A Wrinkle In Time

by TD 10 Replies latest jw experiences

  • TD
    TD

    Although the term "brainwashing" has fallen out of favor of late, I think few here would deny that the JW faith exerts a tremendous influence over the adherent at levels far below that of conscious thought.

    Certainly no spouse of a believing JW is unfamiliar with this. In clinical terms, I think The True Believer by Eric Hoffer gives one of the best analysis of the resultant behavior, but does not capture the sheer emotional frustration friends, family members and associates of JW?s often experience.

    For emotional parallels, we often turn to works of fiction. The Ex-JW community, for example often draws comparisons between the JW mindset and the artificial reality portrayed in The Matrix or the iron control of the Borg, from the television series Star Trek. Both scenarios depicted humans in symbiotic enslavement to machines.

    For me, no work of fiction comes closer than Madeline L?Engle?s 1962 Newberry Award winning classic, A Wrinkle In Time. Written loosely as science fiction, and primarily to an adolescent audience, A Wrinkle In Time utilizes liberal Christian theology as a framework to explore the issues of personal responsibility and integrity versus the dangers of mindless conformity.

    The story revolves around Meg Murry, a teenaged girl who?s father, a scientist experimenting with the possibility of travel through extra spatial dimensions, has disappeared nearly a year ago.

    Meg Murry, her younger brother, Charles Wallace Murry and her friend Calvin O?Keefe are taken by kindly angelic beings to a planet called Camazotz where the elder Murry is imprisoned.

    On the surface, Camazotz appears much like Earth, but the three children notice something different almost immediately:

    In front of all the houses children were playing. Some were skipping rope, some were bouncing balls. Meg felt vaguely that something was wrong with their play. It seemed exactly like children playing around any housing development at home, and yet there was something different about it. She looked at Calvin and saw that he too, was puzzled.

    "Look!" Charles Wallace said suddenly. "They?re skipping and bouncing in rhythm! Everyone?s doing it at exactly the same moment."

    This was so. As the skipping rope hit the pavement, so did the ball. As the rope curved over the head of the jumping child, the child with the ball caught the ball. Down come the ropes. Down came the balls. Over and over again. Up. Down. All in rhythm?..

    The reason, the children soon discover, is that the entire planet was telepathically controlled by IT, an oversized disembodied brain. Once IT had invaded your mind, not only all of your conscious thoughts, but all of life?s rhythms, from your heartbeat to your footsteps would proceed according to IT?s drumbeat.

    Charles Wallace, Meg?s precocious younger brother makes the mistake of thinking he can open his mind to IT and still maintain a shred of his own personal identity. He is mistaken.

    Meg and Calvin try to reach Charles in vain:

    Charles Wallace?s voice seemed to come from a great distance. "Stop staring at me."

    Breathing quickly with excitement, Calvin continued to pin Charles Wallace with his stare. "You?re like Ariel in the cloven pine, Charles. And I can let you out. Look at me, Charles. Come back to us."

    Again the shudder went through Charles Wallace.

    Calvin?s intense voice hit at him. "Come back, Charles. Come back to us."

    Again Charles shuddered. And then it was as though an invisible hand had smacked against his chest and knocked him to the ground, and the stare with which Calvin had held him was broken. Charles sat there on the floor of the corridor whimpering, not a small boy?s sound, but a fearful animal noise.

    Calvin shook his head. "Charles almost came out. I almost did it. He almost came back to us."

    Like Calvin with Charles, I have often been that close with my wife. All of us who have ever tried to talk and reason with a JW are intimately familiar with the slack-jawed glazed look that greets this endeavor. Many times, I have seen that glazed look leave her eyes and briefly, for a second, sometime even two, I have seen the real Ane, a kind compassionate person who is repulsed by the idea of a loving God hiding from his children for so long that they begin to doubt his existence and then one day, suddenly annihilating them because they failed to join a small esoteric American religion that abuses its members and lies about its own history.

    As Charles sinks deeper into IT, Meg eventually discovers that she has a weapon that IT does not --- Love:

    Tears were streaming down her cheeks, but she was unaware of them.

    Now she was even able to look at him, at this animated thing that was not her own Charles Wallace at all. She was able to look and love?.

    Slowly his mouth closed, Slowly his eyes stopped their twirling. The tic in his forehead ceased its revolting twitch. Slowly he advanced toward her.

    "I love you!" she cried. "I love you, Charles! I love you!"

    Then suddenly he was running, pelting, he was in her arms, he was shrieking with sobs. "Meg!"

    -----Would that it was this simple??.(sigh)?.

  • CeriseRose
    CeriseRose

    Excellent illustration. And I love that book...I think I read it at least 30 times in elementary school, and several dozen more since.

    It really is like that...once central organization controlling uniformity of thought. It would be one thing if it truly was from God, but it -is- missing the part about love.

    Thanks for posting. :)

  • blondie
    blondie

    A Wrinkle in Time will be on ABC on May 10 at 7 pm CDT.

    http://abc.go.com/movies/awrinkleintime.html

  • Odrade
    Odrade

    I've never read L'Engle's books. Maybe I will... as soon as I finish the Narnian Chronicles for the first time...

  • CeriseRose
    CeriseRose

    A Wrinkle in Time, a Wind in the Door and A Swiftly Tilting Planet are the 3 I've read. I didn't read the next 2 because when I found out about them I was a JW and the religious content was a bit 'grey area' for me. I will probably read them as well.

    I can recommend the 3 I read unhesitatingly. I enjoy them even as an adult.

    I have yet to read Narnia. That's on my list too. I finally got through the Anne of Green Gables series. It makes me wonder what I was reading through my childhood. Nancy Drew I think. hehe

    Blondie: Thanks for the movie heads up! I'm so there. :)

  • myauntfanny
    myauntfanny

    I loved those l'Engle books so much. I really want to read them again.

  • Snapdragon
    Snapdragon

    Excellent post, TD.

    I just read A Wrinkle a few months ago, and had this nagging familiarity. I just couldn't place it, though. Your thoughts on it are really insightful and I thank you for them.

    What is the history of the author, do you know?

    I read the Narnian Chronicles when I was in grade school and was completely blown away when I put together the biblical parallels. Of course, in this matter I have the JW to thank for my early bible teaching. To this day, that series is the first one out of my mouth when asked what is my favorite book. Once I found out, later in life, about C.S. Lewis, I was a little worried that I'd crossed over into that "grey area" of allowable JW reading. But pushed that firmly aside, so as not to spoil my emotional image of the books.

    On another note:

    I have an interesting experience. Of course growing up I was highly discouraged from reading anything with magic and sorcery etc. My grandparents raised me and I'll never forget Grams saying "Be especially careful with things like J.R.R Tolkien books, and anything with magic. If you show interest in the demons, they'll show interest in you." I guess this scared the snot out of me ( I woulda been a sophmore in H.S.) because I didn't really know what the Hobbit, or Lord of the Rings was about, but seeing the books in the library made me feel like I was in the occult section.

    Fast forward 6 years and its 1999. I had been out of JW for 3 years, and my new mother-in-law gave me a book store gift card. I was wandering through my favorite section and came across LOTR. It again made my stomach jump. But I stared at it for probably two minutes. I picked it up and read the back. It sounded beautiful. I was nervous, but anxious to get it home. I read all three books in a week's time. To think that those words from my dear Grams would have affected my thinking process so deeply, and may have kept me from reading one of (personal opinion here) the most beatifully written and poetic epics of all time.

    <This all came about before I knew about the movies. They were a wonderful bonus and I was thrilled with their outcome. By the way.>

    Also, were those other books mentioned in an earlier post from the same author? (I'm sorry, I forgot who recommended them...)

    ~A

  • CeriseRose
    CeriseRose

    Madeline L'engle's Site is this: http://www.madeleinelengle.com/

    The three books I mentioned in my post are all hers. They are basically like a trilogy for story/theme. The next two books focus on different members of the same family and I think of them as separate (I don't know if they are, because I haven't read them yet).

    During elementary school the teacher would read us classics. I know I've 'heard' the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe, and the Hobbit. I finally read the J.R.R. Tolkien trilogy a few years ago. Oddly enough, my sister, not a reader herself and still a staunch JW, didn't like the look of the previews on the LoTR movies and figures they're demonized. (Of course she and hubby have Star Wars in all it's episodes...no magic or anything in that...LOL). But I digress.

    Another Tolkien book I have on my list is the Simarillon. At this point, it's way down the list. hehe

  • myauntfanny
    myauntfanny

    Have any of you read the Philip Pullman trilogy? They're a bit like the Harry Potter books but about a million times better.

  • Bulldog
    Bulldog

    I was in grade five when our teacher read "A Wrinkle in Time" to us, and I remember being very alarmed at first, as my "bible trained conscience" warned me that this was crossing the evil line, and I asked to be excused. My teacher refused, explaining that this was a lovely book, and I guiltily started to enjoy the book, and looked forward to it very much.

    My brother was dying of a brain tumor at this time, and I cried and cried at the passage you just quoted, as I wanted so badly to bring my brorher back, and was unable to help him. I felt like i had let him down, and it was somehow my fault.

    I loved the Narnia books, and read them guiltily, noticing the parallels even back then at that tender age.

    I have just recently bought the Lord of the Rings Trilogy, and when I get time will read them. I remember visiting an elders wife who encouraged me to read them, and being shocked, and telling her my conscience wouldn't allow it. I also judged her for reading "bodice rippers" romances, but then with much guilt secretly read hers at her house.

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