http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-chopra/a-tribute-to-my-friend-mi_b_221268.html

Michael Jackson will be remembered, most likely, as a shattered icon, a pop 
genius who wound up a mutant of fame. That's not who I will remember, however. 
His mixture of mystery, isolation, indulgence, overwhelming global fame, and 
personal loneliness was intimately known to me. For twenty years I observed 
every aspect, and as easy as it was to love Michael -- and to want to protect 
him -- his sudden death yesterday seemed almost fated.

Two days previously he had called me in an upbeat, excited mood. The voice 
message said, "I've got some really good news to share with you." He was 
writing a song about the environment, and he wanted me to help informally with 
the lyrics, as we had done several times before. When I tried to return his 
call, however, the number was disconnected. (Terminally spooked by his 
treatment in the press, he changed his phone number often.) So I never got to 
talk to him, and the music demo he sent me lies on my bedside table as a 
poignant symbol of an unfinished life.

When we first met, around 1988, I was struck by the combination of charisma and 
woundedness that surrounded Michael. He would be swarmed by crowds at an 
airport, perform an exhausting show for three hours, and then sit backstage 
afterward, as we did one night in Bucharest, drinking bottled water, glancing 
over some Sufi poetry as I walked into the room, and wanting to meditate.

That person, whom I considered (at the risk of ridicule) very pure, still 
survived -- he was reading the poems of Rabindranath Tagore when we talked the 
last time, two weeks ago. Michael exemplified the paradox of many famous 
performers, being essentially shy, an introvert who would come to my house and 
spend most of the evening sitting by himself in a corner with his small 
children. I never saw less than a loving father when they were together (and 
wonder now, as anyone close to him would, what will happen to them in the 
aftermath).

Michael's reluctance to grow up was another part of the paradox. My children 
adored him, and in return he responded in a childlike way. He declared often, 
as former child stars do, that he was robbed of his childhood. Considering the 
monstrously exaggerated value our society places on celebrity, which was 
showered on Michael without stint, the public was callous to his very real 
personal pain. It became another tawdry piece of the tabloid Jacko, pictured as 
a weird changeling and as something far more sinister.

It's not my place to comment on the troubles Michael fell heir to from the past 
and then amplified by his misguided choices in life. He was surrounded by 
enablers, including a shameful plethora of M.D.s in Los Angeles and elsewhere 
who supplied him with prescription drugs. As many times as he would candidly 
confess that he had a problem, the conversation always ended with a deflection 
and denial. As I write this paragraph, the reports of drug abuse are spreading 
across the cable news channels. The instant I heard of his death this 
afternoon, I had a sinking feeling that prescription drugs would play a key 
part.

The closest we ever became, perhaps, was when Michael needed a book to sell 
primarily as a concert souvenir. It would contain pictures for his fans but 
there would also be a text consisting of short fables. I sat with him for hours 
while he dreamily wove Aesop-like tales about animals, mixed with words about 
music and his love of all things musical. This project became Dancing the Dream 
after I pulled the text together for him, acting strictly as a friend. It was 
this time together that convinced me of the modus vivendi Michael had devised 
for himself: to counter the tidal wave of stress that accompanies mega-stardom, 
he built a private retreat in a fantasy world where pink clouds veiled inner 
anguish and Peter Pan was a hero, not a pathology.

This compromise with reality gradually became unsustainable. He went to strange 
lengths to preserve it. Unbounded privilege became another toxic force in his 
undoing. What began as idiosyncrasy, shyness, and vulnerability was ravaged by 
obsessions over health, paranoia over security, and an isolation that grew more 
and more unhealthy. When Michael passed me the music for that last song, the 
one sitting by my bedside waiting for the right words, the procedure for 
getting the CD to me rivaled a CIA covert operation in its secrecy.

My memory of Michael Jackson will be as complex and confused as anyone's. His 
closest friends will close ranks and try to do everything in their power to 
insure that the good lives after him. Will we be successful in rescuing him 
after so many years of media distortion? No one can say. I only wanted to put 
some details on the record in his behalf. My son Gotham traveled with Michael 
as a roadie on his "Dangerous" tour when he was seventeen. Will it matter that 
Michael behaved with discipline and impeccable manners around my son? (It sends 
a shiver to recall something he told Gotham: "I don't want to go out like 
Marlon Brando. I want to go out like Elvis." Both icons were obsessions of this 
icon.)

His children's nanny and surrogate mother, Grace Rwaramba , is like another 
daughter to me. I introduced her to Michael when she was eighteen, a beautiful, 
heartwarming girl from Rwanda who is now grown up. She kept an eye on him for 
me and would call me whenever he was down or running too close to the edge. How 
heartbreaking for Grace that no one's protective instincts and genuine love 
could avert this tragic day. An hour ago she was sobbing on the telephone from 
London. As a result, I couldn't help but write this brief remembrance in 
sadness. But when the shock subsides and a thousand public voices recount 
Michael's brilliant, joyous, embattled, enigmatic, bizarre trajectory, I hope 
the word "joyous" is the one that will rise from the ashes and shine as he once 
did.

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