Every bright spark has their demons and that’s true for all
of us. I could talk about how and why Robin Williams died but that’s not what I
want to remember him for. Instead I want to remember him for the way he lived,
the way he battled his demons and what he came to teach each of us.
Whatever
public persona we each choose to give we each have our demons buried underneath
however deep they may be. There is nothing wrong with that, if anything it is
part of what makes each of us human, the complexity and fluidity of human
emotion. Like I said, I don’t want to remember William for how or why he died
but for the joy he brought to millions be it on the big screen, the television
or on stage. To me he will always be that boy who never grew up and the machine
who found his humanity.
If William’s
death does anything it should make us think about how we see mental illness and
how we each choose to live our lives. Despite his problems Williams chose to live his
life bringing joy to millions teaching many a lesson along the way. He taught
us that “to live will be an awfully big adventure” and to see time and death
not as enemies but as companions who travel with us on the journey that is
life.
And in
regard to depression and our deeply buried demons, these can haunt us for years
and drive us to the brink without anyone else ever knowing. There is nothing I can
say or do that will ever change that. It is only ourselves and those around us who
can change that, the smallest things can change the way we see ourselves and
the way we choose to live our lives. This makes me think of William’s relationship
with Christopher Reeve, the actor turned activist who played Superman in the
films but was later paralyzed in a horse riding accident and died some nine
years later. The story goes that Williams was the first person to make Reeve laugh
after his accident when Williams visited him in hospital and pretended to be an eccentric
Russian doctor set to give Reeve a rectal exam. Williams then went on to
promise that he would cover any of Reeve’s medical bills his medical insurance wouldn’t
pay for, fulfilling a promise they made years earlier that they would always
look after one another. It was friends like Williams that brought Reeve out of
his darkest hour and shows us the type of man he was; kind, generous and the
man who made the world laugh despite his demons.
So what
is the point in my writing this post, what is it I am setting out to say or do,
the truth is I don’t know. Since I heard the news of William’s death it has
forced me to think, to reflect and to wonder. So I guess I am just trying to
make sense of my thoughts and what it is I am trying to take from it. All I can
say is, life is short, so don’t judge or criticize as you can never be certain of the full story and treat life as a
treasured gift and an adventure to be had. So here’s to Robin Williams, the boy
who never grew up and the genie who is now free, let us hope he now finds his
peace.
Thanks for reading,
Jason.
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