Saturday, December 11, 2004

Without a Trace

HJ Links
—Review by Elizabeth Leitch
—About this Series
—Spiritual Connections


Joining the ranks of the well-established crime dramas of Law and Order and the soon to be just as popular CSI series, Without a Trace first aired in the fall of 2002 under the name Vanished. Just as CSI took crime out of the courtroom and into the laboratory, Without a Trace brought viewers a new perspective on the crime drama. Without a Trace focused not on the criminal, his/her crimes, and bringing him/her to justice, but on the victims—missing persons, their lives, the circumstances that lead to their disappearance, and finding them.

Since its beginning, Without a Trace has explored the disappearances of people from all walks of life—men, women, young, old, black, white, rich, poor, servicemen, business women, teenagers, children, parents, people from all over New York, who simply disappeared from the map that was their life. In each episode, the missing individual and his or her life become the focus of the investigation. The team interviews everyone they know. They try to reconstruct the hours and days leading up to the disappearance. They attempt to figure out how and why the missing person has disappeared from the routine of day-to-day life.

As the details unfold in each case, the team most often comes to one of two different conclusions as to why the person has disappeared—one, the individual was kidnapped; two, the individual ran away. Greater than just the moment of a kidnapping or the instant the person decides to run away, however, the disappearance of every individual points to the idea of a life in trouble and a person who has lost his or her way even before the actual disappearance. Sometimes it is the abductors who are lost, looking for love, looking for money, or simply trying to find a way out of a desperate situation that they believe should not be their life. Many times it is the missing person themselves. A person whose life has taken a wrong turn, gotten tangled in dangerous situations, gotten complicated, and somehow resulted in his or her disappearance or a decision to try to escape the circumstances. In cases where the victims have run away, their sense of being lost often stems from the feeling of living in a world in which they do not feel they belong.

Throughout the course of each investigation, victims’ lives are laid bare before investigators. While some victims do remain “innocent,� more often than not, the lives of most victims and those closest to them are revealed to be not quite as perfect as they may have seemed. In each case, however, the team is dedicated to finding the individual and rescuing him or her. Sometimes victims may face criminal charges once they are found, but the team is dedicated to first making sure their lives are safe. Whoever they find the persons to be and whatever circumstances may have lead to their disappearances, the team is dedicated to finding every person and enabling them to return to the lives in which they are not lost.

While Without A Trace always delivers captivating stories and outstanding performances by all its actors, the way each episode truly delves into a life gives the viewer so much more than a good story. Each episode is also a clear reminder of the value of life and the right and opportunity each and every one of us has to escape from lives of being lost and find lives of belonging, value, and purpose. Even after just two episodes of this third season, this point is already being driven home.

In the 2004 season’s first episode, a blind teenager and her instructor are kidnapped. Investigators delve into her life and soon find, among other things, that she was having extreme difficulty coming to terms with her blindness and realizing her life still had value. In the end, however, she escapes and is the one who is able to direct investigators back to the cabin where her instructor is still captive.

In the second episode, the woman who goes missing is a burn unit nurse who is quickly determined to be one of the main suspects in abortion clinic bombing years earlier. As the story unfolds, it is revealed that she was working in the burn unit to try to make up for her sins, that she had recently decided to come out of hiding and confess to her crime, and had been kidnapped by one of the other bombers. Although the teams stops an explosion that would have killed her, she still is shot by someone connected to her abductor. As she lies dying, however, her thoughts flash back to a scene several weeks earlier and as she listened to a survivor from the original bombing speak a message of love and forgiveness specifically directed at her and her fellow bombers.

While many of us have never actually been technically missing, the stories portrayed in Without a Trace (including the individual struggles of the investigative team themselves) speak to any and every feeling of despair, lack of control, and confusion that we all face as we deal with life on a day-to-day basis. While those around us may not know how lost we sometimes feel, and there may not be a team of trained FBI agents trying to figure out how we got off track, the truth is that God is aware of what we are going through at all times and is always seeking to restore us to the best life that we can live. Whether we played an active part in getting ourselves into a mess, or we just slowly slipped into a life of despair, or just can’t seem to stay where we want to for any amount of time—whether we are rich or poor, black or white, young or old, man or woman—God is there, always valuing us and seeking to find each of us that feel lost.

2 Comments:

Maurice Broaddus said...

did you see the episode two weeks ago about the prisoner who disappears?

as it turned out, he found God while in prison. he ended up giving up his life to make sure that another prisoner remains safe.

the episode was a standout, plus the strong message of redemption.

8:01 PM  
Robert Peterson said...

Sunday night episode 8/6/06 regarding the lesbians. I cannot believe this "couple" was kissing on TV! You all took it to a closeup at the end. I will never watch this program again. I mean that. If someone wants to be a lesbian, yes that is their problem/choice; however, you have brought it into my house because I watched your show. That is something I can remedy easily enough by never watching "Without a Trace" again. From this day forward there will not be a trace of "Without a Trace" in my house. I cannot believe you showed this on TV on a family night! That is just wrong!

Robert Peterson

8:20 PM  

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