In one of his presentations, Richard Barrett talked about how the fears one encounters are related to our needs and how while we may overcome these fears at an earlier stage in our lives, we don’t really overcome them completely. That comes at a later stage in our lives, where we have to face and overcome them completely, but the challenge to do so is monumentally greater and more complex.
This always reminds me of what happens in a role-playing game or MMORPG when undertaking a quest chain or raid dungeon, whereby earlier in it you often face monsters that seem difficult to overcome but you’re able to do so. However later, you encounter the “boss” monster and quickly realize that the previous monsters you encountered were just “minions”. That’s because this “boss” monster is massively challenging and extremely difficult to overcome because of its cunning and complexity.
I feel like I’m at this point in my life where I’m trying to completely let go of this fear that is embodied as this “boss” monster. And this fear is the primary obstacle that is standing in the way of me freely expressing my life’s work.
So what is this fear?
If I could relate it to anything, I would say it relates to a need for belonging which is a basic psychological need, initially acquired as one of the many basic values we cherish in the earlier part of our lives.
However, as one traverses through one’s life, these values transform, as the context of one’s worldview transforms as one’s expands it.
Initially, as a Socialized Mind, belonging is about fitting in and surviving within society as a whole. Within the role-playing game called Life, this is embodied as The Walled City. So similar to a starting city like Stormwind in World of Warcraft.
This city embodied as society offers safety through inclusion but this inclusion is often determined by others assuming you will follow the expectations of society. If you don’t follow these societal expectations though then often you will be cast out and become an “outcast.”
In this way, earlier stages often use belonging as a weapon of coercion. Don’t follow societal expectations and you will be cast out, like Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. So not following society’s expectations is effectively seen as a sin.
However, as one develops, one actually becomes tired of following societal expectations because one eventually realizes they are not truths but just societal constructs that have been made up. And often, these constructs no longer feel like they’re working for the individual, for one reason or another, often due to life challenges that reveal the fallacy of them.
Thus the individual actually decides to consciously and intentionally walk out of The Walled City of society because they are seeking a better way of living. So they feel like they need something more, thus they seek greater values with which to live by. This Self-Authoring Mind is embodied as stepping into The Borderlands within the role-playing game called Life.
In the process though, belonging is transformed as well. No longer does one have to follow the expectations of society, one can choose one’s own community based upon one’s own internal value system rather than the external value system of society alone.
This obviously provides much more autonomy for the individual but there can still be conflicts if their authored sense of self doesn’t fully align with others in these differing communities.
An example of this was my joy at finding communities on Google Plus years back, whereby the people within them felt like disrupters of society, outcasts who were pioneering a new way of being beyond society’s limited expectations. However, what quickly became apparent to me is that I was disrupting the disruptors within these communities, thus I was feeling like an outcast among the outcasts.
This is where the next leap for the individual takes one to embracing a Self-Transforming Mind which again transforms the meaning of belonging for them. And this is the very leap that I’m stuck within like a maze because the complexity of it is difficult to face and overcome, due to the fear related to it.
The reason for this is because I still feel like I need the validation and approval of others to continue on my journey and to fully express myself.
Yet the irony of this would be similar to a person wanting to step outside of society’s expectations to attain a Self-Authoring Mind and thus asking for society’s approval and validation to do so from Socialized Minds.
It’s just not going to happen.
That’s because each mindset has its own limitations and can’t see beyond them because stepping beyond them seems absurd to their current beliefs, as it would be like stepping off the edge of the world. They would think you’re crazy to try to do so, as “there by dragons there” that will slay you. Not literally of course. I’m talking about our fears.
And this is why fears as monsters within the role-playing game called Life are not so much there to stop you, as they are there as signposts to tell you that you are reaching the limits of your worldview and beliefs.
So you better damn well be sure you want to step further beyond them, similar to what Atreyu did stepping beyond the Sphinx guardian sentinels within the movie The Neverending Story.
And more often than not, the courage to step forward is often created by the courage to let go of the old world behind oneself. In effect, you won’t be able to fully step forward until you are completely ready to let go of the old worldview and mindset you’ve been living within because it’s no longer empowering for you but rather is draining and soul sucking instead.
In other words, the patterns of your old mindsets are no longer empowering because you see them for what they are, thus they feel lifeless and evidently repetitive in nature, like having to follow a script that you’ve been roleplaying for so long that the role feels hollow and empty.
This is what it feels like when the role-playing game called Life begins to feel like a grind.
In effect, you’ve stayed in the same zone and territory for so long, doing the same quests and slaying the same monsters you’re no longer afraid of, that you’re barely getting any experience points at all because there’s nothing left to learn from the experiences there.
So life is actually giving you a “call to adventure” by telling you that there are greater adventures ahead of you but only if you’re willing to play a larger game beyond the one you’re playing now.
And this is why starting a new level isn’t epic and climatic, as most people would assume, but instead it feels like you’re stuck.
It’s because you’re having to start all over and figure out the new game at this new level with an open and curious beginner’s mind.
So what is this new game at my level? And how does it transform ones sense of belonging?
The paradox that one has to step into at this level has nothing to do with participating with a certain group of people, be it with society or those who have stepped beyond it.
It has to do with participating with life as a whole.
In effect, it’s the realization that life has a greater role for you to play.
So as the saying goes, it’s realizing that life isn’t happening to you, it’s happening through you, regardless of how mysterious and uncomprehending it may be in the moment.
Yet to fully participate in life at this larger role requires the individual to fully participate with oneself as a whole.
This is what Maya Angelou and Brené Brown describe as true belonging.
So it’s completely letting go of needing validation and acceptance of others to continue your journey and instead validating and accepting yourself, fully and completely, as you are right now.
Again not some vision of who you want to become but who you are already being right now.
Yet a being that doesn’t need validation and acceptance from others to step forward, nor to even exist.
Again this has been my greatest challenge.
But again, the more I go through the repetition of this experience, that being needing the validation and acceptance of others, the more it feels like a grind that is becoming exhausting to me. Thus the greater the need to let it go.
Actually now that I’ve turned 60, another reason for letting go of it and fully embracing myself has arisen in relation to this.
I don’t want anyone else defining who I am upon my death because most people often misinterpret and misunderstand a person’s life from the outside. Or perhaps more appropriately, they want to define the person by how they perceived them or wished they were, rather than how they truly were.
For example, I’ve had some family members say that they are glad I’m not gaming anymore, yet most of my growth and development has occurred because of gaming. Not just the growth and development that allowed me to have leadership capabilities in the work world but also the ability to understand life ontologically by using roleplaying game metaphors to do so.
So if they can’t accept my gaming background (just as many professional change agents could’t seem to accept it when I was on Google Plus) then they can’t accept me as I am because my gaming background made me who I am today and is a part of my story.
Again, this is about me reaching a point where I take a stand and plant a flag in the ground, accepting myself fully as I am and owning my own story.
And what this allows me to do is to be at home wherever I am.
Because I am no longer using external waypoints to define where my home is. I’m using internal waypoints instead.
All said and done, this is the leap I have to take. And it becomes more and more clearer each day.
The question is what action will I take to undertake this leap?
What action will clearly show that I’m taking a stand and planting a flag in the ground within a new territory, declaring and accepting myself as being nobody-but-myself?
And above all else this is what a Self-Transforming Mind embodies within the roleplaying game called Life.
It is the ability to not just live within The Great Wilderness.
It is about becoming The Great Wilderness.
In connecting and participating with life fully, one no longer fits within any one group, yet at the same time one feels connected to many.
This is the difference between one feeling despair from loneliness versus the empowering presence of solitude.
In effect, one may be surrounded by people, yet feel completely alone because they’re aren’t fully seen and understood.
Yet one can also be completely alone, yet feel completely connected to everything and everyone in life because they are fully accepting and validating themselves.


