Mid-Life
“This
discovery of the Self, and the gradual stabilization of it’s felt presence and
guidance within conscious life, would become the foundation for a new
experience of identity and integrity, based on an internal center, the Self,
rather than rooted in externals, the cues and reinforcements from parental
figures and other ‘models,’ from cultural influences and expectations and from
collective pressures.”
Murray
Stein (In Midlife, p. 27; Chiron Publications, 2014)
Midlife is a time of enormous
transition within and without. The new guidelines, because we live much longer
than we once did, place midlife as beginning around 55 years of age, at least
ten years later than we once thought. This change has much at do with having an
active mind and body. We age according to our attitude toward life and, of
course, according to our genetic make-up.
Carl Jung believed that midlife is the turning point of consciousness. It is when we move from outer orientation to inner, from extroversion to introversion in a sense. Usually, that change in consciousness begins when we realize that half our life is behind us and begin to ask questions about where we want to go from here. Do you remember the song “What’s It All About Alfie,” from the film “Alfie?” It was written by Burt Bacharach and the first few lines are:
“What’s it all
about, Alfie?
Is it just for the
moment we live?
What’s it all
about when you sort it out, Alfie?
Are we meant to
take more than we give?
Or are we meant to be kind…”
The
film and the song are accurate examples of the questions we begin to ask at
mid-life which take us on a long journey of discovery. Sometimes this journey
begins because of a loss—of love, of joy, of position—that creates enough
psychological pain that we can’t avoid it. If we manage not to numb it with
substances or patch up the loss with someone or something new, we have an
opportunity to delve into our own deep resources.
The Self is the soul,
the internal wise one, the God spark. We have it from the beginning and occasionally
it stabs through consciousness with awareness that we have broached our own
moral compass, or that something is so beautiful and precious it brings us to
our knees. But at midlife, we want to know more. The Self makes its presence
known in dreams and synchronicity, in surprise and near rapture. Its voice
becomes louder than the call of the outer cultural demands. It cannot be ignored.
The
middle passage is when long-term relationships wobble, some break apart because
“you’ve changed.” How many of us have heard these words? “You aren’t the same
person I married.” When one person begins to change, but the other doesn’t, it
can cause huge rifts in love relationships and friendships. We find ourselves
moving away from the known and into the unknown. Usually, we spend time going
back and forth between the two. It is a chaotic passage, but a necessary one.
This
is the soul’s journey, and it will not be denied. The chaos is a necessary part
of the whole movement from outer to inner guidance. This is when we grow up
spiritually. In the words of Judith Vorst, this is a “necessary passage.” It is
a journey in which you learn who you really are—aside from persona and ego. Who
you are on the inside; and where your soul wants to take you. It isn’t easy,
and unfortunately, it isn’t fast. But the journey is worth it. It’s like cracking
through the crust of a chocolate lava cake to find the gooey, delicious center.
And who doesn’t want that?
In
the Spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
This is beautifully written. I love the metaphor of the lava cake and remember the time I first tasted one. Unfortunately, many of us look in a mirror and continually try to patch the outer cake. Here's to working toward a more solid center.
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