The Heaven Principle February 13, 2008
Posted by Liz Mead in : Matters Blue , trackback
“Heaven begins with our favourite memory” my girlfriend Rosey once told me.
For me it was bumping out out a show, often at 3 a.m, doubtless tired and pissed, but so happy – in the smells, the dust, the wonder and the satisfaction.
When I was starting school, my stage, cast and lead character was Mighty Mouse a cartoon character from the sixties (who years later was disbarred from Comic Valhalla due to a perceived opium addiction!) Mighty Mouse was everything to me, my scene, my rising star, my metaphor and script for surviving the school yard. He was my Raison d’être.
He may have been small, but he was power-packed. “Here I come to save the day, that means that Mighty Mouse is on the way.”At that time in my life I was hanging out for a miracle and a saviour. And in the process, that wonderful alchemistical theatrical process, I rescued my self.
Notwithstanding the blatant fantasy fixation, the game provided me a rich vein of coping strategies. It gave me the ‘pretend until it feels better’ mentality and the ’practice until you get it right’ strategy. Both of which I’ve maintained to this day. All through high school and through my working life I’ve cast the play, the characters, the scenery and style. So as to make my world interesting enough for me to be a part of. If I found things boring I changed it. If the the colour was drab I’d enliven it. Sort of Steven Covey meets Colour by numbers.
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“Adventures in Paradise” became 2 years teaching in PNG.
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“The Little Princess” became 2 years in Government House
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“The Sound of Music” turned into the Australian Opera
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“Hawaii Five-O” translated into 5 fabulous years working in Television and
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“Disneyland” morphed into the Public Service with its rich seam of fantasy.
But here’s something for nothing – the technique is exhausting. So I’m bumping out the show. No not suicide – just changing roles. A mid-life trauma has forced me to reconvene my cast of creative thousands into a new show altogether. But how?
In a recent documentary on the making of the Australian Hedda Gabler, the fabulous Cate Blanchett commented on the exchange between actor and audience. She ruminated that each production is forged in the exchange between actor and audience and each interpretation therefore is ”right”.
I’m not sure about this new theatre I’m engaging in. Not sure about the cast, or the role, or the plot. But I’ve settled at least on the audience. They’ll be explorative, faith-filled, imaginative, forgiving and kind (as much UNLIKE Hillsong as possible). This is theatre of the soul, not the masses.
And of the show itself? It won’t be outside the self, it will be within. I’m happy to bump it in anytime.
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Comments»
How wonderful to look back at your choices and see the patterns being created and the healing within the process of change.
You’ve certainly given me food for thought. Keep up the progress on the artist’s way.
Dear Lizzie
Finding and reading your blog today has provided me with so much joy. Please continue to explore and to question and be faithful to yourself.
I believe in the Ying and Yang of life. Often the deeper the trouble the greater the need to search and strive for the positive, and how wonderful and refreshing that feels after the abyss!
Yes we all repeat ourselves. And I’m finding that I’m encountering many of the same people again as the circles turn, often after many years. But I’m approaching both the experiences and these people in a very different way, and it all feels very positive.
When these ‘returns’ feel so right, I can but only trust in them and invest my most honest of emotions. If the future reality doesn’t work out entirely as expected perhaps I’ll feel deflated but never sorry. And I seem to be receiving the message that all care should be taken with everyone we come into contact with, as who knows when we cross paths again! So, to the high mountains I go..but leave love with you to take on your voyage.