Showing posts with label america. Show all posts
Showing posts with label america. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Melancholy and Mourning and The Sixth Sense

One of the fundamental aspects of being human is that we are constantly in a state of change.  Transition and our response or reaction to change is our greatest teacher.  As I write this from my desk and in between sessions, I'm struck with how many men I help who are stuck in a process of change; meaning they're emotionally suspended as change is happening around them.  Typically I see men who present a variety of problems which are keeping them awake at night and when they do the work to look at what is driving these issues invariably what shows up is the place where they have been emotionally parked - a major life transition - that they just have not processed fully.  This state is melancholy and it comes with a sense of drifting, of a lack of deep engagement with anyone or anything, and most important an emotional palette which is limited or non-existent.  If you look around you can probably identify many guys you know who fit this bill; perhaps even it's you.  When I'm in melancholy, I'm never fully happy, never really excited, never fully in love, never truly ignited by living.  I'm a poltergeist locked in angst desperately trying to get away from where I am and wanting to cling onto anyone who can give me a way out or whose life energy I can suck to make me feel better.

Sounds horrible right?

So what's the answer?

Well, let's look at M. Night Shamalayan's breakthrough movie - Sixth Sense for a clue.    In the film, a young boy is visited by numerous 'ghosts,' who are seeking to end their drifting suffering.  The boy's function is to tell the truth about how these people died setting the record straight, righting any wrongs and thereby bringing closure and releasing the apparitions from their pain.  But he's deeply disturbed by what he sees and wants to escape the realities that visit him.  Bruce Willis, as a 'dead' psychiatrist enters to ease the boy's pain to make life less scary and in doing so, finds his own salvation.  Sixth Sense is about melancholy and the process by which we can exit melancholy which is mourning.  

Our culture has lost the willingness or the stomach to mourn fully and it is killing us.  Mourning, grieving are the processes by which humans naturally move through transition.  Mourning is how we move from attachment to detachment, to re-attachment.  Mourning requires us to tell the truth about what has happened, and feel all the emotions connected to the power of that truth.  Mourning brings us closure to our life's major changes as we move through the defined stages of Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Sadness and Acceptance.    Mourning requires us to feel.  Sadly, it seems our culture has lost the enormous value of this process by favouring a "Get On With Life" solutions-oriented approach which places greater importance on action over feeling.  Don't get me wrong.  Action is necessary for moving us forward lest we decide to roll around lost in the muck of our emotions, but action without feeling is empty and ultimately creates more pain and disorder because the pain is never fully healed.

Look around  - Isn't this what is affecting America right now.  Their take action approach to 911 truncated the nation's mourning and mis-directed all of that hurt into adversarial policies which have created alienation, mistrust, and economic woe.  America needs to grieve fully to have a hope of ever becoming a superpower again.  

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Will The Best Man Win?

So, here we are at the precipice of what has been billed as the most important election in U.S. history.  Three men and one woman are squaring off for the world's most influential job.  It's a job which has the power to change markets, shift the global balance of power and set the world-wide agenda of what gets our attention.  

Politics aside, I'm left wondering if the best man will win?  What I mean by that is which man has demonstrated that he's truly ready for the job?  In my view it's Joe Biden.  

Biden is unshakeable in his beliefs around family; he's gifted in his understanding of foreign policy and he has weathered decades of domestic shifts which have given him a seasoned perspective on where America has been and, more importantly, where America needs to go.

There's a truism in the packaged goods business when it comes to selecting the best team for a job.  When the job is launching a new product you need a young, fresh team of creative thinkers and innovators who will wedge the product into what is likely either a market first, or an already crowded category.  A new idea by its very nature deserves the kind of out of the box thinking which youth can deliver.

However, when the job is the kind of trench warfare where combatants crawl on their bellies for percentages of market share you need a team which is deep in experience.  You put your 'old guys' on the job because they have the wisdom, history and humility necessary for the long game.

I believe America has fallen for its own hype and by that I mean she has been seduced by the shiny attractiveness of 'new' which drives the American dream.   Obama is certainly gifted and talented and so is McCain, yet neither of them truly have the global or domestic experience which is mandatory to pull America out of her listing.  And though it seems that the nation is captivated by the promise of "It's Time For A Change," they've collectively lost sight of the necessity for consistency and the value of old.  And Sarah Palin for all of her 'get up and go,' is nothing more than pre-mature; she's simply not ready for the 2008 gig.  Joe Biden on the other hand is, and in my view, the strongest man on the ticket.  Biden deserves to win because experience has taught us as human beings that age trumps youth when it comes to truly moving our species forward.