‡ | Why Mid-life Crises Are Happening Sooner & More Often

‡ | Why Mid-life Crises Are Happening Sooner & More Often

Okay folks: here we start to play with mildly dark/dangerous notions. I don’t mind the dark—the light can be blinding. And I don’t mind the danger—it’s how we learn and grow. But there is some peril to the following, which is why I ought deploy the following Caveat-cantrip (I have plenty): if you are experiencing a kind of depression that is debilitating—something that limits your ability to function and act—please seek some support.

As you’ll learn: depression is quite a natural response to the myriad challenges of life. The low-energy state protects us from blind optimism. But!—if we are not careful it can turn into a downward spiral. So please: be kind to your self and seek help/support if you need it. (FWIW I was in a big funk a few years ago—here’s what worked for me, back then, kinda).

IT USED TO BE EASIER

Before the internet, we would form our identities—our sense of ‘who we are’—within the communities in which we were raised. This would further develop through our schooling, and then we’d then potentially venture off into new cities, building new iterations of our identity amidst the confluence of new relationships, careers and interests.

Occasionally, some of us would experience a ‘mid-life crisis’ and have to rekindle the self-development process again. Death, divorce, disaster, displacement—or similar such calamities—would trigger us to question the foundations of our existence. Who are we, really? What are we actually doing with our lives? What really matters? And what does it all mean, really?

These are powerful questions. Questions that can unravel the very notion of ‘who’ we really are—positively dis-integrating our very sense of self. But with time (and support), we’d usually find our way through this darkness. We’d either regress to a previously stable identity—or we’d grow into a re-integrated new form, finding our way to new ‘coherence’—a state in which things ‘make sense’ once again.

NOW EVERYTHING HAS CHANGED

These ‘mid-life crises’ seem to be happening earlier and much more frequently—to many more folk. Friends and many people I know (myself included) frequently experience a vague kind of ‘existential angst’—a pensive and pervasive background sadness. Not quite depression, no: but some kind of darkness that lingers in the periphery. Even when life is ‘good’ and everything is ‘fine’, there can be this subtle sense as though you are missing something important, that you are not where we ought to be, or that you are not embodying ‘who’ you ‘really’ are.

Not to worry! We live in a world rich with distraction. Fret not—numb yourself instead!

But, hoho—this approach doesn’t make the angst go away. And while I’m not sure if the angst ever truly leaves, the Ritual of Becoming—if done well—will have us at least engage productively with it. We do this with deep curiosity and empathy, so that we can find, decipher and rework the hidden patterns that shape who we are.


WHY DO THIS?

We are living in what could be considered a ‘meaning crisis’ (which, in turn, is part of a meta-crisis that includes climate change and ecological devastation, systemic inequality and the looming threat of societal collapse—among other things).

If depression is an adaptive mechanism that protects us from blind optimism, then any optimism we hold ought be tempered with a level of cynicism—and vice versa. This is at once a stoic, metamodern and fluid approach to navigating the myriad existential perils of life. And so, in contemplating the incoherence and incongruence we think and feel—we are more likely to find/fabricate a path towards meaningful progress and development. Towards contribution, belonging, and mattering.

To contemplate…

It has been said that life is simply a process of exchanging one anxiety for another. Ergo—if you were to do a quick scan of your Anxiety Heat Map™️—what is most on your mind right now? And what else? What’s the cluster of anxieties that currently plague you? And… is there a deeper, underlying pattern to this?

In time we shall be building a journalling habit (750words.com) to surface these angsts each day. Then—in time—we shall become deft at recognising the meta-patterns that shape and influence our unfurling selves. And with this knowledge we can begin the process of cultivating our own ‘character development’ with a hint of intentionality.

Or at least: the illusion of such.

Next, we get into the Ritual proper, starting with The Book of You…

Choose One Word

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Welcome

  • ∆ | A Quest Beckons34
  • ∆ | Pick a Path – find your word in 3 hours, 3 days or 3 weeks11
  • ‡ | Bonini’s Paradox & Useful Delusions (a primer)9
  • ‡ | Why Mid-life Crises Are Happening Sooner & More Often26

Part 1 | Self Knowledge

  • ∆ | The Book of You (your unfurling story)17
  • ✎ | The Book of You (worksheet)3
  • ◊ | The Book of You (an extended activity)7
  • ‡ | A Non-Narrative Approach to Life (with narrative)7
  • ∆ | The Chart of You (what makes for a meaningful life?)13
  • ✎ | The Chart of You (worksheet)5
  • ‡ | Patterns of Incongruence2
  • ∆ | Finding Your Fulfilment Factors3
  • ✎ | Fulfilment Factors (worksheet)4
  • ∆ | The Negative Path to Clarity & Fulfilment
  • ◊ | The Most Difficult Question—What Do You Want?4
  • ◊ | Self-Sabotage—Why We Get In Our Own Way1
  • ◊ | Procrastination—the Savviest Self-Sabotage4
  • ◊ Perfectionism—the Prettiest Self-Sabotage5
  • ◊ | Busyness—the Most Pernicious Self-Sabotage
  • ◊ | Overcommitment—the Noblest Self-Sabotage3
  • ◊ | Environmental—the Circumstantial Self-Sabotage
  • ◊ | Physiological—the Invisible Self-Sabotage3
  • ∆ | Finding Your Hidden Commitments (important)9
  • ∆ | Harvesting Dark Wisdom from Conflicting Values4
  • ◊ | You Are Not Broken —there’s nothing you need to ‘fix’2
  • ∆ | Only Now Are We Ready to begin to Choose One Word6

The Incredible Power of Journalling

  • ◊ | Cultivating Metacognition3
  • ◊ | Journaling for Insight2
  • ◊ | Flexing Introspection6

Part 2 | Self Development

  • ∆ | What is Self-Development and why bother?
  • ∆ | Embrace a Fluid Experimental Disposition2
  • ∆ | Why This Is A Yearly Ritual (+ when to start)2
  • ◊ | How to Deepen the Power of Rituals1
  • ✎ | Contextual Momentum Model.pdf
  • ‡ | “The Qualified Self” (& Advanced Reading)2
  • ∆ | “We understand how dangerous a mask can be.”2
  • ‡ | You Are What You Subsume (in-form yourself)2
  • ‡ | Beware the Notion of the ‘True Authentic Self’8
  • ∆ | The Pathway to Mundanity & Blandness5
  • ∆ | How to Cast a Longer Shadow5
  • ◊ | Revel in Ambiguity & the Infinite Game3
  • ∆ | Finding Your Root Word4
  • ✎ | Word Map.pdf
  • ◊ | A Linguistic Connoisseur (like Whisky)6
  • ‡ | Words are Power (Semiotic Evocations)2
  • ◊ | How to Expand Your Vocabulary2
  • ∆ | Making Meaning Memorable (socially sticky)2
  • ‡ | Cultivating Magical Realism2
  • ◊ | Abstract Words
  • ◊ | Active Words
  • ◊ | Aspect Words
  • ∆ | Archetype Words4
  • ‡ | The Many Words of Dr Fox (boring)8
  • ‡ | How to Subtly Test Your Word
  • ◊ | Blossoming Out Potentiality2
  • ∆ | Not Too Comfortable, Not Too Cool
  • ◊ | Choose Just One Word
  • ∆ | Flirt with Tension & Paradox8

Part 3 | Self Actualisation

  • ∆ | The Seasonality of this Annual Ritual
  • ∆ | Considering the Notion of ‘Purpose’
  • ∆ | Principles to Guide Decisions (NSFW!)4
  • ✎ | Word Principles.pdf
  • ∆ | Intentional Patterns of Behaviour
  • ◊ | Shaping Behaviour & Crafting Habit3
  • ‡ | How You Manifest in the Lives of Others
  • ∆ | Projects to Project2
  • ◊ | Bringing Lightness to Your Projects2
  • ∆ | How to Avoid Advice
  • ◊ | Enchant Yourself via Enclothed Cognition6
  • ∆ | Reconsult The Chart of You
  • ∆ | Return to The Book of You1
  • ◊ | Interview Your Future Self4
  • ◊ | Practice Ironic Self-Indulgence
  • ∆ | Remember: It Was Never About You15
  • § | What next?3

Appendix

  • The 20/21 Update—What’s New2
  • ◊ | A Reflective Overview-Preview4
  • How to Choose One Word in Less Than 3 Minutes2
  • (Why You Really Ought Invest More Than 3 Minutes)2