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Wednesday 29 May 2019

138: Mid-Life Crisis and Reginald Perrin (!)


Very interesting article on mid-life crisis – and even more interesting comments below the line.

Of relationships it says, ‘In her book Male and Female, she floated this suggestion: we should allow two, three or four marriages. “The first,” Jackson summarises, “for youthful passion, your second marriage for parenthood, your third marriage for companionship.” (Jackson ends there. Maybe a fourth for different companionship, once you have had enough of the third?) “There’s nothing to suggest that can’t be all to the same person,” Jackson adds, although if that were true, the relationship wouldn’t have been in crisis in the first place.

When it talks about taking control and, say, leaving one’s current relationship and going off, ‘It’s not just that there is a vanishingly thin line between authenticity and selfishness, because – especially in a family – there is no such thing as consequences-for-one.’

When it talks about choices that we make in life, ‘Footfalls echo in the memory, Down the passage which we did not take, Towards the door we never opened, Into the rose-garden.’ TS Eliot, Burnt Norton
I have often thought that, ‘A mid-life crisis is a luxury, probably triggered by too much leisure time and exercise; try dealing with a major illness or a something really dramatic, shitty and prolonged at work and you might realise that you didn't need to have one:). First World Problem’

To which another person wrote:
‘I've dealt with horrible situations at work, ending in redundancy, and also major surgery. But, having worked in many, I can assure you that people in poorer countries also experience a similar mix of feelings about aspirations unfulfilled, contentment mingled with regrets, beginning to fear rather than embrace the future - particularly in situations of major generational shifts. People who lost so much in liberation struggles only to see everything they fought for overturned or forgotten. Not just a First World Problem.’

‘Throughout my forties I would often ask,.... so when is this midlife crisis thing going to hit me?
And then it did. One day I found myself in a specialist hospital unit with lots of worried faces staring down at me, and my wife asking nervously of anyone who looked competent, ' Is he going to die?'.

Not the midlife crisis I expected, but a proper, full on, five star, life threatening crisis nevertheless. Fourteen years on and I didn't die, but without wishing to sound remotely sanctimonious - always a risk for us survivors - my 'crisis' did fundamentally change my outlook on......pretty much everything.

'These days when I hear the phrase, 'Is this all there is?', I bite my tongue, and I think to myself, what do you mean, 'all'? Is health, wealth, democracy, education, abundant food, entertainment of every description at the touch of a button, foreign travel, the love and companionship of family and friends....plus, in my case the knowledge that a team of very clever people fought and worked hard to bring me back from the dead. Is this not enough?

'If this is 'all' there is ....then I'll take it, no questions asked, no further explanation needed. Having a crisis? Get ill....very ill....then fight your way back.’

And something I have pondered, ‘One of the tragedies of modern life is that most of us don't have a big enough purpose to live for.

‘We buy in to the message that romance, sex, work or material stuff can be enough. While these can be good in themselves they simply can't bear the weight of our needs to have significance, to be loved and to have purpose.’

‘Isn't that what most of us have kids for, so that we have a purpose? When they grow up and away (although that's getting harder these days as we all know), then the 'purpose' disappears and if you're not careful so does your reason to be.’

And then a passionate thought:
‘Is this all there is?”... If the question ever surfaces you're in (relative) luck, because it means you have time to contemplate and possibly the resources to change route.

"If we all dropped everything to go on a voyage of self-discovery...". This is a voyage that is easy to set upon. The sooner the better. It basically starts with one fundamental question: What hand have I been dealt in life? and its derivatives: What are my strengths and what are my weaknesses? How do i combine these to reach my potential ..or at least increase my chances of survival (as is the case for the many)? What do i actively love doing? etc.

'Depending on the clarity (lots of luck and tutoring needed here) of the results of such a self survey, one can slowly form a toolkit to deal with the ups and downs of real life and discard other peoples' 'models' and fantasies that invariably lead to stupidity and frustration.

‘We all are a product of randomness and we need lots of help and need to help others. We could do well to go short on our mythologies of "hard work" and the "success" of "self made men/women". Those of us lucky enough to feel content, we should be thankful for the gifts nature bestowed on us and pay back with love and consideration for those beings and surroundings that make our lives truly meaningful.
‘Embrace your mid-life crisis! Let it shake you to your core! Because for some, it is an unstoppable force of destruction. Destroying what is no longer relevant or appropriate or necessary. It can come in the form of job loss, divorce, emptying of the family home, nervous breakdown, illness ... whatever. As we gear up to face the second half of our life, jettison what is holding you back before life comes and disposes of it for you. Mid-life crises - buying a leather jacket, buying a Harley, running off with someone 20 years younger than you - I guess these are all possibles but I think of mid-life crises as an existential even spiritual breakdown where we are asked to put ourselves back together again in a new fashion. It can be horrendous, but if embraced and faced can be a devastating force for positive change.

Friday 17 May 2019

137: Self-Awareness


She asks me the other day, ‘you like children and enjoy sport – why don’t you do some coaching like many other dads?’

There are two main reasons.

I suppose in years gone by I would have been afraid of the time commitment away from the family. As I’ve shared before, a couple of successive evenings out due to work and there would be stress. Does she really not remember that history?

But I now play sport on the week-ends and so I’ve overcome that particular qualm.

Then I went on to say that – without any false modesty – I have never considered coaching (or mentoring at work, for example) because I have never considered myself to be very good. I would struggle to be a counsellor for example – taking that level of responsibility.
‘I think I would be a good counsellor,’ she responds.

Really? Given that she is just about the most judgemental person I know. That she has treated her husband and son like shit while being all sweetness and light with friends (and a harridan with customer service people who can’t answer back) is an unlikely background for a counsellor. ‘I might do what E. does and become a Samaritan.’

I suppose people can be different inside four walls and outside and she is a good friend to her friends. Good luck to her.

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