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My Journey: A Story of Transformative Learning
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Hoi An, Vietnam, January 8, 2018 |
I was born to
a fifteen-year-old, uneducated mother, in an Arabic-speaking Muslim family, in the
heart of a centuries-old Moroccan medina. I am the oldest of four siblings. At
seven years old, I was admitted in a French elementary school attended mostly by
French children. Needless to say, this first learning experience was a shock. At
eighteen, and in the grip of teenage angst, I dropped out of twelve grade and traveled
by car with a boyfriend and a team of book salesmen to Europe, the Middle East
and Africa selling French books for a living. After four years, I had enough
savings to return to Morocco, this time after rationally weighing my options for
the future. I enrolled in a correspondence course in preparation for the French
Baccalaureate Exam as an independent candidate, and passed it with mention.
Six months
later, I traveled to New York, Japan and Hong Kong and upon my return home, recognized
that I needed to learn English to engage with the wider world. I immediately signed
up for an intensive six-month study in London. Only weeks after I passed the
TOEFL, and with the financial help of a generous uncle, I started college at
the University of Florida where I graduated just two and a half years later
with Honors and an induction in the Phi Beta Kappa Society, a distinction which
was still a mystery to me. By then, I had fallen in love with academia and I
applied to a few prestigious graduate schools knowing full well I couldn’t
afford any of them (my uncle’s largess having ended) but hoping they would
come through for me even though I was a penniless foreign student.
I was quickly accepted by Johns Hopkins and Harvard, among others. I chose instead New York University because it was the only institution that offered me a full fellowship including a monthly cash stipend, provided I maintain straight A’s. After I received my Masters Degree and finished the PhD coursework and comprehensive exams, I was awarded a generous year-long doctoral research internship by the Guggenheim Foundation, which was interested in the subject matter of my doctoral dissertation: International Terrorism. Unfortunately, I hit a wall before completing my PhD. I was struggling with stress and anxiety and lacked proper guidance and mentoring. It turned out there were limits to my independent, intrapersonal, self-learning abilities. I found a way out by becoming pregnant and giving birth to a colicky, hyperactive baby and forever remained an “All But Dissertation.”
I was quickly accepted by Johns Hopkins and Harvard, among others. I chose instead New York University because it was the only institution that offered me a full fellowship including a monthly cash stipend, provided I maintain straight A’s. After I received my Masters Degree and finished the PhD coursework and comprehensive exams, I was awarded a generous year-long doctoral research internship by the Guggenheim Foundation, which was interested in the subject matter of my doctoral dissertation: International Terrorism. Unfortunately, I hit a wall before completing my PhD. I was struggling with stress and anxiety and lacked proper guidance and mentoring. It turned out there were limits to my independent, intrapersonal, self-learning abilities. I found a way out by becoming pregnant and giving birth to a colicky, hyperactive baby and forever remained an “All But Dissertation.”
After that,
my life took on a radically different path. My love marriage to my college
sweetheart collapsed after years of discord and, as a divorced single mother, I
faced financial ruin and looked for jobs primarily to make money and support my
daughter and ailing mother. After a couple of years as a Manhattan real estate
agent, I answered a Merrill Lynch employment ad in The New York Times. I was
hired as a rookie broker in a midtown branch and studied for the various Series
Exams required to work in the financial industry and stock markets. That was
the easy part! When in the first few
months I started prospecting for clients, I found I loathed cold-calling. But I
persevered using networking and, within a decade, became a rising star; one of
only a handful of women in the industry.
As a Merrill
Lynch Senior Financial Adviser and VP, I occupied a large office overlooking
the East River on the 47th floor of the Citicorp Tower. In the eyes of all
those around me, I was the embodiment of the American Dream! Only, inside, I
was a wreck, reacting to not only the stock markets debacles but also all kinds
of other events, such as 9/11, the Iraq War, and my Muslim identity. Needless
to say, I was always stressed, lived in perpetual fear, and carefully kept up
appearances thanks to anti-anxiety medication and strenuous gym workouts. By
the time, my mother’s illness led to the complete loss of her mobility and she
required around-the-clock care, I was on the verge of a nervous breakdown. The
decisions I took then were for the most part irrational and short-sighted. I
took a leave of absence from my job and when my mother passed away within
months, I had just undergone a full hysterectomy and was in the midst of utter
mental confusion. I never went back to work, turning my back in doing so to an
enviable Wall Street career and loads of money.
Fast
forward fourteen years later, the mature woman I am today finally figured out some
of the big problems that caused the devastating crashes that ended my promising
career paths before their time. For even though I had entered and pursued those
careers wholeheartedly, their unplanned endings came about reluctantly and
irrationally. My decisions stemmed from deep emotional turmoil and a reactive
and negative state of mind. For a while, I was so enthralled by the capacity of
the intellect to create and control events in my life, I had pretty much
dismissed my unconscious emotional self and I was perpetually at war with it. Because
my mother and most of the women in my family during my childhood were all
either completely illiterate or uneducated, I viewed education and reason as
the holy grail for a fully independent life. I entered a male power system with
a man’s mindset, and I couldn’t understand why I harbored so much angst and why
I couldn’t control my circumstances when they took on unforeseen turns. My
capacity for lasting transformative learning was showing its limits. And that
is where Mezirow’s theory with its over-reliance on the rational mind stops
being helpful for people like me.
After four
years of self-reflection on the content, process and premise of my life
experiences (Mezirow, 1997), I was met with the same stumbling blocks, namely
the values and judgments of the dominant white, male, middle class culture I
was living in, the one I had so proudly conquered. Only that which causes the
problems cannot beget the solutions. I was stuck and desperate. Time and again,
my rational mind came up with actions to get me out of my predicaments only to
present me with further problems instead of lasting solutions, because they
were marred by fear and doubt. The light at the end of the tunnel appeared one
spring day when a friend called to recommend I read Eckhart Tolle’s “A New Earth,” and I suddenly realized I
was a prisoner of my mind. My incessant thinking had tormented me to the point
of despair. It was time for me to learn to be still and open my heart to my emotional
being in order to integrate my shadow
self, as Carl Jung calls it.
Robert Boyd
understood this missing aspect in Mezirow’s theory and, borrowing from Carl
Jung’s work on ego, shadow, persona and collective unconscious, expanded the
purview of Transformative Learning Theory further. The deep conflicts between
the ego (the conscious mind) and the unconscious within the individual’s psyche
must be resolved for true transformation, defined as: “the fundamental change
in one’s personality involving conjointly the resolution of a personal dilemma
and the expansion of consciousness resulting in greater personality
integration.” (Boyd,1989) From that moment on, I went on a quest for spiritual expansion
and emotional growth that’s still ongoing. All my life, I had been oblivious,
or rather dismissive, of my feminine/emotional being, whilst exhibiting a
self-assured, rational persona, which depleted my energy and left me wanting. I
aspired to fit in and succeed in a world that devalued and derided feelings and
emotions and appreciated above all the analytical mind, the ego and the
Newtonian model of cause and effect. Feelings are anything but rational and
explaining them rarely makes them go away. We end up repressing and denying them,
which over time comes back to haunt us in the form of mental and physical
sickness.
More
importantly, the over-reliance on the intellect at the exclusion of the heart
deprives us of our wholeness and ultimately of our expanded consciousness and
full cognitive abilities. I was busy pushing away my conflicting negative
emotions lest they be seen by others, so intent on appearing strong and
confident that it almost destroyed me. I preferred to run away rather than be
found out as a fraud and admit to my vulnerability. My lack of self-worth and
tragic need to prove myself over and over again manifested as insurmountable obstacles when life threw me a curve-ball. My “disorienting dilemmas,’ as Mezirow
calls them, were impervious to self-examination and critical reflection. They
yielded and transformed only when I sat still with my negative emotions,
embraced them despite the pain, and surrendered to my shadow self. When that
happened, my negative feelings turned into deep peace and compassion. It was
only then that my critical mind became productive again, creative and potent,
not before.
In
Kabbalah, it is asserted that the less we react to events, circumstances and
others, the closer to God we get. Hence, just as I started to settle into a feeling
of authenticity and wholeness, integrating my shadow self and transcending many
of my subconscious negative feelings and beliefs, I began contemplating yet
another challenge: expanding to still higher levels of consciousness and love. Inside
me the impulse was growing, an instinctual urge I couldn’t ignore much longer,
only this time, it was not born of confusion or dilemma, it was emanating from
a deep state of knowing and bliss, which does not mean my ego was not in full
panic mode at times. This type of transformative learning is an entirely
different animal. It is a spiritual drive motivated by the desire to know god
within, to embrace the unknown armed with faith alone. I believe that many of
us today are feeling that calling and have set on the path of bringing more love
and awakening onto the world, an endeavor that starts with greater individual awareness.
Shortly
after my birthday, in the summer of 2016, I gave away all my material
belongings and most cherished possessions, left my home, family and friends and
went on a solo travel around the world to countries where I had never been. In
my view, there is not a bigger trigger for transformative learning than
overseas travel. And I am not talking about the kind of travel that seeks to
duplicate the comforts of home while away and shields you from the imponderable,
but of the type of solitary travel that throws you into an altered state of
consciousness. The kind of travel that obliterates your identity, habits and
frames of references and finds you naked and raw in the face of the unknown and
utterly unfamiliar. I recently returned from that adventure and have been
reflecting and writing about the extraordinary changes I have experienced. My
journey, it turns out was not so much about the wondrous countries and peoples
I discovered as much as about the deep emotional shifts and altered mindsets
that have taken place within me while stretching the envelop of my awareness.
Eighteen
months, fifteen new countries, and a new book later, I am back home ready to
embark on a whole new chapter, my Life’s Third Act, as Jane Fonda famously calls
it in her 2012 TED talk for Women. This latest phase of my personal psychic
development and transformative journey has moved beyond the personal
ego-centered development to a desire to share with others the fruit of my
spiritual expansion and higher consciousness. Scott (1991) wrote: “When one
transcends his/her ego, collective needs, wants and desires represent a
stronger force… [and the] group can serve to represent symbolically alternative
thoughts, structure, directions and images for what is appropriate in today’s
society.” The group I am thinking about is the growing army of light workers
who are seeking enlightenment and empowerment while spreading love and compassion
in the world today.
This was
the story of my own evolution. The intent to share it with you stems from my desire
to shed light on some of the basic premises of Jack Mezirow’s Transformative
Learning Theory and highlight a couple of alternative perspectives that appear
to support my own transformative journey. Transformative Learning, as a
fundamental change in the way we see our world, has been crucial in my life
experience from early adulthood. For most adults, their perception of
themselves, the perception others have of them, and fear of judgment make them
impervious to taking risks and expanding beyond their current perspectives. As
we get older, most of us tend to root ourselves into daily routines until our
unconscious mind becomes so hardwired that attempts at change are not only
difficult but also painful. Yet, some of us, have a seemingly infinite capacity
to undergo a multiplicity of perspective changes throughout our lives and to
reinvent ourselves time and time again.
My hope is
that my journey will inspire others, especially older women who are the largest
demographic in the Western world today, who like me yearn to be the best version
of themselves while living their best lives. And perhaps, since we are talking
about transformative learning in adults, let me say a word about this
phenomenon of our time which is the explosive growth of seniors in the
developed world. These so-called Baby Boomers are entering the third act of
their lives at unprecedented numbers and many of them do not feel they are on a
path of decrepitude or decay but further growth and expansion and most of all
service. To them, Fonda, today at the beautiful ripe age of 80, offered a
different metaphor for aging, one that is no longer defined by an arch but a “staircase,”
symbolizing in her own words: “The upward ascension of the human spirit
bringing us into wisdom, wholeness and authenticity. Age not at all as a
pathology, age as potential…” Because after all, scientific research now shows,
the brain, with its magnificent plasticity, has the ability to form new neural
pathways, expanding our capacity to learn and transform into very old age. Neuro-plasticity
is opening the door to the secret of immortality, which is infinite flexibility
and creativity: Transformative learning as a lifelong voyage.
Note: This article was written as a story illustrating Jack Mezirow's Theory of Transformative Learning for Teachers College 20th Anniversary of the International Transformative Learning Conference in November 2019.
Note: This article was written as a story illustrating Jack Mezirow's Theory of Transformative Learning for Teachers College 20th Anniversary of the International Transformative Learning Conference in November 2019.
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