Complexity and mess

What if what you want is on the other side of pain?

In my last email, I mentioned a second pattern-making question I wanted to introduce. I found it personally really helpful in the past couple of weeks.

I'm going for surgery in July to Thailand to have what we, right now, call ‘lower surgery’ or gender affirmative surgery, or what I’m quite enjoying calling in my head, a sex-change operation. Very retro.

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Obviously I'm really excited. It was a cancellation that I got offered much sooner than I expected. I jumped at the chance.

I’d thought I’d come to terms with living with my body as it is (“I’m FINE”), but then literally as I was driving home from Mum’s funeral, I realised this might be my one opportunity to have a surplus of cash and a light, a smile,  just opened up in front of me.

I did, however, have a huge wobble the other day.

The clinic had let slip in an email a couple of weeks ago about not pooping for seven days after the surgery. As someone who is ordinarily, er, very well fibered that was quite a concern for me. They won’t send out any more information beforehand - you just get it when you arrive.

I realised I didn’t actually know anything about the first few days of recovery. So I, of course, went on Reddit.

I found a manga written/drawn probably more than 15 years ago by somebody who went to the same clinic. It was pretty detailed.

As I was reading it, I realised more than theoretically that the recovery is pretty intense because this is a major major surgery. Suddenly, I was panicking.

I really thought, Do I actually want to do this? Can I not just carry on how I have been?

I paced up and down, had a cry, talked to one of my partners.

A couple of days later, one of my siblings reflected back that I was saying like things like, “Well, I'm not getting any younger so if I'm going to do it, it needs to be now because if I wait a year or two, I'll just be a year or two older and that's not going to make me any more likely to recover easily.”

She pointed out that that's not a ‘towards’ perspective, that's like… a circumstantial perspective?

I had to really tune in and go, Do I actually want this to happen or not? Do I feel really committed to it?

The timing is not great in terms of some aspects of my life. We're in the (please gods) final stages of selling my mum's house. We are sorting out the death admin of my partner's mum’s estate. And we’re moving house suddenly and not by our choice.

And then on top of that, I now need to do all the admin for the Thailand trip plus do a massive handover of my job, because I'm going to be away for three months?

And yet, I do really want it.

Holding that certainty didn’t, however, take away all of the panic.

The main thing was the anticipation of pain and my realisation that I have never had any major medical procedures. I've been to the dentist. That's it. I've had horrible tooth pain and had a tooth out.

So I don't know how I'm going to deal with pain that goes on for an uncertain period of time but certainly for weeks. I don't know how I'm going to deal with the recovery. I don't know how both of us are going to deal with being in first a hospital room and then a hotel room for a month in Thailand.

And I don’t know how I actually deal with proper pain because I think in my head I decided that they just give you, like, enough painkillers so it doesn't really hurt.

But you're only in the hospital for a week and there's only so much morphine they can give you anyway and then you're in the hotel and then it's like paracetamol or Tramadol?

So. I remembered you and that pattern-making question I wanted to focus on.

Our last patternmaking question was

What is this an example of?

The question I’d like to suggest you experiment with is:

What does this whole thing remind me of?

This creates a different focus than the ‘What is this an example of?’ question which, I think, gives you loads and loads of different perspectives, but not necessarily many from your own experience, and therefore maybe not embodied knowledge.

“What does this whole thing remind me of?” links you to your experiences or metaphors that sometimes help you find resources you might not otherwise find.

So I was thinking about anticipation of pain to get a result that I really want.

Straightaway it reminded me of what I imagined it’s like to give birth: an anticipation of massive unavoidable pain that you’ve (probably) opted into and you know that the other side of that pain and recovery is something that you really want.

I haven’t watched 20 seasons of Grey’s Anatomy to not know that people can recover from pregnancy and, indeed, huge surgeries (but don’t be too likeable or get in a car or on a plane, just saying).

Like pregnancy, the surgery I’m having is also something that many people have gone through. Not as many as birth, but this particular clinic have done their technique with 180 people a year for the past 15-20 years.

It was helpful to engage that aspect, but it wasn't quite enough.

And then I went, Okay, what else does this whole situation remind me of?

And the thing that I think is really helpful is: it reminds me of a rite of passage.

Which is something that as a white person living in the decaying Western Empire I’m missing. I've never had a rite of passage into adulthood.

Didn't even have a prom, like Molly Ringwald and Duckie.

To be honest, I have had a very easy gender transition so far.

(I preface this by understanding that no one needs to change their body and everyone should be able to change their body if they want to. No matter their gender, no one should have to change their body in any way. It's not a requirement to be the gender that you are and to have that respected.)

Five years ago, I was able to go to a private service and have some counseling to make sure that a medical transition was what I wanted, and I was able to afford hormones. Recently, I was very easily able to transfer my prescription onto the National Health Service, therefore only paying £18 a month.

I like the changes in my body.

I was able because of my job to access voice training, which means I'm beginning to have a voice that I like.

But what about surgery?

I was talking about changing my body the other night with some people who I’d met for the first time and the conversation turned quite deep.

And I was saying that when I first went on hormones for the first time I could feel my fingers and my toes. Spiritually, energetically. Like, I'm not saying that my feet and toes were physically numb, but that I could feel them for the first time -  it was like I was in my body.

But I still feel like I walk an inch off the ground.

And having put some vision on this with my meditation instructor, I think that this surgery is going to help me be fully embodied in the world and therefore be able to do the work that I'm here to do.

Which… is this. The email that you're reading right now is part of that work, creating this rhythm of six monthly lunar focus for leaders who see the deep interdependencies of this world and helping you feel less alone and helping you find who you are, what your best next step is and be fortified enough to take that next step.

That's my work.

And I have a sense that going through this experience is going to allow me to land here and then for the next 20 years (?) do the work that I'm here to do.

So being able to engage Rite of Passage energy is really helpful.

What does this mean?

I'm going to work out ways that I can remind myself of that energy and surround myself with images of people I admire, who have also been through rites of passage. I’m gonna potentially lineup some autobiographies of people who've gone through difficult things, not just trans people.

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There’s also a second part of this question that you can engage:

What does this remind me of in nature?

There are some really interesting things that come out of that.

For me in this situation, some of them are a bit embarrassing about caterpillars  and goo and trust and butterflies.

But also the transformation of forest fires that lead to regeneration. Cutting back in order to bloom.

An image of a tree struck by lightning but somehow allowing new growth (is that a thing?).

Rather than just taking our perspective from other human situations, taking our guide from the bird people, the plant people, the insect people, the miracle of this planet links us to something grounded and fully embedded in interconnection.

Asking these questions makes me think about what you might call ‘Ways of Knowing’, which I think might be a bit of a misnomer.

Ways of knowing implies, well, knowing.

I think we might be better thinking about

sources of information or

sources of data or

sources of influences.

So one of the sources, one of the influences on our worldview and our decisions and actions is science and facts, what Western science and Western academic culture likes to think of as objective facts. Cool. Science is important.

There's other ways of accessing influences to add in different, deeper, lighter inputs in to those decisions.

There is intuition. There is metaphor. There is the learning from other experiences that are similar.

There is indigenous knowing and indigenous science.

There is what nature can teach us.

There is looking at history.

There is lived experience.

There is the thinking that happens through the body.

There is somatic knowing.  The realisations that come when you're doing something physical with your hands and or your body.

There are lots of ways to access information, to access influences, to access knowings that are build on and augment factual knowing.

I wonder about the ways of knowing that we emphasise and where else might we be able to focus as we close this month of looking at complexity and mess.

How do we approach complexity and mess, which ways of knowing do we personally emphasise? Which influences do we culturally emphasise?

I was talking to someone the other night who spoke about seeing the unseen and as someone who has spent 20 years doing a type of meditation that is designed for real spiritual knowledge that made a lot of sense.

There is an aphorism I heard my teacher use: that a person with vision looks at where lots of things seem to be happening and sees nothing going on. But they'll look at where nothing seems to be happening and many things.

They see dark in the light and light in the dark.

Being able to imbibe different influences can help us to move through the world with more sensitivity, more discernment, more nuance, more wisdom.

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So… yes, I'm closing this month a bit ‘late’. The New Moon was several days ago.

We will transition into spending the rest of this lunar month focusing on our relationships with others.

Patterns and fractals

Blurry super-close-up of some purple petals of a flower

Yesterday. Last Friday. Friday before last I was driving down to see my sibling in Birmingham where I used to live and whilst I was driving, I was thinking about you.

(Yes, I wrote most of this two weeks ago but it’s been quite the two weeks!)

The easiest way of making a long drive bearable is for me to listen to an audiobook or podcast - something funny or plotty.

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On journeys, I’ve done thrillers, I’ve done cosy fantasy, I’ve done fun podcasts.

The night before, I decided I wanted some true crime. Nothing too gory - I loved this one about North Korean hackers and this one about a leadership coaching cult.

I found one about the UK Post Office scandal which I hadn’t heard of before, somehow.

Basically, the Post Office installed a new IT system, it quickly started showing deficits in postmasters’ accounts, and the PO demanded that they pay it back or they would prosecute them for theft/fraud, denying that it had anything to do with the computers.

Innocent people who were just running the small business of their local post office literally went to prison for it, but the Post Office always said they were the only one this had happened to.

I’m only 10 episodes in and there are 15, but it’s telling the story of how people organised and took the Post Office to court and (kind of) won.

As I was listening, I thought about that complexity question I mentioned yesterday:

What is this an example of?

Here’s some of what I came up with:

  • Big corporates/organisations wielding enormous power

  • Behemoth organisations making individuals feel powerless

  • The invisibility of pain of people we may see regularly

  • The power of people banding together

  • Racism in British life (lots of the people in the cases were from South Asian backgrounds and often received lower compensation)

  • How movements are often driven by one person’s tenacity/stubbornness

  • How bloody long change takes

  • That impossible things are possible

  • IT being trusted implicitly

  • Outsourcing can be dangerous

  • People hiding behind their jobs

  • The relief of having company in our oppression

  • Corporate structures persisting (the ‘Security’ team is hundreds of years old and came from trying to stop thefts when money was being transferred on horseback?!)

  • What seems big to you, is a tiny distraction or unknown to most other humans on the planet

  • How an escape fantasy (eg running a cute little post office) isn’t always the idyll you imagine

  • Sometimes the legal system is the only way of keeping big organisations accountable

  • How rarely people murder people who hurt others, when, you know, they COULD

Then there’s things like:

  • How first-person storytelling can be so involving

  • How hearing the actual voices of people involved makes things really engaging

  • SO much more information is available in English than in some other languages

  • The amount of work a produced podcast involves

And also:

  • How organised sounds deliver meaning to human brains (language is a whole THING isn’t it?)

  • How information is delivered to a tiny computer in my car and then without wires to my EARS? (and how used to that access I am)

  • How I let myself forget the damage that driving does to the planet (and downloading/using the internet!)

  • How having audio in my ears helps me feel safer in service stations/in crowded situations

  • How I still have that love of being lost in a story that I had a child

  • The choices we make on how we spend our miraculous lives on this tiny blue rock in space

(There’s more but you get the point!)

I find there’s an awakening power to the question ‘What is this an example of?’ that takes me out of just being lost in the specifics of my current situation. It allows me to build connections to broader themes, stretch further into the past and see bigger significance.

Pattern-making is a way to move more wisely through complexity and mess - this is a pattern-making question.

I keep being drawn to the power of fractals - in a metaphorical sense, don’t @ me with maths (actually feel free to @ me with fractal math facts, I’d love it).

Most recently, it was the incandescent adrienne maree brown who brought this back to the surface for me.

That we can affect the whole by changing a part.

That even in our tiny actions we can embody the world we dream of.

And I have a hunch that by finding the connections of our present moment with other experiences, we can give more power to the fractal connections of our choices.

I was very drawn to Joanna Macy’s idea of the energy of Business As Usual as contrasted with the energy of The Great Turning, the tide of change that we can nurture. (I’ve got her new podcast in my queue - age 94!)

We can find literal and spiritual company with all of the people who are following the energy of better, more equitable, more just, more magical, more joyful, more survivable futures.

What’s a situation you’re facing right now? What’s it an example of?

What else is it an example of?

And what else?

There’s another pattern-making question I find really useful, and I reckon we’ll be exploring that next.

Complexity and mess. Month two's invitation.

After a month of focusing on self/feelings/sacredness/work, we’re allowing a different aspect of being an interdependent leader take the focus: how we handle complexity and mess.

(New here? This is the intro to the six-month cycle)

Those of you who’ve been around for a while know that I’m fascinated by the lenses adults can develop to look at the wild uncertainty of reality.

How we can (but don’t always do) move from wanting to just be a good belonger, to standing out for solving specific problems, to being inspirational and focusing on outcomes, to then despairing at how everything ELSE is broken and wondering who the hell we are and what we’re here to do, to finally finding some kind of peace as we zoom further in and further out of what’s happening around us.

This month I think I’m holding a few things gently (and I’d love if you joined me):

Patterns

What is this an example of? What does it remind me of?

Time

What length of time am I seeing this through? What happens if I zoom more into the immediate moment? What happens if I delve into the deep past that lead us here? What future timelines am I aware of - and how far forward am I thinking?

Empathy

Who do I have empathy with and how deeply do I allow that empathy to go? Who do I NOT have empathy with and what effect does that have?

Ways of knowing

Which ways of knowing do I sit in out of habit? Can I allow other ways of knowing to be added in? Where do I have certainty/fundamentalism? How do I know what I know? What else might be true? What does my body know? What does younger me know? What does Big Me know? What are non-human people telling me - the plant people, the animal people? What hunches or instincts am I listening to or ignoring?

A friend asked me a while ago about what was missing in ‘leadership’ education. I said I felt like the middle 65% is very well looked after. But the edges - the super macro and the zoomed in micro are often missing.

My hunch is that we’ll get a lot of mileage from looking at the margins this month, the liminal spaces. The quiet, corner-of-the-eye, don’t-look-straight-at-it subtleties. The big, high/deep, sweeping hugenesses.

Let’s see what happens!

As always, let me know if you are using any of these prompts and what they spark for you. Either by replying here or finding me on the socials (I’m @megalightheart everywhere - Insta, FB, Twitter, Medium).

Another world is possible.

PS Support a Black trans author AND do yourself a favour by having a plotty book that will take over your brain - order/pre-order The Library Thief

What's a dynamic tension and how does it help us navigate complexity?

One of the transitions adults go through as we grow our lenses on complexity and mess is from certainty to a felt-sense of how… mixed life is.

Feels like we're living in the middle of lots of what I think of as dynamic tensions, within a pressure to create clear, pure rules.

I'm wondering if part of moving through the world in a wiser way is resisting rules and instead living inside those dynamic tensions, where there are no clear ‘right’ choices, only annoying nuance.

How do you handle these?

Here's one I'm… embarrassed? ashamed? of…

I’ve signed up for a paid ‘yoga’ app that is wildly customisable (style, level, session length, amount of instruction, voice), and makes sure over a period of days you've had a good variety of movement. All of which to say, I’m finally actually moving my body once or twice a day.

I'm trying to make it more likely that 70-year-old Meg can move, and I'm working on being more present in my body, after years of chronic dysphoria-led disembodiment.

So, through that lens, this app is pretty bloody perfect.

However, I'm extremely aware that it also has less than zero to do with a connected system of spiritual knowledge or even anything or anyone from India.

Whilst I was on my free trial, I spent a while searching for Indian owned yoga apps or Indian yoga videos but they didn't work in a way that suited my neorosparkly brain or they asked for way more time than I can spend each day.

So I either

- find some other type of balancing/stretching/strength activity that isn't (what one of my besties calls) colonised stretching that I won't actually do for more than a week (ask me how I know)

- go back to running (which only serves cardio)

- haul my ass to a class run by someone from a real lineage (money/time/who?)

- work out how to teach myself and make my own sequences (?)

- try and MAKE myself do something I'll find very hard to actually stick to

or… do something I don't find particularly ethical.

Add it to the list of an Evil Prime subscription, owning a car, and not hassling our landlord enough about our gas boiler?

This is what I mean by dynamic tension.

I want to be building my strength, balance and flexibility in ways that suit my brain/timetable AND I don't want to be contributing yet again to the centuries-long project of White violence.

I want to (more publicly) denounce genocides AND it helps literally no one if I lose my job or jeopardise the service I manage.

I want to be working on nurturing our medium-term work culture AND there's so much detail to deal with day-to-day.

I want to talk to the landlord about converting our gas hob so that we're not directly burning fossil fuels every meal AND I love the immediate control I have over the temperature (plus we had a terrible experience with an induction hob at our last place).

I want to nurture a human and humane team environment AND we have to operate within challenging KPIs to keep our funding.

I want to date more AND oh my god don't make me struggle through messaging so many strangers.

I want to read All The Books/knit/play jazz piano/draw/paint/make my own clothes AND I want to rest my brain at the end of the day with Grey's Anatomy reruns.

I want to knit impressive garments AND I find it wildly stressful to spend 100 hours making something that might not fit.

I want to throw my lot in with the climate crisis direct action lot AND we cannot live without my salary.

I want to give it all up to run a tiny bakery AND I want to do everything I can to bring us closer to another, better world (and we all know the bakery is just an escape fantasy lol)

Through a black and white lens, the ethics of some of these are very clear.

In practice, in our current world, it's much less straightforward.

Reminds me of when a (non-day-job) colleague came to me with a dilemma she was in, about someone she was connected to who was beginning to express some anti-trans views.

She came to me for advice, and maybe because I was tired, I ended up saying that it was up to her to decide what fitted with her feminism, what sat right with her, her spirit.

We live in a wildly confusing world. We absolutely shouldn't excuse ourselves from self-education and doing the work of anti-oppression, AND there's also a challenge in facing the truth that we often have to, at least in the short term, live within in a tension that can't be resolved.

AND we need to be conscious of who benefits from that compromise and who loses. And how that sits with our spirit.

AND how we find peace in our body and take the next wise and timely action with so many unresolvable loops.

AND how we do our best to live with integrity whilst we exist in this particular moment/the space-time continuum.

Erm.

I don't have a neat conclusion, here.

Discuss?