Happiness comes from the smallest things in everyday life. Like in my case, I wait for these birds to appear every winter ... and now, they are here !!
“You may think you know my story,” Mary tells us. “Trust me, you don’t ...”
‘Mary’ is a re-imagined period drama that explores the character and the circumstances of being the ‘chosen one’ to give birth to the promised king as per the prophecy of ‘Isaiah’. The film portrays Mary of Judea, as a young woman coming into her power and accepting her unique destiny, albeit with occasional fears and confusion … balancing her humanity with her divinely ordained role.
Joachim and his wife, Anna, have their prayers answered when a daughter is born to them in exchange of the promise to dedicate her to the service of the lord. Young Mary is sent to the Temple of God in Jerusalem. While Mary accepts a mission, not of her own choosing, director D.J. Caruso shows her as a heroic woman, who displays remarkable strength and courage making her life story a survival narrative in many ways. Chosen to bring the Messiah into the world, Mary finds enemies in Judea; she is shunned by the community for carrying what they believe to be an illegitimate child. Mary fights back and persists even in the face of the temptation of Lucifer. Later, Lucifer provokes a mob to stone Mary to death but Joseph saves her. When King Herod orders the “King of the Jews” to be killed, Mary and Joseph are forced to escape to save the newborn Jesus. The film ends as they return to the Temple of Jerusalem with Jesus. The priest proclaims a new prophecy … the blessed child is destined to bring about the rise and fall of many.
‘Mary’ isn’t a typical Christmas movie: it dramatizes the miraculous birth of Jesus and also the miraculous birth of His mother – Mary, through events that may or may not align with the Scriptures.
When the song was released the women's liberation movement was really gaining momentum and a lot of men didn't understand what it meant … Did liberation mean that the new woman was trying to be a man? No ... perish the thought!
The term ‘new woman’ emerged at the end of the nineteenth century to describe women who were pushing against the limits which society imposed on women. Today we might call her a liberated woman or may be a feminist. Less constrained by Victorian norms and domesticity than previous generations, the new woman had greater freedom ... she challenged conventional gender roles and met with hostility from men and even from women who objected to women's public presence and supposed decline in morality ! Put in a simpler way, the new woman was the young women at the turn of the century to reject her mothers' ways in favour of new, modern choices. Indeed equations change every day. Questions have been raised on how far women's liberalism has become effective. But the big change was that women have tasted the possibilities; they know what’s in the realm of their grasp … the freedom to work or be single, the freedom to define themselves, to find what they really want.
O ... she takes care of herself
She can wait if she wants
She's ahead of her time
O ... and she never gives out
And she never gives in
She just changes her mind
And if all this brings confusion to the woman, think of the poor man. What worked well some time back did not work anymore. The men are slowly getting the idea, they are trying to understand the new rules and become new men ! Yet the new man seems to be a confused young man right now … trying to be gentle, open and supportive new men while fulfilling the traditional male role of being aggressive, assertive and high-achieving. Typically men do not like the expression ‘new man’ at all … the new man is a caricature ! They do not care for ‘feminists’ either …for feminists are 'short-haired women shouting for their rights'. Indeed there are very few new men around and there is no evidence to suggest that we are witnessing huge social change. But in my own family and among friends and acquaintances I see men who are more open to change. Men are becoming incorporated into domestic and societal roles, which have traditionally been the prerogative of women.
Anyway, the idea of the new man is not new. There were plenty of affectionate and sympathetic men around in previous generations.
But those affectionate and sympathetic men of the previous generations were never asked questions like – "Is it important for you to be the breadwinner ? Are you competitive ? Is it important to you to have a good physique ? Would you share the housework or look after the children ? Are you confused about how you relate to women ? Do you find it difficult to talk about your feelings ?" The answers, I guess will reveal a lot. It will be interesting to put these same questions in their proper context to a new woman too. The answers will reveal a lot, yet again ! Indeed we all are living through changing times. However, the basic rules of human relationships have always been the same … you cannot force your views on somebody else, emancipation is a state of the mind !
And she'll promise you more
Than the Garden of Eden
Then she'll carelessly cut you
And laugh while you're bleedin'
But she'll bring out the best
And the worst you can be
Blame it all on yourself
Cause she's always a woman to me
She is frequently kind
And she's suddenly cruel
She can do as she pleases
She's nobody's fool
And she can't be convicted
She's earned her degree
And the most she will do
Is throw shadows at you
But she's always a woman to me
Coming back to Billy Joel’s song … there's a sort of haunting melancholy in the song. The man cannot reconcile the things the woman can do to a man with the chivalrous notion he seems to hold of a woman. She's on a pedestal like a Goddess … even though he seems to know she shouldn't be; and now that she has fallen off, he alternates between cynicism and admiration for her. The song captures the duality a man can feel when he's involved with a woman who has embraced liberation in context of society's stereotypical expectations of what it means to be a woman. The woman does not appear to either seek or need approval from others, and she's not taking responsibility for others reactions to how she is. She is her own person, has accepted it and is proud of it. So he chooses to blame himself, “Blame it all on yourself"… for he still loves her and recognises her as still being very much a woman. The song does not speak of the perfect woman, it speaks of a woman and the man who loves her for who she is and can be.