Madonna's Back
But she never went away. After 30 years of ruling pop, she tells the truth about daring. See Madonna's daring fashion shoot for our November issue.
By Madonna
TRUTH OR DARE?
That is a catchphrase that's often associated with me. I made a
documentary film with this title, and it has stuck to me like flypaper
ever since. It's a fun game to play if you're in the mood to take risks,
and usually I am. However, you have to play with a clever group of
people. Otherwise you'll find yourself French-kissing everyone in the
room or giving blow jobs to Evian bottles!
People usually choose "truth" when it's their turn because you can
tell a lie about yourself and no one will be the wiser, but when you are
dared to do something, you have to actually do it. And doing
something daring is a rather scary proposition for most people. Yet for
some strange reason, it has become my raison d'être.
If I can't be daring in my work or the way I live my life, then I don't really see the point of being on this planet.
That may sound rather extremist, but growing up in a suburb in the
Midwest was all I needed to understand that the world was divided into
two categories: people who followed the status quo and played it safe,
and people who threw convention out the window and danced to the beat of
a different drum. I hurled myself into the second category, and soon
discovered that being a rebel and not conforming doesn't make you very
popular. In fact, it does the opposite. You are viewed as a suspicious
character. A troublemaker. Someone dangerous.
When you're 15, this can feel a little uncomfortable. Teenagers want
to fit in on one hand and be rebellious on the other. Drinking beer and
smoking weed in the parking lot of my high school was not my idea of
being rebellious, because that's what everybody did. And I never wanted
to do what everybody did. I thought it was cooler to not shave my legs
or under my arms. I mean, why did God give us hair there anyways? Why
didn't guys have to shave there? Why was it accepted in Europe but not
in America? No one could answer my questions in a satisfactory manner,
so I pushed the envelope even further. I refused to wear makeup and tied
scarves around my head like a Russian peasant. I did the opposite of
what all the other girls were doing, and I turned myself into a real man
repeller. I dared people to like me and my nonconformity.
That didn't go very well. Most people thought I was strange. I didn't
have many friends; I might not have had any friends. But it all turned
out good in the end, because when you aren't popular and you don't have a
social life, it gives you more time to focus on your future. And for
me, that was going to New York to become a REAL artist. To be able to
express myself in a city of nonconformists. To revel and shimmy and
shake in a world and be surrounded by daring people.
New York wasn't everything I thought it would be. It did not welcome
me with open arms. The first year, I was held up at gunpoint. Raped on
the roof of a building I was dragged up to with a knife in my back, and
had my apartment broken into three times. I don't know why; I had
nothing of value after they took my radio the first time.
The tall buildings and the massive scale of New York took my breath
away. The sizzling-hot sidewalks and the noise of the traffic and the
electricity of the people rushing by me on the streets was a shock to my
neurotransmitters. I felt like I had plugged into another universe. I
felt like a warrior plunging my way through the crowds to survive. Blood
pumping through my veins, I was poised for survival. I felt alive.
But I was also scared shitless and freaked out by the smell of piss
and vomit everywhere, especially in the entryway of my third-floor
walk-up.
And all the homeless people on the street. This wasn't anything I
prepared for in Rochester, Michigan. Trying to be a professional dancer,
paying my rent by posing nude for art classes, staring at people
staring at me naked. Daring them to think of me as anything but a form
they were trying to capture with their pencils and charcoal. I was
defiant. Hell-bent on surviving. On making it. But it was hard and it
was lonely, and I had to dare myself every day to keep going. Sometimes I
would play the victim and cry in my shoe box of a bedroom with a window
that faced a wall, watching the pigeons shit on my windowsill. And I
wondered if it was all worth it, but then I would pull myself together
and look at a postcard of Frida Kahlo taped to my wall, and the sight of
her mustache consoled me. Because she was an artist who didn't care
what people thought. I admired her. She was daring. People gave her a
hard time. Life gave her a hard time. If she could do it, then so could
I.
When you're 25, it's a little bit easier to be daring, especially if
you are a pop star, because eccentric behavior is expected from you. By
then I was shaving under my arms, but I was also wearing as many
crucifixes around my neck as I could carry, and telling people in
interviews that I did it because I thought Jesus was sexy. Well, he was
sexy to me, but I also said it to be provocative. I have a funny
relationship with religion. I'm a big believer in ritualistic behavior
as long as it doesn't hurt anybody. But I'm not a big fan of rules. And
yet we cannot live in a world without order. But for me, there is a
difference between rules and order. Rules people follow without
question. Order is what happens when words and actions bring people
together, not tear them apart. Yes, I like to provoke; it's in my DNA.
But nine times out of 10, there's a reason for it.
At 35, I was divorced and looking for love in all the wrong places. I
decided that I needed to be more than a girl with gold teeth and
gangster boyfriends. More than a sexual provocateur imploring girls not
to go for second-best baby. I began to search for meaning and a
real sense of purpose in life. I wanted to be a mother, but I realized
that just because I was a freedom fighter didn't mean I was qualified to
raise a child. I decided I needed to have a spiritual life. That's when
I discovered Kabbalah.
They say that when the student is ready, the teacher appears, and I'm
afraid that cliché applied to me as well. That was the next daring
period of my life. In the beginning I sat at the back of the classroom. I
was usually the only female. Everyone looked very serious. Most of the
men wore suits and kippahs. No one noticed me and no one seemed to care,
and that suited me just fine. What the teacher was saying blew my mind.
Resonated with me. Inspired me. We were talking about God and heaven
and hell, but I didn't feel like religious dogma was being shoved down
my throat. I was learning about science and quantum physics. I was
reading Aramaic. I was studying history. I was introduced to an ancient
wisdom that I could apply to my life in a practical way. And for once,
questions and debate were encouraged. This was my kind of place.
When the world discovered I was studying Kabbalah, I was accused of
joining a cult. I was accused of being brainwashed. Of giving away all
my money. I was accused of all sorts of crazy things. If I became a
Buddhist—put an altar in my house and started chanting
"Nam-myoho-renge-kyo"—no one would have bothered me at all. I mean no
disrespect to Buddhists, but Kabbalah really freaked people out. It
still does. Now, you would think that studying the mystical
interpretation of the Old Testament and trying to understand the secrets
of the universe was a harmless thing to do. I wasn't hurting anybody.
Just going to class, taking notes in my spiral notebook, contemplating
my future. I was actually trying to become a better person.
For some reason, that made people nervous. It made people mad. Was I
doing something dangerous? It forced me to ask myself, Is trying to have
a relationship with God daring? Maybe it is.
When I was 45, I was married again, with two children and living in
England. I consider moving to a foreign country to be a very daring act.
It wasn't easy for me. Just because we speak the same language doesn't
mean we speak the same language. I didn't understand that there was
still a class system. I didn't understand pub culture. I didn't
understand that being openly ambitious was frowned upon. Once again I
felt alone. But I stuck it out and I found my way, and I grew to love
English wit, Georgian architecture, sticky toffee pudding, and the
English countryside. There is nothing more beautiful than the English
countryside.
Then I decided that I had an embarrassment of riches and that there
were too many children in the world without parents or families to love
them. I applied to an international adoption agency and went through all
the bureaucracy, testing, and waiting that everyone else goes through
when they adopt. As fate would have it, in the middle of this process a
woman reached out to me from a small country in Africa called Malawi,
and told me about the millions of children orphaned by AIDS. Before you
could say "Zikomo Kwambiri," I was in the airport in Lilongwe heading to
an orphanage in Mchinji, where I met my son David. And that was the
beginning of another daring chapter of my life. I didn't know that
trying to adopt a child was going to land me in another shit storm. But
it did. I was accused of kidnapping, child trafficking, using my
celebrity muscle to jump ahead in the line, bribing government
officials, witchcraft, you name it. Certainly I had done something
illegal!
This was an eye-opening experience. A real low point in my life. I
could get my head around people giving me a hard time for simulating
masturbation onstage or publishing my Sex book, even kissing
Britney Spears at an awards show, but trying to save a child's life was
not something I thought I would be punished for. Friends tried to cheer
me up by telling me to think of it all as labor pains that we all have
to go through when we give birth. This was vaguely comforting. In any
case, I got through it. I survived.
When I adopted Mercy James, I put my armor on. I tried to be more
prepared. I braced myself. This time I was accused by a female Malawian
judge that because I was divorced, I was an unfit mother. I fought the
supreme court and I won. It took almost another year and many lawyers. I
still got the shit kicked out of me, but it didn't hurt as much. And
looking back, I do not regret one moment of the fight.
One of the many things I learned from all of this: If you aren't
willing to fight for what you believe in, then don't even enter the
ring.
Ten years later, here I am, divorced and living in New York. I have
been blessed with four amazing children. I try to teach them to think
outside the box. To be daring. To choose to do things because they are
the right thing to do, not because everybody else is doing them. I have
started making films, which is probably the most challenging and
rewarding thing I have ever done. I am building schools for girls in
Islamic countries and studying the Qur'an. I think it is important to
study all the holy books. As my friend Yaman always tells me, a good
Muslim is a good Jew, and a good Jew is a good Christian, and so forth. I
couldn't agree more. To some people this is a very daring thought.
As life goes on (and thank goodness it has), the idea of being daring
has become the norm for me. Of course, this is all about perception
because asking questions, challenging people's ideas and belief systems,
and defending those who don't have a voice have become a part of my
everyday life. In my book, it is normal.
In my book, everyone is doing something daring. Please open this book. I dare you.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário