Since the following post was originally published in November of 2018, it has been one of the most popular here at Becoming Yourself. Given that many of us are streaming a lot more media in these days of the coronavirus, I thought it was a good time to share it again. Also, I started a YouTube channel focusing on book recommendations, writing advice, and personal development that I’m really excited about! You can check it out HERE. I hope you find both resources enjoyable and helpful.
Once upon a time…
It was a dark and stormy night…
Call me Ishmael…
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…
In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit…
How do you feel as you read these famous opening lines? I get a tingle of excitement and anticipation. Why? Because I LOVE stories. I believe most of us do. We seem to be hard-wired as humans to be respond deeply to a well-told story. A lecturer once said, “If I want to say something really important, I tell a story.” Even Jesus used stories as his main method of teaching. Stories speak important truths about ourselves and the world in ways that entertain, inspire, challenge, and remain embedded in our memories.
That’s why I’m excited to introduce a new friend to you. His name is Khemit Bailey, a fellow writer and blogger who understands the power of fictional tales. He specializes in helping people use movies as tools to help them tell their own story. We each have a story to tell, and as the famous poet Maya Angelou said, “There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside of you.” So when Khemit said he was willing to do a guest post on Becoming Yourself, I jumped at the chance. I hope you’ll find his words as inspiring and challenging as I have, and that they will help you on your journey toward Becoming Yourself. Enjoy!
So there I was, sitting in a dark movie theatre with my best friend watching the film Beasts of the Southern Wild in 2012. The movie ended, and the house lights came up. I immediately stumbled over my friend in a rush to get to the bathroom.
Once safely there in the confines of the stall, I immediately found myself shaking and sobbing uncontrollably, but not for the reasons one might normally do so in a bathroom stall. No, my tears were from the pure, unadulterated resonance I felt with the film. There was a little sadness, a little joy, but mainly a deep and fulfilling inspiration.
It wasn’t the first time I’d cried in a movie, but it might have been the first time I asked myself a question whose answer might not be as obvious as it seems: Why??
One answer might be that your empathy for the characters has overwhelmed you… and that may be true. Another answer might be that the technical harmony of the movie (acting, directing, soundtrack, etc.) all drove you towards an emotional climax… and that’s probably not wrong either. But both of those answers are incomplete.
The role of our deeply personal resonance with stories can’t be ignored. Film (and fiction of all kinds) evolved with our emotions in mind. The stories that play themselves out on screens across the world all attempt to gain proximity to our fundamental human nature: the thing inside of us that yearns, strives, and searches endlessly for meaning.
But it isn’t just a generic thing that resides in all of us in the exact same way. If that were the case, every single person would cry at the exact same movies and scenes, and movie theaters would be even more intense places to be.
No, we all seem to resonate with the specific aspects of movies that speak to us on an individual level. We see reflections of ourselves in the stories that surround us. The stronger the link to our unique emotional worlds the stronger the resonance, like tuning forks vibrating in time with each other.
That day in 2012 when I fled to a theater restroom to sob over a movie I’d just seen was not long after I’d gone back to school in the US after an extended and tumultuous 3 year excursion abroad. I was still adapting to life back in the States and things were not going well. I couldn’t keep my grades up, and my social life was nonexistent. I was failing and just couldn’t seem to adapt to the new environment. What’s worse, I didn’t feel like there was anywhere I belonged.
At that time in my life, and many time since, a well-told story about a little girl’s sojourn into unknown lands in search of secret knowledge was like a lightning rod for my emotions. Every scene felt packed with some secret significance meant only for me. I felt like the world was shifting into alignment around me; I felt like I wasn’t alone in my fear and wonder at the mysteries of life.
Certain things stood out to me: The hero of the movie seemed powerless in a chaotic world. The forces of man and nature seemed rallied against her. She had one point of control in all the world: herself. And we, the audience, followed her awash in hope and fear.
As the story spun itself out, I could feel myself resonating strongly with all the impactful scenes that spoke to me personally, and especially with the little heroine confronting her fears one by one. I started paying close attention to what I was feeling as I was watching that film. I’ve continued to do so for the thousands of films since. Instead of paying attention to what the characters felt as I used to, I started paying attention to what they did in response to those feelings: the things that made me respect them.
The characters I’d admired so strongly over the years reflected an ideal back at me: a compiled, but singular pattern of action aimed at overcoming adversity. It was a pattern I could also see in real life when I paid attention. It involved facing fears, taking action, asking for help, and the myriad other things we know but often ignore.
That single pattern of action, a single character composed of all the others, was alive inside of me: an answer to the uncertainty that plagued my life, if only I would turn to ask it for guidance.
Once I saw the potential in viewing movies this way, I was able to refine my understanding of that underlying pattern with each new inspirational film I watched. More than just giving me a greater appreciation of film (which it certainly did), doing so told me things about what I could do about challenges in my own life, and about what I wanted to be doing in the world.
More than just vague inspiration, I saw that there were implications for action there. I started using the movies I resonated with as generators, refiners, and reminders of who I was trying to become. They became my life coach in a very real sense.
I’d always been a movie fan, but I started consuming with an intention that was absent before. I watched movies very closely, and I watched myself just as carefully while I did. I saw what I respected reflected back at me constantly, and I worked to bring myself into alignment with it.
I brought the lessons I was learning to my studies and to my personal life and things began to improve, slowly at first and then with increasing speed. My grades improved drastically; I found the courage to share myself, and build relationships and lifelong friendships. More importantly, by looking to my heroes for inspiration, I found my way back from the edge of hopelessness.
In using my resonance with movies as a guide, I discovered a personal hero all my own, the embodiment of all the traits I found admirable. I still look to that character for guidance today, and every great movie I see brings it more into focus.
The crafters of movies, the writers who plot them, and the real-world people they draw on to drive their creative works are the bedrock of inspirational resonance that movies call forth in us. People follow patterns that take their life on trajectories that are often hard to see except in hindsight. The medium of film is an art form because it can distill those complex patterns and lengthy timelines into kernels of wisdom about human action that are enjoyable, poignant, and powerful.
In life, the inevitable question that arises for all people is: what do I do now?? Some films, ones that inspire and resonate with us strongly, ask that question and then provide an answer. They do so by showing you a character moving from a place of tumultuous uncertainty to one of spiritual equilibrium.
They show you patterns of action that yield answers to the big question, and they have a rationale that justifies it. They keep you engaged, and speak to deep truths within you. They inspire you to be more than what you are, and they show you exactly how. They make you believe it’s possible. They give you hope.
One would be very lucky to find a life coach who can do better than that.
Movies are one of the most powerful tools we can use to assist us in becoming ourselves. Because I’m committed to having everyone share in that process, and I believe what resonates with you is all about YOU, I give out free recommendations of great films based on individual taste in my free time. You can follow this link to get yours 🙂
BIO:
Khemit Bailey is a writer, entrepreneur, and true believer in the transformative power of fiction.
He blogs about great fiction and the mastery of personal stories at The Character Arc. He also co-hosts the FYMP Podcast which focuses on the same topics.
Gravatar e-mail: tyshalle99@gmail.com
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Great article! I have always thought of myself as the opposite of a “movie lover “ , simply because I don’t watch or go to the movies often. But after reading Khemit’s article and identifying with so many things he said about movies , I realize that I really do enjoy movies! The characters,plot, themes all resonate with me . From now on, when I watch movies , I will pay more attention to how they make me feel as well as what I’m enjoying about the film !
Thanks so much for the great feedback, Karen! I'm really glad that Khemit's thoughts connected with you, especially going into it as a self-professed "non-movie" person :) I know what you mean. I had the same experience when watching a movie last night - I'm seeing through a new, deeper lens. Thanks again for reading and keep up the great work on Becoming Yourself!
WOW! I never imagined movies in such a deep light! I do enjoy them although I don't go often. This article will certainly make me pay attention in a more critical way. I really know I MUST read this column a few more times because it is packed full of suggestions which I CAN CERTAINLY USE in my transition into retirement. I believe it will be especially helpful because the truth is change can be challenging! However it is clear to me these particular tips will be a boon to my spirit as I seek "what to do NOW?"
Oddly enough, I can utilize this technique in my daily reading ,also!
Thank you for including this work on your website!
I'm so glad this post connected with you and that you found it helpful! That's what Becoming Yourself is all about - providing people with tools to help them discover and become their best selves. I'm glad what Khemit shared will help you on that journey! Thanks so much for reading and for the great feedback.
Coming late to the party but great post! I find using movies as a start point for coaching discussions to be a much more productive start point than saying ' Oh you should (book on mindfulness/ reasearch paper). The learning points from movies are so much more memorable because, as you say in this piece, you've FELT some of what is being expressed.
Thank you for sharing this, T
Thanks so much for that great feedback, Tom! I'm so glad the post resonated with you as it did with me. I'll pass on your feedback to Khemit, who did this guest post!