We are accustomed to thinking of a crisis as a catastrophe. Losing a job, breaking up, illness, the death of a loved one — all of this is perceived as the end of the world. But what if a crisis is not the end, but the beginning? What if it is precisely at the moment of the collapse of the old world that a new personality is born? Psychologists and philosophers call this "emergence" — the appearance of a new quality that did not exist before. In this article, we will discuss how a crisis becomes a point of assembly for a new identity.Why We Fear a CrisisThe fear of a crisis is the fear of the unknown. We do not know who we are without a job, without a partner, without a familiar routine. The loss of external supports exposes the inner emptiness. Many try to drown out this fear — with alcohol, work, new relationships. But avoiding a crisis does not allow you to grow. Only by accepting a crisis as a given can you start to go through it. The first step is to stop calling a crisis a "problem" and call it a "transition".Stages of CrisisA crisis is a process. It has phases. First, there is denial. "This can't be." Then, anger. "Why me?" Then, bargaining. "If I do this, everything will be fine." Then, depression. And then, acceptance. Only at the stage of acceptance does the birth of the new begin. But you cannot skip the stages. You need to live through them. Living through does not mean getting stuck. It is important to feel but not to identify with your feelings. A crisis is not you, it is what is happening to you.The Crisis as the Destruction of the False "Self"Before the crisis, we live in a world of illusions. We believe that we are protected, that our personality is stable. A crisis destroys this illusion. But along with false protection, it also destroys false identity. We stop being "the one who works in this company," "the one who is in these relationships." We remain without roles. And this is terrifying. But it is in this emptiness that the real "self" begins to ...
Read more