I’ve been fortunate in life in so many ways – so far, as one
must always qualify. While I’m well aware that good health is always at risk of
vanishing without notice, mine to date has been generally robust despite a
family history that stacks the odds against it. (I am the last of my immediate
family still standing, as I have been for nearly two decades.) Whatever health issues
have arisen have been my own fault, e.g. caps for teeth (floss more!) or, just
last week for the first time ever, a touch of gout in the right foot (eat
better!) that cleared up in a few days. Another piece of pure luck (I obviously
had nothing to do with it) is having grown up in a caring and supportive
family. There were no psychically destructive childhood horrors to overcome later
in life beyond the inescapable ones faced even by the Beaver and his brother
Wally. I managed to take some very wrong turns as an adult anyway (the
consequences of my choices have not been as charmed as those of French Stewart
in the 3rd Rock clip below),
but like the health issues they have been entirely my fault – and temporary.
There is a curious downside to a wholesome upbringing and minimal
trauma beyond the inescapable ones. (We all lose people along the way.) Creativity
thrives on bad experiences. To be sure, a Beaver-esque soul can self-motivate
to create anyway and to seek out experiences. Hemingway had nice parents and a
comfortable upper-middleclass childhood yet did pretty well as a writer for
example. (For all his towering reputation, Hemingway wrote plenty of absolute
garbage by the way, but when he was good he was excellent.) Yet trauma when it
doesn’t crush completely (as it too often does) can drive people to create and
produce in a way that prosperity struggles to match. I remember a decade ago in
the cinema watching the movie The
Runaways based on Cherie Currie’s autobiography Neon Angel. Despite (or because of) a dreadful home life, Currie
became the band’s lead singer at age 15. A friend with whom I was watching the
film commented, “You know, our families were just way too functional.”
“Yes,” I agreed. “It ruined our careers,”
We were joking, of course, but not entirely. In truth, my
most productive period for fiction including my one full-length novel was in
the few years following the worst years of my life. (Years, once again, for
which I blame only my own choices.) Words flowed more easily onto pages than
they had before or have since.
These somewhat rambling thoughts came to mind after reading Becoming Superman: My Journey from Poverty
to Hollywood with Stops along the Way at Murder, Mayhem, Movie Stars, Cults,
Slums, Sociopaths, and War Crimes, an autobiography by J. Michael
Straczynski. Outside of scifi fan circles Straczynski is not a household name,
but the work of this prolific novelist, journalist, comic book writer (for both
Marvel and DC), TV animation scriptwriter, live-action TV scriptwriter (Babylon 5 was his personal creation),
and screenwriter (Changeling, Thor, World War Z, et al) is almost impossible to avoid. By “becoming
Superman,” Straczynski does not mean attaining “powers and abilities far beyond
those of mortal men.” He means the adoption of a moral code and personal outlook
attainable by anyone.
To call Straczynski’s childhood impoverished and hellish would
be to make it sound far too pleasant. Straczynski describes his father as a
hard-drinking literal Nazi (he kept the WW2-vintage uniform in the closet) con
man who kidnapped his mother from a brothel in Seattle and then beat her and their
children mercilessly over the course of their lives together. The physical
abuse was matched by shockingly mean-spirited and manipulative verbal kinds.
His mother, he tells us, had mental issues and tried to kill him as a boy at
least twice: once by smothering him and once by pushing him off a roof. He was
caught by wires when falling from the roof, preventing him from splatting
on the concrete. They were not June and Ward Cleaver. Straczynski retreated
into comic books, identifying especially with Superman’s quest to fit into a
world in which he didn’t really belong. It would have been easy enough to be
crushed by a family background like this but Straczynski saw his path out his
mess when, yet a young teen, he realized he didn’t have to be like his father.
He could choose to be different: “The most important aspect to negate was my
family’s sense of victimization… They believed that since they had been
mistreated, they were entitled to do the same to others without being
questioned or criticized.” Refusing to be defined by his abusive family “would
allow me to decide what I wanted to
do with my life” and the kind of person he wanted to be. Straczynski doesn’t
make light of the physical, social, and psychological obstacles to be overcome
with this kind of starting point, but in existentialist fashion stresses the
ultimate power of choice.
Writing became Straczynski’s therapy, as it is for so many
authors. In one of those odd twists that sometimes happen in life, Straczynski
was tagged by DC back in 2010 to write three Superman graphic novels. The character still resonates with him:
“Being kind, making hard decisions, standing up for what’s right, pointing
toward hope and truth, and embracing the power of persistence…” He tells us we
all can do that if we choose. “We just have to be willing to choose. That’s it.
That’s the secret.”
Straczynski’s awful life experiences are an endless resource
that gives depth and breadth to his stories. Nonetheless, as much as I admire
good writers, I wouldn’t trade my far more comfy
upbringing for any Hugo Award. If that ranks ease and peace of mind over art,
so be it.
French Stewart’s rendition of Randy Newman’s Life Has Been Good to Me