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Home » The Secret to Mastering Life’s Biggest Transitions: Bruce Feiler (Transcript)

The Secret to Mastering Life’s Biggest Transitions: Bruce Feiler (Transcript)

Here is the full text and summary of Bruce Feiler’s talk titled “The Secret to Mastering Life’s Biggest Transitions” at TED conference. In this talk, author Bruce Feiler shares from his experience of how his father’s Parkinson’s disease and multiple suicide attempts led him to research and explore the importance of storytelling and transitions, leading to the idea of linear living being outdated. Feiler speaks about disruptors as events that transition our lives, the average person going through three to five lives changing lifequakes in five years, and half of adult lives spent in transition. He also offers five tips on how to master life transitions, including building a team of allies and recognizing the power of storytelling to rewrite our life narratives during transitional periods.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

I used to have a saying that phone calls don’t change your life. Until one day I got a phone call that did. It was from my mother. “Your father is trying to kill himself.”

He’s what? My dad was a son of the American South, a Navy veteran and civic leader, he was never depressed a minute. Until he got Parkinson’s. Six times in 12 weeks, my dad attempted to end his life. We tried every solution imaginable, until one day I had a thought. Maybe my dad needed a spark to restart his life story.

One morning I sent him a question. “Tell me about the toys you played with as a child.” What happened next changed not only him, but everyone around him, and led me to reimagine how we all make meaning, purpose and joy in our lives. This is the story of what happened next and what we all can learn from it.

I want you to stop for a second and listen to the story going on in your head. It’s there, somewhere, in the background. It’s the story you tell others when you first meet them, the story you tell yourself every day. It’s the story of who you are, where you came from, where you’re going. It’s the story of your life.

What we’ve learned from a generation of brain research is that story isn’t just part of us. It is us in a fundamental way. Life is the story you tell yourself. But there’s something that research hasn’t much answered.

What happens when we misplace the plot of that story, when we get sidetracked by a pitfall, a pothole, a pandemic? What happens when we feel burned out and need a fresh start? What happens when our fairy tales go awry. That’s what happened to my dad that fall, to me around that time, to all of us at one time or another. We get stuck in the woods and can’t get out.

This time, though, I wanted to learn how to get unstuck. Like my dad, I was born in the American South. And for years I had what I now think of as a linear life. I went to college, I started writing, I did it for no money for a while, I had some success, I got married and had children.

But then in my 40s, I was just walloped by life. First I got cancer as a new dad of identical twin daughters. Then I almost went bankrupt. Then my dad had that suicide spree. For a long time, I felt shame and fear about these events. I didn’t know how to tell that story. I didn’t want to tell that story.

When I did, I discovered that everyone feels their life has been upended in some way. That their life is somehow off-schedule, off-track, off-kilter. That the life they’re living is not the life they expected. That they’re living life out of order.

I wanted to do something to help. Over three years, I crisscrossed the country, collecting what became hundreds of life stories of Americans in all 50 states. People who lost homes, lost limbs, changed careers, changed genders, got sober, got out of bad marriages. In the end, I had 1,000 hours of interviews, 6,000 pages of transcripts. With a team of 12, I then spent a year coding these stories for 57 different variables, looking for patterns that could help all of us in times of change. I called this “The Life Story Project.” And here’s what I learned.

THE LINEAR LIFE IS DEAD

Lesson number one. The Linear Life Is Dead. The idea that we’re going to have one job, one relationship, one source of happiness from adolescence to assisted living is hopelessly outdated. What’s more, that idea turns out to be a historical anomaly. Though we don’t talk about it nearly enough, the way we look at the world affects how we look at our lives.

In the ancient world, they didn’t have linear time. They thought life was a cycle because agriculture was a cycle. In the Middle Ages, they thought life was a staircase up to middle age, then down. That’s no new love at 60, no retiring and opening an Airbnb at 70. Not until 150 years ago did we adopt the idea that life precedes in a series of stages, like an industrial factory. Freud’s psychosexual stages, Erikson’s eight stages of moral development, the five stages of grief. These are all linear constructs. This model peaks in the 1970s with the idea that everyone does the same thing in their 20s, the same thing in their 30s, then has a midlife crisis between 39 and 44 and a half.

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It is hard to overstate how powerful this idea was. There’s only one problem. It’s not true. Today, we’ve updated how we look at the world. We understand there’s chaos and complexity and networks, but we haven’t updated how we look at our lives. That leads to lesson number two.

NON-LINEAR LIFE

The non-linear life involves many more life transitions. I went through every interview I conducted and made a master list of all the ways our lives get redirected.