SPINE

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Rise and fall

HBO will be airing an interesting documentary today, March 28, 2013: Emmy award winning Alexandra Pelosi's (Nancy Pelosi's daughter) Fall to Grace.

Pelosi's subject is James McGreevey, the ex-governor of New Jersey, who went through a rough and public divorce from his wife after he was charged with soliciting gay sex from an aide. Through all the rough and tumble of this very public process of exposure and perhaps a bit of a crucifixion on the side, McGreevey was re introduced to the world as a closeted gay male.

Today, McGreevey lives in Plainsfield, New Jersey, with his Australian mate Mark O'Donnell and is an Episcopalian with a degree in Divinity (he received that in his early 50's) and a career in social service:

As a recovery specialist who preaches the Gospel, Mr. McGreevey spends much of his time in the Hudson County Correctional Center in Kearny, N.J., working with women fighting addiction through the nonprofit organization Integrity House. His message: No matter how far you’ve fallen, redemption is within reach.

Pelosi claims she is interested in broken souls and deemed McGreevey to be one. She likes to look inside the lives of those who have fallen after having been in the limelight for a while. 

Indeed, as Pelosi says in her insightful interview, the fall of men and women are far worthier of attention than are the stories of their "rise." The "rise" stories are often formulaic and banal and they are also, with the benefit of hindsight, re constructed to make them inspirational.

The fall stories, on the other hand, are more human.

The title of the HBO documentary on McGreevey has a turn into a parable as well: For those who've read Leonard Kriegel's touching essay, "Falling into Life," will see a "fall" as redemption, or a freedom from certain invisible yet adamantine shackles that hold people back from experiencing their "real" lives--the one's reserved for them to achieve their full human potential.

Clearly, McGreevey's fall isn't the typical fall from the wheel of fortune, but a fall into what was reserved for him as a real and rightful place in this world--a gay man with a deep conscience and desire for social service.

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