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- <text id=92TT2295>
- <title>
- Oct. 12, 1992: Al's O.K., You're O.K.
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Oct. 12, 1992 Perot:HE'S BACK!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 60
- Al's O.K., You're O.K.
- </hdr><body>
- <p> As his motorcade sped through leafy Allegheny County,
- Pennsylvania, in late September, Al Gore leaned against his
- orthopedic back pillow, drank bottled water and reflected on the
- human spirit and his newfound sense of self. How is it that the
- wooden-tongued policy wonk of 1988 has emerged as an
- introspective spokesman for the inner child, an icon of the new
- manhood? Says Gore simply: "I found the connection between my
- head and my heart."
- </p>
- <p> In that special transaction between candidates and voters,
- Gore's currency is the language of self-discovery. The myth of
- the log cabin has been replaced by another image of adversity
- -- the dysfunctional family. Few politicians represent that
- shift better than Al Gore, who through his own psychic battles
- has found not only his voice but a vocabulary that borrows
- heavily from therapyspeak. But, says Gore, "if the language I
- use or the ideas that I discuss are a little bit out in front
- of what the conventional political wisdom says, I don't care."
- It's not that Gore is rubbing crystals or espousing a national
- 12-step program. His stump speech is standard fare; he follows
- the "Q. and M." -- question and message of the day -- in
- countless public appearances. But the Tennessean can subtly slip
- into words like "dysfunction" and "inner child" as adroitly as
- his supporters buckle on their Birkenstocks. He makes eye
- contact when someone talks about "letting go." In conversation,
- Gore offers Zen-like nuggets like, "Sometimes you can only find
- something by losing it."
- </p>
- <p> Most Americans got their first glimpse of the "new" Al
- Gore during the Democratic National Convention last July, when
- the vice-presidential candidate recounted his six-year-old
- son's brush with death and his family's journey of emotional
- healing. Some sneered at Gore's revelations about family
- counseling as mawkish exploitation of private tragedy for
- political gain. But many voters, aware of the transforming
- experience of a personal tragedy, are less cynical; they
- understand that politicians can be simultaneously strategic and
- sincere. "I thought, `This white-bread family admitted to
- counseling?' " recalls Susan Longley of Liberty, Maine, who had
- been lukewarm to Gore before his speech. "And since then I've
- developed a magnetic pull to Gore, because he speaks the
- language of people who tend their hearts." Family counseling is
- not part of Gore's campaign pitch, but like many of his
- generation, he is clearly fascinated by the family as an
- institution. He talks enthusiastically about Swiss psychoanalyst
- Alice Miller, whose 1981 classic Prisoners of Childhood, renamed
- The Drama of the Gifted Child, argues that children deprived of
- unconditional love from their parents grow up with emotional
- hunger and injure their own offspring by repeating the pattern.
- He says he has also been influenced by his Harvard professor
- Erik Erikson, who pioneered work in the discovery of personal
- identity.
- </p>
- <p> Though it deals with the environment rather than
- psychology, Gore's own book, Earth in the Balance, is infused
- with self-help concepts. Gore speaks of a "dysfunctional
- civilization" and uses terms like "pathology of addiction" and
- "denial" to discuss humanity's relationship to the earth. "Just
- as the members of a dysfunctional family emotionally anesthetize
- themselves against the pain they would otherwise feel," he
- writes, "our dysfunctional civilization has developed a numbness
- that prevents us from feeling the pain of our alienation from
- our world."
- </p>
- <p> Not your basic campaign stump speech. But when Vice
- President Dan Quayle derides Gore's notions as "pretty bizarre
- stuff," he may not be aware that millions of people attend
- support groups every week in the U.S. "A lot of political
- professionals don't begin to suspect the extent to which
- millions of Americans have begun to think about these things --
- the richness of their inner lives," Gore says.
- </p>
- <p> That may be. But the willingness to expose those inner
- lives from the podium is something new in U.S. politics. In 1972
- Thomas Eagleton was shamed off the Democratic presidential
- ticket after revelations that he had undergone shock therapy.
- This year, in contrast, the Democrats are getting maximum
- electoral mileage out of their personal problems -- perhaps
- hoping that people will bring their inner children into the
- voting booths with them.
- </p>
- <p> By Elizabeth Taylor with Gore
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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