
The Lion King (1994)
Rafiki, with his playful and mysterious way of speaking, acts as a kind of emotional guide. He understands that Simba is trapped in fear and uses a very simple but powerful lesson: the past can hurt, yes, but it doesn’t have to control you. When Rafiki hits Simba and then tells him that it’s already in the past, he shows him that dwelling on pain changes nothing. What matters is deciding what to do next.
This scene is about growth. Simba begins to understand that avoiding the past doesn’t make it disappear. On the contrary, facing it and learning from it is what will allow him to move forward. Rafiki doesn’t deny the pain, but he teaches that pain can also be a teacher.
