In John Carpenter’s 1984 film “Starman,” Jeff
Bridges stars as an alien who is stranded on Earth, and goes on the run from
U.S. government agents with the widow of a deceased housepainter, whose body he
has cloned as a disguise. They have misadventures while eluding the authorities
and the widow (Karen Allen) falls in love with this alien in the body of her
dead husband.
In retrospect the plot summary makes this sound like a
ludicrous B-film, but it works. One scene and one line from the film has stuck
with me since I watched it in a movie theater as a 12-year-old.
The couple are finally cornered in a restaurant by the
authorities and the federal agent who has been leading the hunt for them comes
to confront them. He asks the alien about his journey and learns he is here to
study Earthlings.
“You are a strange species, not like any other, and you
would be surprised how many there are, intelligent but savage,” the Jeff
Bridges/alien tells his pursuer. “Shall I tell you what I find beautiful about you?”
The federal agent nods yes.
“You are at your very best when things are worst.”
That line has been etched in my mind for more than three
decades now, and it’s a fitting mantra for the times we are in.
“You are at your very best when things are worst.”
It can be hard to imagine things getting worse. We are still
in the midst of a global pandemic that has hit the U.S. harder than any other
country, followed by widespread civil unrest over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis
police custody, poisonous politics in an election year and unemployment levels
not seen since the Great Depression.
These are times that try our patience and our resolve. It is
easy to want to withdraw and bunker down, to tune out the outside world and
lapse into a fatalistic nihilism, a hopeless sloth of withdrawal.
The pandemic reminded us that contact with others is an essential part of life.
Human contact is something we took for granted, or even came to resent in New
York City, where everything is too crowded and the inconsideration of others is
amplified by proximity.
But the need to interact with others is more important now than
ever, and despite the myriad conflagrations boiling over in our society, we can
still find common ground with decent people of differing ideas.
Human life is inherently tribal, and America has forged
tribes along lines of culture and character in ways other societies cannot fathom.
These cultures appear to be irreconcilable, but basic human decency and
goodness can transcend even our deepest chasms. The past few weeks have shown
the extent of our divisions but also the depth of our decency and
resolve.
“You are at your very best when things are worst.”
It is time to be the best person you can be and play some
part in making our world a better one. You may be at odds with your friends and
family, you may be subjected to hatefulness from smaller minds, but the things
most worth doing are often most difficult. Keep going.
We can look back at this time and be proud we were at our
very best.
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