Why does icarus disobey his father




















The themes both portray the desire for freedom. Icarus kept flapping his wings but soon realized that he had no feathers left and that he was only flapping his featherless arms, and so Icarus fell into the sea and drowned. Daedalus wept for his son and called the nearest land Icaria, an island southwest of Samos, in memory of him.

He warn Icarus not to fly too close to the sun,as it would melt his wings and not too close to the sea,as it would dampen them and make it hard to fly. Minos called on Daedalus to build the famous Labyrinth in order to imprison the dreaded Minotaur.

Competition may be derived from seeking ones place and boundaries within a hierarchy, whether in sports or on the corporate ladder. Every social niche provides both a channel for expressing power and limits of that power.

In the Icarus myth, gravity represents the imprisonment that results from remaining forever trapped within our past. Having limits and conscience without encouragement to use one's own power leaves one vulnerable and undefended.

Without an inspired and empowering father, Icarus would have flown low and been unable to complete the journey. Or, worse, he would have lived the rest of his days in depression and resignation, trapped inside the maze he inherited. In relationships, such as a man might believe his only power is to veto, to withhold, to withdraw, and to abandon. To address the power dilemmas they face, men must recognize the causes of such dilemmas, and develop strategies for healing and prevention.

There may be a tendency to look at the symptoms, and to work to increase the effectiveness of men's responses to the problem. But, by taking that route, we are again at risk for playing into the seduction of trying to "get ahead" in work, finances, status, or attempts at controlling relationships.

To address power issues fundamentally, a man must examine his relationship with power and his relationships with others around power. The description of power described above may be considered stereotypical masculine power. Founded on control and domination, it also may be referred to as "power over. Shared power with stereotypical feminine power is mutual empowerment.

Founded on equality rather than hierarchy, shared power is created through interrelationship. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts, is one way of viewing such power. Shared-power-with endows people with more power than they have in isolation. Without developing shared power, men are likely to experience threat or challenge, rather than affirmation and partnership, in their relationships. Spiritual power or power within involves realizing inner potential by making manifest the true self.

When the internal self and the external life are aligned in harmony, this gives the unconditional sense of well-being that does not depend on status or performance. To grow to be able to use power, men need support and limits, encouragement and containment. A young man needs a personal connectedness with his mentor, in which there are both a drawing out or calling forth of power, and a structure and emotional containment that helps shape it.

Men who are learning about power also need information, coaching, a sense of relatedness to others regarding the use of power, and healing of wound and deficits in their personal history with power. Open, honest, and informative communication is essential. Whether informally among friends or in men's groups, couples' groups, individual, conjoint, or group therapy, interpersonal healing is needed. During adolescence, a boy's peers can exert a profound influence on his learning, development, and values.

Our society often responds to its "lost boys" with disdain and avoidance, encouraging the development of an adolescent male counterculture rebellion. A generation of youth that grows up with respect, guidance, and inclusion, however, can draw upon the strengths of those who have gone before them, and has tremendous potential for influencing the world in positive ways. Adult men must continue to develop a culture around the use of power that communicates positive values and behaviors.

While growing up, a young man internalizes the parent-child relationships within which he was raised. He will relate to the childlike parts of himself and others using his experience.

He will repeat abuse and neglectful use of power in his relationship with himself and others is that is what he has known. Therefore, symbolic, historic, and developmental healing must occur if he is to grow further, developing and internalizing a parent-figure who is both nurturing and protective, who offers both support and containment. This developmental process is crucial to healthy maturation and happens through interaction with a benevolent mentor with whom the young or adult man can test, challenge, and butt heads all-the-while remaining emotionally connected.

Finally, healing can be complete only when the spiritual component is addressed. A man's spirit is the deepest core of his being, his true essence.

The man in full recovery communes with that which is most truly he, and connects with the spiritual essence of others. His healing both draws upon and is the expression of the "power within. In the journey of healing, a man must ultimately summon the courage to go deep within his true inner self, search out his true direction, and call forth the power to live a life of balance and meaning. About Dr. His death only serves to heighten this fame.

However, his survival takes away this glory by thrusting him back into a world where no one knows who he is. The myth of Daedalus and Icarus tells the story of a father and a son who used wings to escape from the island of Crete. Icarus has become better-known as the flyer who fell from the sky when the wax that joined his wings was melted by the heat of the sun.

Icarus was a winged humanoid. The god of a group of intelligent owls in the Obverse gave them two giant eggs to guard, telling them they must not hatch prematurely. Daedalus stole one and let it hatch before its time, from which Icarus emerged. Daedalus declared the boy as his son. But Icarus soared ever higher and got too close to the sun. The wax of his wings began to soften and his feathers began to fall out. Icarus just wanted to forget every thing but joy and forgot about his fathers command.



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