There is no shortage of inspiring stories for those
pursuing a hero’s journey. At some point though, girls (and women)
will seek role models that align closely with their belief and thought
structure. Regardless of what this post-feminist era teaches us of the
roles of men and women, we remain different biological constructs
including our brain
anatomy.
The difficulty, even when finding a strong female
character in a heroic encounter, is that the goddess role is emphasized
rather than an independent experience. This heroine is often (and far
too predictably) driven to fulfillment through her male counterpart.
This approach is especially true in Austen’s characters of Elizabeth
Bennet, Emma Woodhouse and Anne Eliott; but also manifests to a lesser
degree in Scarlett O’Hara and Jean Auel’s Ayla. Even Hermione
Granger with her superior intellect is ancillary to Harry Potter’s
greater objective. Of course, the persistent Disney Princess notion of
Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, et al, continues to distort the female
heroic journey.
For me, Meg Murry O’Keefe of Madeleine
L’Engle’s "Time Quartet" is the literature character
closest to my archetype. She still finds her strength through Calvin
O’Keefe – but more in a true heroic cycle switch. Calvin’s love of
literature is yin to Meg’s yangish
predilection for math and science. He truly plays her supporting role,
while remaining that which she lives for.
Meg’s trials are used to confront something bigger
than herself – the battle against universal "Nothingness."
She and her brother Calvin take on the metaphorical Echthroi and learn
that love is the human tool to defeat fear and egoism.
I appreciate the deeper topics that Meg is asked to
take on – almost universally, the battle is not with the Echthroi but
within herself. She must overcome her own fears and prejudices. In
overcoming her selfish tendencies, the evil is nullified – the tyrant
topples. These stories depict our perennial battles – not whether we
will marry our soul mates, but whether the human spirit can resist
annihilation at the hand of hate and self-interest.
I hope I can be like Meg and learn to love in the
face of fear and blind hatred. This is the spiritual battle that every
individual must fight. Our whole universe is in the balance. Will you
give in to selfish impulses, or choose to abandon ego and embrace a
nobler vision for yourself and humanity?