False Champion

 

 

false

“Some day my prince will come.”

“I need a knight in shining armour to come and rescue me.”

“Where is my Prince Charming?”

These are familiar comments and they all arise as a consequence of the myth that has been created and perpetuated. It is well established that my kind and me create an illusion (read Power of Illusion on this blog for more) . Have you considered the fact that we are just giving you what you expect? We are saying what you want to hear, doing what you want to see and complying with a pre-conceived notion of how relationships ought to be? How has this idea been formulated? Who created the concept of the happy ever after? Was it the Brothers Grimm or Hans Christian Andersen through the fairy tales that they wrote or were they just recording something which had existed orally for centuries before as they added a new gloss to the fairy tale? Maybe we should blame Hollywood for its depiction of how love conquers all and the hero saves the day by dashing to aid the stereotypical damsel in distress. The number of films in which that happens is numerous. Richard Gere appears in his limousine to woo Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, in Love Actually, Hugh Grant goes door to door in search of the tea lady Martine McCutcheon and in The Matrix Trilogy even the kick-ass feisty Trinity is masterfully caught by Neo to prevent her falling. In Rear Window,James Stewart rescues Grace Kelly, in the unusual Wild At Heart, Nicholas Cage (playing Nicholas Cage) comes to the assistance of Laura Dern at a metal gig and who can forget Shrek where an ogre goes hell for leather to beat Prince Charming of all people and gain the hand of Princess Fiona. I am sure you can think of many more examples. There are thousands of instances of this stylised concept of romance and love. Certain films dedicate the entirety of the production to it. Others have a different subject matter but still the concept remains. Luke Skywalker went to rescue the Princess trapped in the Death Star. Clint Eastwood helped the young lady in Pale Rider and she fell in love with him although he left her (was that a cowboy discard perhaps?) and even uber narcissist James Bond gives the Bond Girl her slice of heaven for a few screen minutes. Everywhere you look the idea of romance and the knight in shining armour is reinforced. Pop songs, advertisements (once upon a time a man would go to great lengths just to deliver a box of chocolates to his paramour in the Milk Tray ad) , greetings cards, magazines, newspapers, sitcoms, novels and so on and so forth. The airbrushed, photoshopped, sweeping soundtracked and every sense heightened message is driven at you each and every day. There is a dashing hero (or heroine) out there who will save you and treat you like a princess (or prince).

This is the message that is all around you. This is what you have been raised to expect. Someone will save the day and sweep you off your feet. Everything is going to be alright. You will have your happy ever after. It is hardly surprising that you have bought into this master illusion. Who would not? It is all pervading and virtually impossible to resist. It appeals to that deep-seated desire to be cared for and protected and this is done by maintaining a myth that someone should arrive on a white charger, armour gleaming to pull you from the clutches of the evil troll or moustachioed villain.

“I need a hero” sang Bonnie Tyler and then she laid down the criteria required for said hero to attain. I do not recall her mentioning a steady income, being handy with a paintbrush and making a nice cup of tea. Instead she, along with countless others, generate an ideal and you bought into it. You want the fairy tale. I understand it. Why would you not when all around you, you are being told that this is the way it should be. Who would not want that sensation of being swept off their feet, romanced and made to feel wonderful. And who says we do not provide it? There is no denying that when our kind come along we invariably pick you up in a marvellous whirlwind of love, attention and affection as we suck you into an illusion. Where does the fault lie? Is it us that are to blame for creating this construct to draw you in? Is it your fault for falling for the myth and casting common sense aside for wanting the unattainable? Or does the blame lie elsewhere? Is it those that created and not maintain this illusion? If it is those in this latter category that have created this monster that you believe in and we merely comply with, then the question becomes this. Who are they? Are they your kind or our kind?

14 thoughts on “False Champion

  1. Veronique Jones says:

    Probably both
    I have come to realise that self love is the most important thing when I started practicing that my abusers either left changed or they just no longer had any control over me or how I feel I have walked away as well no one is worth keeping if they are abusive
    We do choose who we love it’s not the narcissist that causes it it is our own self talk
    I actually think I have gained a greater ability to love because I don’t need him to be perfect I only need him to be real

  2. neant says:

    Don Quixote
    Madame Bovary
    and and and…

  3. WhoCares says:

    Nah…I’d take “a steady income, being handy with a paintbrush and making a nice cup of tea.”
    If I even cared about that kind of thing anymore…
    Actually, I would have cared about it before him…all I ever wanted was an equal.

  4. empath007 says:

    Also I think it was Colin Firth’s character in that scene in Love Actually… not Hugh Grant. But I could be mistaken.

    And that movie is so right about the fact that the arrivals at an airport is one of the happiest places on earth 🙂

    1. HG Tudor says:

      I agree. Selecting targets to search is marvellous

      1. empath007 says:

        Haha! Well naturally we see that differently H.G.

      2. Getting There says:

        Hello, empath007. It was Hugh Grant as the prime minister who went door to door. Colin Firth was healing a broken heart writing a book in another country.

        I agree that the airport is great to watch the happy scenes. I don’t enjoy the goodbyes as much and usually hope they get to hug hello again soon.

  5. empath007 says:

    This is important! And has been on my mind a lot lately.

    I can tend to sway from both sides of wanting the story book romance but also logically understanding it does not exist.

    But your kind are so sly! I would tell the narcissist “oh please that’s so cliche, the man “changing” for the woman… come on you’re not going to do that!” When he tried to pull the old soulmate routine on me I’d say “that’s so manipulative, we barely know each other” yet he’d always counter act it…. with such ease. Haha. At least that part I knew was exaggerated. But I couldn’t help it… I wanted it and so did he. He believed I’d be the fuel to last a lifetime and I believed he could be my love to last a lifetime. And BOTH of us…. were WAY off 🤣 we both underestimated each other… And we were both to blame.

    But… let’s mostly blame him anyways 😜😂haha.

  6. Dearest HG: It is a desire of many. Women pray for it a lot, because of our general lack of power and wealth, that is 95% in the hands of men. So nothing is weird or mysterious or negative about many women desiring a man to be our champion rather than our enemy or oppressor. It is rarely discuss that many men brought about the women’s` movement in the West, and now men largely have their cake and eat it to, and are presented with a minuscule bill, if any bill at all. Many women are left with their age and their weariness and their poverty to show for all of their productivity and love and care they have shown to many men and the children of many men. Yes, many women want a champion, and many men want a perfect women. Many call it, in the Western Culture, Happily Ever After. It seems that Narcissists in Western Culture call it: The Forever Golden Period. I do not know about other cultures and their Narcissists. The high divorce rates and relationship failures are at a record high level, in Western Culture. I do not know about the rates in Non Western Culture.

    1. mommypino says:

      PSE, I do not know if this has already changed in my home country but when I left my country, divorce is not legal there. So narcissists or narcissistic men just leave their wives to take care of their kids and replace them with a new woman that they are not married to. They do not have to pay alimony and the legal system is so inefficient that it is rare for anyone to demand for child support legally. It’s a very religious country and since the Catholic Church does not believe in divorce, only annulments, most people there are against divorce as well. Although in Western countries narcissists have found a way to navigate through the alimony rules by using prenups.

      1. PrincessSuperEmpath says:

        Mommypino: Thank you for that info.!

      2. Claire says:

        I am so fortunate I have the opportunity to be done with him.. It’s appalling divorce is admonished anywhere.

        1. mommypino says:

          I agree Claire, I am religious but I am for the freedom to escape a horrible marriage. I really believe in the separation of church and state.

          1. Claire says:

            I like a nice holiday mass but I’m not religious. I agree re, the separation of church and state. I even like some religious ideals.. I have enough to do on a random Sunday.. I did teach Sunday school at one time and the kids went to private school at a mega church.

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