Tag Archive for: MacKenzie Philips

1,000 Posts Today/ 5 Year Anniversary Coming

Today, I reached a milestone. I’ve published 1000 posts! I’ve essentially written a huge book, haven’t I?

I will reach another milestone in less than a month. This one is very exciting for me, yet unnerving to say the least. On October 24, 2009, I will have been blogging for 5 years and I have not missed a case that I am aware of to date in the five years I have been writing.

I’d like to find a rocking way to celebrate, and get my name out there more. Do you have any good suggestions for me? I really want to celebrate this milestone!! No offense, but I don’t want to continue another 5 years like this. I want to reach more people and get my message out there. Can you help me? I would be so grateful.

Large group of people holding balloons

On another hot topic, MacKenzie Philips, and her book “High On Arrival”, one reader named Lou pointed us to a comment from a psychotherapist in the Amazon forum for the book. If you scroll down and find her name “S. McQueen”, she has some interesting points about the book. It was a great read. Thanks, Lou.

Lou’s comment reminded me that I forgot to write my thoughts that I found it very strange that “Mac” said that she was surprised that people found the incest this controversial. This makes no sense at all for a victim to say because they are usually the most traumatized by it once they accept what happened to them. McKenzie wants us to accept it, but then she doesn’t. This flat out doesn’t make sense. Does she consider herself a victim and her dad the perpetrator, or does she still and idolize/love her dad? If she still loves her dad, would she want this secret out there? Really? I mean there is no worse way to defame your father. It doesn’t jive. I’m leaning here slightly, but I am still not ready to make any definitive call.

Did you watch “Lie to Me” last night? I have to confess, I haven’t. It’s still on my DVR.

My Thoughts: MacKenzie Philips

Mackenzie Philips
MacKenzie Philips, 1999

I have to say that when I first heard MacKenzie Philip’s story on Oprah, I was drawn in, perhaps, by the shock value. But as I thought about what she said, I’ve become conflicted. I think it could be because Philips is sending mixed messages about her father. She wants us to see him as a rapist and a perpetrator, abusing his “power” as a father, yet at the same time she truly tells us she loves him and she gets a glow in her eyes when she talks about him. She says her dad was an incredible person, and his demons shouldn’t affect our image of him. And in a very strange twist, she tells us she never worried about her younger sister, who lived with him, being abused by him. Was she and is she that disconnected, still?

Read moreWhen you absorb it all, she talks out of both sides of her mouth. Then she rationalizes perhaps this is due to Stockholm Syndrome (where the victim sympathizes with their perpetrator).

I honestly don’t know what to think.

Philips emotions go all over the chart, which is neither consistent or inconsistent with her message, because logically such a tumultuous life could cause someone to be very ungrounded, if they’ve never dealt with it. And it appears from all Philips is saying, she still hasn’t dealt with anything. She is just writing her story in a book, which makes me wonder what her motivations are for this.

Is she writing this book to help people? If so, you’d expect her to say she is donating the proceeds to help other women, but when Oprah asked her why she wrote this, her answer seemed to come off the top of her tongue, which concerns me, knowing Philips has struggled her entire life with addiction. I don’t know her financial state, but did she do this because she needs the money? Money motivates people to do things they normally wouldn’t do.

If she was truly on a healing path, I would have expected her to help us understand why she did what she did. Why did she stick around after she felt she was raped? She was an adult and could leave. She never confessed to this, at least not on TV. Maybe she does in her book?

Was it the lure of the rich life and drugs? Is she not able to talk about her addiction to drugs yet on any serious level? If she truly wanted to help people, wouldn’t she want to talk about the ravages of addiction, too, if she was on a healing path? She didn’t talk about any of this on TV, which causes me concern.

All in all, I wonder if I am confused, because if this were, let’s say a lie, would this be high-stakes? I mean who could prove or disprove that these two had a consenting sexual relationship? Could anyone outside of Philips or her father, who is now deceased, prove the truth?

Theoretically, she could create or embellish this story and sell it, cash in big, because she knows no one could prove or disprove anything. Yet some people are supporting her, which makes me think perhaps she is honest. One of her father’s band member’s daugther says her father knew. But then why didn’t he feel morally obligated to help “Mac”? If others knew, why didn’t they draw the line? I know many people suffer from incest in their families and it is no doubt a horrible experience many people will relate too.

I keep hearing “Mac” say that her father told her, “A lie will serve you better than the truth.”

On the Today Show, she says she was 18 when she was raped. On Oprah, she said she was 19.

Then I think, “‘Mac’ look clean in her recent interviews.”

I’m all over the place.

When I watched her on the Today Show, which aired the day after Oprah, this morning, I got an uneasy feeling again. I guess I am not willing to come to any conclusions at this point. Perhaps it is because her life has been tragic enough, I just don’t want to go there. But when I start to think that, I think how could anyone come out normal in the world she lived in ? My goodness, her life was hell and you can’t blame her for it–at least in the early years.

This story is so out there that even I can’t put my finger on it with any certainty, which if you are a regular reader of mine, you know this is VERY RARE. My opinion changes minute to minute. I will simply say, may she find peace and may she truly find a “healing path”.