke Mara, even Lando. Heck, even the stupid droids . . . Nothing could hurt us . . . "

He goes on to face the realization that 'this should have, logically, happened a long time ago . . . They had been living on the very edge of disaster for so very long . . . so many times, it seems, one or more of them should have died." But for so long, they didn't. And Han Solo's safe, cozy bubble must have seemed, in his mind, to become all the more impenetrable with each narrow escape, each brush with death. Until Chewie's death burst that bubble, seemingly forever.

So, how do we in our own world deal with the potential disasters that might befall us in the course of each day of our relativley, deceptively mundane lives? I truly believe that Han is not alone - most of us have constructed this self-same bubble, for the sake of our own sanity. After all, if one watched the news each evening and really considered the possibility that the attrocities that digust and frighten us might actually befall us or our loved ones, we'd be too paralyzed with fear to function properly. (All of you parents out there, does the news ever make you wanna grab your kids and flee to a heretoforth deserted island, or am I the only one???) But most of us don't give in to the paralysis, the paranoia. We create a bubble to encompass those we have brought into our own little world and, like the Force-sensitve jedi sometimes try to do, we tune down the vibes from those outside the bubble, because to do otherwise would be overwhelming. We can't worry about everyone; we instead cling to the belief that its not too much too ask that this small circle of people stay out of harm's way - and, if you're like me, that we never have to live long enough to see any of them suffer, grow old, or die.

Well, I'm going to tell you what happens to some of my neighbors in Gotham City who have had their bubble burst one too many times, who have seen too many loved ones, acquaintences, or neighbors of their own become senseless, and, often untimely victims of the usual suspects, Death and Violence: the all-encompasing bubble disappears. For it costs too much, emotionally, to keep such a delicate thing afloat when you've seen so much evidence that it can't possibly last. Instead, they either create a bubble big enough for only themselves - thereby eliminating the need to care about somebody who may not stick around long enough to care back - or, worse still, they don't bother with a bubble at all. Death and Violence have grown so powerful, and now loom so large, that Compassion is hidden somewhere in its shadows, lost in the pain, anger and confusion that comes with too much loss. It's easier to pretend not to care.

For those of you who may have caught my first entry, you know that losing Chewie - as strange as it sounds to someone who never loved a fictional character the way I love this guy - was indeed very personal for me. Not just because I love Chewie, but because often times really great stories touch some part of you that's completely real. Because it brought me back to the turning point in my life when I was forced to accept that the sheer will of my fiercely protective love can't keep those I have included in my bubble safe forever. Because, like Han, I need some version of that bubble just to accept the pain and move on in spite of it.

Maybe Han Solo's bubble will come back (I dunno; not done with Dark Tide: Ruin yet, and he's still drunker than I'd imagine the Rogueish one is on New Year's Eve). I know mine did; after I ranted and railed at Death, I learned to carry on my life in a city where we (miraculously) keep a respectful distance from each other. I still look for him and Violence around every corner, and when the bell rings on Friday afternoon, I say a small prayer that my students won't run into either one of them over the weekend.

Because my bubble is not only back, it's bigger now. It hurt when the old one got busted, but the new one I built is bigger and has room for more people. Because I'm not as afraid to lose them as I once was. Oh, it the possibility still terrifies me - don't get me wrong - but I know now that I'm blessed to have so many people to worry about. And I know that if my kids can still be moved enough to cry over a sad movie about heroes that died so long ago, they're still close enough to Compassion they haven't lost respect for the frailty of that bubble.

And I hope they never do.

leia19886
Someone get this big walking carpet out of my way ...
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 6:36 PM
Kids living in a bubble. I hear you on that one. I get the impression from the kids on my bus that they thing their invinable. Either that or they just don't think about the phone call to mom and dad when they get hurt. Most of them when I ask them how to explain it to their parents get very, well it brings them back to the real would.
Wish we could live in that bubble. Too bad we can't.
Leia
GalacticBabe
I Have a Bad Feeling About This!
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 6:41 PM
Your words move me so!!! Very eloquently said!

does the news ever make you wanna grab your kids and flee to a heretoforth deserted island, or am I the only one??? Oh no, you are NOT the only one!

I, too, have a replacement bubble--the original one burst the day my father, my superman, my champion, passed away. It has been eleven years, and it has taken me this long to rebuild my bubble. But I am a much stronger person for it.

Very touching! Thank you:)
jedilily1026
Years Matter Not (Gone Crazy...Be Back Soon)
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 7:27 PM
Glory...very good and touching movie...NYC a rough place to grow up in. More so now than 40 years ago.
mandalore65
Mandalorian Pride
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 7:48 PM
That honestly touched me.im still too young to worry but i really am touched.Chewie wasnt my fav but it still hurt when i saw him die. it was like when i saw han going into carbonite,
or qui gon dying, or obi getting struck down by vader, boba rolling into the scarlacc (even if he didnt die.) It also is true about how we forget the people like porkins or red leader or biggs.

~M65~
  rivet head
WILL TYPE STAR WARS BLOG FOR FOOD!
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 8:07 PM
BLG, (can I call you BLG?) if you're willing to take a chance on the comics, pick up the trade paperback Chewbacca. It has a series of post-Vector Prime stories, different tales by different friends of Chewie. Han's is last. It's both funny and heartbreaking. A rare exercise in the reflection of the mortality of our heroes.
jediprincess77
I Know...
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 8:27 PM
Wow. This was one of the most beautiful entries I've ever read. Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom with us. Bubbles are scary things because, like you noted, you hurt so badly when they are shattered. I would be more afraid of not having this bubble, however, because my compassion for these dear people is much of what shapes who I am as a person.

Beautiful entry!!
  Rogueish
W.I.E.R.D.
date Posted: Nov 09, 2006 11:35 PM
So, how do we in our own world deal with the potential disasters that might befall us in the course of each day of our relativley, deceptively mundane lives?

Remy Martin.

Seriously. I'm an Army guy so I am trained to have a bubble that consists of your fellow men, whether you call it a squad, platoon, section, whatever. I've never (thankfully) been in a situation where the bubble has burst, well not in combat anyway.

Downtown battling with paras is a different matter.
  Rogueish
W.I.E.R.D.
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 1:03 AM
and he's still drunker than I'd imagine the Rogueish one is on New Year's Eve

Why be like that just once a year?

Am I putting the British Army in a bad light?
amidalooine
The Emotional Galaxy
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 5:37 AM
Beautiful entry, brook. I love the movie, Glory, too.

Though I fight hard to maintain the bubble I've built around myself and my family, I also realize that breaking out of it once in a while to experience the pain and joy of reality is necessary...healthy, even. One needs raw emotion to survive...at least I do...
hansgirl3
Invoking the Squee
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 7:43 AM
Very well said, brook.

I'm also glad when I see kids cry over movies. Too many don't nowdays and it's tragic. There are too many "tough" kids out there. It's good to hear you're running into some softer hearts. :)

I still cry when Han is lowered into the Carbon Freezing Chamber (and when I read it). I know I will cry when I read of Chewie's death in Vector Prime; I have yet to bring myself to read that book (I own it, but can't quite read it yet).

We do all have our bubbles. Mine has been broken and rebuilt a number of times. I have a very thin bubble, personally, but it's really big. :)

Nice entry! :x
  brooklooineghost
Just a simple mom trying to make my way in the (expanded) universe
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 1:34 PM
It has been eleven years, and it has taken me this long to rebuild my bubble.

then you can be my real-life hero ... i'm still figuring that part out, after 6 yrs. but like Luke, we find that the teachings of those we love never leave us.

greetings & peace to mandalore & jp 77 (congrats on the sewing machine, by the way!)

and jedilily, you have no idea ... there are sooo many things i love about this city, but when you have kids ... well, the pros definitely become eclipsed by the cons (at least for me)
  brooklooineghost
Just a simple mom trying to make my way in the (expanded) universe
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 1:45 PM
I have a very thin bubble, personally, but it's really big.

then much in common, we have, hg3!

breaking out of it once in a while to experience the pain and joy of reality is necessary...healthy, even

boy, is it ... as backwards as it sounds, my own loss made me a better parent. it gave me a much greater respect for and understanding of time as a commodity to be cherished, appreciated, savored . . . i now have less tolerance for people and situations that stress me out, and a much better reference point for what will really matter in the long run, and which things in my life are simply distracting me from my priorities

  brooklooineghost
Just a simple mom trying to make my way in the (expanded) universe
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 1:46 PM
We have a magnet on our fridge that reads "Remember what is truly important to you." Seems obvious, but after losing someone you love, it takes on a new meaning.
  brooklooineghost
Just a simple mom trying to make my way in the (expanded) universe
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 1:56 PM
rivet head, blg works for me . . . thanks for the heads up, i ordered it after reading the write-up. funny thing is, i'd have to say that Anakin is my favorite character, but honestly, watching him turn into Vader, i was saddened by the inevitability of it all. With Chewbacca, i was caught off guard . . .

Rogueish!!! you must explain to me someday what prompted you to don the uniform (could it be that it invokes its own special brand of squee???) and while you're at it, explain the drinking thing too, 'cause, as much as i'm afraid to admit this to you and risk jeapordizing our fledgling friendship, i have a confession to make: i can't hold my liquor ataaaaaaall!
jkthunder
Seven Pieces
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 2:09 PM
This is so thought provoking. I agree, it's so easy these days for kids *and* adults to not be moved by anything, fictional or not. It speaks to how important it is to support the arts in such a way that our storytellers can emote people rather than make them immune to violence and the like.

Just a heads up, even though the material you're discussing is one of the most widely known stories of the EU, it's still a pretty big spoiler. Some people like to know when some plot content they haven't read for themselves is coming up. You might want to put a spoiler note in the beginning of the entry. :)
padmeskywalker77
Padme's Legacy
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 5:16 PM
What a touching entry!! To me, bubbles are necessary entities in our lives, even though they can be shattered so easily. They help us to protect those we care most about and love, even in the most difficult of times. Although I do not have children of my own yet, I still want to protect all the children I come into contact with on a daily basis from the horrors of every day live. The rebuilding of these shattered bubbles are what make us stronger.

Thanks again for the wonderful entry :)
  rivet head
WILL TYPE STAR WARS BLOG FOR FOOD!
date Posted: Nov 10, 2006 8:52 PM
Why be like that just once a year?

Am I putting the British Army in a bad light?


Hey everybody, ask him about St. Patrick's Day!!!


But on the serious side, this was a thoughtful entry, BLG, considering that tomorrow is Veteran's Day in the USA.
  brooklooineghost
Just a simple mom trying to make my way in the (expanded) universe
date Posted: Nov 11, 2006 1:12 PM
You might want to put a spoiler note in the beginning of the entry.

wait a minute, jk . . . (slaps self upside own head) . . . there , that oughta do it.

sorry, i got so carried away writing that stuff that i completely forgot about protocol. good lookin out.

and to rivet head, i tend to lean more towards Alderaanians in my view of what i'd like the world to be, but i also have a serious love for the people we celebrate today. (imagine a SW fanatic admiring people who are willing to put everything on the line for the sake of others ... no big surprise there.)
  Rogueish
W.I.E.R.D.
date Posted: Nov 27, 2006 4:51 AM
Rogueish!!! you must explain to me someday what prompted you to don the uniform (could it be that it invokes its own special brand of squee???) and while you're at it, explain the drinking thing too, 'cause, as much as i'm afraid to admit this to you and risk jeapordizing our fledgling friendship, i have a confession to make: i can't hold my liquor ataaaaaaall!

I'll gladly explain in detail, one day. It isnt such a special story for no other reason that I had to escape my home town life. It was meant to be for 3 years only, but here I am 18 years on, fairly successful.
  Rogueish
W.I.E.R.D.
date Posted: Nov 27, 2006 4:57 AM
And as for the drinking? Well, if you put several hundred soldiers in a barracks, then stick one or two bars in those barracks, and then the barracks is quite close to a town which is full of loose women - what are those soldiers going to do? Go to church? I think not.

But, not all soldiers are lager louts. I used to be, then I mellowed when father-hood came along - but still had the odd wild boozy night now and then.

Nowadays, I still enjoy the drink. The debauchery is long gone, but the drink is still one of my favourite hobbies.
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