(c) Disney |
Peter Pan, 1953
watched November 20, 2011
In my living room, there's an old steamer trunk-turned-coffee table, of which I have many memories. As a child, it served as a doctor's table when I - the patient – was sick and my sister used her toy stethoscopes and thermometers to heal me. And it served as the ice rink on which we figure skated during every Winter Olympics.
watched November 20, 2011
In my living room, there's an old steamer trunk-turned-coffee table, of which I have many memories. As a child, it served as a doctor's table when I - the patient – was sick and my sister used her toy stethoscopes and thermometers to heal me. And it served as the ice rink on which we figure skated during every Winter Olympics.
But most
frequently, it served as the launching pad for my first attempts at flight.
Encouraged by Peter Pan's advice to “think happy thoughts” and the catchy song,
“You Can Fly,” my little sister and I jumped off the edge countless times in
reach of the sky, the second star to the right, and Never Never Land.
There was
something in that moment of jumping. It's a common trope for animated movies to
prolong the instance when the character - hanging in mid-air – suddenly
realizes they are no longer standing on solid ground. This realization happens
much faster in reality. But it still happens. For a brief space in time, you
truly believe you are hung. Suspended. Flying.
And then the fall.
(c) Disney, thanks disneyscreencaps.com |
But
I think we're mistaken in assuming that practicality and dreaming are mutually
exclusive. The dreamers aren't always admirable characters. Peter is
self-absorbed and lacks focus. Wendy is needy; she can't go anywhere by herself
(though I admit, flying is hard. I've tried).
So what
makes me love these characters is not their dreaming; it's their moments of
growing up - the actions they take when just dreaming isn't enough: Wendy's
decision to walk the plank rather than join the scalawag band of pirates, even
when it means the end. Peter's choice to fight Captain Hook “man to man” on
solid ground. His refusal to fly away when left weaponless and at swordpoint
because he gave his honorable word. These are heart-wrenching and thrilling
scenes in the movie. They moved me as a child as I realized that loss was a
possibility even when you dream, and they move me now as I still need the
courage to keep dreaming.
The gift of
stories is not that dreams come true; it’s that there is something worth
dreaming about. That in the midst of difficult circumstances, you still hope.
For something Greater. For something Beautiful. That’s growing up as a dreamer.
Having the courage to dream when it’s stupid to and the actions to follow
through when it gets tough. Even when the next second brings the hard crashing
against earth, for a brief moment, you fly.
---------------
Abi is a dreamer, a writer, and a sucker for good fairy tales and sassy heroines. She blogs on art and good
people at www.offthefrontporch. wordpress.com. Her favorite movie, not surprisingly, is Finding Neverland. Tissue, anyone?
You're such a great writer, Abi. :) Hope to see more guest posts in the future!
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