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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Michael Jackson’s Life Could have Been Saved

This Friday marks one year since the passing of Michael Jackson. His legacy remains highly controversial. On one side there are ardent fans who consider him the central inspiration of their lives. On the other there are strident critics who believe he was hopelessly weird with an unhealthy interest in children. In the middle are those who simply love his music and miss his talent.

The truth about Michael as I knew and understood him was something else entirely. Michael Jackson forever remained the broken boy who yearned for a normal childhood but was thrust reluctantly into a spotlight that slowly became addictive. Immersed in a celebrity culture rife with human corruption, he yearned to be innocent. Starved of affection, he spent his life looking for love but ultimately settled for attention. Surrounded by sycophants who indulged his every unhealthy whim, he longed to find an authentic and spiritual environment. And trapped in a cocoon of incarcerating fame, he craved to consecrate his celebrity to a cause larger than himself.

The tragedy of his life was his failure to achieve these noble aims. Michael knew that G-d had given him a special gift and with it the power to ‘heal the world, make it a better place.’ He understood the responsibility of celebrity and was devastated as his was slowly transformed into notoriety. He hated to be hated and was crushed by the chasm between what he saw as his sincere intentions to do good verses the uncharitable public perception of him as a shallow materialist.

Once in the midst of the thirty hours of recordings we did together for publication in a book that would allow Michael to speak directly to the public, he revealed how defamatory his celebrity had become. “You get tired and it just wears you down. You can’t go somewhere where they don’t manipulate what you do and say, that bothers me so much, and you are nothing like the person that they write about, nothing. To get called Whacko, that’s not nice. People think something is wrong with you because they make it up. I am nothing like that. I am the opposite of that.”

Polite to a fault, he was a soft and gentle soul who prided himself on being different to other celebrities. Whereas they partied in nightclubs, Michael loved being around ordinary families. Where they put, as Michael said, needles in their arms, he was a vegetarian who wouldn’t be caught dead with a street drug. And where they, as Michael maintained, engaged in tawdry relationships, Michael preferred the company of innocent kids.

What he could not see was that overindulging in medication prescribed by a doctor was just as destructive as a street drug and was motivated by the same celebrity emptiness. He was also oblivious to his own excess when it came to kids. It was one thing to show kindness and friendship to children. It was another thing entirely to invite them into your bed.

I do not for a moment believe Michael was a pedophile. Those who judge him as such forget that the only time he was charged he was utterly acquitted, and it is time for the public to exonerate him as well. But he gave himself license to cross lines of basic propriety that brought him into disrepute and soiled his message as to the purity and innocence that adults could learn from children. For a man who spent his life trying to educate the public as to the wonders of childhood, this was a monumental failure, and he knew it. The suspicion cast on him by a public whose love he had spent a lifetime cultivating marked the principal sorrow of his life. It would have tragic consequences when he turned increasingly to painkillers to numb the ache.

A year after his death what most haunts me is the knowledge that Michael’s life could so easily have been saved. What Michael needed was not painkillers but counseling, not the numbing of an inner woundedness through drugs but the awakening of an inner conscience through spiritual guidance. He needed a wise voice in his ear guiding him to a mastery of his demons before they consumed him. Any number of people could have rescued Michael from impeding oblivion. Most of all, he craved the love and validation of his father. What emerges most strikingly in our recorded conversations – conversations that Michael knew would be read by a wide audience, perhaps including his parents – was the hurt he felt toward his father on the one hand, and the extreme affection he harbored for him on the other. Michael had many fans, but he played primarily to an audience of one.

But while his life is sadly irretrievable, the lessons to be culled from his life are not. Few were as eloquent in articulating the profound lessons parents could learn from being around their children. Fewer still were more attuned to the lifelong scarring of children who were victims of neglect. I can still hear Michael’s daily admonishments to me to look my children in the eye and tell them I loved them and to never allow a night to go by without reading them a bedtime story.

When first I learned of his death my immediate reaction, I am ashamed to say, was anger. You silly man, I thought. How could you? You knew your children, whom you adored, depended on you. You were the most devoted father. How could you orphan them? You Michael, to whom G-d bequeathed such unequaled talent, just threw it away?

Twelve months later the anger is gone, replaced by a deep sadness. He was an imperfect candle. But his striving to go beyond the caricature he had become and redeem his life by visiting orphanages and hospitals was illuminating. The lyrics of his songs spoke to the human yearning to mend the broken pieces of the human soul and become whole. Whether it was encouraging himself and his fans to be the man looking in the mirror, or healing the world, he wished for his music to inspire people to choose goodness.

A year after his untimely passing it is time to finally mourn Michael as a man. To remember him not as an entertainer, or to miss him as an international icon – an object without feelings or pain – but as a struggling soul who tried to transform the pain of his broken childhood into an inspirational message of parents cherishing their children. It is time to evaluate Michael his life not in the context of an idol who had much money and fame but as a man who searched for a real home that was not a stage.

 


Rabbi Shmuley Boteach is the author of ‘The Michael Jackson Tapes: A Tragic Icon Reveals His Soul Intimate Conversation,’ (Vanguard) and the just-published ‘Renewal: A Guide to the Values-Filled Life’ (BasicBooks). His website is http://www.shmuley.com. Follow him on .

Comments

  • Tuesday, June 22, 2010

    steveprobst

    I highly admire his talent.  It’s so sad he chose the path he did. Definitely a spiritual healing was the only way to turn things around. Your book was very insightful.

  • Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    Dario

    I highly admire Michael Jackson and Rabbi Shmuley
    definetely I need to buy this book !
    thanks for the mail
    Shalom

  • Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    Ami Toben

    Truly shameless.
    If 1 year of Michael Jackson’s death is worth a 25% discount on “the Michael Jackson tapes” does that mean that in January I’ll be able to get it after a 37.5% discount?
    Shameless!

  • Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    JeanneRegan

    Well, I, for one, bought the book when it came out as I knew what a good friend Rabbi Shmuley was to Michael.  I had heard about Michael spending time with the Rabbi and his family; family dinners, day trips together, etc.  Let me also say that I became a fan of Rabbi Boteach a few years ago watching a show he was on where the main focus was counseling families.  I was impressed!  That is what most families need today—spiritual counseling.  I remember feeling some relief, an inner joy, for Michael just knowing he had a caring friend who wanted to help him grow and work on shared projects for the betterment of individuals (children). 

    In reading the book, I got a better idea of what Michael honestly felt about his family, his fans, and himself, and what he felt his purpose was here on earth.  He was a poet, a singer, and a dancer with unparalleled ability!  That was his legacy. 

    I thought the book was tastefully written, and clearly by someone who knew Michael well.  Rabbi Shmuley expressed it so well in the above article.  He knew the projects Michael could have completed in his adulthood.  He knew being a father to his children meant everything to Michael, but Shmuley also saw, so much clearer than Michael could have, the futility of it all.  The sycophants, and the doctors on the payroll who would never said “no” to Michael because the money was just too good. 

    G-d rest you, Michael.  May we all know perfect healing someday.  Peace.

  • Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    Ami Toben

    Do you believe that the rabbi was consulting Michael Jackson for free?
    Was he a friend or was he a paid consultant? a friendly consultant but a paid one none the less. Now making even more money off of the tapes, and as mentioned - call now and he’ll take 25% off of the the price he charges for publicizing the intimate personal confessions that his “friend” gave him.

  • Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    JeanneRegan

    Rabbi Shmuley explains in the foreword that the tapes were something that both he and Michael planned on publishing one day.  If I thought that an individual ONLY wanted to profit from releasing “confessions,“ as you say, it would not appeal to me at all.  However, I was well aware that these tape sessions were meant to reveal Michael to the very people Michael claimed misunderstood him.  It was no doubt cathartic for him since he trusted Shmuley enough to open up to him. 

    I’m not naive enough to think that the rabbi was just a pal.  He is an well-respected psychologist who happens to specialize in the dynamics of family relationships.  I can only assume he was able to provide Michael with a lot of insight.  They did seem to have a mutual friendship going as well.  I think Michael had a few really good friends in his life—not a bad thing.

  • Wednesday, June 23, 2010

    JeanneRegan

    Sorry, I typed this without my eyeglasses on, and it’s late!  I meant to write “He is a well-respected….“

  • Thursday, June 24, 2010

    Ami Toben

    Well, as for publicizing the tapes, if indeed it was agreed between the two men that they should be publicized one day, then i must concede the point. Nevertheless, you did mentioned that he is a “well-respected psychologist”, are you sure about that? In which university did he study? And what degree does he hold?
    As far as i know, Shmuel Boteach never got a degree from any university and is a follower of an ultra-orthodox sect, practically a cult called “Chabad”, that believes that Menachem Mendel Shneerson (who died 16 years ago) was the messiah.

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