Jonny Kim has been called the Internet’s perfect Asian son and an overachiever in all possible ways. He’s a Navy SEAL who earned a Silver Star and a Bronze Star, a NASA astronaut who returned last December after nine months on the International Space Station and he is a physician and a naval aviator.
For perspective, consider this: since the First World War, only 79 individuals have ever reached the dual designation of Aeromedical Dual Designation which is being a naval aviator, someone fully qualified to pilot an operational aircraft and understand all the human factors through extreme G-force through their medical training and also is a qualified medical doctor.
Solo Hero
What Kim doesn’t want to be known as is a hero. Much less, a solo hero.
In his recent Harvard alumni speech, Kim pointed out a self-discovery. The solo hero is a myth. True service, he said, is not about the uniform, the position, or the heights reached. It is about trusting the person next to you.
After watching Kim’s speech this week, I wanted to find a classical work that explains this and I think this painting perfectly spells out what he was saying.
The Apotheosis of Hercules

If you wanted to see it in person, you can’t get up close. It’s on the ceiling at the Palace of Versailles.
142 characters in the sky
In between is a whole universe and the conclusion of a complex tale of labours, tasks, challenges and finally accomplishments. The word apotheosis is a rare one in today’s modern times. It means deification, or the elevation of a human being to divine status.
Our world today, to me, is based on putting our heroes up on pedestals and then finding ways to diminish them.
Superheroes and Self-Reliance
As a kid, Kim was fascinated with superheroes. He wanted to be Batman. To him, Bruce Wayne’s alter ego was incorruptible. He was self-reliant and he fought injustice.
This stayed with me. We did an episode called Fortress of Solitude: The Loneliness of Superheroes. Reading Kim’s speech led me to think about Hercules and the rise of a hero to the greatest of heights. From human to becoming a demi-god who suffered like mortals, into eventually an apotheosis, ascending to the heights of being a god.
Heroes find their ways in righting wrongs
As a hero in human form, Hercules killed innocents with his anger and sheer strength. Then, seeking forgiveness, he found a way to right his wrongs.
Kim referred to his own struggles. Driven by guilt and assigning himself a mission to seek atonement that was Sisyphean in breadth, he pivoted from being a soldier to becoming a physician.
It’s impossible to heal those who need healing the most without exposing yourself to vulnerabilities, Kim said. This was the greatest gift he received when he went to medical school. It was other people who healed him by pulling him out of darkness and into something he had once considered only as a weakness: empathy.
“True superpowers don’t require us to put armor on. They require us to take our armour off.”