Will was good, and so are we.
In my class today, we discussed
the Great Depression and the fear factor. Fear always asks the same question:
"What if?" During the Depression, people saved so much for an
uncertain future that they forgot the present was now. They held on so tightly
to what little they had that they couldn't see what was possible. We do the
same thing with our lives—holding back our gifts, our love, our futures, all
because of fear.
Think about Matt Damon and Ben
Affleck, two kids in their twenties writing a screenplay. What if they had
questioned the outcome instead of diving in? They didn't. They wrote Good
Will Hunting and won an Oscar for Best Screenplay.
In the movie, a math teacher
finds Will Hunting in the corridor and shouts, "That's people's work,
don't do graffiti here!" As they approach the wall, they discover Will has
solved the toughest problem in the class—a problem that stumped MIT students,
solved anonymously on a hallway chalkboard. But genius wasn't Will's real
problem. Fear was.
Later, therapist Sean Maguire,
played by Robin Williams, asks Will a simple question: "What do you wanna
do?" Will doesn't have the precise answers we think we should give. He's
brilliant but lost, talented but terrified. Here's what makes Sean different—he
doesn't search for answers. Instead, he talks about his own life, his mistakes,
his late wife, showing Will how to be vulnerable around the people we love.
Vulnerability is a strength, not a liability.
We're all dealing with this gap
between the self we are and the self we want to be. But what if we are more
than the fear we experience? The most powerful scene comes when Sean tells
Will, again and again: "It's not your fault." Will breaks down
because Sean gave him permission to be human, to stop running, to accept love.
The movie ends with Will driving
to California to find the girl he pushed away, and Sean leaving for a trip he's
been postponing. Both men choosing the uncertain road over the safe one. It's
bittersweet, not because it's perfect, but because it's real. The ending
whispers to us: make that one little effort, give it a try, just one more time.
In the end, it's all about a road
not taken for fear of what doesn't even exist today. But Will was good—broken
and brilliant and scared and good. And so are we.
What road are we not taking today? Or rather taking today?
This genuinely Inspires a lot mam...👌
ReplyDeleteThank you for the encouragement!
DeleteI liked how you shared your ideas with real meaning. Enjoyed reading it!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!
DeleteMa’am, this is my fourth time reading this today, and every time I read it, it inspires me and makes me feel good, ma’am. It also brings to mind the things I’ve pushed away for a future that never came. Reading this reminds me that *it’s better to try than to do nothing*, ma’am. And this is so beautifully written, ma’am. Thank you for sharing your ideas, ma’am.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I am glad it could resonate with you :)
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