Transitioning
We are always transitioning, as individuals, as couples, as families, and as teams.
Transitions are often seen as challenging and scary. After all, we cannot really see what there’s over the edge, over the horizon.
While change is an external event or situation that takes place, transition is the internal shift we make in response to it. In the book “Transitions” by William Bridges, an expert on change and transition, he breaks down transition into three phases:
Endings
The Neutral Zone
Beginnings
These three phases give us the map and the points of reference of where we are when we transition.
Paradoxically any transition has to begin with an ending. Something has changed, there has been a disruption of the status quo and we need to identify what we are losing, what is over, what we can let go, and what we will keep.
Secondly, there is a territory (the neutral zone) that is in between and precedes the new phase. This territory is uncomfortable, it feels like limbo. We are not in our comfort zone there. As individuals it produces an identity crisis, of who I am, in relationships creates uncertainties about who we are and in organization creates re-organization, mergers, and so on. Every time we try something new, even just a new behaviour or a new perspective, we are moving away from what we know and identify with and transitioning into the unknown. In this stage, we are creating new processes and learning what our new roles will be. We often try to rush this stage in between, because the limbo is uncomfortable, but it’s critical to give it time so we can effectively process the ending before moving on to our new beginning.
Finally, Beginnings involve new learnings, values and attitudes. Beginnings are an expression of a fresh identity.
Well-managed transitions allow us to establish new roles with an understanding of our purpose, how we contribute, and the impact we have. And a new process starts.
Everything is constantly changing and both positive and negative experiences are part of the process of transition that makes up the story of our lives.
Learning to see any experience as a necessary part of the process, and becoming aware of the inevitable tides of life, is important to create some distance from the story we are telling about a situation (often catastrophizing or feeling like victims) and what the ultimate reality might be.
I want to leave you with a fable from the Tao Book:
“When an old farmer’s stallion wins a prize at a country show, his neighbour calls round to congratulate him, but the old farmer says “who knows what is good and what is bad?”. The next day some thieves come and steal his valuable animal. His neighbour comes to commiserate him, but the old man replies “who know what is good and what is bad?” A few days after the spirited stallion escapes from the thieves and joins a herd of wild mares, leading them back to the farm. The neighbour calls to share the farmer’s joy, but the farmer says “who knows what is good and what is bad?” The following day, while trying to break in one of the wild mares, the farmer’s son is thrown and fractures his leg. The neighbour calls to share the farmer’s sorrow, but the old man’s attitude remains the same as before. The following week the army passes by, forcibly conscripting soldiers for war, but they do not take the farmer’s son because he cannot walk. The neighbour thinks to himself “who knows what is good and what is bad?”
I invite you to reflect on this fable by noticing what this perspective can bring into your life. For me, it brings lightness, a reminder that we are all on our very personal journey and that everything can be turned into an opportunity for growth and for becoming more “me” (self-actualisation).
Finally, try to notice where you might be in your “transition map”, at this moment of your life. Are you in the neutral zone, at the end, at the beginning? Just knowing where you are on the “transition map” will help you to be more present in your experience, to have the courage to let go of the old, to embrace the uncertainty of neutral zone and finally embark on a new beginning… and grow!
Please, contact me if you need support with navigating a particular transition in your life.
I’m always here for you,
Cristina