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The Psychological Portrait of Michael Jackson

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Over the last two weeks, after watching the recent film about Michael Jackson, I found myself thinking about him long after the screen went dark.

 

For years, I saw what the world saw: a superstar, a phenomenon, a controversy, a spectacle. Yet something shifted.

For the first time, I found myself looking beyond the performer and asking a question:

What kind of child becomes Michael Jackson?

 

I no longer saw only a superstar.

Watching the film, I found myself feeling less curiosity about the celebrity and more compassion for the child behind the legend. I saw pressure from his father, endless rehearsals, discipline, and praise tied to performance. I saw a gifted child who never truly finished being a child.

The more I watched, the more I wondered whether genius sometimes grows where childhood was interrupted.

Michael Jackson seemed to learn love through performance.

When love arrives through applause, perfection becomes survival.

Gifted children often grow up too quickly on the outside while remaining emotionally unfinished inside.

 

The Price of Genius

The film then shifts to the adult Michael: impossible perfectionism, relentless rehearsals, the constant pursuit of magic, and visible exhaustion.

I understood something differently.

Perhaps perfection was never vanity. Perhaps it was safety.

Some people create art. Others build entire worlds because ordinary reality once failed them. Michael Jackson seemed to be one of them.

 

The Loneliness of Being Seen by Everyone

One of the film’s strongest points is the paradox it reveals:

adored by millions, yet deeply lonely.

The giraffe and snake living in his house.

Neverland.

The childlike aesthetics.

The visible discomfort with adulthood.

Neverland was more than eccentricity. It was an attempt to recreate the childhood he never truly had.

Gradually, something became clear to me.

Michael Jackson may have spent much of his life trying to return to the childhood he never truly had.

 

 

Watching Jaafar Jackson Become Michael

One of the most moving parts of the film was watching Michael’s nephew, Jaafar Jackson, portray him.

There was something extraordinary in seeing talent reappear through family.

The body remembers.

Sometimes talent travels through generations like music carried in the blood.

 

What I Finally Understood

I am not trying to saint him.

I am not trying to condemn him.

I no longer saw only Michael Jackson the icon.

I saw a gifted child who became extraordinary while carrying wounds that fame could never heal.

The film moved me deeply.

It reminded me that great talent often comes at an invisible cost. 

Because sometimes, genius grows in the very place where childhood remained unfinished.

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  • The Psychology of Imperfection. Lucian Freud
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