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English Pages [388] Year 1986
THE GROUNDBREAKING 10-YEAR STUDY THAT WAS THE BASIS FOR
PASSAGES! THE MOST AMBITIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE ADULT
LIFE
CYCLE."
•NEWSWEEK
NATIONAL
DANIEL J, LEVINSON
BESTSELLER
WITH
CHARLOTTE N. DARROW • EDWARD B. KLEIN MARIA H. LEVINSON • BRAXTON McKEE (2j) Ballantine 28258 $5.95
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«
NEW COLLEGE OF CALIFORNIA (SF)
The Seasons of roan
'
s
a
1 i f
mu>
®
THE BAKER a TAYLOR CO.
ALSO BY DANIEL
J.
LEVINSON
THE AUTHORITARIAN PERSONALITY (1950) with Theodor
W. Adorno,
Else Frenkel-Brunswik and R. Nevitt Sanford
THE PATIENT AND THE MENTAL HOSPITAL (1957) co-edited with Milton Greenblatt
and Richard H. Williams
PATIENTHOOD IN THE MENTAL HOSPITAL: Role, Personality and Social Structure (1964)
with Eugene B. Gallagher
THE EXECUTIVE ROLE CONSTELLATION:
An Analysis of Personality and Role Relations in Management with Richard C. Hodgson and Abraham Zaleznik
(
1965)
TO by
Daniel
J.
Levinson
with Charlotte N.
Edward
B.
Darrow
Klein
Maria H. Levinson Braxton
McKee
Ballantine Books
•
New York
:
Copyright
© 1978 by Daniel
All rights reserved
J.
Levinson
under International and Pan-American
Copyright Conventions. Published
in the
United States by
Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc.,
and simultaneously
in
New York,
Canada by Random House of Canada,
Limited, Toronto, Canada.
Library of Congress Catalog Card
Number: 77-20978
ISBN 0-345-28258-2 This edition published by arrangement with Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
An
earlier version of
appeared
some
book
of the material in this
in
The May 1977 Copyright
issue of Psychiatry.
© by The William Alanson White
Psychiatric Foundation, Inc.
Used by permission.
We the People: American Character and Social Change (Greenwood
Press, 1977).
Life History Research in Psychopathology (University of Minnesota Press, 1974).
Since this page cannot legibly accommodate acknowledgments continue on page 353.
all
United States of America Books Edition: March 1979 Second Printing: May 1979
Manufactured
in the
First Ballantine
o
J
permissions,
To
our families, whose generations
in their rich variety
have so enhanced our appreciation of the seasons
\
8
1
®ontents Preface
I
ix
A VIEW OF ADULT DEVELOPMENT
i
The Life Cycle and
2
Eras
3
Developmental Periods: The Evolution
:
Its
Seasons
The Anatomy of the Life Cycle
of the Individual Life Structure
4
Four
II
5
Men
40
THE NOVICE PHASE OF EARLY ADULTHOOD Early Adult Transition, Entering
the Adult World, and the
Major Tasks
7
The Life of James Tracy,
8
The
Life of
of the
Age Thirty Transition
Novice Phase
6
9
1
64
The Novice Phase: The
III
3
71
90
Executive
(
112
I)
William Paulsen, Worker
1
26
THE SETTLING DOWN PERIOD
Settling
Down:
Building a Second Adult Life Structure
10
Five Sequences Through the Settling
1
The Life of James Tracy
12
The Life of Paul Namson,
(
II
)
Down
166
Novelist
171
Period
1
1
50
39
Vlll
CONTENTS
IV
THE MID-LIFE TRANSITION
AND ENTERING MIDDLE ADULTHOOD 13
The Mid-life Transition
14
Mid-life Individuation:
15
Mid-life Individuation:
16
Modifying the Life Structure
191
Young/Old, the Major
The Other Polarities
During the Mid-life Transition 17
The Life of John
18
Entering Middle Adulthood
19
The
Life of James Tracy (III)
V
CONCLUSIONS
20
Tasks and
Notes
Index
260
278 305
Adult Development
341
Permissions Acknowledgments
355
222
245
Barnes, Biologist
Possibilities of
Polarity
353
317
209
areface What
does
it
mean
be an adult?
to
What
are the root issues of adult life—
the essential problems and satisfactions, the sources of disappointment, fulfillment? Is there an underlying order in the progression of our
grief
and
lives
over the adult years, as there
me
tions of this kind led
and
years ago,
this
book
is
in
childhood and adolescence? Ques-
program of research some ten
to undertake a
my
reports the progress
and
colleagues
have made
I
them.
in answering
As our research progressed, it became increasingly clear that a developmental approach was needed in the study of adulthood, as of childhood. This was in abstract
it
itself
hardly a
new
began, there was
theory and even
little
adult phases in the
cycle
life
wide acceptance
idea, yet despite its
had remained curiously neglected
When
in practice.
less
research evidence regarding
and the nature of adult development.
Despite the increasing interest in adult development, there luctance to study the course of adult learn
more about the
life
some
in
possibilities of personal
growth
fear that careful scrutiny will reveal only decline
hope that
life
begins at
result of this pervasive
40—but
the great anxiety
dread about middle age
about the experience of being adult. is
one of the best-kept
secrets in
tory generally. People in the discuss the course
in the
our work
The
is
is
depth. is
re-
still
wish to
hampered by the
and
restriction.
that
it
Adults
ends there.
The
almost complete silence
concrete character of adult
life
human
his-
our society, and probably in
middle years generally find
and meaning
is
The
it
difficult
to
of their lives with their peers, younger
co-workers or youthful offspring. Middle age has been one of the great
taboo topics. In the
last
ten years there has been an increasing
number
of
and popular books (usually intended to be reassuring) on But our avoidance is still great and our knowledge limited.
novels, plays this topic.
The
widespread fears about old age have been widely recognized. Long
before old age anxieties
hood
is
is
imminent, however, middle age activates our deepest
about decline and dying. that there
is
no
life after
The most distressing fear in early adultyouth. Young adults often feel that to
Preface
x
pass 30
is
be "over the
to
hill,"
and they are given
different ages.
life at
The middle
and meaningless comfort
triviality
beyond hollow
problems and
cliches to provide a fuller sense of the actual
adult
little
possibilities of
they imagine, will bring
years,
at best, stagnation
and hopelessness
at
worst.
Middle age
usually regarded as a vague interim period, defined pri-
is
One
marily in negative terms.
but what vitality,
ability,
is
one
in a
more
is
no longer young and yet not quite old—
The
positive sense?
connotations of youth are
growth, mastery, the heroic; whereas old age connotes vulnerwithering, ending, the brink of nothingness.
Our
overly negative
imagery of old age adds greatly to the burden of middle age. to go through middle age in the
already very old;
and
though one were
cycle has
own
must know and accept These personal and our research goals. years,
and
virtues
of death, as
a self-defeating illusion to live
it is
of youth, as its
shadow
still
it
in the
shadow
simply young. Each phase in the
limitations.
To
realize its potential value,
terms and create our
its
It is terrifying
though one were
within
lives
it
life
we
accordingly.
professional considerations shaped the definition of
The
goals have
but the basic idea
is
been
and amplified over the
clarified
unchanged. Our primary aim
developmental perspective on adulthood in men. systematic conception of the entire
life cycle,
We want
is
to create a
to set forth a
while paying primary atten-
Each season has its own intrinsic molded by its place in the cycle. on was the "mid-life decade" from age 35 to 45; it
tion to the major seasons of adulthood.
nature and value, though
Our emphasis
at first
its
character
is
was then extended to cover the span from the
late teens to the late forties.
began imagining and planning the study in 1966, before the recent activity in this field had started. In embarking upon this work, I seemed to be entering a lonely and uncharted territory. The study reflected in part I
my intellectual
interest in the possibility of adult
development.
of topic also reflected a personal concern: at 46, transition into
middle age
in
The
choice
wanted to study the order to understand what I had been going I
my life had changed in crucial had "developed" in a sense I could not articulate. The study would light on my own experience and, I hoped, contribute to an understand-
through myself. Over the previous ten years ways; cast
I
ing of adult development in general. Later decision reflected
became evident that this There is a growing to see adulthood as something more than a long, years with childhood at one end and senility at the
more than my personal
desire in our society featureless stretch of
it
feelings.
other.
During the academic year 1966-1967, having
just
come
to Yale,
I
explored various theoretical issues within the broad domain of adult devel-
Preface
opment and moved toward
a specific research plan. In the fall of 1967,
Charlotte N. Darrow, Douglas
and
lyzing
some
S.
Derrer and Edward B. Klein joined me,
team was formed. Early
a research
pilot interviews,
xi
we
in 1968, after
conducting and ana-
submitted a research proposal to the Na-
Mental Health. The study was funded and had its formal January 1969, although by this time the work was well under
tional Institute of
inception in
Our
way.
first
subjects were interviewed in the
McKee
1970. Braxton
fall
of 1968, the last, early in
joined the project in 1968 and Maria H. Levinson in
when Derrer left to take a member of our group from 1968 1970,
Ray C. Walker was a owe him a special debt. He
position elsewhere. to 1971.
We
was the one Jungian in a group committed to other— chiefly Freudian— con-
With
ceptions of the person.
and
great tact
he helped us to
persistence,
assimilate Jung's ideas without having to reject other viewpoints. All of us
have become
Our pleted
less sectarian as a result.
the
initial
to a wider age span
proper next step, to write a
early in 1973.
By
this
we had moved from
and
we
felt,
a
a study of the mid-life decade
more general theory
of adult development.
The
was to develop further our concepts and findings,
book about them. Unfortunately,
in this field funds are
ordinarily given to initiate research, not to write books.
book has
we had com-
time
and follow-up interviewing and much of the case
analysis. In the process,
and
ended
research funding
The
writing of this
been complicated by the lack of funds and the generally
trfus
bleak economic situation of the universities.
Planning
this
book
in the spring of 1973,
we
decided that
I
would write
the chapters on the theory and findings, and each of the others would write a single biography. This division of labor has been followed. Charlotte
Darrow wrote the biography of the novelist Paul Namson, whom she had Edward Klein did the same for the executive James Tracy, and Braxton McKee for the worker William Paulsen. Maria Levinson interviewed.
joined the project after the interviewing had ended; she wrote the biogra-
phy
of the biologist
John Barnes,
whom
I
had interviewed.
I
completed the
data analysis and the conceptualization, and wrote the remaining chapters.
Braxton
McKee was
a great help to
me
in this work.
He
also
made
signifi-
cant contributions to the revision of the manuscript.
Although
I
was the originator of the study and the primary author of
the book, the research project was a cooperative one. As in rations,
it is
difficult to sort
members. The
mon
all
good collabo-
out the distinctive contributions of individual
five of us feel part of a collective process that yielded a
com-
product.
From
the
start,
our approach has been multidisciplinary.
on the individual and
his
development over the adult
years,
Our
focus
and
this has
is
xii
Preface
traditionally
been the
territory of
psychology and psychiatry. However, our
interest in the evolving life course requires us to place the individual in
we have
society:
to
examine a man's engagement with
his relationships, roles, involvements in the conflicts
and
This means, in turn, that
abilities.
social sciences
world
and humanities, upon
environment—
his
as well as his fantasies,
we must draw upon
the
disciplines such as sociology, anthro-
pology, history and political science, along with psychology and psychiatry.
We
boundary
are
then in the province of
discipline:
it
which
psychology,
social
creates a structure of theory
is
a
and knowledge linking
the disciplines that deal primarily with the individual and the disciplines that deal primarily with society, culture
adult development
This orientation
My
and
collective
life.
Our view
of
social-psychological in this sense.
is
is
reflected in the composition of the research team.
intellectual roots are in psychology, psychiatry
others' are primarily in psychology
(
and
(Darrow) and psychiatry-psychoanalysis (McKee). Our has brought each of us into
all
sociology.
Maria Levinson and Klein )
,
The
sociology
intellectual history
these disciplines, in a joint effort to create
an enterprise at the boundaries. In the spring of 1967,
I
invited several faculty colleagues at Yale to
meet and review
my
my commitment
to the research
others.
That
fall
embryonic research plan.
we began
A
few meetings validated
and evoked the sustained
a faculty seminar
interest of the
on adult development;
it
con-
tinued with minor changes in membership over the next four years. In
members included: Kenneth Keniston, Gerald L. Klerman, Graham Little, Theodore M. Mills, John S. Montgomery, David F. Musto, Peter M. Newton and Daniel P. Schwartz. The seminar was an essential part of our research method and helped
addition to the research team, the seminar
shape the course of the project.
We
discussed theoretical approaches,
re-
search articles, literary essays, biographies, clinical case studies, the individuals in our pilot study
about the
and our primary research sample.
relative merits of various personality theories
We
argued
and the impor-
The seminar members had origins and evolving interests in various disciplines, and wanted to work at the disciplinary boundaries. Most of us were then between 35 and 45 and were personally struggling with the developmental issues of this tance of societal influences in adult development.
Those who were a bit older or younger were by no means free of these concerns. It soon became evident that, if we were to engage in incisive intellectual discussion of the lives of others, we had to discuss our own lives as well. Although the main function of the seminar was to/facilitate decade.
the research enterprise,
it
contributed as well to our personal
deeply grateful to the individual
members and
own special way became a participant in
lives. I
to "the group" that in
the work.
am its
Preface
xiii
As the manuscript took shape and the choice of a publisher had to be made, we were extremely fortunate
in
having the consultation of Jane Isay
and Richard Grossman. Both of them read an early version of the manuscript and gave invaluable advice on the writing and on the issues of
With
publication. Sterling
help,
their
we
Donald Cutler
discovered
Lord Agency), who became our agent and helped
for the rest of the voyage.
He
steer
We
completing the manuscript.
is
made
substantial
individuals
and
literary
closely with
me
work of
revision. If this
serious, yet relatively free of the
pedantry of so
much scholarly writing, much of the credit Where it is not, the fault is our own.
Many
who, working
a major contribution to the
and
and
.
are grateful also to Jack Shepherd,
for over a year,
book
the
has been a godsend. Charles A. Elliott, our
editor at Knopf, has been a source of understanding, support sensibility in
(of
our course
institutions
goes to Shepherd and Elliott.
have been of great help over the past
ten years. Frederick C. Redlich, then chairman of the Psychiatry Departrjient at Yale University, provided the moral ^and material support that allowed to begin the exploratory
period of
some 20
years,
work before grant funds were
Gerald L. Klerman has been
available.
me
Over
a
my student, colleague
Connecticut Mental Health Center from 1967 to 1969, he participated actively in the growth of this endeavor and in my professional development. Throughout my Yale years Boris M. Astrachan
and
friend; as Director of the
has been a valued collaborator and friend; this study has benefitted in mani-
and administrative support. Peter M. Newton has spent countless hours with me in informal discussion, manufrom
fold ways
his personal interest
and collaborative work on various
script review
with Klerman, Astrachan and
Newton
ful
much
relationships
good mentor-
gain as his younger col-
Harding and Margit van Leight Frank contributed
in power-
intellectual substance and psychological work. Beyond her general influence on my life, my mother
though indirect ways to the
qualities of this
has
My
give evidence that, in a
ing relationship, the mentor derives at least as league. Esther
projects.
made
a very direct contribution to this book.
last several years bilities for
been the primary source of
my
Now 91,
she has over the
understanding of the possi-
self-development in old age.
Barbara Kellerman and toral dissertations utilizing
Wendy
Stewart have written the
first
our theory of adult development
two doc-
—Kellerman
doing a biography of Willy Brandt, Stewart a study of the development of
women from
age 17 to 35. Kellerman also contributed to the revision of
several chapters, especially the biography of
Our
James Tracy.
appreciation goes to the National Institute of Mental Health,
which gave
me
Award (Number MH-13032) as well (Number MH-15982) for the present study. The opera-
a Research Scientist
as a research grant
Preface
xiv
tion of this project has been
managed
in succession
by Katherine Cash,
Judy Townsend and Sharon Canosa. Each, in her own way, has contributed beyond the call of duty to our collective work and individual well-being. In particular, Sharon
Canosa has been
secretary, administrator
and stabilizing influence during the four long years this book has been a-borning. She
is
a full
member of the enterprise.
We wish to thank the companies known pseudonymously as Ajax Industries
and United Electronics
largely
company; we hope
it
had some
the workers and managers
Above
all,
into their lives
Since
for
welcoming us and allowing us to be guests
on our own terms. Our study was of no
indirect value for the
who became
companies and for
our research collaborators.
our thanks to the forty
men who
and allowed us to bring
their experience to a
we cannot thank you by name, we
anonymously
direct benefit to either
for the help
in the debt of the four
and
insight
men who
took us so full-heartedly
wide audience.
express our gratitude to
you gave
us. Finally,
we
you
are forever
agreed, after reading an early draft, to
permit publication of their biographies.
They support our fond hope
that
biographical research of this kind can be done on the basis of mutual respect
New
and cooperative
Haven,
May
1977
effort.
Daniel
J.
Levinson
A View of
a
Adult Development
The and
a
Life Cycle Its
Seasons
Great masses of data have been accumulated about adult
life.
There are
on marriage and
statistics
and
illness,
expectancy, occupation and income. There are studies of such stressful
life
events as retirement and "the
The
nature.
empty nest" syndrome.
on adulthood—but
extensive information its
specific features of
divorce, health
We
have, in short,
a very limited understanding of
basic developmental principles of adult life remain an
enigma.
We and we
much better understanding of the pre-adult years, up to know that development occurs during this part of life
have a
We
about age 20.
are able to trace
it
through a
series of periods: infancy, early child-
hood, middle childhood, pubescence, early and late adolescence. Our understanding of the pre-adult phase
we have examined
largely because
We
is
more profound and
systematic
from a developmental perspective.
regard childhood and adolescence as a formative phase, a time of
unique pleasures and life
it
to come.
The
conflicts, of
growth and preparation for the adult
overall shape of the first
twenty years emerges plainly:
an incomplete, highly dependent child grows in complex biological, psychological
and
social
ways to become, in greater or
lesser degree,
an inde-
pendent, responsible adult.
A
we
developmental approach to the pre-adult years means, too, that
can discern an underlying order in the child's
movement through them.
It
common
develop-
mental principles in childhood and adolescence and go through a
common
is
now
generally accepted that
all lives
are governed
by
sequence of developmental periods. At the same time, each individual has
its
A
own
special character
and follows
developmental approach
book we present
is
needed
hardly a novel idea, yet
cycle has rarely theoretical
own
special course.
in the study of adulthood. In this
and a more and middle adulthood. This is lr
a conception of the life cycle as a whole,
detailed picture of development in early itself
its
life
it
been studied
framework
has remained curiously neglected.
co stimulate
and guide
a
The
life
and there exists no program of research in
in the social sciences,
THE SEASONS OF A
MAN S
LIFE
these disciplines. In academic psychology the situation was only a
more
better in the 1960s, although
interest has
been generated
little
in recent
years.
Conceptions of the Life Cycle The most
promising view of the
comes from the
know
field
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939). Freud compassing
and of adult development,
cycle,
life
broadly as "depth psychology," founded by created a theory of personality en-
unconscious as well as conscious aspects, and showed
its
how
personality development in childhood profoundly influences one's life in
adulthood. In the excitement of his discoveries about childhood develop-
ment, however, Freud was inclined to regard adulthood primarily
as
a
scene in which the early unconscious conflicts were re-enacted, rather than
time of further development.
as a
In our view, the person
modern study most of
of adult
his thirties,
who
can justly be considered the father of the
development
Jung was
is
Carl G. Jung (1875-1961). During
a disciple of
Freud and
a leading
the newly forming psychoanalytic movement. In 1913 he
and gradually formed
Of
the
many
own
his
split
member
of
from Freud
school, Analytical Psychology.
intellectual differences
between Jung and Freud, two are
of especial relevance here. First, Jung felt that Freud was too narrowly
focused on childhood development and conflicts
and
creativities.
influence
its
on adult problems,
Jung forged a conception of the entire
life cycle,
giving particular attention to adult development in "the second half of life."
Second, he believed that Freud's strongly clinical orientation had led
to an overemphasis
on psychopathology and
internal
processes, to the neglect of social institutions, religion
Jung
set
out to develop a social psychology.
He
tried to
("intrapsychic")
and mythology. understand
indi-
vidual development as a product of both internal psychological processes
and
exterior cultural forces. His theory
patients tions
Jung's
main
interest
young
in the
is
analysis of ethnography,
from many cultures and
that the
up
and the
based on the clinical study of
mythology and symbolic
was the study of adult development.
adult, as part of
normal development,
He
is still
understood
highly caught
emotional involvements and conflicts of childhood and
pressed to cope with the personality cannot reach
crea-
historical periods.
demands
its full
of family,
growth by age
opportunity for fundamental change
starts at
is
hard-
work and community. The 20.
He
found that the next
about 40, "the noon of
life."
The Jung used the term "individuation" begins then and may extend over the
The
Life Cycle
for the
and
Seasons
Its
developmental process that
last half of
the
life cycle.
next great figure in the study of adult development
Erikson (born 1902). Although he
Erik H.
is
by training and allegiance a psycho-
is
analyst, Erikson provides a historical
and
intellectual link
between Freud
and Jung. His modifications of psychoanalytic theory bring him Jung, though he lacks some of the philosophical and mystical an
artist
closer to qualities
He
was iniand teacher. Seemingly by accident he became a Freudian
that kept Jung at odds with the professional establishment. tially
5
psychoanalyst in Vienna at about age 30, shortly before moving to the
United
States.
enormous influence
Erikson's
in the humanities, psychology
and the
began in 1950 with the publication of his first book, Childand Society. Since then, he has devoted himself primarily to the hood social sciences
method and a combined work on childhood has been more widely understood and appreciated than his work on study of adult development, using a biographical
historical-sociological-psychological
adulthood. Although he
mode
of analysis. His
on the boundary between the humanities and
is
is
than an academic
In this respect and others, he
scientist.
primarily a
life
more
closer to
Jung
humanist— a student
the social sciences, Erikson
is
of
than to Freud, whose thinking was deeply rooted in physiology and in nineteenth-century science.
On
the psychological side, our thinking about adult development thus
grows out of an intellectual tradition formed by Freud, Jung and Erikson. This tradition includes Rank, Adler, Reich and other socially oriented
depth psychologists. In recent
years,
these sources have been used by
Ernest Becker, Robert Lifton and others in creating a broader approach
The
to adult life in society.
schisms that for so long have divided the
vari-
ous schools of depth psychology, and have restricted the scope of each
The
viewpoint, are perhaps beginning to be outgrown. sectarian struggles
is
evident.
to the emergence of a
more
The
present study
will,
absurdity of the old
we hope,
contribute
integrative, nonsectarian approach.
In creating a deeper and more complex view of adulthood, one has to consider both the nature of the person and the nature of society. It
enough merely to acknowledge that influence the
life
history, culture
of the individual adult.
An
and
The
do
this will
not
adequate approach must be
informed by concepts and ways of thinking from the efforts to
is
social institutions
social sciences.
Our
be apparent throughout our book.
literature of biology,
psychology and the social sciences does not
contain a systematic conception of the
the course of the study
we
life
cycle
and
its
components. In
discovered a good deal about the
life
cycle
and
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
6
arrived at a conception of our 3,
and spelled out
own.
in later chapters.
It will
The
be presented
in
Chapters
2
and
starting point for our thinking was,
however, not an articulated theory but an intuitively derived, metaphorical sense of what the
cycle
life
is
about.
Let us begin at the beginning, with concrete meanings and images. First,
the term "life cycle." Other terms, such as "life span" and "life
synonyms
course," are often used as
meanings. "Life span" birth to death. It
how
this interval
is
"Life course" has
is filled.
life
over
time— the
course
what we are trying
is
says nothing
it
more content.
The term
the
It refers to
A
to understand.
theory provides one of several perspectives through which
and understand the
about
patterning of specific events, rela-
and aspirations that are the
tionships, achievements, failures life
but they have quite different
it,
a descriptively useful term, but
is
flow of the individual
The
for
simply a category referring to the interval from
stuff of life.
developmental
we
try to analyze
life course.
conveys another, more distinctive meaning.
"life cycle"
suggests that the life course has a particular character
and follows
It
a basic
sequence. According to the American Heritage Dictionary, the words "cycle" and "development" have the
form of kwel
is
English words such as
The term
cultivate.
Greek
coJere, the
circle, evolve,
cycle"
"life
made
words, but they are rarely
same root source:
telos.
They
Jewel.
The
Latin
contemporary
are sources for
completion, wheel, inhabit, culture,
contains the basic meanings of such
explicit.
I
would
like to articulate
two
of
the key meanings. First, there
to a termination point (death, conclusion).
(birth, origin)
a general,
the idea of a process or journey from a starting point
is
human
life
cycle
to propose that the journey
is
To
speak of
from birth to old
age follows an underlying, universal pattern on which there are endless cultural
and individual
variations.
Many
influences along the
way shape
They may produce alternate routes or detours may speed up or slow down the timetable within cerextreme cases they may stop the developmental process
the nature of the journey.
along the way; they tain limits; in
But
altogether.
as
long as the journey continues,
follows the basic
it
sequence.
Second, there the
life cycle.
There are
is
The
the idea of seasons: a series of periods or stages within process
character. Every season
though takes
it
is
not a simple, continuous, unchanging flow.
qualitatively different seasons, each having
also has
many
is
much
different in
its
own
distinctive
from those that precede and follow
common
with them.
The imagery
forms. There are seasons in the year: spring
is
soming, winter a time of death but also of rebirth and the
it,
of seasons
a time of blosstart of a
new
The cycle.
There are
day— daybreak, noon,
seasons, too, within a single
the quiet dark of night^each having logical character.
There are seasons
and
artistic creation
Life Cycle and Its Seasons
its
diurnal, atmospheric
7
dusk,
and psycho-
in a love relationship, in war, politics,
illness.
Metaphorically, everyone understands the connections between the seasons of the year and the seasons of the
an explanation of the "It's a long,
when you
between youth and middle
poem
To that
it
stable
to
"Do
is
that he
When
is
Dylan Thomas
is
Summer
different
from
each,
and
a transition its
own
its
or
and needs to be understood
more important than any
tributes
its
Before
I
of our study
other.
in
is
season
Each has
is
time;
its
is
To
it
more
a relatively
is
say that a season
is
stationary or static.
important in
it is
terms.
No
season
is
its
better
necessary place and con-
an organic part of the
and future and containing both within
present a
total
itself.
analytical view of the life cycle, a brief account
in order.
The Study The
A
required for the shift from
is
own own
special character to the whole. It
cycle, linking past
it is
life.
has a character different from
sunrise.
one season to the next. Every season has right
in his celebrated
experienced as the end of
however, does not mean that
Change goes on within
short
to say that the life course has a certain shape,
total cycle.
that of winter; twilight relatively stable,
the hero sings,
referring to the contrast
is
evolves through a series of definable forms.
segment of the
one needs
not go gentle into that good night,"
coming of night
speak of seasons
When
No
December/ And the days grow
know
all
age.
aging father,
tells his
clear to all that the
May we
reach September/'
life cycle.
"September Song."
lyrics to
long while from
human
of Adult
Development
character of this study was established during a two-year exploratory
period. It grew out of
my
strong but vaguely defined interest in learning
about the nature of adult development somewhere within the age span of 30 to 50.
I felt
intuitively that the years
portance in a person's
and introspecting, During
I
life.
decided to
this "mid-life decade,"
to "middle age."
None
I
reasoned, one
more
factually
made the
shift
from "youth"
of the above terms in quotes was precisely defined
either in the research literature or in to give a
around age 40 have a special im-
some preliminary reading, interviewing focus on the decade from age 35 to 45.
After
my own
mind.
My
initial
aims were
grounded meaning to these terms and to examine
the process of development— if
any— in
the mid-life decade.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
8
Accordingly our research subjects were at the
start in
the age range
We
between 35 and
45. Their ages varied fairly evenly across this decade. considered having a more limited age range, say 43 to 45, so that all participants could review their lives over the decade. It seemed more important,
however, to cover
as
wide a current age range
as possible,
within the limits
of our aims. Since the sample was selected in 1969, the subjects were born
between 1923 and 1934. They were at different ages when they experienced major social changes, such as the depression of the 1930s, World War II, the Korean War, the constricting conformist decade of the 1950s and
the upheavals of the 1960s. identical.
The
ture of the
The
external phasing of their lives was not
variation in age also enabled us to obtain a
life
We
each part of the decade.
in
experience with greater fullness and immediacy than
our remembrance of times past. not describe their
The
forties,
vivid pic-
we can
reconstruct
participants in their late thirties could
but they gave a richer account of the
than could those of 44 or 45.
late thirties
Many
the
lives in
more
can review our recent
colleagues advised
me
to focus not
upon
a particular age span
but upon a particular stage example,
in the occupational or familial career. For might have studied the "middle parenthood" stage when the
I
children are of school age, the "empty nest" when the last child has left home, or the "mid-career" stage in the occupational sequence. Having already done several studies of occupational careers, I found this option too restricted. At this time in my own personal and intellectual development, I
wanted
to create an overarching conception of
encompass the diverse ring in adult
occur, as
it
life. I
and that the
made the
risky bet that
mid-life decade
development that could
and
biological, psychological
social
development
changes occur-
in this sense does
was a good place to look for
it.
The bet,
turned out, was worth making.
The
size of the
sample was a major
studied intensively, the total
want to do
number had
Since each
issue.
to
be
limited.
I
life
would be
clearly did
not
a massive survey or to administer psychological tests to a large
more than
sample. Yet
a
few cases were required so that we could generate
widely relevant theory and discover various forms of development under differing conditions. It
biography.
I
would not be enough
to
do
a single, richly textured
decided, finally, on a sample of forty, the largest
number our
resources could handle. This small sample could not yield conclusive proof
of any hypotheses, but then conclusive.
Still,
we might
no
investigation in this
arrive at
some
new
field
could be
significant ideas, tentative gen-
and useful research methods. most difficult decisions was that limiting the study to men. Ultimately, it is essential to study the adult development of both genders
eralizations
One
if
we
of the
are to understand either.
The
challenge of development
is
at least as
The
women
great for
mental periods
as
Life Cycle and Its Seasons
as for
men. They go through the same adult develop-
men,
believe,
I
but in partially different ways that
the differences in biology and social circumstances. selves
may be
different in
some
that the first
two genders develop
women
made by Wendy
Stewart. Studying
found that
in their mid-thirties, she
went through the same developmental periods
my
it.
A
strong desire to include
study of twenty
group.
The
men and
differences
women,
of
them
now under
way.
decided finally against
I
women would do justice to neither women and men are sufficiently great so
twenty
between
would have to become a major focus of
that they
all
our men, though some
as
of the specific issues were different. Additional studies are
Despite
periods them-
women. The approach prewomen, without the assumption
in either identical or totally different ways.
step in this direction has been
a small sample of
The
reflect
respects for
sented here offers a basis for the study of
A
9
analysis. It
was not
simply a matter of testing another sample and letting the computer grind
we men
out the data. Given the intensive exploratory nature of the study,
would be examining each
participant's life in detail.
containing several subgroups
is
more
A sample
of forty
nearly adequate than twenty for
studying male development under systematically different conditions. In retrospect,
I
believe that this was the right choice.
We are now in a better
position to learn about various other populations. In
all
candor, however,
must admit to a more personal reason for the choice: I chose men partly because I wanted so deeply to understand my own adult development. Finally, I decided that the sample would be composed of four occupational subgroups, each containing ten men. A man's work is the primary base for his life in society. Through it he is "plugged into" an occupational structure and a cultural, class and social matrix. Work is also of great I
psychological importance;
a vehicle for the fulfillment or negation of
it is
central aspects of the self.
Our
task was to select a set of four occupations representing diverse
sectors of society.
They should
differ
widely in type of work, origins, and
current social and psychological conditions of living. In the end,
we
chose:
hourly workers in industry, business executives, university biologists and novelists.
Other
but we found
sets of
occupations might equally well have been picked,
this choice to
be very
satisfactory.
cover features of adult development that are
We
common
have tried to
dis-
to the sample as
among the various groupings. Thus, our plan was to study forty men who were currently between 35 and 45 years old, equally distributed among four occupations. We then selected the men to be studied. The sampling procedure varied somewhat among the four occupations. Two companies are the work places from which we drew both the
a whole, as well as differences
10
THE SEASONS OF A
MAN S
workers and the executives. of the Ajax Corporation.
LIFE
One we
call
(The names
the Industrial Firearms Division
of
all
persons and institutions are
pseudonyms.) This division manufactures a small number of products, including munitions and recreational equipment.
Its
products, technol-
ogy and organizational structure have not changed radically over several decades,
though recent changes
diversification.
The second company, United
rapidly growing firm Its
founders,
IBM, have ing
its
We
a
the corporate
in
on modern management
to a greater emphasis
in
dream that
and product
Electronics,
is
an "infant,"
modern communication-information
the
who came from
have led
structure
practices
established corporations such as
their infant will before long
become
field.
Xerox and
a giant rival-
forebears.
two companies
selected these
radius of fifty miles of ples of workers
and
New
after
conducting a search within a
Haven. In both companies, we selected sam-
executives.
The men were
told that the
company
endorsed our study but did not require anyone to take part in
it.
We
emphasized that our interviews were confidential; the company would receive a copy of our published findings but
would get no
private report
or evaluation of any individual. Confidentiality and other ethical issues
were of great importance to suffer or gain unfairly
us.
We wanted
to be sure that
no one would
because of his involvement in the study. Both com-
panies honored our agreement to the
full.
We regret that the requirements
of confidentiality keep us from stating publicly the names of the companies
and individuals whose help we so greatly appreciate. •
The
hourly workers were drawn equally from Ajax and United Elec-
tronics. In Ajax,
where 60 percent of the hourly labor force (and none of
the management) was Black, ers.
we
chose three Black and two
United Electronics had no Black workers and
somewhat higher
levels
of education
its
and technical
White work-
employees were training.
The
at
ten
workers varied in current age, occupation, labor grade, education and years with the
company. All ten
men
accepted our invitation to partici-
became evident that some of them had initial doubts about our relation to management, and we had to work to establish our credibility. In this group, as in all the others, no one dropped out and several men
pate. It
continued for extra interviews
as
needed.
Of the executives, six were from From each company we obtained a •
Ajax, four from United Electronics. table of organization for middle
and
top management, with each person's name, age and a few demographic characteristics.
We
in age, rank in top
then selected our sample so
and middle management,
as to
line
and
previous work in engineering, sales, finance and the
maximize
diversity
staff positions, like.
We
and
did not
The
Life Cycle
select for marital status, personality, ability
but
and
Seasons
Its
and other such
11
characteristics,
our method we obtained great diversity in these
in the nature of
re-
As with the hourly workers, all ten men we invited agreed to take It was helpful that the head of each company met our sampling criand accepted our invitation to be a subject. (Several executives had
spects. part. teria
the feeling that the boss rather than the researchers had selected them; they wondered whether they were seen as budding stars or wilting failures. Again, •
we worked on
For the sample of academic
versities in
the course of the interviews.)
this issue in
we chose two
biologists,
the corridor between Boston and
New
York. In these institu-
young men" or senior
tions biology professors are generally "promising investigators of national reputation. Yet, as
excellent uni-
we knew from
personal ex-
perience at Yale and elsewhere, the lives and professional careers of pro-
enormously. Biology
fessors differ
scientific discipline
such
and
is
undergoing rapid change both
as a
as a field of increasing social application (in areas
medicine, population control, warfare and food production).
as
Biologists are
employed not only
in the Biology
Department but
also in
Biochemistry, Biophysics, Public Health, Forestry, even Urban Planning.
Wc spent some time learning about the various departments and the ages, academic ranks and versity
we chose
fields of specialization of their
uni-
men who differed widely in these respects. We got in man by letter and then by phone and personal interview. agreed to participate. In all, we approached thirteen men
five
touch with each Eight of the ten
before obtaining our
unteer bias/' but
we had
members. In each
complement
full
it is
far less
of ten.
We
thus have a small "vol-
than in most research.
With
the biologists
neither the advantages nor the drawbacks of sponsorship by organi-
zational authority.
The sampling procedure was different again with the novelists. Here we operated entirely outside of any organizational framework. Once more, we used a quasi-anthropological method of studying what was for us a new culture. We began by trying to learn about the writer's world— a world that contains publishing houses, universities, mass media and many other institutions. We talked with a number of critics, teachers, editors and •
agents,
and with some
There
is
writers outside our chosen age group.
no accepted
criterion for identifying a
man
as a novelist.
Very
few people can make the writing of novels a full-time occupation. Noveloften work also as
ists
tled
on two ground
and that being
From novelists
critics, journalists,
rules: that a
a novelist
various sources
who seemed
to
is
businessmen, teachers.
man have
We
set-
published at least two novels,
of major importance in his personal identity.
we compiled meet these
a
list
criteria
of over one
and who
hundred male
lived
somewhere
1
2
THE SEASONS OF A
between Boston and
MAN S
New
LIFE
list, we Some men
York. In selecting ten names from this
tried to get variety in terms of quality
and kind of
writing.
chosen were highly gifted novelists whose work had been praised by serious writers
and
critics.
worthy of serious
Others, less well known, were regarded as promising or
critical consideration. Still
less "literary" novelists,
hard at their writing.
who
We
followed this by a phone interview. Seven of the
men
to fourteen
others were
wrote call
each man on the man was interested,
letters to
and,
if
the
ten accepted our invitation. In
first
before completing the group.
greatly in social background, in literary style critical
films,
and commercial
more popular and
considered themselves craftsmen and worked
success.
Most
of
The
ten
men
initial list,
all,
a personal
we spoke
selected differ
and aims, and
in degree of
them do other writing— plays,
poetry and nonfiction— and have occupations in addition to writing.
The sample
thus consists of forty men, distributed in age between 35 and 45. All are American born. There are ten in each of the four occu•
They currently live in the region between many of them were born in other parts of
pations selected for study.
New
Boston and
York, though
the country.
The sample
is
highly diverse in other respects. Let's quickly look at
four characteristics: social class origins, racial-ethnic-religious origins, education and marital status.
The men come from varied social class backgrounds. Six of them (15 percent) are from poor urban or rural environments. These include four workers, an executive and a novelist. Forty-two percent are from stable working-class or lower-middle-class families, 32 percent from comfortable middle-class origins, class)
backgrounds.
families.
Only two
and 10 percent from wealthy (upper-middle- or upperworkers come entirely from poor or working-class
The
executives are from comfortable middle-class families;
seven are from the working class or lower-middle in poverty.
class,
and one grew up
Seven biologists and eight novelists are from families of mod-
erate to high social position.
They
tilt
the sample as a whole toward the
higher end of the class structure in terms of social origins.
The sample There are
five
is
also diverse in terms of racial-ethnic-religious origins.
Black participants (12 percent)— three workers and two
No Black biologists or executives between age 35 and 45 were employed by the organizations we studied. Twenty of the men are from novelists.
Protestant families (50 percent), eight Catholic (20 percent), seven Jewish
(18 percent) and another seven from families of mixed religious or
ethnic parentage (usually Catholic-Protestant or mixed national origin).
Of the
biologists, six are
from Protestant
mixed Catholic-Protestant. The
families,
novelists include six
one Jewish and three from Protestant fam-
The (of
among
pations.
Its
Seasons
13
which two are Black) and four from Jewish. The lack of Caththe biologists and novelists was not by design; it is a chance
ilies
olics
variation
and
Life Cycle
which may
The
reflect
religious
number
the small
of Catholics in these occu-
backgrounds of the executives are
five
Catholic
(mainly of Polish, Italian or Irish extraction), two Protestant, one mixed
The backgrounds
Catholic-Protestant and two Jewish.
three Catholic, five Protestant and two mixed
With and only
men
regard to education, 28 six
of the workers:
Catholic-Protestant.
completed
(70 percent)
college,
did not complete high school. This reflects the educational
The
levels of the occupations represented.
workers were the least edu-
cated: five did not complete high school; three
went through high school;
and two had some college experience. All ten of the biologists finished college and then a Ph.D. degree in a biological science such as biochemistry, zoology or botany. Of the executives, nine completed college (including four at engineering schools) and two of these had
uate education.
completed
The
novelists too
college, six at elite schools such as Harvard,
Oberlin.
A
and the
tools of his trade in
serious
young
novelist
some
grad-
were highly educated. Nine of them
is
Dartmouth and
likely to get his personal experience
an affluent pre-adult world and in an edu-
cational milieu that gives strong
if
ambivalent support to his
literary
aspirations at the start of early adulthood.
All of the
men had been
married at least once. Their current marital
status varied as follows. Thirty-two of the forty in their first marriage.
Of
the eight
men
who had been
remarried and five were in their second marriage.
(80 percent) were
divorced, three
A
had not
few of the marriages
were rather rocky, and we know of two divorces that occurred soon the study ended. Roughly 80 percent of the first
men had
no marked
or second marriage. There were
after
children in their
differences
among
the
occupational groups.
Although our primary source of information about each man was the
man
we had other sources as well. Our main purpose here was to obtain an additional perspective on the husband, but we also learned something about the wife in her own right, as preparation for more intensive study of women. We also learned a good deal about the men's various occupations and work worlds. In the course of this, we in effect Most
himself,
it
is
important to note that
of the wives were interviewed once.
performed an informal organizational analysis of the two companies and the two universities in our study.
We
constructed a picture of the history,
current structure, hiring and promotion policies, and problems of survival
and growth of each organization, study. Often,
especially as these affected the
more than one man gave
men under
his personal version of a particular
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
14
LIFE
incident or individual; these contributed to our view of each
Our
home and
to a man's office,
visits
organizational space gave added
dimensions and meaning to what he told us himself. they had no organizational
affiliation,
and each
novelist.
We
We
some
read
or
The
we
all
learned about this world
of each man's novels
and other
also read their reviews.
emphasize these additional sources for two main reasons.
I
though
novelists,
lived within a loosely organized
occupational world, and from various sources
writings.
work world.
cause they gave us a richer and
more
First, be-
we could
valid picture than
obtain
from interviews with each subject. Second, because an understand-
solely
ing of a man's
life
requires that
we know something about
his external
circumstances as well as his personal motives, aspirations and interpretation
We
of events.
partly so that
selected just a few occupations
we
and work organizations
could study them and their part in each man's
life.
Our
understanding of them was an essential ingredient in our analysis of individual •
life
The
and development.
interviewing
the heart of our research method. During the
is
interviewing phase of the study,
work
we
interviewed a
man in The
place, or in our offices, according to his preference.
interviews usually lasted an hour or
Occasionally, an interview ning; or several weeks
two and were held
would continue
time. In
all,
we saw each man
hours, within a span of
five to
intervals.
sessions. Flexibility
was the
privacy
and
ten times, for a total of ten to twenty
two or three months. In most
follow-up interview about two years after the transcripts of the tapes averaged
weekly
we have enough
keynote, within the basic requirement that
or
an entire afternoon or eve-
for
would elapse between
at
home
his
tape-recorded
cases,
we had a The
interviewing.
initial
about three hundred pages per man. Each
member. we showed every man
subject was interviewed by a single staff
As part of the interviewing, a series of five picand asked him to tell a story about each of them. The pictures were selected from the Thematic Apperception Test devised by Henry A. Murtures
ray.
in
This
test
often used in personality diagnosis.
is
an unconventional way,
as
an
We
used the stories
intrinsic part of the interviews.
They
often brought up personal experiences, interests and imaginings that might
otherwise have been avoided or overlooked. of this
method
The
proach. If
I
had
example of the usefulness
start,
one term
for this
method,
would
call it bio-
The primary
task, as
we informed our
subjects at
to choose
graphical interviewing.
the
An
given in the biography of John Barnes (Chapter 17). interviewing reflects what is most central in our theoretical apis
was to construct the story of a man's
life.
I
Interviewer and inter-
viewee joined collaboratively in this work.
We tried
to cover the entire life sequence
from childhood to the
pres-
The ent: family of origin; marriage
man
Life Cycle
and family
and
Seasons
Its
15
which the
of procreation (in
husband and father); important relationships with men and
is
women; education; occupational choice and work history; leisure; involvement in ethnic, religious, political and other interests; illness, death and loved ones; good times and bad times; turning points in the
loss of
At
course.
man's
life
we tried to pull together a picture of the how the various components of his life were interhow the life pattern at age 34, say, had emerged from
various key times a whole:
life as
related at that time;
the past and what were his hopes,
fears,
plans and imaginings for the
future.
This was a
way
best
lot of
do
to
ular sequence
it.
The
tell:
incidents unfold in a partic-
about the course and outcome of
feelings
specifics of external situations are often important,
the internal meanings, desires and conflicts with which he partici-
pates in them.
own
has a story to
and he has strong
various chapters. as are
ground to cover, and there proved to be no single
A man
story.
He
The also
interviewer had to give the
had
man
a chance to
tell his
to intervene at times to get the story straight, to
learn about specific situations, actions
and
feelings,
and to explore the
connections between different sectors of living and different times in the sequence.
A
biographical interview combines aspects of a research interview, a
clinical interview
and a conversation between
research interview in that certain topics
purpose
is
research.
As
like a structured
is
sensitive
of
meaning
as they lead
as in a conversation
between
friends, the
and follows the threads
through diverse topics. Finally,
equal and the interviewer
is
is
in a clinical interview, the interviewer
to the feelings expressed,
relationship
friends. It
must be covered, and the main
is
free to
respond in terms of his
own
experiences. Yet each party has a defined role in a sustained
task,
which imposes
What
is
its
involved
is
own
work
constraints.
not simply an interviewing technique or procedure,
but a relationship of some intimacy, intensity and duration. Significant
work
The
is
involved in forming, maintaining and terminating the relationship.
recruiting of participants, the negotiation of a research contract,
and
the course of the interviewing relationship are phases within a single, complex process. Understanding and managing this process of our research method.
Managed with
sensitivity
and
is
a crucial part
discretion,
it
is
a
valuable learning experience for the participant as well as the researcher.
Although therapy was not a primary aim, the interviews may have had
some therapeutic
effects. Virtually all of
the men,
we
believe,
found
this
a worthwhile undertaking.
The
basic
aim of biography
over the years.
It
is
to portray an individual life as
it
evolves
has different purposes for novelists, literary biographers,
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l6
i
historians
and psychologists. Biography may be used to show how a person
was influenced by
his times
and how he helped to shape
provide a deeper understanding of a person's
work—be
tary exploits or political leadership— by placing his personal life
and engagement
in society.
A
it
his times. It
may
painting, mili-
it
within the context of
poor biography depicts
its
protagonist as saint or villain, as merely a product of his times, a creature of his unconscious or a sequence of reactions without individuality.
Our
essential
method was
to elicit the life stories of forty
construct biographies and to develop generalizations based biographies. of each
man, and there
are important gaps in every story. Nonetheless,
we began by immersing
man and
his life.
interpretive formulations and, going back
came
the interviews and the analysis,
The
lives.
ourselves in the interview material
toward an intuitive understanding of the
more
upon these
We do not have the data required for a book-length biography
have produced a systematic reconstruction of the forty
tried
men, to
we
In each case,
and working Gradually
we
and forth between
to a construction of the life course.
preparation of biographies and the creation of a developmental
theory thus went hand in hand.
opmental periods. The theory
more integrated view
obtain a
advanced the formation of
it
did not start with a theory of develexisted at a given time was used to
of the individual
specific concepts
form of biographical method of research
We
as
essential,
is
I
life;
and each biography
and ways of thinking. Some
believe, during the initial
phase
on adult development.
Because biography
is
so important here, the biographies of four
men—
a worker,
an executive, a biologist and a novelist— will be presented.
men
be introduced
The
Chapter 4 and their lives described in subsequent chapters. Brief summaries or fragments of other lives will also be will
used to
in
illustrate particular findings
theory of adult development raphies
is
and concepts. One
the value
it
crucial test of a
has for the writing of biog-
and autobiographies.
In addition to the primary sample of forty men,
secondary sample of
imagined in
fiction,
men whose
lives
we have
have been depicted
in
created a
biography or
poetry and theater. This sample has had an important
and I shall occasionally draw upon more public examples of our ideas. It includes such men as Dante, Milton and Shakespeare; Abraham, Luther, Gandhi and Willy Brandt; Freud and Jung; Gauguin, Goya, Eugene O'Neill and Bertrand
part in the evolution of our thinking, it
to provide
Russell; the fictional figures of Prospero, King Lear, Herzog, Willy Loman and George and Martha, the mutually destructive couple in Who's Afraid
Woolf? Our aims expanded
of Virginia
in the course of the study. Initially, our
main focus
:
The
Life Cycle
and
Its
Seasons
17
was on the decade from age 35 to 45. Our goal was to determine what developmental process, if any, occurred within it. In reviewing our first cases,
we
reconstructed the
life
studying the mid-life decade.
history prior to age 35 as a backdrop for
We
found ourselves
ideas— stemming
full of
mainly from psychoanalytic theory— about the subject's development in childhood and adolescence.
We
could
make many connections between It became increasingly
these early periods and what happened at mid-life. clear, however, that we had no useful conception
of early adult develop-
By
regarding the mid-life
ment from the end struggles traits
of adolescence to age 35.
and adaptations
and
conflicts
leading simplicity
as
formed
we had
no more than in childhood,
set
It
is
new
we were falling into the misThe emphasis on childhood
out to avoid.
development helped to illuminate adult
what
a re-enactment of personality
life,
but
it
kept us from examining
in adulthood.
became
evident, finally, that
we had
to deal seriously with the years
between adolescence and the mid-life decade. So our major aim took shape
we had hood it
from the entry into adult-
to create a theory of adult development,
until the late forties.
This was a valuable but distressing insight, for
increased the scope, difficulty and length of our work.
actual nature of the choice implicitly
made
It
at the start:
made
clear the
our subject was
not solely the mid-life decade, but the entire developmental sequence during the adult years represented in our sample.
In Chapters 2 and
3
we
describe our conception of the
the process of adult development. In Chaper 2
I
life
cycle
present a view of the
and life
moving from the metaphor of seasons to a conceptualizaChapter 3 introduces our theory of adult development as a
cycle as a whole,
tion of eras.
sequence of periods in the evolution of the individual
life structure.
In sub-
sequent chapters our theory and findings for each period are described in
more
detail.
:
Eras:
2
The Anatomy of the Life Cycle
It is
we have no
remarkable that
major seasons of the the total
life
life cycle. Is
standard language for identifying the there a valid and useful
way
cycle into several gross segments, each having
tinctive character?
We
can probably agree without
segment of some twenty adolescence. There
is
years, a pre-adult
also "old age,"
20 and 65?
Though
Our view
phase embracing childhood and
which
age 60 or 65. Geron-
starts at
But what about the adult
little
years
under-
between
is little
agreement regarding their definition and their
life cycle.
of the life cycle
is
a product of our research. It
armchair speculation or assumption the
dis-
initial
everyday language provides terms such as "youth" and
"middle age," there place in the
life.
own
on an
difficulty
tology has thus far provided considerable information, though standing, about this time of
to divide
its
we made
beforehand.
is
not an
We believe
that
cycle evolves through a sequence of eras each lasting roughly twenty-
life
The
five years.
under way
new one is The sequence
eras are partially overlapping, so that a
as the previous
one
is
being terminated.
getting
goes as
follows 1.
Childhood and adolescence: age 0-22
3.
Early adulthood: age 17-45 Middle adulthood: age 40-65
4.
Late adulthood: age 60-?
2.
An
era
is
a "time of life" in the broadest sense.
changes go on within qualities,
An
era
opment
each era has
its
own
distinctive
which have to do with the character of
character of living, aspects,
it,
we
Although important
living.
and unifying
In studying the
take account of biological, psychological and social
but do not focus on any one of these to the exclusion of the others. is
thus not a stage in biological development, in personality devel-
or in career development. It
is
than a developmental stage or period. the macro-structure of the
life cycle. It
much broader and more inclusive The sequence of eras constitutes
provides a framework within which
developmental periods and concrete processes of everyday living take place.
The Anatomy
Eras:
The
eras are analogous to the acts of a play, the
or the gross segments into
The developmental
ject.
and the
of the Life Cycle
19
major divisions of a novel,
which a biographer divides the
of his sub-
life
periods give a finer picture of the dramatic events
an overview of the
details of living; the eras give
life
cycle as a
whole.
The main
focus of our study, as
the late teens to the late
have mentioned,
I
On
forties.
is
on the
years
we
the basis of this study,
from
identify
and middle adulthood as separate eras in the life cycle. Early adulthood comes to an end in a man's forties, when the character of living once more undergoes a fundamental change and middle adulthood begins to early
One
emerge.
most important— and most controversial— contribu-
of the
tions of this study
is
the demarcation between early and middle adulthood
as clearly defined eras. I
at
shall give the reasons for
set forth a specific age at
have
which
I
ends. This
it
is
not to
say,
it
which each
shortly.
era begins,
and another
however, that a bell rings at precisely
the same point for everyone, demarcating the eras as though they were
rounds in a boxing match or classes in a highly regulated school. Life never that standardized. There
onset and completion of every era. There
The
the average.
variation
is
five,
or six years.
or, if it does,
no connection to
age.
that
On
The move from one
The
discovery of age-
development does not occur
month
in
pace varies tremendously and has almost
its
the contrary,
seems to be closely age-linked.
it
era to the next
neither simple nor brief.
is
quires a basic change in the fabric of one's
a day, a
around
another unexpected finding of our study. This finding goes
against the conventional assumption that
adulthood
also a range of variation
is
contained, however, within fairly narrow
is
limits— probably not more than linked eras
is
an average or most frequent age for the
is
The
or even a year.
life,
transition
takes four or five years— not less than three
and
and
this takes
between rarely
It re-
more than
eras consistently
more than
six.
This
is the work of a developmental period that links the eras and some continuity between them. A developmental transition creboundary zone in which a man terminates the outgoing era and
transition
provides ates a
initiates
the incoming one.
Though pre-adulthood ends
at roughly age 22, early
several years earlier, usually at 17.
of overlap," a period in
one
is
two
eras
starting.
and
is
The span from
which the old
This period
is
era
is
adulthood begins
17 to 22
is
thus a "zone
being completed and the
the Early Adult Transition.
It
new
bridges the
part of both. Likewise, the Mid-life Transition extends
from roughly 40 to 45. It serves to terminate early adulthood and to initiate middle adulthood. There is a subsequent transition in the early sixties,
we
believe,
and perhaps another
at
about 80.
THE SEASONS OF A
20
MAN
S
LIFE
ERAS IN THE
MALE
4.
LIFE CYCLE
Late
Adulthood
1.
Childhood
land Adolescence
The
eras
and the
cross-era transitions are pictured above.
now
Let us
briefly review the eras in turn.
Pre-adulthood The
pre-adult era includes childhood, adolescence
and the Early Adult
Transition. During this time one ordinarily lives within the family or an
equivalent social unit.
The
family provides protection, socialization and
support of growth during our pre-adult years.
ment, we can be
relatively self-sufficient
adulthood. In pre-adulthood
we
With adequate
members
of society as
develop-
we
enter
are relatively (though decreasingly)
de-
most elemental sense of the term. The "transition into childhood" starts sometime before birth and
pendent and vulnerable, growing continues for the
first
in the
two or three
years of separate
the infant develops into a separate person.
"me" from the "not-me" and this
to
form
He
life.
In this period
learns to distinguish the
a primordial sense of self.
During
time he also comes to realize that other persons have an enduring
existence and character.
Another
transition at 5 or 6 leads
from
early to
The Anatomy
Eras:
middle childhood. The child expands
his social
of the Life Cycle
21
world from the immediate
family to a larger sphere containing school, wider peer group and neighbor-
He
hood.
begins to resolve his emotional struggles within the family and
become more
to
disciplined, industrious
at 12 or 13 (plus or
minus
childhood to adolescence. to sexual maturity but
it
The
touched
off
by the bodily changes leading
the culmination of the pre-adult
is
During
this period
starting to
and
form
the growing male
boy-man; he
a
is
his place in the pre-adult world,
his first adult self
establishes his initial
and
is
It pro-
part of both.
a crucial turning point in the life cycle.
all cross-era transitions, it is
pre-adult self
he
era.
Early AduJt Transition extends from roughly age 17 to 22.
vides a bridge from adolescence to early adulthood,
Like
starts
involves a variety of other changes leading toward
adulthood. Adolescence
full
Puberty usually
skilled.
and provides a transition from middle
2 years) It is
and
is
and
terminating his
at the
same time
and to make the choices through which
membership
in the adult world.
Childhood and adolescence together now make up roughly one-quarter of the expected life span.
growth but
and
still
it is
The
pre-adult era
vulnerable individual making
a time of extraordinary
is
only a prelude to adult living.
Its result is
an immature
his entry into the adult world.
Early Adulthood Early adulthood
is
the second era of the
17 or 18 and ends at about 45. Ushered
life cycle. It
in
terminated by the Mid-life Transition, which links
it is
hood. Early adulthood
may be
ordinarily begins at
by the Early Adult Transition,
the most dramatic of
to middle adult-
it
all eras.
For men, the
peak years of biological functioning are roughly from 20 to 40. of 20
is
new
man
in the society of adults.
season starts to
of his life
By
and is getting ready to take At the other end, as he passes
at the height of his bodily vigor
place as a a
20,
is
make
itself felt;
ending and autumn
is
he begins to
fast
realize that the
most of the mental and bodily
is
He
is
and
close to his full height
capability, cardiac
and
also close to his
that have
peak
characteristics that
characteristics
maximal
in intelligence
remain
skills
summer
and
have been
The young
level of strength, sexual
and general
biological vigor.
in those qualities of intellect
in pre-adulthood, such as
thought, ability to learn specific
These
his
respiratory capacity,
grown so measurably
his
40,
approaching.
evolving in the pre-adult years are at or near their, peak levels.
man
The youth
memory,
abstract
and to solve well-defined problems.
relatively stable
and near
their peak levels
THE SEASONS OF A
22
until
MAN
LIFE
S
around 40. Biologists often use age 30
as a reference
point for study-
most
biological functions remain
close to their highest levels until that age,
and then decline gradually
ing age changes in adulthood, because
through the remaining
years. In the late thirties, a
man
is
normally
still
near his peak levels of biological and psychological capacity and within
the era of early adulthood.
Apart from impairments due to not fallen
much below
illness or accident, a
maximal
his
him
often great enough, however, to give
is
The
decline at around this age.
visible
at
40 has
The drop
a distinct sense of bodily
"cosmetic" changes, such as bald-
and paunch, symbolize the
ness, wrinkles
man
level of bodily functioning.
youth and the imminence
loss of
of "middle age," even though they involve
little real
decrease in bodily
health and capacity.
The
span from 20 to 40
He
their height.
he
is
the era of greatest biological abundance and stress.
The man's
both
He
is
During
conflicts regarding
such
grati-
struggling to establish his place in society. This effort, too,
satisfying
identity.
instinctual drives are at
urgently seeks personal gratification of various kinds, but
burdened by the residues of childhood
fication. is
is
and
of greatest contradiction
and
stressful.
his twenties, a
He makes
the
young man
first
ordinarily forms a preliminary adult
major choices, such
as marriage, occupation,
residence and style of living, that define his place in the adult world. Early
adulthood
is
the time to pay his dues and
to the survival of the species: begetting
and
a marriage
make
and
family, giving his labor to the
"tribe"— that part of the species in which he luck,
he
Within
man
raising children, maintaining
economy and is
most
welfare of the
fully involved.
With
has the sense of doing something for himself as well as others,
of both satisfying his
a
his essential contribution
this era
own needs and contributing we find a basic sequence of
to his society.
change. Over
its
normally moves from being a "novice adult" through a
intermediate steps to the point where he can assume a sition in work, family
"senior" po-
and community. Going through the process of form-
ing an occupation (often establishes himself
more
course
series of
first
making more than one provisional choice), he and then advances along some
at a junior level
formal or informal ladder until, at around 40, he reaches the culmination of his youthful strivings.
ginning a
new
He
is
now ending
In marriage and family, too, the young
husband and
his early
adulthood and be-
era.
man
father. Gradually, often painfully,
begins as novice lover,
he grows more understand-
ing and responsible— better able to gain the satisfactions and bear the
burdens of being senior.
The
first
several years in the
growth of the family
The Anatomy
Eras:
tend to be especially married
financial
power and capacity
his earning
23
small children add to the complexity of
stressful:
and increase the
life
of the Life Cycle
demands on the young man; but
meeting
for
responsibilities are
still
rather
limited. If a
man
starts a
family in his twenties, his offspring are in or near
them
adolescence as he passes 40. His relationships with sharply.
The
nest
is
emptying and the nuclear family
separate households.
The husband and
emotional losses and
stresses.
is
are changing
dividing into
wife together experience strong
At the same time, the
financial, social
and
emotional burdens of raising a family are greatly decreased.
A man's
and the members of
relationships with his parents
his
extended
family also change over the course of early adulthood.
them
desperately to get
By
40,
he
is
to regard
him
as
an equal and a
At 20, he man, "not a
tries
kid."
taking on parental responsibilities for parents, relatives and
who
the generation of the elderly
And by
40 he from them.
look to
him
seen by the youth as senior, a
is
As compared with
later eras, then, early
its
fullness of energy, capability
In
it,
and
for care full
and leadership.
generation removed
adulthood
is
distinguished by
potential, as well as external pressure.
personal drives and societal requirements are powerfully intermeshed,
at times reinforcing each other
and
at times in stark contradiction.
Middle Adulthood At around 40 a crucial developmental change occurs. Early adulthood is coming to an end and a new season begins to make itself felt. The Midlife Transition, which lasts from about 40 to 45, is devoted to the termination of early adulthood and the initiation of middle adulthood. It is thus a part of both
conception of are
among
it
eras.
Our
as a link
discovery of the Mid-life Transition, and our
between two
distinctive eras in the life cycle,
the most controversial aspects of our work.
We
did not begin
with the hypothesis of a highly defined transition at mid-life; in the course of
our research.
following chapters.
middle adulthood
My
main
The
evidence for
interest here
is
it
will
it
emerged
be given
in the
to present a brief account of
an era covering the span from roughly age 40 to 65. The distinction between early and middle adulthood would have been as
discovered and accepted long ago,
I
believe,
that occurred universally at around 40
shake the foundations of a man's
life.
if
there were a single event
and had great enough impact to
A
concrete, tangible event of this
THE SEASONS OF A
24
MAN
S
LIFE
kind— a bodily change, a dramatic social event or a basic change— provides a useful reference point for theory and vestigators can then determine
developmental change.
whether the event
The prime example
is
psychological research.
In-
part of a fundamental
of such a reference point
is
puberty, which universally marks the shift from childhood to adolescence. It
had been hoped that menopause would serve
thus far of
it
a similar function,
but
has not proven a useful guide in studying the adult development
women. found no
Investigators have as yet
single event that universally heralds
the end of early adulthood. There have been studies of various significant
empty nest; but these They do not provide the
events such as divorce, depression, illness and the
occur at different ages and for different reasons.
more
basis for a
general view of individual development. Likewise, bodily
characteristics such as cardiac capacity or visual acuity decline gradually
over the adult years. There
is
no age
at
which a
set of biological or psy-
chological characteristics shows a
marked change that might
underlying developmental process.
The
by the study of concrete
We as
it
shift in eras will
reflect
an
not be revealed
variables or events.
get a different picture, however,
when we examine the
Jived Jife
evolves, rather than searching for a single, specific criterion. In the
present study
we have
tried to
evolves over time.
Within
ments of
as
life,
we must
cessive eras
When we
such
take a
examine the whole of a man's
this context,
we then examine
work, family and bodily health.
To
life as
it
particular seg-
identify the suc-
trace the individual life course over a span of years.
more
biographical approach, the eras
come
into clearer
focus.
In the following pages I
examine
this era
I
offer a
schematic view of middle adulthood.
from three contrasting perspectives: (1) changes
in
and psychological functioning, (2) the sequence of generations and (3) the evolution of careers and enterprises. Each ^perspective offers a different vantage point from which to describe the changing character of biological
living
from one
era to the next.
elements in the individual's
life,
They
focus on different but interweaving
as I shall try to
show.
Many
aspects of a
man's personality and external circumstances are represented in each of these elements.
Changes
in Biological
Although
a
and Psychological Functioning
man's bodily and mental powers are somewhat diminished
after 40, they are ordinarily
middle adulthood.
A
still
ample
for
an
active, full life
special illness, accident or defect
may
throughout
force
him
to
Eras:
restrict
The Anatomy
may have
himself in certain respects; he
if
he
not severely
is
ill
to give
up
25
skiing or de-
and energy he devotes to work.
crease his sexual activity or reduce the time
But
of the Life Cycle
or impaired, and
his
if
normal development has
not been grossly hampered, he can maintain most of his earlier interests
if
he wishes.
The
maximal
instinctual energies, too, pass their
what reduced
in
middle adulthood.
A man
level
and are some-
by no means lacking
is
in the
youthful drives— in lustful passions, in the capacity for anger and moral indignation, in self-assertiveness and ambition, in the wish to be cared for
and supported. But he
from the tyranny of these
suffers less
drives.
Moreover, the modest decline in the elemental drives may, with mid-life
man
development, enable a
to enrich his
His normal sexual capacity in middle age ing sex
The
life.
life.
He
can be more free from
and moralisms of
the petty vanities, animosities, envies
is
early adulthood.
more than enough
quality of his love relationships
may
for a gratify-
well improve as he
develops a greater capacity for intimacy and integrates more fully the tender, "feminine" aspects of his a
more responsive
He
self.
men
friend to
has the possibility of becoming
as well as
facilitating parent to his adolescent
women. He can be
and young adult offspring
nizes that they are
no longer children and that he
controlling father.
He
(for
whom
is
as
more
a
he recog-
no longer the youthful
can become a more caring son to his aging parents
he increasingly assumes parental
responsibilities),
and
more
a
compassionate authority and teacher to young adults.
Although biological decline ordinarily occurs gradually,
several small
changes often bring about a major, qualitative drop in body function by the early
forties.
This change
may
require considerable
accommodation
in
the man's style of living and social rojes, especially with regard to work.
The
effect
is
seen in
uous labor; there a
man must
is
many
occupations that involve highly precise or stren-
an upper age
which
limit, usually in the thirties, after
either leave his occupation altogether or shift within
it
to a
managerial, consultative or physically less-demanding role.
The
professional athlete
who
gives
up playing
ball at 30 has
ten years of early adulthood in which to establish himself in a tion or elsewhere in his sport. late thirties,
But the one who
must go through a
difficult
lingers
burn out or
and external
live a highly
Most men undergo
until, say, his
occupational change even as he
entering the stressful period of the Mid-life Transition. variety of internal
on
another
new occupais
Those who,
for a
mode
of
work
living.
Early
reasons, cannot alter their
marginal existence.
a mid-life
change
in style of
work and
adulthood produces qualities of strength, quickness, endurance and output.
Middle adulthood
is
a season
when
other qualities can ripen: wisdom,
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
26
judiciousness, magnanimity,
unsentimental compassion, breadth of per-
Great
spective, the tragic sense.
than before,
make
his
as Elliott
most
who
artists
continue their creative en-
more profound, more "sculpted" works
deavors after 40 tend to produce
man
Jaques has shown.. In middle adulthood a
can
diplomacy and philoso-
effective contribution to politics,
phy. Although his most brilliant specific discoveries are often
made
in early
adulthood, the creative scientist in middle adulthood tends to do more integrative theoretical
At
generation.
work and
new
to set
many
mid-life,
talented
directions for the
turn
scientists
upcoming
increasingly
managerial, consultative and teaching activities. At their best, the
have great personal and
A man often,
human
at mid-life
some
some
suffering
is
to self
little
life.
loss of his
youthful vitality and,
insult to his youthful narcissistic pride.
literally close to
roles
means of or society and
social value; at their worst, they are a
saving face and keeping busy, but contribute are a tragic waste of
new
to
Although he
is
not
death or undergoing severe bodily decline, he typically
experiences these changes as a fundamental threat.
on the threshold of
senility
though he were
and even death.
Jaques has identified the "middle starting in the late thirties
It is as
crisis" as a
and continuing
the experience of one's mortality
normal development period
for several years.
He
suggests that
at the core of the mid-life crisis.
is
Though
we prefer the word "transition" in naming this period, our view of it owes much to his. The Mid-life Transition may be rather mild. When it involves considerable turmoil and disruption, we speak of a mid-life crisis. Having person
a crisis at this time
who
is
not in
pathological. Indeed, the
may be
goes through this period with minimal discomfort
denying that his
life
must change,
for better or worse.
opportunity for personal development. possibilities of this period
and
scious fantasies
must engage
itself
in
is,
anxieties.
mourning
be made more whole.
To
He
is
thus losing an
experience the dangers and the
however, to open a Pandora's box of uncon-
Dealing with his mortality means that a
man
for the dying self of youth, so that the self can
To do
this,
he must experience some degree of
and despair. This process begins in the Mid-life Transition but through middle adulthood and takes a new form in the next
it
era. It
crisis
extends is
never
completed. It is
not at
all certain,
of course, that development will occur in middle
adulthood. For large numbers of men,
life in
the middle years
of gradual or rapid stagnation, of alienation from the world self.
Severe decline and constriction are
common enough
often seen as part of normal middle age. In of decline
is
statistically
normal
many
in the sense that
is
a process
and from the
so that they are
populations, a good deal it
occurs frequently.
It is
Eras:
The Anatomy
of the Life Cycle
not, however, developmentally normal. Drastic decline occurs only
development has been impaired by adverse psychological,
social
27
when
and
bio-
logical circumstances.
conditions for development are reasonably favorable, and
If
ments from the past are not too and
of personal fulfillment
man come
that a
contribution. This requires, however,
to terms with the developmental tasks of the Mid-life in
The Sequence
of Generations
The
early to
from
impair-
middle adulthood can be an era
severe,
social
Transition. (These are discussed
shift
if
Chapters 13 to
16.)
middle adulthood, and the character of
living in
the middle years, also involves a sequence of generations. Generational
and
levels are features of individual
by
culturally defined age grades,
and other
and
careers,
and by the
The meaning
tions.
social institutions.
The concept
historical rise
of the generations
A man
he struggles to make sense of of
is
and
works out his
is
are
marked
familial, occupational
of successive genera-
fall
shaped by biology, history, culture
own
individual meanings as
his experience in the
"generation"
They
collective experience.
by the phasing of
changing generations.
importance— though
of great
still
used— in the study of the adult life course. Members of a given generation are at the same age level in contrast to younger and older generations. With the passing years, a young adult has the sense of moving from one generation to the next and of forming new
poorly understood and rarely
relationships with the other generations in his world.
These age
categories are,
I
believe, widely experienced during adult-
hood: other persons are roughly the same age
as
myself (age peers or
they are not more than 6 or 7 years older or younger. "My generation" thus covers a span of some 12-15 y ears Where the age differcoevals)
if
-
ence
is
regard
somewhat it
an elder ship.
as
greater, say 8 to 15 years in either direction,
marking a half generation; the older one
sibling,
to
in the position of
with an implicit claim to greater authority in the relation-
As the age difference
tion apart,
is
we tend
increases to 20
and beyond, we are
and the older one seems to be more
a full genera-
a parent than a sibling.
When
the age difference is 40 years, there is a distance of two generations, and the older one assumes the symbolic properties of grandparent. Relationships between generational levels are important in
While acknowledging the
differences
learn to increase the interaction
between them. At every
carry within ourselves aspects of every generation.
these aspects
is
all societies.
between generations, we can
a relevant task in every era. It
is
Coming
age, all of us
to
difficult in
also
know and
use
childhood, and
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
28
even in early adulthood, to get more in touch with the "older"
much empathy
who
self
and to
more than ten years older than we are. A special task of middle adulthood is to become more aware of both the child and the elder in oneself and in others. Work on this task allows us to transcend in some measure the generational barriers and to relate in a more fully human way to persons of all ages. have
A man
for persons
of 30 to 35
is
likely to
are
be regarded
as
an older sibling (a half
generation removed) by persons in their twenties. This
He
preference, too.
regards himself as
still
*
may be
his
own
young" and very much part of
the youthful generation. In his twenties he often fears that passing 30
means getting
"old."
He
is
relieved to discover in the early thirties that
has his youthful powers, though he
still
may
find himself
more
he
naturally
inclined to assume a variety of older sibling relationsips to those in full
youth.
A new change in generational status and
ordinarily begins in the late thirties
well established by the mid-forties.
is
by people
A man
lished, as part of the establishment, in fact.
a parent than an older sibling— as
"Dad"
He
surprise to the
man
entering mid-life.
is
usually regarded as
more
tends to be viewed
estab-
more
as
rather than "buddy." This mes-
conveyed with increasing frequency and
sage,
of 40
removed,
in their twenties as a full generation
often comes as a
force,
He may respond at first with feelings He wants to say: "This is ridicu-
of puzzlement, irritation or depression. lous!
I
haven't really
"you" in
this
statement
ful parts of the self.
a deeper level in society
changed— I am
and
it
is
with you, not with them\
7f
The
the youthful generation in society and the youth-
The "them"
is
less clearly
refers to the "old,"
its
still
defined and experienced. At
the generation that has lost
capacity for youthful pursuits.
statement expresses his growing realization that he
More is
place
its
immediately, the
leaving the youthful
generation and entering that vaguest and most disturbing of generations,
"the middle-aged."
So is
it
becomes important to
no standard
identify the sequence of generations.
There
definition of generations in the individual life cycle.
useful starting point, however,
One
the Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset's conception of generations in the history of society and in the life cycle.
1.
2. 3.
4. 5.
is
He identifies five generations Childhood: age 0-15 Youth: age 15-30 Initiation :. age
30-45
Dominance: age 45-60 Old age: age 60+
The Anatomy
Eras:
The Youth and
occupy the era of
Initiation generations
hood. Youth (age 15-30)
starts
of the Life Cycle
29
early adult-
with the Early Adult Transition and
extends through the "novice" phase of early adulthood. This generation
engaged
in entering the adult
there, as
we
shall see.
Mid-life Transition
The
world and making an
place for
initial
is
itself
Initiation generation (age 30-45) includes the
and the ending of
between the Youth, who are not yet
early adulthood. It
is
intermediate
fully responsible participants in adult
society, and the Dominant generation, which has the main burdens and satisfactions of senior leadership and authority. The Dominant generation (45-60) makes its ideas and aims the gov-
erning ones in every sector of society (such as politics, business, religion, art
and science) and devotes
and
implementing those aims. The
to
Initiation generation receives the
upcoming to assert
itself
its
own
goals. It will
authority,
and
implement
its
wisdom
of
elders, begins
its
creates moderately or radically
own aims
after taking the
new
ideas
mantle of power
and fifties. At any given moment in history, says Ortega, the Initiation and Dominant generations are the two crucial ones, and the relations between them are fateful for the future of society. Even in a period when a youthful "protest" generation plays a dramatic part on the social scene (as it did in the 1960s), the immediate historic result of the protest is carried by the two
in the forties
older generations.
impact when
it
The
current
Youth generation will have a more direct power and enacts its succes-
enters positions of increasing
sive generational roles
from age 30 to
In his theory of the
Erikson identifies a
life
series of generations in
cover early and middle childhood. sion, occupies adolescence
Intimacy
60.
cycle as a sequence of eight ego stages, Erik
The
adulthood. His
fifth,
first
and the Early Adult Transition. The
vs. Isolation, arises in
four stages
Identity vs. Identity Confu-
the twenties, Generativity
vs.
sixth stage,
Stagnation at
about 40, and Integrity vs. Despair at 60. Erikson's last four ego stages thus unfold with the successive eras of early, middle and late adulthood. Erikson's seventh stage, Generativity vs. Stagnation,
vance here.
and
it
Its
is
of special rele-
onset coincides with the start of the Mid-life Transition,
remains a predominant concern through middle adulthood. "Generoften thought to
mean
the creation of a
ativity"
is
spring.
Being a father to young children
adulthood. As a
man
passes 40, his task
is
generations of adults— the generations of
to
is,
new
generation of
off-
however, a task of early
assume responsibility
Youth and
Initiation, in
for
new
Ortega
He must become paternal in new ways to younger adults. He cannot treat them as if they were children under his benign control. He must find new ways to combine authority and mutuality— accepting his
y Gasset's sense.
THE SEASONS OF A
30
own
responsibility
MAN S
and
LIFE
as adults, inviting their participation
greater independence
them
offering leadership, yet also taking
and fostering
and authority. While he
is
seriously
growth toward
their
becoming
a senior
mem-
ber of the adult world, he must relate to persons in their thirties as junior
but
members who
fully adult
their twenties as novices going
soon succeed him, and to persons in
will
through their
initial
formative period within
the adult world. In every stage, developing
is
a process in
which opposite extremes
are to
some degree reconciled and integrated. Both generativity and its opposite pole, stagnation, are vital to a man's development. To become generative, a
man must know how
ing, of
tion
being
and devoid of
of living in the
The
it
feels to
static, stuck,
down in He must know the
self -fulfillment.
capacity to experience, endure
Stagnation
is
a life full of obliga-
experience of dying,
shadow of death.
intrinsic aspect of the struggle
and
fight against stagnation
vulnerability in myself
passion for others.
I
in
a source of
an
neces-
recognition of
wisdom, empathy and com-
can truly understand the suffering of others only
can identify with them through an awareness of destructiveness.
It plays a
The
mid-life development.
becomes
is
toward generativity in middle adulthood.
not purely negative nor to be totally avoided.
and continuing part
sary
stagnate— to have the sense of not grow-
drying up, bogged
my own
if I
weakness and
Without this self-awareness, I am capable only of the kind and altruism that reduces the other's hardship but leaves
of sympathy, pity
him
still
a victim.
Evolving Careers and Enterprises
The
nature of each era
is
reflected in the evolution of a
man's careers in
work, family and other settings, his involvement in solitary and social enterprises,
and
his broader life plans
and
goals.
The
fabric of his life changes at
around 40, with the start of middle adulthood. By 40, he has had a chance to build a life and to realize the fruits of his youthful labors. As he enters likely to review his progress and ask: "What now? Of what value is my life to society, to other persons, and especially to myself?" He must deal with the disparity between what he is and what he has dreamed of becoming. These questions present themselves regardless of the outcome of his youthful efforts. If a man at 40 has failed to realize his most cherished dreams, he must begin to come to terms with the failure and arrive at a
the Mid-life Transition, he
have
new
I
done?
Where am
set of choices
brilliantly,
is
I
around which to rebuild
his life. If
he must consider the meaning and value of
feel that his present life
is
satisfying
and provides the
he has succeeded
his success.
basis for a
He may
good
life in
The Anatomy
Eras:
of the Life Cycle
31
the future. Even in this fortunate but rare case, however, a turning point
new
has been reached. His
hood, but
man who
may stem
life
will nonetheless
it
change
directly
from that of
early adult-
in certain crucial respects. Often, a
has accomplished his goals comes to feel trapped: his success
meaningless and he
is
now
caught within a stultifying situation.
is
Many men
some respects and disappointing or Whatever his life condition, every man in the early things out, come to terms with the limitations and con-
find their lives relatively satisfactory in
destructive in others. forties
needs to sort
sider the next steps in the journey.
A man
around 40 has the experience of arriving at a culmination, a turning point. A specific event often serves as a marker indicating where at
he now stands and how
some form
far
he can
path. Several events of great
life
and
This culminating event represents
go.
movement forward or backward on the significance may occur in the late thirties
of success or failure, of
promotions or
early forties:
factions in family
failures at
work, major
difficulties or satis-
the
illness or
death of loved ones,
recognitions or devaluations in his world.
The one
that operates as the
personal
life,
illness,
culminating event has a special meaning: in his mind,
outcome of
his youthful strivings;
phase of his
will receive in this
it
life,
it
symbolizes the
represents the highest affirmation he
and he uses
it
to estimate his chances
for realizing his aims in the future.
An 1970).
example
He
is
begins
given by the great philosopher Bertrand Russell (1872-
Volume
II of his
autobiography as follows:
The period from 1910 to 1914 was a time of transition. My life before 1910 and my life after 1914 were as sharply separated as Faust's life before and after he met Mephistopheles. I underwent a process of rejuvenation, inaugurated by Ottoline Morrell and continued by the curious that the
out of
my
War
mental questions. I
me provided me
and made
prejudices
It also
think afresh on a
with a
new kind
me
whenever
did not feel the staleness that beset
mathematical
logic.
I
it
number
may seem shook
I
me
of funda-
of activity, for
which
tried to return to
whom
Mephistopheles was represented by
War.
His remarkable transition clearly went on for the
World War
It
have therefore got into the habit of thinking of myself
as a non-supernatural Faust for
the Great
War.
should rejuvenate anybody, but in fact
I,
Russell's early
so that
its
span
is
age 38-44.
The
first
few years of
culminating event of
adulthood was the completion of the Piincipia Mathematica
This monumental work established his fame and brought him the Nobel Prize some years later. It was the product of a nine-year labor with
at 38.
his colleague his senior.
and mentor, Alfred North Whitehead, who was eleven
During
this
entire period Russell
sexually celibate marriage that left
him
had an emotionally
free to center his life
years cold,
around the
THE SEASONS OF A
32
MAN S
LIFE
passionate intellectual work with Whitehead. In the
months
was completed, he realized that he was a great success
human
a failure as a
human is
being. His
life
after the
book
philosopher and
as a
was devoid of most pleasures and
mathematics attracted him precisely "because
feelings; in fact,
it
not human."
At 39 Russell met Lady Ottoline Morrell, with whom he had an intense affair. She opened a new world to him— a world of greater sexual freedom and, what was more important, of deeper feeling, esthetic sensibility and social concern. Three years later, the start of World War I provided new impetus for his growing pacifism and his interest in fame and power. His love for Ottoline Morrell and his hatred for the war played a love
basic part in this process.
However, the change was not merely a reaction
The
to these external events.
events were ingredients in a developmental
process— the Mid-life Transition— through which he was rejuvenated and his life drastically altered.
clear shape:
By
his mid-forties the transformation
he was struggling desperately to become
machine" that gained
its
satisfaction
was taking
of a "logic
less
from producing good ideas and from
destroying bad ideas (and their advocates); and he was trying to live a
more
fuller,
The
diverse
struggle
changed
life.
went on
his occupation
phenated hybrid
for the remainder of his 98-year lifetime. Russell
from "pure" academic philosopher to
a highly hy-
philosopher-politician-popular-writer-moralist-and-more.
:
By word and example he became an advocate of sexual liberation. He never entirely outgrew some of the early tendencies— the splitting of inteland emotion, the egocentric
lect
willfulness, the uneasy mixture of elitism
and humanitarianism, the awareness of destructiveness in himself.
and
Yet he showed a continuing evolution
his personal
ticular final state,
A
life. is
of the essence of
life.
human development.
culminating event frequently plays an important part in instigating
The same
meaning and consequences is
in his creative products
This evolution, and not the attainment of any par-
the Mid-life Transition.
40
if it
event, however,
not simply reacting to an external situation.
He makes
an
would have
occurred at another time.
effort to reconsider
He
future.
He
interprets the culminating event
analysis, too,
must take
A man
is
different at
around
reappraising his
the direction he has taken, the fate of
his youthful dreams, the possibilities for a better (or
Our
more than
in others
worse)
and others within
life in
the
this context.
into account his initial adult aspirations
and
his involvements in work, family, politics, religion, leisure, friendship— all
the segments of
life
that have significance for him,
and
their evolution
over the years.
The
idea of a Mid-life Transition was given
its first
modern formulation
The Anatomy
Eras:
by C. G. Jung.
He
distinguished the
half
first
of the Life Cycle
33
from the second half of
life,
and placed the dividing period at around 40. Although he does not identify eras, the distinction between early and middle adulthood is evident in his thought. Jung observed that a resurgence of "individuation''
40— the "noon
around
of life" as
afternoon and evening of
individuation
is
of his
aims.
He
utilize his
thirties,
one-sided and unbalanced.
neglected or suppressed. feeling, intuition,
or
two are
first
sorely needed, at mid-life
is
Until the late
psycholo-
which a person
and
fuller identity
inner resources and pursue
new levels of awareness, meaning and underknown to be a crucial aspect of development
is
childhood and adolescence. Jung was the
ation occurs, and
commonly used by
generates
standing. Individuation in
it is
individual. Acquiring a clearer
own, he becomes better able to
own
his
as
a developmental process through
becomes more uniquely
begin at
life.
As Jung conceived the term, and gists,
may
he called it— and continue through the
Many
Of
life
of necessity rather
is
valuable aspects of the self have been
the four psychological functions— thought,
sensation— that
likely to
man's
says Jung, a
to recognize that individu-
and beyond.
all
must
personalities
exercise, only
one
have developed much. Although no one develops
four functions to an equal degree,
it
is
all
possible in middle adulthood to
strengthen the formerly weaker functions and lead a
more balanced
life.
Mid-life individuation enables us to reduce the tyranny of both the
demands
on us and the demands of our own repressed
society places
We can
stinctual) unconscious. calls
the "archetypal unconscious," an inner source of self-definition and
satisfaction.
Most
(in-
begin giving more attention to what Jung
of
Archetypes
are, so to speak, a treasury of seeds
them remain dormant
in early adulthood.
man
individuation in middle adulthood, as a figures
and
enrich his
gives life in
them
a
more valued place
ways hardly dreamed of
in his
Through the
process of
life,
they will evolve and
in youth. Individuation it
I
shall return to this
theme
in
is
not
holds the possi-
continuing self-renewal and creative involvement in one's
others' lives.
self.
nourishes the archetypal
without painful transitions and recurrent setbacks, but bility of
within the
own and
the chapters on the Mid-life
Transition.
Late Adulthood As
I
have mentioned, our study deals with the span of years from the
teens to the late forties. In developmental terms,
we
late
cover the period from
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
34
LIFE
the Early Adult Transition to
more
full
I am on and the nature
entry into middle adulthood.
end of
speculative ground in discussing the
this era
of the subsequent eras. Nonetheless, in order to complete this overview of
the
life cycle, I offer
the following provisional view of late adulthood.
In the early sixties middle adulthood normally comes to an end and late
The
adulthood begins.
numerous
a result of
character of living
is
needs to be recognized as a distinctive and
we believe, from about 60 Middle and
late
altered in fundamental ways as
biological, psychological
and
social changes.
fulfilling
season in
This era
life. It lasts,
to 85.
adulthood, like the other
eras, are
not demarcated by
a single universal event. Various marker events, such as illness or retire-
ment, may highlight the end of middle adulthood and shape the tional process. exists for
specific
The Late Adult
Transition
from about 60 to
lasts
transi-
65. It
the same kinds of reasons as the Mid-life Transition, though the
content
is
different.
At around 60, there is again the reality and the experience of bodily As I've mentioned, there is statistically a gradual decline starting at about 30 and continuing its inexorable course over the remaining years. A man does not suddenly become "old" at 50 or 60 or 80. In the fifties and sixties, however, many mental and physical changes intensify his experience of his own aging and mortality. They remind him that he is moving decline.
from "middle age" to a terrifying
every
term "old age."
man
There
later generation for
is
No
one of these changes happens to
likely to experience several
is
and to be
nothing
if
he
is
all
greatly affected
the increasing frequency of death and serious
loved ones, friends and colleagues. Even cally active,
which our culture has only the
in
illness
men. Yet by them.
among
his
good health and physi-
he has many reminders of
else,
his decreasing vigor and capacity. If more frequent aches and pains. But he is also likely one major illness or impairment— be it heart disease,
there are
to have at least
cancer, endocrine dysfunction, defective vision or hearing, depression or
other emotional distress.
He
will receive
medical warnings that he must
follow certain precautions or run the risk of crippling illness.
The
internal messages
make accommodations
men
at
around 60
from
more his
or major changes in his
differ widely.
Some
serious, possibly fatal or
own body, too, tell him to mode of living. Of course,
face a late adulthood of serious
ill-
ness or impairment, while others lead active, energetic lives. However,
every of
man
some
in the
Late Adult Transition must deal with the decline or
loss
of his middle adult powers.
In addition, there sixties. If
is
a culturally defined
the term "middle-aged"
is
change of generation in the
vague and frightening, what about our
terminology (and imagery) for the subsequent years?
The commonly used
The Anatomy
Eras:
words such
"golden age" and "senior citizen" acquire nega-
as "elderly,"
a person in the twenties,
hill."
it
appears that passing 30
In the thirties, turning 40
is
a powerful threat.
the passing of the next age threshold of vitality
What
and of life can
it
is
is
to
mean, then, to approach 60 and to
overcome the
of age dominates, but
long as a
man
in. self
in
life,
feel that all
splitting of
it
forms of
remaining in middle age— are
last vestiges
The developmental
youth and age, and find in each season
an appropriate balance of the two. In
growth
getting "over the
anticipated as a total loss of youth,
about to disappear, so that only "old age" remains? task
is
At every point
itself.
youth— even those seemingly
as
35
connotations reflecting our personal and cultural anxiety about aging.
tive
To
of the Life Cycle
late
adulthood the archetypal figure
can take various forms of the creative, wise elder
retains his connection to youthful vitality, to the forces of
and world. During the Late Adult Transition,
that the youth within
him
is
dying and that only the old
a
man
man— an
fears
empty,
dry structure devoid of energy, interests or inner resources— will survive for a brief
and
foolish old age. His task
form appropriate to
is
late adulthood.
to sustain his youthfulness in a
He must
new
terminate and modify the
earlier life structure.
Once
again the ending of an era brings the culmination of the strivings
that were important within
occupy the center stage of
it.
In late adulthood a
his world.
He
is
man
called upon,
can no longer
and increasingly
upon himself, to reduce the heavy responsibilities of middle adulthood and to live in a changed relationship with society and himself. Moving out of center stage can be traumatic. A man receives less recognition and has less authority and power. His generation is no longer the dominant one. As part of the "grandparent" generation within the family, he can at best be modestly helpful to his grown offspring and a source of
calls
indulgence and moral support to his grandchildren. But offspring, as they
major responsibility and authority in the family. authority,
he
is
it is
time for his
approach and enter middle adulthood, to assume the
likely to
become
If
he does not give up
his
a tyrannical ruler— despotic, unwise, un-
loved and unloving— and his adult offspring
may become
puerile adults
unable to love him or themselves. In his work
life,
too, there will
be serious
difficulties if a
man
holds a
beyond age 65 or 70. If he does so, he is "out own generation and he is in conflict with the generation
position of formal authority of phase" with his in
middle adulthood who need to assume greater
times happens that a
man
responsibilities. It
in his seventies or older retains a
position in government, religion, business or other institutions.
come
quickly to mind:
Mao
Tse-tung,
Chou
En-lai, Churchill,
some-
pre-eminent
Names
Ben Gurion,
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
36
Gandhi, de Gaulle and John D. Rockefeller. But, even when high level of energy and adulthood.
and
ers is
He
skill,
he
by them. The continuity of the generations
The
generation in middle adulthood suffers from powerlessness
and conformism, while the generation lack of innovation,
immediate
has a
into late
tends to be an isolated leader, in poor touch with his follow-
overly idealized or hated
disrupted.
man
a
power well
ill-advised to retain
is
adulthood
in early
suffers
from the
moral support and tutelage they need from their
seniors.
Some men can Within employment, and late as 70.
retire
with dignity and security the age at which a
this range,
from
especially
others, should reflect his
own
position
a
as early as 50, others as
man
of
retires
needs, capabilities and
from formal
authority
direct
over
circumstances.
life
After "retirement" in this specific sense, he can engage in valued work, but it
now
stems more from his
own
from external
creative energies than
pressure and financial need. Having paid his dues to society, he has earned
the right to be and do what
most important
is
the distinction between work and play.
way
playful
to the interests that flow
Using the youthfulness
self.
sibilities
and
directly
men
will
is
beyond
from the depths of the
are just beginning to learn
environments for development
adulthood so that more
He
social security are the external condi-
We
freedom of choice.
facilitating
most
to himself.
can devote himself in a serious-
within him, he can enjoy the creative pos-
of this season. Financial
tions for this
create
still
He
in
early
how
to
and middle
have the internal resources for meaningful
work-play in their later years.
A primary developmental task of late adulthood to find a new and with the self. A man in this era is
of involvement with society
is
balance experi-
encing more fully the process of dying and he should have the possibility
more
of choosing
freely his
own
humanity, of his
tribe
mode
and of
Without
losing his love of
he can form
a broader perspec-
of living. his self,
and recognize more profoundly our human contradictions,
tive
creativity
and destructiveness. Greater wisdom regarding the external world can be gained only through a stronger centering in the that a
man becomes more
he becomes
more
j
selfish or vain. Just
less interested in
become,
He
continues to
as
This does not mean It
means that
obtaining the rewards offered by society, and
interested in utilizing his
self
self.
the opposite.
own
inner resources.
The
voices within the
more audible and more worthy of his attention. be actively engaged with the voices and realities of the
it
were,
external world, but
he seeks
a
new balance
in
which the
self
has greater
primacy. (For a discussion of this issue in middle adulthood, see Chapter 15-) If a
man
creates a
new form
of self-in-world, late adulthood can
be
a
The Anatomy
Eras:
season as
full
and
rich as the others.
of the Life Cycle
37
Some of the greatest intellectual and men in their sixties, seventies and
works have been produced by
artistic
even eighties. Examples abound:
Frank Lloyd
Verdi,
Yeats,
Picasso,
Wright, Freud, Jung, Sophocles, Michelangelo, Tolstoy. Countless other
men have
contributed their wisdom as elders in a variety of counseling,
educative and supporting roles in family and community.
Sigmund Freud's late adulthood, passionate vitality was in constant struggle with morbid pessimism. Ernest Jones, in his great biography, In
divides Freud's life into three segments that correspond to the eras pre-
Volume
sented here.
The Formative
1,
Years and the Great Discoveiies:
1856-igoo, carries Freud through his Mid-life Transition and his shift from neurology to psychoanalysis.
Volume
Years of Maturity: 1901-1919,
2,
covers the years of middle adulthood from age 44 to 63. During this time
Freud sought to establish psychoanalysis theory and a
movement
Volume During
The
would strongly influence the academic and
totally
engaged
War
was an
I
in this struggle.
Last Phase: 1919-1939, describes his late adulthood.
this era Freud's creativity
and World
we
3,
that
He was
psychiatric world.
as a clinical specialty, a scientific
took
new
turned 60 in 1916,
was leaving the peak years of his middle adulthood, the
world was starting
its
transition out of an age
of reason, science, gradual ciety) that his
He
Late Adult Transition. Again
and individual development:
see a convergence of societal history
Freud
forms.
intrinsic part of his
own
had
(dominated
as
Western
the imagery
by.
and continuing progress toward the good
existed for over
two hundred
years.
He had
so-
to deal with
decline as well as the decline of the culture to which he was so
ambivalently committed. His previous scientific and clinical interests continued, but they were overshadowed by his growing concern with philosophical-religious issues
Late adulthood
ment. Erikson's its
key polarity
feels
is
final is
and with the
an era of decline
as well as
ego stage occurs in this
Integrity vs. Despair.
fate of
As
a
His contribution to society and to his
He must
arrive at
some
own
appraisal of his
begins at about 60, and
enters late adulthood
immortality life.
civilization.
opportunity for develop-
era. It
man
human
that he has completed the major part— perhaps all— of
pleted. is
and
origins
is
he
his life work.
largely
com-
The developmental
task
to gain a sense of the integrity of his life— not simply of his virtue or
achievement, but of his
life as
a whole. If
he succeeds
in this,
he can
live
without bitterness or despair during late adulthood. Finding meaning and value in his
To
life,
however imperfect, he can come to terms with death.
gain a genuine sense of integrity, a
integrity in his
life.
man must
confront the lack of
During the Late Adult Transition, everyone
has a sense of utter despair. This always has
some
at times
basis in actuality as well
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
38
He
as in irrational self-accusation.
himself or others, that
its
good
destructiveness, stupidity
Worst
of
all,
feels that his life
qualities are far
has been of no value to
outweighed by the recurrent
and betrayal of the values he holds most
dear.
no further opportunity to
right
the damage
is
done: there
is
the balance.
Whatever our must our
values,
we cannot
The
up to them
fully.
we
In the end,
with the sources of the flaws and corruptions in
effect a reconciliation
lives.
live
sources are multiple: they are in ourselves, in our enemies
and loved ones,
in the imperfect
world where each of us
build a
tries to
Making peace with all the enemies in self and world is an important part of this task. To make peace in this inner sense does not keep a man from fighting for his convictions; but it does enable him to life of integrity.
fight
with
less rancor,
with fewer illusions and with broader perspective.
Late Late Adulthood More people are now living into the eighties and beyond, but very little is known about development in those years. It is obviously an oversimplification to regard the entire span of years after age 60 or 65 as a single era.
Given the lack of research ing segment of the
we can only speculate about this concludThe following hypothesis is offered mainly as
data,
life cycle.
We
suggest
new era, late late adulthood, begins at around 80. Most men who survive to enter their eighties are suffering from
various
a point of departure to stimulate further
work on
this issue.
that a .
and
infirmities
at least
more evident than the
one chronic
process of growth.
tains only a small territory, a
tion with
The process of aging is much The life structure usually con-
few significant relationships and a preoccupa-
immediate bodily needs and personal comforts. Under conditions
of severe personal decline all
illness.
and
social
development
What
a
paring for his
man own
is
coming
death.
opmental work was to
man
in his eighties
months, or
mean
at the very
end of the
life
lose
psycho-
cycle? It
to terms with the process of dying
At the end
start a
knows that
new his
of
all
is
and
pre-
previous eras, part of the devel-
era, to create a
death
new
imminent.
It
basis for living.
may come
in a
A
few
shadow, and at its call. To be must make his peace with dying. If he the immortality of the soul, he must prepare himself for some in
twenty
years.
But he
lives in its
able to involve himself in living he believes in
is
as well as senescence.
does development
means that
may
social deprivation, life in this era
meaning. Under more favorable conditions, however, there
Eras:
kind of
afterlife. If not,
and with
his
own
vitality,
and to
of the Life Cycle
he may yet be concerned with the
fate of
39
humanity
human evolution. Development is giving new meaning to life and death in
immortality as part of
occurring to the extent that he general,
The Anatomy
his
own
life
is
and death
he may continue to be engaged
in particular. If
in social life.
he maintains
He may
his
provide others
an example of wisdom and personal nobility.
Above
all,
matters most
he
is
now
reaching his ultimate involvement with the is
his final sense of
the bridge" at the end of the the crucial internal figures
it
life cycle.
it
up.
life is
it
What
about, his 'View from
In the end he has only the self and
has brought into being.
to terms with the self— knowing
ready to give
what
self.
and loving
it
He must come
finally
reasonably well, and being
Developmental Periods:
8
The
Evolution of the Individual Life Structure
The sequence
of eras, described in the previous chapter, forms the gross
Within
scaffolding of the life cycle.
fundamental question of
framework we can pursue the
gressed, our findings led us
from the idea of a
development to the idea of qualitatively
ment.
We
began to identify
sequence of periods, from the end of ado-
a
have
I
major developmental change. there
is
steady, continuous process
of our subjects passed.
all
clues as to the nature, of the periods have
cussion of the eras. As
indi-
different periods in develop-
lescence to the middle forties, through which
Some
normal process of
and middle adulthood? As our study pro-
vidual development in early
of
this
this inquiry: Is there a
said,
been noted
in the dis-
the shift from one era to the next
is
a
does not occur easily or quickly. Rather,
It
a cross-era transition, a developmental period that normally lasts
we conThe Mid-
four or five years. In the Early Adult Transition (age 17 to 22)
clude pre-adulthood and begin our entry into early adulthood.
Transition (age 40 to 45) enables a man to terminate early adulthood and to initiate middle adulthood. The discovery of these periods led us to
life
ask whether there are not additional developmental periods in each era.
We found too
that the eras are distinguished by changes in the overall
character of living. focuses
on a
The
eras
do not necessarily show themselves when one
single aspect of living, as
the nature of adult development,
most
we had
investigators have.
in its patterning at a given time,
and
trace
its
When we
life
from
this
looked at each man's
To
grasp
to begin with the individual life
evolution over the years.
vantage point,
we
first
observed in broad outline the eras and cross-era transitions. Then, examining the
life
course
more
mental periods, similar
Many of living.
closely,
era a series of develop-
concepts and techniques are available for studying specific aspects
But how do we study the character
tion over a span of years? it
we found within each
in their basic nature to the cross-era transitions.
includes "too
discipline.
My
many
Many
variables"
of a man's life
will say that this
is
and takes us beyond the
answer: yes, the study of an individual
scope of any single discipline, and
it is
and
its
evolu-
too difficult a task, that limits of a single
life is
beyond the
very difficult to do well— but
it
can
Developmental Periods
be done! In the present study we have,
though
only a start and there
it is
is
I
believe,
made
41
a significant start,
a great deal left to do.
The concept we have created for .this purpose— and it is the pivotal concept in our entire work— is the individual life structure. By "life structure" we mean the underlying pattern or design of a person's life at a given time. Here we are studying the lives of men. A man's life has many his occupation, his love relationships, his marriage
components:
and
family,
his relation to himself, his use of solitude, his roles in various social con-
texts—all the relationships with individuals, groups
and
institutions that
have significance for him. His personality influences and his
involvement in each of them.
life structure.
fied,
we can
Once
influenced by
is
We must start, however, with the overall
the character of the individual's
life
has been identi-
study in more detail the changes occurring in personality, in
the marital and occupational careers, and in other components of
We have found
that, over the years, the life structure evolves
sequence of periods.
a standard
The developmental
describe are thus periods in the evolution of the
emphasize and re-emphasize I
am
this point, as
it is
periods
I
life.
through
shall
life structure. I
soon
want
to
frequently misunderstood.
not talking about stages in ego development or occupational develop-
ment
or development in any single aspect of living.
periods in the evolution of the individual
life
I
structure.
am
talking about
The
and
periods,
the eras of which they are a part, constitute a basic source of order in the life cycle.
The
order exists at an underlying level.
day-to-day level of concrete action, events
At the more immediate
and experience, our
lives are
often rapidly changing and fragmented.
We are now prepared to maintain that everyone lives through the same developmental periods in adulthood,
just as in
childhood, though people
go through them in radically different ways. Each individual
own unique
A
character.
valid theory of
development
is
life
has
its
not a ipold or
blueprint specifying a single, "normal" course that everyone must follow. Its
function, instead,
is
to indicate the developmental tasks that everyone
must work on in successive periods, and the infinitely varied forms that such work can take in different individuals living under different conditions.
Such
a theory increases our sense of
variousness of individual lives;
The
it
human
potentialities
and of the
does not impose a template for conformity.
Individual Life Structure
The concept at a given
of life structure— the basic pattern or design of a person's
time— gives
us a
way
of looking at the
engagement of the
life
indi-
THE SEASONS OF A
42
MAN S
LIFE
and the
vidual in society. It requires us to consider both self and world, relationships
between them. Our study has shown that the
goes through a process of development in adulthood. focus of our analysis.
evolution of the
of
I
speak of adult development,
structure provides a tool for analyzing
life
times called "the fabric of one's interrelations of self
life."
Through
and world— to see how the
it
we
the primary
mean the
I
its effects.
When
what
is
some-
we may examine
the
in the world,
and
self
is
how the world is in the self. When an external event has we consider how processes in the self may have helped and to mediate
structure
life
is
structure during the adult years.
life
The concept
When
It
a decisive impact,
to bring
it
about
an inner conflict leads to dramatic action,
how external influences may have touched off the conflict and how it would be played out. We try to determine how various
consider
decided
aspects of self
shape
its
and world influence the formation
and
of a life structure
change over time.
The life structure may be considered in terms of three perspectives: a. The individual's sociocultural wodd as it impinges upon him has meaning and consequences for him. To understand a man's life, therefore, we must take into account the society in which he lives. We must place him within
various social contexts— class, religion, ethnicity, family, polit-
system, occupational structure— and understand their relevance for
ical
him. His
modified by changes in the surrounding culture, in social
life is
movements and is
affected
institutions, in the
by massive events such
ticular conditions in his
own
economy and the
as
political climate.
war and depression, and by more
work, family and community
He par-
life.
Some aspects oi his sett are lived out; other aspects are inhibited or neglected. The self includes a complex patterning of wishes, conflicts, b.
anxieties
and ways of resolving or controlling them.
moral values and
ideals, talents
thought and action. Part of the
we must
and self
skills, is
character
conscious;
much
consider both parts. Important aspects of the
in the pre-adult era, continue to influence a
It
man's
includes fantasies,
traits, is
modes
of feeling,
unconscious; and
self, initially
life in
formed
adulthood.
how the person draws upon the self, or ignores it, in his The self is an intrinsic element of the life structure and
We
have to see
every-
day
not a
life.
separate entity. c.
We
need to examine the man's participation
in
the world.
The
external world provides a landscape, a cast of characters, a variety of re-
sources and constraints out of which a selectively uses
and
and
is
man
fashions his
and
life.
A man
used by his world, through his evolving relationships
roles as citizen, lover, worker, boss, friend,
diverse groups
Own
husband, father,
member
enterprises. Participation involves transactions
of
between
Developmental Periods
self
and
43
and world. The transactions take obvious forms, but subtle meanings feelings play an important part in them.
When
studying the evolution of
the most fundamental sense: evolves over time.
He
his subject's life.
factually accurate
He
this life.
The
we
life
course as
it
to present a full picture of
is
an interpretive construction that
tries to arrive at
is
and that "makes sense" of the nature and sequence of and historical context, and at
places his subject in his social self,
attempting to grasp the most private
torments and fulfillments.
aspirations, qualities of character,
show how the person is both a reflection making his unique contribution, large
The
of his society
method
biographer
is,
as
gist-sociologist-man-of-letters.
it
and
He
tries to
a creative agent
or small, to the continuity and
The term "biography"
his world.
prise including a task, a
product.
are being biographical in
with the concrete
start
task of the biographer
the same time probes into the
change of
we
life structure,
thus refers to a complex enter-
of work, a theoretical conception
were, a hybrid: he
and
a
a historian-psycholo-
is
While bringing together
various theoretical
approaches and sources of information, he must maintain his fidelity to the unique, idiosyncratic
life
We are engaged
of his subject.
here in one form
of biography.
How
we go about
shall
most useful
starting point,
makes and how he
I
believe,
is
to consider the choices a person
deals with their consequences.
ships of various kinds,
where to
The important
live, leisure,
involvement in
many models
is
choices relation-
religious, polit-
and community life, immediate and long-term goals. Making a significant life choice is a complex matter. Choosing
an occupation
The
structure?
life
have to do' with work, family, friendships and love
in adult life
ical
describing and analyzing the
to enter
not like choosing a dessert or a brand of soap (though
of decision-making treat
them
as
they were the same)
if
decision to marry grows out of a premarital relationship
point for an evolving marital relationship.
A
man's
and
self
is
The
.
the starting
and world
are
heavily involved in the character of the initial relationship, in the decision to marry,
So is
and
in the further vicissitudes of the marriage.
in describing the
important choices in a man's
not enough to deal with the "choice" in isolation.
other words, simply to say that he
he
is
a
member
he belongs to sary to
ings
of occupation
X
is
It
and employed
B and
listing of items.
at
component
life structure,
a given time
it
not enough, in
work place Y, or that
fraternal order
We
every choice
C.
It is
neces-
have to consider the mean-
and functions of each choice within the individual of the
is
married to a particular woman, that
religion A, political party
go beyond a mere
life at
is
life structure.
saturated by both self
As a and
44
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
To
world.
tionship
LIFE
choose something means to have a relationship with
becomes
The
it.
rela-
and
a vehicle for living out certain aspects of the self
for
engaging in certain modes of participation in the world.
The I
have
primary components of the
motives and
life
The components
just described.
structure are choices, in the sense
are not features of the self, such as
nor are they features of the world, such
abilities,
as institu-
tions, groups and objects. In characterizing each choice, however,
man's relationship with
sary to understand the nature of the
within the
and to see how
life structure,
it is
to place
it,
connected to both
it is
necesit
and
self
world.
The components
of the life structure are not a
random
set of items, like
pebbles washed up at the seashore. Rather, like threads in a tapestry, they are
woven
into an encompassing design. Recurring themes in various sectors
help to unify the overall pattern of the tapestry. Lives differ widely in the nature and patterning of the components.
One
components
or two
in the structure. Others,
(rarely as
many
have a central place
as three)
though important, are more peripheral, and
others are quite marginal or detached from the center.
ponents have the greatest significance for the course.
They
components
The
made
are easier to detach
and
may change
from center to periphery or vice
committed to work
starts
more
A
in family life.
altogether.
The
a
The less
peripheral
investment
life.
A
component may
man who it
drastically.
shift
has been totally
and involves himself
formerly important component
may be
eliminated
For example, a
compo-
man may
remain
but enrich and deepen the marital relationship; he
the nature and meaning of his work, without changing occu-
he may make
a
new
choice of wife or occupation that leads to
a qualitative change in the character of his
The components most
likely to
tion, marriage-family, friendship
life.
be central
and peer
in a
also
have a central place, when
tions for the self
and
is
work, or watching sports
more than on TV, is a
man's
life
are occupa-
relationships, ethnicity
may
gion. Leisure
We
life.
character of a man's relationships within a given
in the existing marriage
pations; or
when
detaching himself from
nent may change moderately or
may modify
versa, as
still
com-
for the evolving life
in other aspects of
in various ways.
central
and energy, and they
and change; they involve
are less crucial to the fabric of one's
structure
life
and
receive the largest share of one's time
strongly influence the choices
of the self
self
The
it
and
reli-
serves important func-
a casual activity. Playing sports after serious matter for
many men.
found that occupation and marriage-family are usually the most
central components,
though there are
significant variations in their relative
weight and in the importance of other components.
Work and
family are
Developmental Periods
human
universal features of
components more
Let's consider these
life.
45
closely.
•
occupation. In
all societies,
of the social structure. Every
soni£ form of work
deemed
work
man
is
a
major part of individual
and
life
required to contribute his labor in
is
useful for the tribe.
A
man's occupation
is
one
of the primary factors determining his income, his prestige and his place in
work
society. Universally,
number
organized into a
is
of socially defined
occupations that are taught, accorded ^differential value and reward, and integrated into simple or complex economic structures.
Over
men make one
or
him within
them
quite marked, within the
a particular socioeconomic level
upon
exerts a powerful influence
of
of
A
from one occupation to another.
he makes among them, and tion.
chooses and forms an occupation. All
more changes, some
original occupation or
places
man
a span of years, a
man's occupation
and work world.
It
the options available to him, the choices
his possibilities for
advancement and
satisfac-
His work world also influences the choices he makes in other spheres
life.
Occupation has important sources within the quences for the
It
self.
self
and important conse-
medium
often the primary
is
in
which
young
a
man's dreams for the future are defined, and the vehicle he uses to pursue those dreams. At best, his occupation permits the fulfillment of basic values
and
life goals.
At worst,
a man's
sive
and corrupting, and contributes to
and
society. In studying a
of
man's
work and the multiple ways
a
work
life
over the years
is
growing alienation from
oppres-
self,
work
we need to understand the meaning which it may serve to fulfill, to barely
life,
in
sustain or to destroy the self.
•
marriage and family. In
all societies,
a
man
is
expected to marry and
to take certain responsibilities within a familial system. great variation in the culturally defined roles of
the structure of the family. family a central
component
A man
There
of course,
is,
husband and father and
usually wants to marry
and to make
in
his
in his life structure.
Marriage ordinarily creates a new
home
base for the young man.
center on which he establishes his place in the
community and
It is a
his chang-
ing relationships with friends, parents and extended family. It provides a vehicle for traveling a particular path in early adulthood. His marital choice reflects
some
of his
emerging values but violates others.
certain social contexts while separating If
he marries "the
and continuity
in his
girl life.
him from
next door," the marriage In this case, he
is
It links
him
to
others.
more
may make
for stability*
likely to live in
the same
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
46
neighborhood, to have an occupation and
and to integrate
values,
his forebears.
On
the other hand, marriage to a
ground and aspirations
is
likely to
be part of
consistent with parental
and
major
a
religious patterns of
woman
of different back-
shift in his life.
Many
meanings and functions of a marriage are implicit or even uncon-
of the
scious
life style
his life within the ethnic
they play themselves out over time in changing and often unantici-
:
pated ways.
A
man's family
life
usually has a major effect
whole. His immediate family connects of
life,
such
him
as his original family, ethnicity
and poorly designed
certain parts of the self
The
his
ongoing
and occupation.
within a larger world and provides a vehicle that tain life journeys
on
to various other
is
life as a
components
It
places
him
well designed for cer-
for others. It enables
him
to live out
and to leave others dormant or repressed.
various professions
and
scientific disciplines often focus
on one
component of life to the relative exclusion of the others. For example, a good deal of research and counseling has been devoted to occupational acknowledge that
careers. Investigators
by other
factors,
such
man's work career
a
as personality, family life
is
and ethnic context. In
general, however, they tend to ignore the non-occupational
or to consider
them
in only a cursory fashion.
framework within which to
retical
influenced
components
They have had no
theo-
components.
interrelate the various
Likewise, a good deal of research and counseling has been devoted to marriage
and
family.
However, family and occupation have
together in our understanding of adult
rarely
been brought
life.
In the fields of personality research and clinical practice, the primary focus
is
usually
riage, ethnicity
on the and
self,
to the neglect of the actualities of work, mar-
class in a
therapy will be strengthened self as it
is
engaged with
destructiveness
and
man's
life.
when they
social institutions
creative possibilities
and psychomore account of the adult and with the fragmentation,
Personality theory
take
which are the
stuff of adult life
in society.
The Self Is The World
in the World, Is in
the Self
In the scientific study of humanity, there has been a powerful tendency in
each discipline to focus on a few aspects of
the others. society.
One
of the primary divisions
is
human
life
and
to neglect
that between individual and
Psychology and psychiatry focus chiefly upon the individual. Social
Developmental Periods sciences, such as sociology, social anthropology
upon
primarily
and
society
collective
him
vidual altogether or to regard
as a
and
political science, focus
They tend
life.
to ignore the indi-
simple product of the shaping
forces in society.
Although the study of the individual
erally considered
an appropriate
nevertheless It
both
it
field
and
self
that there
is
cycle
gen-
is
remains virtually untouched.
society,
We
or derivative.
life
of inquiry in the social sciences,
We
necessary to take a broader approach.
is
47
need to encompass
without making one primary and the other secondary
need to take seriously the idea of adult development—
some underlying order
in the life
cycle— and the idea of adult
socialization— that the self exists within a world and
mately bound together with that world.
The concept
evolution
its
of
life
is
inti-
structure pro-
vides a starting point for this approach.
The self
individual life structure
is
a patterning of self
and world are not two separate
Each
They
and world. However,
are not like billiard balls
each other's course but not each other's nature.
that, colliding, affect
essential feature of
entities.
An
human life is the inteipenetiation of self and world. Our thinking about one must take account of the
inside the other.
is
other.
The
interpenetration of self and world has been beautifully portrayed
by Arthur Miller
drama
in his plays
parallels closely
and
essays.
His social-psychological view of
our view of adult development:
society is inside of man and man is inside society, and you cannot even create a truthfully drawn psychological entity on the stage until you .
.
.
understand his social relations and their power to make him what he to prevent
water
is
him from being what he
is
not.
The
fish is in
is
and
the water and the
in the fish.
Miller criticizes the "social realism" that prevailed in the American theater during the 1930s. Plays of this period depict the conflicts
and
contradictions in society but their characters are lacking in individuality.
He
also criticizes
many
plays of the 1950s,
experience of adolescents but have
little
which depict the subjective
to say about the adult self dealing
with the responsibilities and potentialities of living in a complex society. Miller writes: In
my
opinion,
if
our stage does not come to pierce through affects to
an evaluation of the world inexpert one at that.
it
will contract to a lesser psychiatry
We shall be confined to writing an
the pestilence, an "Oedipus" whose catastrophe to the survival of his people,
is
and an
"Oedipus" without
private
and unrelated
an "Oedipus" who cannot tear out his eyes
because there will be no standard by which he can judge himself; an "Oedipus," in a word,
who on
learning of his incestuous marriage, instead of .
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
48
away
tearing out his eyes, will merely wipe
his tears thus to declare his
loneliness.
we
If
more
are to have a
truly adult theater, says
I— we must
adequate basis for studying adult development, say this interpenetration of self
external world.
We
without seeing
how
And
others.
and world. The
self
it is
well as
the external world
structure of society
its
sources,
life gives
an intrinsic part of the
is
is
members
its
particular choice
and the
cannot
structure.
life
and destructiveness. Society makes for
available
involvement and
social
among
others.
man
about a patterning in the choices a
moves
a
man
self-
making some Through its own
these options,
more highly rewarded than
structure, society brings
A
We
a limited range of individuals, groups, material re-
occupations and possibilities
attractive or
self.
diverse aspects of the
it.
reflected in the self
fulfillment. It influences his choices
more
how
evidence of his society's wisdom and integration as
conflicts, oppression
to each of
recognize
intrinsic part of the
colored and shaped by his self and the selves of
world are reflected and contained within
The
an
more
a
cannot adequately grasp the nature of a man's world
grasp the full nature of the self without seeing
Every man's
is
Miller— and
makes.
into a given world, or strengthens his
position in that world; and at the
same time
it
moves him away from
other worlds he has been considering.
The
external world also contributes to the substance of a man's chang-
ing attachments, aspirations, anxieties, identifications, creative productions.
Every organization and
social
world has a culture,
social structure
material conditions which affect the character of the relationships
A
the members.
It
and myths which he
self,
is
and
internal-
empty conformity,
development of certain parts
while hindering the development of others.
Although every man's it
selectively uses
provides invitations to heroism, martyrdom,
bitter or zestful struggle. It encourages the
of the
among
man's particular external world presents significant mean-
ings, feelings, identities izes.
and
also in
some
circumstances.
Out
ment, he makes
his
life
respects
structure reflects the structure of society,
unique— a
of the possibilities
own
reflection of his specific self
and constraints given
choices and builds his
crucial factor in the formation
own
and
in his environ-
world.
The
and transformation of each
self
is
a
individual's
world.
To be
truly
of his self in
it
engaged with
his world, a
enriched, depleted and corrupted by into the world
man must
invest important parts
and, equally, he must take the world into his self and be it.
In countless ways he puts himself
and takes the world into himself. Adult development
the story of the evolving process of mutual interpenetration.
If
we
is
are to
Developmental Periods
understand
it
we must
how,
learn
the water and the water
is
in Miller's vivid imagery, the fish
49 in
is
in the fish.
Tasks and Periods in the Evolution of the life Structure
When we of our 40
used the concept of
men, we made
life
structure in writing the biographies
a remarkable discovery: the life structure evolves
through a relatively orderly sequence during the adult character of the sequence for the other
men whose
the same for
is
all
men
the
we examined.
biographies
The
years.
essential
in our study
It consists
and
of a series
periods and transitional (struc-
of alternating stable (structure-building)
ture-changing) periods. These periods shape the course of adult psychosocial^
development.
The primary task of man must make certain
every stable period
is
to build a life structure: a
key choices, form a structure around them, and
pursue his goals and values within this structure. stable in this sense difficulty. is
The
not necessarily to say that
is
task of
making major
often stressful indeed, and
Each
may
life
many
stable period has additional tasks of
and distinguish
two periods
in the life cycle are identical.
it
second childhood, though
developmental within
it.
A
is
kinds of change. its
A
(and other periods) are reactivated
issues of adolescence
stable period ordinarily lasts six or seven years, ten at the
basis for stability
and
No
resembles childhood in certain aspects, and
it
transitional period, as
structure
reflect its
not "merely" a second adolescence, though
most. For various reasons, internal and external, the
formed the
own which
They may have some common ways. Old age is not "merely"
elements but they also differ in essential
the Mid-life Transition
is
and without
from the other stable periods.
life
a
say that a period
tranquil
choices and building a structure
involve
place in the
cycle
To
it is
life
structure that has
comes into question and must be modified.
we have
seen, terminates the existing life
new
creates the possibility for a
one.
The primary
tasks of
every transitional period are to question and reappraise the existing structure, to explore various possibilities for
change
move toward commitment to the crucial a new life structure in the ensuing stable has other, distinctive tasks reflecting
in self
and world, and to
choices that form the basis for period.
its
Each
place in the
transitional period life
cycle.
These
periods ordinarily last four to five years.
Since the transitional periods play such a vital part in development, let
me
articulate their nature
more
fully.
A
transition
is
a bridge, or a
50
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
LIFE
boundary zone, between two
states
greater stability.
of
involves
It
a
process of change, a shift from one structure to another.
The
Mid-life Transition, for example,
two great
eras in the life cycle.
era of early adulthood.
When
As it
boundary zone between
the person
primarily in the
is
ends, middle adulthood
way. During the Mid-life Transition
"on the boundary": he
a
is
it starts,
however, the person
itself,
under
fully
is
truly
is
both in early adulthood and in middle adult-
is
hood. This transition separates the two the next can begin. It serves also to
enabling one to end so that
eras,
connect them, bringing about
inter-
change so that the past can be drawn upon and used selectively in building is an intrinsic part of both eras and can be understood
for the future. It
only from the conjoint perspective of both. Similarly, the Age Thirty Transition initiating a
A
is
a
new
means
is
adult
life
structure
an ending, a process of separation or
cases the separation in a
is
complete:
we
my
life.
In
some
terminate a casual relationship, job,
I
I
and of
shall see.
loss.
group or community, ownership of a house or
they pass entirely out of rarely think
first
structure for completing early adulthood, as
termination
membership
of terminating the
book— and
have no further contact with them,
about them, and only the most limited residue of their
I
exis-
tence remains within me.
When
the relationship with an object (person, group, setting, thing,
symbol) has great meaning for me, however, termination does not mean a complete ending of the relationship.
The
changed and changing form. The most
relationship continues but in a
clear-cut
and dramatic separations
of this kind involve total loss of a significant object:
someone
love dies;
I
move to new locale and leave a world behind. I experience a profound loss and must come to terms with painful feelings of abandonment, grief and rage. a quarrel leads to
permanent parting from
a friend or mentor;
I
a
Over time the
lost object
is
continues to evolve within
more
my
self
fully internalized
and
my
life.
relationship are ended, but other aspects continue ated.
I
have lost the external object but
I
and the relationship
Important aspects of the
and new ones are
cre-
maintain the relationship with
the now-internal object.
The
separation
is
often partial rather than total.
some contact with the person or group, but
I
continue to have
a major change occurs in the
nature of the relationship: a romantic love relationship becomes a modest friendship; an intense mentoring relationship
sociation in work; a marriage ends in divorce in
new
becomes
a
more
casual as-
and the relationship goes on
forms, such as friendly co-parenting or continuing hostility and
recrimination.
The
relationship
modified or transformed
if
it
is
comes to
a turning point
to continue.
A
and must be
transitional period
quired to terminate the past and start the future.
is
re-
Developmental Periods
A
good example
is
51
the young adult in the process of separating from
parents. His developmental task
not to end the relationship altogether;
is
Rather, he has to reject certain aspects (for instance, those in which he is
the submissive or defiant child relating to all-controlling parents), to
sustain other aspects,
between
and
new
to build in
distinctive individuals
who have
qualities
such as mutual respect
separate as well as shared inter-
Neither the young adult nor his parents find this an easy
ests.
task.
As students of childhood development have shown, the processes of separation and individuation are closely linked. Drastic change and loss
may be damaging, but under
reasonably supportive conditions the process
of separation leads to enrichment, differentiation self.
This
The life:
is
as true of
adulthood
as of
and development of the
childhood.
task of a developmental transition
is
to terminate a time in one's
to accept the losses the termination entails; to review
and evaluate
the past; to decide which aspects of the past to keep and which to
and to consider one's wishes and
pended between past and separates them.
Much
cut out of one's
And
there
is
life,
much
future,
possibilities for the future.
and struggling
to
One
reject;
sus-
is
overcome the gap that
from the past must be given up—separated from, rejected in anger, renounced in sadness or grief.
that can be used as a basis for the future.
must be attempted in both self and world. These tasks produce features common
to
transitions.
all
Changes
They
are
frequently times of crisis— of profound inner conflict, of feeling "in a state of
a talk I,
I is
suspended animation"
as
one of our
on the Mid-life Transition, a young
am
at age 31,
having
many
men
man
put
it.
asked me,
After hearing
"How
is it
of the experiences you ascribe to age
in a precocious Mid-life Transition?"
The answer
is,
of course, no:
going through a different transition appropriate to his place in the
cycle,
but
it
is
one that has many
transitions such as those at mid-life
Along with the life issues
The Age
common
qualities in
and
features,
are specific to each period
that
41—am
common
he life
with the other
at puberty.
certain developmental tasks
and give
Thirty Transition, for example,
is
it
its
and
distinctive character.
strongly colored by the im-
minence of Settling Down and the need to form a life structure through which one's youthful dreams and values can be realized. The Mid-life Transition brings of a
more
polarities.
new concerns with the
loss of
senior position in one's world,
youth, the assumption
and the reworking of inner
Some preoccupation with death— fearing it, being drawn to it, uncommon in all transitions, since the process
seeking to transcend it— is not
and rebirth. But the meanings of death and the kinds of developmental work to be done differ
of termination-initiation evokes the imagery of death
greatly
from one transition to another.
THE SEASONS OF A
52
As
a transition
give these choices
MAN
comes to an end,
The
choices
of the next period.
done— all
When
decide, 'This
man must make
his choices
and
will settle for,"
I
the
all
the struggles to improve
to explore alternative possibilities of living, to
more to terms with the self— a
He must
to start building a life
mark the beginning
the past several years are
work or marriage,
bets.
time to make crucial choices, to
the major product of the transition.
are, in a sense,
efforts of
one's
it is
meaning and commitment, and
structure around them.
They
LIFE
S
come
and place
his
start creating a life
structure that will serve as a vehicle for the next step in the journey.
A man may his life. it
work
barks
He
choose to reaffirm the commitment to an existing part of
decides to remain in the marriage with the intention of
He
better.
upon such
gives
up
a serious extramarital relationship— or
a relationship in the
hope that
making he em-
this will enrich his life
while allowing the marriage and family to continue. Likewise, he
may
choose to remain in his present job rather than make a more drastic change entailing greater risks
he if
will
make
the job
The ment.
and discontinuity.
significant
title
improvements
work even
remains the same.
decision to stay put
is
may stem more from
It
an active reaffirmation,
If this is
in the character of the
not always based on a reaffirmed commitresignation, inertia, passive acquiescence or
controlled despair— a self-restriction in the context of severe external constraints.
This kind of surface
new
decline unless
stability
marks the beginning of
intervene
factors
him to form a more made in a transitional
period) and enable
The
choices
or drastic change in
life structure.
his job or occupation,
pursuits that modify
make
satisfactory life structure.
period usually lead to moderate
A man may
his
life.
A
choice
event that takes only a few days or weeks.
bedded within several years.
a process of
divorce, remarry, change
move,
a geographical
and enrich
The
work on
A
a
transition a
number
when
man must
new
avocational
often marked by an
event
is,
however, em-
is
the most conspicuous
many
other changes. In
de-structure his existing
of basic developmental tasks,
transitional period
start is
change that ordinarily extends over a span of
Thus, a divorce or a job change
event within a complex transition that contains
making the
a long-term
(perhaps in the next transitional
life
and restructure
comes to an end not when
a
pattern,
new
life.
a particular event
the tasks of questioning and exploring have lost their urgency,
when when a
man makes
tasks of
occurs or
a sequence
his crucial
building, living within
We
is
completed
in
one aspect of
life. It
ends
commitments and is ready to start on the and enhancing a new life structure.
did not begin this study with preformed hypotheses about de-
velopmental periods unfolding in an age-linked sequence.
We
were
as
Developmental Periods
The
surprised as everyone else by these discoveries.
may be summarized
to age
quent age
at
findings with regard
There
briefly as follows.
which each period begins. There
53
most
a single,
is
fre-
a range of variation, usu-
is
about two years above and below the average. Thus, the Age Thirty
ally
Transition most often starts at age 28, the range being 26 to 29.
The
next
Down, usually starts at 33— and never before 30 or after The four occupational groups in our study showed only minor differences in the age at which every period began and ended. More
period, Settling 34, in
our sample.
specific data
on age
be presented
will
on the successive
in the chapters
periods.
The developmental tasks are crucial to the evolution of the periods. The specific character of a period derives from the nature of its tasks. A period begins when its major tasks become predominant in a man's life. A period ends when its tasks lose their primacy and new tasks emerge to initiate a new period. The orderly progression of periods stems from the recurrent change in tasks. The most fundamental tasks of a stable period are to make firm choices, rebuild the life structure and enhance one's life within
it.
Those
of a transitional period are to question
new
the existing structure, to search for
and reappraise and world,
possibilities in self
and to modify the present structure enough so that a new one can be formed. Implicit in the concept of task well or poorly.
not
When
a task
how
difficult to evaluate
work on the developmental it
is
is
the idea that
rather specific
well
tasks
carried out it
is
usually
has been performed. Evaluation of
it
much more
is
may be
it
and concrete,
difficult.
In
some
cases
seems clear that the tasks of a period have been met very poorly or very
well,
but in most cases the picture
based on a few tasks
and processes
is
mixed.
The
assessment cannot be
important to understand the developmental
criteria. It is
in their full complexity,
and oversimplified evaluations
as to
how
and to avoid making premature
well the tasks have been handled.
We have made a small start, however, toward dealing with the problem much
of evaluation. Since the developmental tasks have so building, modifying
and rebuilding the
to define
and evaluate the
period, a
man
During a
ate) the current structure
one.
What
it
"satisfactoriness" of a structure.
transitional period,
and
to
he
move toward
a
to
own
Broadly speaking, a viable in society
life
and
do with
becomes important During a
some sense be
tries to
stable satis-
reappraise (evalu-
new and more
satisfactory
meanings does "satisfactory" have for him, and how
use this term for our
is
structure,
build a structure that will in
tries to
factory for him.
life
shall
we
purposes? structure
is
satisfactory to the extent that
suitable for the seli.
The
it
perspectives of both
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
54
and
society
self are
LIFE
S
structure
man
a
it,
and to receive
various roles
A
needed here.
works in the world. Within
out crucially important aspects of his
live
ture
may be
tory":
rewards the
though
man's
in the world. Often, a
On
it
man had hoped
and
for,
him
does not permit
is
structure
may be exhim to
the other hand, a struc-
dreams and values, and yet not structure
life
works pretty well in the world, though
it.
it
does not allow
if it
self.
suitable in terms of his inner
be workable
A
sufficient rewards.
and yet not internally suitable
ternally viable
viable to the extent that
is
able to adapt, to maintain his
is
is
"fairly satisfac-
does not bring
it
all
moderately suitable for the
to live out
the self,
some important wishes and
values.
Every self,
and
The
for society.
strengths are also sources of weakness
never
and
of a piece. It contains
all
and
structure provides diverse gains
life
for others
diversity, integration
by basic changes
and take
some mixture
man
him-
its
great
and
structure
always flawed in
It is
is
disorder, unity
some
and gaps which can be modified only
in the structure itself.
painful consequences, but they
A
their toll.
of order
and fragmentation.
respects. It contains contradictions
costs for the
elements that constitute
may
The
contradictions often have
also enrich the process of living
and
provide an intrinsic basis for change and development.
No and
its
matter
how
satisfactory a structure
is,
in
time
its
utility declines
flaws generate conflict that leads to modification or transformation
of the structure. It
seeds of
its
own
is
as
.Marx
transitional period.
The
said: every
The
destruction.
system contains within
itself
once-stable structure passes into a
the
new
seasons change. Developmental tasks are under-
taken anew, and the lessons of growth are gathered and stockpiled against
the
new
period coming.
A period
is
The
pattern of adult development continues.
defined in terms of
its
developmental
tasks. It
in terms of concrete events such as marriage or retirement.
gators have searched for significant events that for
lems in adult
life. It is
in terms of tasks
then use
this
more
it
investi-
as signposts
fruitful in generating
has contributed to the study of prob-
fruitful, I believe, to
and periods
not defined
Many
might serve
developmental periods. This search has not been
a developmental theory, though
is
conceive of development
in the evolution of life structure.
We
can
developmental perspective in understanding the significance
of particular events.
Our
lives are
punctuated by events such
as marriage, divorce, illness,
the birth or death of loved ones, unexpected trauma or good fortune,
advancement or
failure in
work, retirement, war, flourishing times and
We
use the term marker event to identify an oc-
"rock bottom'' times.
casion of this kind, which has a notable impact
upon
a person's
life.
Marker
Developmental Periods
55
events are usually considered in terms of the adaptation they require.
They change way.
The
man's
a
and he must cope with them
situation
life
further changes
in
some
and personality are
in his relationships, roles
then understood as part of his adaptation to the new situation.
we
Yet,
need to regard marker events from the viewpoint of devel-
also
opment. They can occur
and do not
at various ages
the start or end of a period. However, the age at is
important.
upon
partly
The
marker event for an individual depends
significance of a
place in the sequence of developmental periods.
its
Getting married, for example, ever his age and circumstances.
where
marker event
a
is
makes
It
in the evolution of the periods
his current
developmental
arating from parents
He
tasks.
and forming an
more independent and
man
occurs. If a
what-
marries at the
he
"adult," but
adult identity.
also feels
development
is
The
qualities
result, often,
he had consciously rejected and
is
is
a protective-caring-
fails
may
perpetuate the
that he retains the childish to attain a
adult identity. There are similar hazards for the
each partner
wants to be
hazard of marrying at this point
that the marital relationship
struggles with his parents.
He
unprepared for adult
and tends to seek a dependent relationship with
The
be highly colored
will
engaged in the process of sep-
is
initial
controlling figure other than a parent. in his
life,
a great difference, however, just
it
marry and the character of the marital relationship
life
man's
in a
the Early Adult Transition, say at age 18 or 19, the decision to
start of
by
in themselves cause
which an event occurs
woman
more genuinely
at this time,
and
implicated in the other's developmental struggles.
Likewise, a marital relationship that takes shape early in the period of Entering the
Adult World, say
at
age 23 or 24, will reflect the develop-
mental tasks of that time: to explore the
and
to
and
is
tries to
form a provisional
life structure.
possibilities of
The
the adult world
choice of a mate influences,
influenced by, the overall character of that structure.
One man
build a structure in which he can pursue his special dream or vision;
he marries a
woman who
journey toward
its
shares that
realization.
build a structure that
is
At some
justification, for
Another man betrays
more acceptable
inner sense, he marries a servatism.
dream and wants
later
woman who time he
her part in leading
his
to parents or
will value
to join
him on the
dream: seeking to is
"safer" in
and support
some
this con-
may blame her, with much or little him away from his dream. The mean-
ing and further vicissitudes of the marital relationship will be markedly different in the If
two
cases.
The
variations are endless.
the marriage occurs at the start of a period,
process
is
just getting
under way, the
ship will be intimately
when the developmental
early character of the marital relation-
bound up with the
struggles of entering a
new
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
56
period. In contrast, a marriage occurring toward the likely to
new
period and an indication that a In
many
cases,
effort or choice,
as war,
end of
be a culmination or outcome of the developmental the marker event
but
is
period is
is
is
emerging.
not the result of a man's voluntary
beyond
a result of circumstances
economic depression and the
a period
efforts of that
his control (such
death of others). His cur-
illness or
rent developmental period does not influence the timing of this event,
but
it
does shape his adaptation to
sequent
it
and the influence
it
has on his sub-
life.
Preview of the Periods in Adult Development The sequence to 22),
which
of periods begins with the Early Adult Transition (age 17 links adolescence
and
early adulthood. It
about 22 to 28; the primary task of life structure.
This structure
is
followed by a
is
World, which
structure-building period, Entering the Adult
this period
is
to create a
lasts
from
first
adult
modified in the Age Thirty Transition.
Down
period (33 to 40), a man builds a second structure and reaches the culmination of early adulthood. The Mid-life Tran-
During the Settling
from about 40 to 45, links early and middle adulthood. It is followed by a more stable period, during the middle and late forties, when sition,
man builds a first life structure for middle adulthood. The sequence of periods is pictured on page 57. In later chapters each period will be explored in detail. Here we shall briefly preview the
a
periods and give an initial picture of their tasks and developmental se-
quence.
The Early Adult Transition: Moving from Pre- to Early Adulthood The two
Early Adult Transition begins at age 17 and ends at 22, give or take years. Its
adulthood.
twin tasks are to terminate pre-adulthood and to begin early
The
first
task
is
to start
to question the nature of that world
moving out
of the pre-adult world:
and one's place
in
it;
to
modify or
terminate existing relationships with important persons, groups and tutions; to reappraise
and modify the
of separation, ending
and transformation must be made
an entire season of
The second to explore
its
self that
formed
in
it.
as
insti-
Various kinds
one completes
life.
task
is
to
make
possibilities, to
a preliminary step into the adult world:
imagine oneself
consolidate an initial adult identity, to
as a participant in
make and
test
it,
to
some preliminary
Developmental Periods
DEVELOPMENTAL PERIODS IN EARLY AND MIDDLE ADULTHOOD
57
(Late Adulthood)
65
LATE ADULT TRANSITION Culmination of
Middle Adulthood
55
Age 50 Transition Middle Adulthood
5° Entering
Middle Adulthood 45
MID-LIFE TRANSITION
40Settling
Down
33
Age 30
Transition
Early
28Entering the Adult
Adulthood
World
EARLY ADULT TRANSITION *7
(Childhood and Adolescence)
choices for adult living. In this period a young
man
is
on the boundary
between adolescence and adulthood. The transition ends when he gets
beyond the boundary and begins to create
The
First
a life within the adult world.
Adult Life Structure: Entering the Adult World
This period extends from about 22 to 28.
Its chief task is
provisional structure that provides a workable link self
and the adult
of his
life;
society.
no longer
novice adult with a
A
young man must
home
own.
between the valued
shift the center of gravity
a child in his family of origin,
base of his
to fashion a
he must become a
He makes and
tests a variety
of initial choices regarding occupation, love relationships (usually includ-
ing marriage and family), peer relationships, values and
The young man
life style.
has two primary yet antithetical tasks: (a)
He
needs
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
58
to explore the possibilities for adult living: to keep his options open, avoid
commitments and maximize the alternatives. This task is reflected sense of adventure and wonderment, a wish to seek out all the trea-
strong in a
new world he
sures of the
create a stable
my
thing of
and
life
Each
life."
(b)
entering,
is
structure:
become more
task has sources
The
contrasting task
and supports
to
is
and "make some-
responsible
in the external
world
in the self.
Finding a balance between these tasks first
predominates,
life
is
not an easy matter.
the
If
has an extremely transient, rootless quality.
the second predominates, there
is
the danger of committing oneself pre-
maturely to a structure, without sufficient exploration of alternatives. is
If
It
an exciting yet often confusing and painful process to explore the new
adult world and, at the
There
same time,
to try building a stable life within
usually moderate or great discontinuity
is
man grew up and
world in which a
it.
between the pre-adult
the adult world in which he forms his
structure.
first life
The Age
Thirty Transition: Changing the First Life Structure
This transition, which extends from roughly 28 to
work on the
tunity to
and to create the
flaws
and limitations of the
basis for a
more
33,
provides an opporadult
life
structure,
satisfactory structure with
which to
first
complete the era of early adulthood. At about 28 the provisional quality of the twenties real."
A
ending and
is
voice within the self says: "If
are things in
is
differ in
a start, for
soon
at the beginning.
Some men have
overt disruption or sense of
for
stressful
man
to
change
my
more
it
will
be too
smooth
They modify
crisis.
want
I
to
late." life
structure
Age Thirty Transition than
a rather
"for
life— if there
transition,
their lives
in
it
was
without certain
but they build directly upon the past and do not make funda-
mental changes.
But
am
the kinds of changes they make, but the
always different at the end of the
respects,
I
serious,
want to modify or exclude, or things missing
it I
add— I must now make
Men
becoming more
life is
It
a time of reform, not revolution.
is
most men, our study
form, the age thirty
crisis.
reveals,
A
this
transition
developmental
crisis
takes a
occurs
more
when
a
has great difficulty with the developmental tasks of a period; he finds
his present life structure intolerable, yet
one. In a severe
crisis
chaos and dissolution, the crisis is
very
These
common
first
seems unable to form a better
he experiences a threat to loss of
hope
life itself,
for the future.
A
the danger of
moderate or severe
during this period.
three periods— the Early Adult Transition, Entering the
Developmental Periods
Adult World and the Age Thirty Transition— generally years,
last
59
about fifteen
until 32 or 33. Together, they constitute the
from age 17 or 18
preparatory, "novice" phase of early adulthood.
The a If
one of the
is
man may make
crucial steps in adult
start of
development. At
may
important new choices, or he
reaffirm old choices.
they provide the basis for a relatively satisfactory
the choices are poorly
will
pay a heavy price in
contradictions and
must
The Second Adult The second sition
and
life
made and
time be changed.
in
Down
Life Structure: Settling
end of the Age Thirty Tran-
structure takes shape at the
about age 40. This structure
persists until
life structure.
new structure seriously flawed, he next period. Even the best structure has its the the
A man
the culmination of early adulthood.
is
the vehicle for
seeks to invest himself in the
major components of the structure (work, family, friendships,
community— whatever aspirations
and
most
is
making
man
become
term "making
it"
He
has two major tasks: (a)
more
a valued
member
firmly,
broadly to include
tries to establish
develop competence in
He
of a valued world, (b)
striving to advance, to progress
it:
leisure,
to realize his youthful
,
goals.
In this period a
a chosen craft,
him ) and
central to
a niche in society: to anchor his life
at
the
time
this
these choices are congruent with his dreams, talents and external pos-
sibilities,
If
from the end of the Age Thirty Transition to the
shift
next period
on
all efforts
a timetable.
I
works
use the
to build a better life for
oneself and to be affirmed by the tribe.
Until the early
He
the young
thirties,
has been forming an adult
life
man
has been a "novice" adult.
and working toward
place in adult society. His task in the Settling a full-fledged adult within his a direction in Sartre has start or
it
which to
termed
may
period.
By
strive, a
The
world.
He
Down
more
period
to
become
sense of the future, a "project" as Jean-Paul
enterprise
of the ladder
is
established
defines a personal enterprise,
may be
is
from the
precisely defined
take shape only gradually over the course of
The imagery It reflects
it.
own
a
central to the Settling
th.'s
Down
period.
enterprise.
the interest in advancement and affirmation so central to this "ladder"
in social rank,
we
refer to all
dimensions of advancement— increases
income, power, fame,
creativity, quality of family life, social
contribution— as these are important for the
man and
ladder has both objective and subjective aspects: of the external social world, but
own meanings and
strivings.
it is
it
his world.
reflects
the
The
realities
defined by the person in terms of his
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
60
At the and
start of this period, a
man
entering a world in which he
is
on the bottom rung of
is
a junior
is
his ladder
member. His aims
are to
advance in the enterprise, to climb the ladder and become a senior
mem-
ber in that world. His sense of well-being during this period depends
on
strongly
his
own and
others' evaluation of his progress
toward these
goals.
At the end there
is
of the Settling
a distinctive phase that
major developmental tasks of Settling
Down
Down we
this
Becoming One's
Own Man. The
phase are to accomplish the goals of the
become
enterprise, to
speak more strongly with one's
from about age 36 to 40,
period,
call
own
a senior
member
in one's world, to
and to have
voice,
measure
a greater
of authority.
This
is
a fateful
time in a man's
life.
Attaining seniority and approacha
man
(not just a person, but a male adult). Although his progress brings
new
ing the top rung of his ladder are signs to
rewards, It
it
burden of greater
also carries the
means that he must
an internal figure
who
give is
him
that he
becoming
is
responsibilities
up even more of the
little
and
pressures.
boy within himself—
never completely outgrown, and certainly not in
early adulthood.
The
Mid-life Transition:
The
late thirties
Moving from
mark the culmination
Early to Middle Adulthood
of early adulthood.
The
Mid-life
Transition, which lasts from roughly age 40 to 45, provides a bridge from early to middle adulthood. It brings a new set of developmental tasks.
The ask:
to
my
truly
structure again
life
"What have
I
comes into question.
done with
my
life?
wife, children, friends, work,
want
for myself
and others?"
actual desires, values,, talents
What
do
It
becomes important
I really
community— and
A man
get from
self?
yearns for a
What
life in
to
and give is
which
it
I
his
and aspirations can be expressed.
Some men do very little questioning or searching during the Mid-life Transition. They are apparently untroubled by difficult questions regarding the meaning, value and direction of their lives. Other men realize that the character of their one.
They
are in a
great majority of
lives is
changing, but the process
manageable
men
this
is
transition,
one without
crisis.
They question
We
crisis.
But
is
a time of
nearly every aspect of their lives
that they cannot go on as before.
new path
not a painful for the
a period of great struggle within the self
with the external world. Their Mid-life Transition or severe
is
They
will
and
moderate
and
feel
need several years to form a
or to modify the old one.
need developmental transitions
in
adulthood partly because no
Developmental Periods
life
structure can permit the living out of
a life structure
must make choices and
I
involves the rejection of a structure, its
I
try over a
many
a transition
self.
To
Every choice
create
make
I
other possibilities. Committing myself to
span of time to enhance
potential, to bear the responsibilities
During
aspects of the
all
set priorities.
61
period—and
and
my
life
within
to realize
it,
tolerate the costs
especially in the Mid-life
entails.
it
Transition— the
neglected parts of the self more urgently seek expression and stimulate
the modification of the existing structure.
Entering Middle Adulthood: Building a
New
Life Structure
The tasks of the Mid-life Transition must be given up by about age 45. A man has had his allotted time for reappraising, exploring, testing choices and creating the basis for a new life. The opportunity to question and search
point
present throughout middle adulthood and beyond, but at this
is
new
The end the next, It
life
he must make
his choices
and begin
structure.
of the Mid-life Transition, like
marked by
is
may be
Now
tasks predominate.
forming a new
a series of changes rather
evident only as a
man
from one period to
all shifts
than one dramatic event.
looks back a few years later that he was
committing himself to the choices around which a new
in fact
life struc-
ture took shape.
In
some
change
lives
the shift
death of a loved one, a spicuous change: closely,
signaled by a crucial marker
is
event— a
drastic
in job or occupation, a divorce or love affair, a serious illness, the
however,
life at
we
siderable difference.
move
to a
new
45 seems to be
just as
discover seemingly
A man may
still
locale. it
Other was
show no conIf we look more
lives
at 39.
minor changes that make
a con-
be married to the same woman, but
the character of his familial relationships has changed appreciably for better or worse.
marking time
Or
the nature of his work
until retirement; his
miliating; or seemingly small changes in his
work
life
more
satisfying
and
life
has altered: he
is
quietly
work has become oppressive and hu-
creative.
A
mode man's
of life
work have made structure,
his
we have
found, necessarily changes in certain crucial respects during the course of his Mid-life Transition.
The its
life
structure that emerges in the middle forties varies greatly in
satisfactoriness, that
the world.
is,
its
Some men have
or early adulthood,
suitability for the self
and
its
workability in
suffered such irreparable defeats in childhood
and have been so
little
able to
their Mid-life Transition, that they lack the inner
creating a minimally adequate structure.
They
work on the
tasks of
and outer resources
for
face a middle adulthood
62
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
and
of constriction
decline.
Other
men form
a life structure that
ably viable in the world but poorly connected to the
do
their bit for themselves
excitement and meaning. that will have
its
own
middle adulthood
is
and
Still
is
reason-
Although they
self.
others, their lives are lacking in inner
other
men have and
special satisfactions
middle adulthood
started a
fulfillments.
For these men,
often the fullest and most creative season in the
life
They are less tyrannized by the ambitions, passions and illusions of youth. They can be more deeply attached to others and yet more separate, more centered in the self. For them, the season passes in its best and most cycle.
satisfying
rhythm.
The Subsequent By
Periods in Middle Adulthood
his late forties, a
adulthood.
beyond
Where
man
has formed an
initial life structure for
does he go from here? Although
this age, there
is
we
middle
did not study
men
evidence that the sequence of stable and tran-
The developmental
sitional periods continues over the entire life cycle.
process of growth, decline and change continues. Here
is
a tentative view
of the subsequent periods in middle adulthood.
There 50 to 55.
an Age Fifty Transition, which normally
is
The
those of the
Age Thirty Transition
work further on the life
structure
who changed
lasts
from about age
functions of this period in middle adulthood are similar to
formed too
in early adulthood. In
tasks of the Mid-life Transition in. the mid-forties. It
little in
our opinion,
middle adulthood without having
Age
it is
at least a
a
man
a time of crisis for
their Mid-life Transition
satisfactory life structure. In
Mid-life Transition or the
may be
it,
can
and can modify the
and then
built
men
an un-
not possible to get through
moderate
crisis in
either the
Fifty Transition.
From
roughly age 55 to 60, a stable period is devoted to building a second middle adult structure, which provides a vehicle for completing
middle adulthood. For enrich their
This period
lives, is
are able to rejuvenate their selves fifties
analogous to Settling
from about 60 to
hood and
men who
the decade of the
65, the Late
Down
in early adulthood. Finally,
Adult Transition terminates middle adult-
creates a basis for starting late adulthood.
transition are to conclude the efforts of
oneself for the era to come.
and
can be a time of great fulfillment.
It is
The
tasks of this
middle adulthood and to prepare
a period of significant
development and
represents a major turning point in the life cycle.
In every cross-era transition a
new
is born and takes its initial on the future, but they never Each new period makes its essential contribution to
season
shape. These transitions have a great effect tell
the whole story.
Developmental Periods the
life
course. In every period
we
suffer because of the
63
undone develop-
mental work of previous periods— for ultimately these chickens do come
home
to roost— but
we
also
opmental work and to create a
have an opportunity to do further devellife
more
suitable to the self.
Four
3
Men
As immediately observed and experienced, every and
orderly
similarities. lives are
The
variegated.
Yet the basic
differences are far
thesis of this
if
is
more marked than the
that even the
most disparate
governed by the same underlying order— a sequence of eras and
developmental periods. This order
must be
book
idiosyncratic, dis-
life is
from
inferred
is
often not immediately evident. It
a truly staggering array of biographical data.
our developmental theory of adulthood has any validity— and
convinced that
it
does— it
will enable us to find
And
individual life course.
do
will
it
this
I
But
am
shape and meaning in any
without reducing the raw ma-
terial—the wonderfully various details of each single human's existence— to a simple set of categories or prescriptions for normality.
This study its
is
biographical in
subject matter.
it is
We
its
theoretical approach,
are concerned above
Thus
lived over the years.
it is
all
appropriate that
of actual biographies in reporting our findings.
we
the kind of material from which
method and
its
with the individual
The
life as
we should make
use
biographies illustrate
derived our ideas and the extraor-
dinary applicability of these ideas over a wide range of personalities and social conditions. In passing,
But the raphies
lives of fall
four
men
we
will
somewhere between
will refer to
be dealt with
many in
a long vignette
some
and
In these biographies, as in the book generally,
the adult portion of the
life
course.
internal psychological processes, social,
world, to
evolving
life.
show how
We certainly
all
We
detail.
Their biog-
a short book.
we
focus primarily on
enough about
a man's
his external circumstances
and
these are interwoven in the fabric of his
do not claim that the biographical sketches are
complete portraits of our subjects. In for
try to say
and about
of our forty subjects.
more extended biographies and
for
fact,
they point to the need both
methods of writing
brief biographies
that will be useful in studying particular facets of adult development.
The
four
men
represent each of the four occupational
utives, workers, biologists size,
even though
this
and novelists— in our study.
may sound
contradictory, that
I
groups— exec-
want
to
we do not
empharegard
Men
65
occupations in any specific sense.
No
Four
them
as "representative" of their
one man can even those
men had
exemplify the abundant variety in the
fully
who
share the
same kind of work with him. Each
"special" in certain respects, but then every
is
own form
his
lives of others,
of these four
one of the
men
forty
of specialness.
men would be reported in detail here, we used man had to be over 42 at the time of interviewing,
In deciding which four several criteria. First, a
so that his reported life
the study. Second,
would extend
we wanted
four
across
most of the span covered by
men who had been
interviewed by four
members active on the project (some staff members had moved elsewhere). These two criteria narrowed the pool to about a dozen men. In selecting four men from this poolof our research
different
team currently
given the requirement of one executive, one worker, one biologist and one
novelist— we tried to maximize the diversity of the group in terms of social
We
man
origins
and
he was
interesting or dull, neurotic or well-adjusted, a success or a failure,
life
course.
talkative or reticent.
same degree
The
The men
as did the
four
did not choose one
sample
varied in these respects to just about the
as a
whole.
men who emerged from
this selection process are
from one another. Considering them
different
cult to see
any
common
separately,
developmental pattern in their
differed widely in personality, in current state of stances,
to
and
you now,
Our
first
study,
is
total of
in the
over another because
sequence of events in their
it is
life histories.
mind and lives.
remarkably at first diffi-
We
They
external circum-
introduce
them
in the order of their appearance.
man a
is Jim Tracy (the name, like those of all the others in our pseudonym), a business executive. He was interviewed for a
about 12 hours by Edward Klein during the
fall
of 1968
and
the spring of 1969, with a follow-up interview in 1971. In 1969 Tracy was 44, a vice president
and general manager of the Firearms Division of the
Ajax Corporation, with authority over several thousand employees in Hartford and two Midwestern plants.
A
strong, trim
man
with a
full
head of salt-and-pepper hair cut
Tracy presented himself to the interviewer
much
in the world,
and was proud of
it.
man who had
as a
For most of
extremely active a navy officer
man who
was strongly work-oriented, an
could look back with satisfaction on his career as
and then an executive. Yet
Tracy was going through career
He
he sustained men, the model
his life,
a central self-image: Jim Tracy the responsible leader of
hero in the military-industrial world.
close,
achieved
a major,
seemed to have peaked.
A
and
at the
time of the interviews
difficult, reappraisal.
few years
earlier
His business
he had ended a long but
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
66
unhappy
marriage; his second marriage, after a very
first
happy beginning,
was looking problematical. In subsequent chapters
we
will
examine Tracy's whole
showing how the developmental forces— the sequence of helped to shape
it.
Chapter 7
Chapter
step by step,
and periods-
him through the first three periods his Age Thirty Transition.
will take
of early adulthood, until age 34
life
eras
and the end of
Down period, from age 34 on Tracy's Mid-life Transition and
11 will cover his life in the Settling
to 41, while Chapter 19 concentrates
middle adulthood— the troubled time he was
his entry into
living
through
when we talked with him. William Paulsen was 44 and an hourly worker
at
United Electronics
when Braxton McKee interviewed him in 1969. McKee spent about eight hours with him in that year, plus a separate interview with Paulsen's wife, Ruth. Two years later McKee and Paulsen met again for a single interview, and they talked
Born and forties
briefly a
few years after that.
raised in a working-class family in Brooklyn, Paulsen in his
was a lean, wiry man, quick in
careful in his
his
movements, neat
manner. His hair was crew-cut and
mobile and expressive.
He
often smiled wryly,
in his dress,
his face deeply lined, reflecting,
McKee's
in
opinion, a certain cockiness. But this was belied by his eyes, which were sad,
and by the
struck
McKee
Paulsen's
as
stories
he told about
his life.
These
stories
frequently
an attempt to impress the other person and to bolster
somewhat shaky
self-esteem.
One theme
strongly. In order to feel better about himself
stood out particularly
he consistently deluded
himself about the real nature of a given situation and his place in
and again throughout
his adult life
it.
Again
he had taken on more than he could
manage. In the preceding five years Paulsen had changed jobs several times,
Each new job had kindled his hopes of being promoted, at last, into middle management. Now, at 43 and 44, he had begun to confront his illusions and to acknowledge his limitations for what they were. He was reconciling himself to the prospect of a job that offered security and modest income, but little in the way of satisfaction and room for advancement. It seemed possible that Paulsen would not attain even this limited goal. Yet it was also clear, from the study of his entire biography, that certain flaws and failures at specific developmental stages— difficulties having their sources in him and in his external circumstances— had contributed to his present plight. Contending with his plight was again a matter of understanding and dealing with going through a
series of failures
developmental problems.
and
fresh starts.
Men
Four
we
In Chapter 8
examine Paulsen's
will
32— the
detail to age
life in
end of the Age Thirty Transition and the novice phase Chapter 18 will complete his history, to the late forties.
67
of early adulthood.
Writing has been a central dream for Paul Namson, yet one that regularly
and
into conflict with other occupational choices
fell
this sense
respects
he was
like
A
he was not.
lionaire in his thirties, full of satisfactions
most
novelists in our sample.
in
some other
successful financier in his twenties, actually a mil-
Namson had
a complex, exciting
and troubling
life,
and disappointments.
Namson had
Interviewed by Charlotte Darrow in 1969,
been out of the family brokerage firm for his
demands. In
social
But
dream of being
six years,
and was going through
a novelist
then, at 43,
was trying to a mid-life
realize
crisis.
In
modest critical success as a novelist, he was having difficulty moving forward. A follow-up interview, fifteen months later, when he was spite of his
44,
found him resolving the divisions of
ments
as a writer,
husband and
father.
his life
and forming new commit-
His wife, Sarah, was also interviewed
at this time.
Namson was an
intense, gentle
manner and evident
tive
ence
in trying to analyze feelings
to speak analytically first
40
years,
tall
and
when he
and motives
slight,
with an introspec-
described his
Settling
own
in fictional terms,
life.
with the main emphasis on the
(the Age Thirty Transition, Man), in Chapter 12. His life
Our
man,
intelligence. Perhaps because of his
Down
in the forties will
We shall last
tell
of
effective teacher
interviewed him, he was just turning 44.
I
He
man
also talked with his wife,
Ann.
when he was
a sense of strength, controlled energy
and blunt. Barnes had the poise and
for personal privacy,
ting his aristocratic trees or
farmer.
a
I first
eagerness to get things done. His speech could be pedantic, but plain
as
When
and administrator.
with clean-cut features and the build of an
manner conveyed
athlete. His
Columbia
was known
Follow-up interviews took place when he was 46, and again 50. The analysis of his life was done by Maria Levinson. Barnes was a calm
Own
be described in Chapter 18.
fourth man, John Barnes, was a professor of biology at
man, an
Namson's
12 years of that span
and Becoming One's
University and had an international reputation. forceful, articulate
experi-
he tended
and the
elitist
it
pride, the self-control
and
was also
and care
attitude of social responsibility befit-
Yankee background. One could imagine him cutting New England
doing carpentry with the heavy deliberation of a
At
his test
he had more
when engaged
difficulty in dealing
in rational analysis of concrete issues,
with emotion and personal relationships.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
68
Yet, during a severe mid-life
crisis,
he conveyed
his personal experience
with great poignancy and richness.
At the time in his
No
life,
of our
first
interview, Barnes
in spite of his considerable
had reached a
serious impasse
achievements and public success.
longer a 'promising young man," he was faced with the need to accept
a wholly
new
pational role
He hoped
vision of himself.
to which he could devote the
was profoundly uncertain about what
The riage
signposts that
and family,
mark
scientific
off
this
to discover a significant occurest of his
working
life.
But he
might be.
the stages of John Barnes's life— first mar-
achievements, divorce and remarriage, promo-
upward through the academic hierarchy— may be viewed as purely exterior phenomena. But their meaning and timing are enormously sigtions
nificant
and can be seen to characterize a deeper pattern. In Chapter 17
we
examine
will
most
his life in
some
dramatic portion, the period
In the following chapters
we
detail,
we
paying particular attention to
call
its
the Mid-life Transition.
shall traverse the
sequence of developmental
periods. First, the Early Adult Transition, Entering the Adult
World and
the Age Thirty Transition, which comprise the novice phase of early adulthood (Chapters 5 to 8). Second, the period of Settling Down and Becdming One's Own Man, in which a man reaches the culmination of early
adulthood (Chapters 9 to 12). Finally, the Mid-life Transition and Entering Middle Adulthood, when he makes the shift from youth to middle age (Chapters 13 to 19).
The Novice Phase
JJ
of Early Adulthood
The Novice
3
The
Phase:
Early Adult Transition, Entering the Adult World
and the Age Thirty Transition The
process of entering into adulthood
has usually been imagined.
It
begins at
more lengthy and complex than around age 17 and continues until end). A young man needs about is
33 (plus or minus two years at either fifteen years to emerge from adolescence, find his place in adult society
and commit himself adulthood.
It is
to a
more
not, even in
its
stable
This time
life.
is
an
intrinsic part of
most chaotic or immature form,
adolescence." Unresolved adolescent problems
may make
it
a "delayed
more
difficult,
but the primary developmental tasks to be met are those of adulthood.
So important
is
developmental sequence that
this
name: the novice phase.
we have
given
it
a
composed of three distinct periods: the Early Adult Transition, Entering the Adult World, and the Age Thirty Transition. Each of these periods has its own tasks. Together they form a special
It is
single phase that serves a crucial developmental function: the process of
entry into adulthood;
The
novice phase begins with the Early Adult Transition (roughly age
17 to 22).
and
A
young man
early adulthood.
He
now on
is
is
the boundary between pre-adulthood
creating a basis for adult life without being fully
The second period, Entering the Adult World, lasts from about 22 to 28. His tasks now are to explore the possibilities of this world, to test some initial choices, and to build a first, provisional life structure. The within
it.
third period, the
ing the
initial
The Age is
Transition, provides an opportunity for revis-
and moving toward
something
needed
if
appreciably change?
is
second structure.
missing or wrong in one's
the future
questions deal with the
life
What
is
to
be worthwhile.
one has created: is
missing from
Thirty Transition the man's orientation
What
it? is
life
and that some
Initiajly
the main
must I give up or Toward the end of the Age more toward the futureparts
and making new choices or strengthening
new life direction commitment to choices already made. As the Age Thirty Transition ends
finding a
a
Thirty Transition frequently begins with a vague uneasiness,
a feeling that
change
Age Thirty
structure
(at
his
about 33), the preparatory phase
THE SEASONS OF A
72
must
MAN
himself to a
new
life
Down, but
it
now
is
structure through
The new
tion of early adulthood. Settling
LIFE
A man
be terminated.
also
S
a full-fledged adult, committing
which he
structure
will reach the culmina-
built in the next period,
is
has to be seen as the outcome and chief product of
the novice phase. This structure provides a groundwork for the effort to attain his youthful aspirations during the thirties.
The
novice phase thus extends from the onset of the Early Adult
Transition to the conclusion of the
sample
as a
completion years,
tion
32.7.
The
duration
average
with a range of 13 to
among
On
For our
Transition.
17.4, the average age of
is
the novice phase
of
There was again
18.
the occupational groups.
ended
Age Thirty
whole, the average age of onset
15.3
Age Thirty
Transi-
by the executives
at 32.4,
the average, the
at age 32.1 for the workers, followed
is
modest variation
a
the novelists at 32.8 and the biologists, 33.6.
The
primary, overriding task of the novice phase
oneself in the adult world
and to create a
in the
world and suitable for the
this in
the early twenties
first
self.
when he forms an
make changes, the Age Thirty a niche in
him an opportunity
make
to
a place for
be viable
often assumes he
initial
and
is
structure that will
A man
structure inevitably has serious flaws
Transition gives
life
is
doing
adult structure. But the
limitations.
The Age
to reconsider the early choices
Thirty
and
to
At the end of Transition a man must begin the second structure and form the world, especially with regard to occupation and marriagelarge or small, in his situation
and
his self.
family. This structure ordinarily remains stable for the rest of the thirties,
although important changes occur within late thirties to
modify a faulty Settling
a painful, long-term process, as
Paul Namson.
The
we
it.
Down
Some men attempt structure,
but
this
in their is
always
Jim Tracy and the end of the novice
shall see in the cases of
structure that starts to
emerge
at
phase has tremendous consequences for future living and development.
With
this
overview of the novice phase as a whole,
let's
now
look at
its
component periods the Early Adult Transition, Entering the Adult World and the Age Thirty Transition. Each period has its own specific tasks, course and outcome, as well as features common to the entire novice three
:
phase.
The Early Adult The
Transition
Early Adult Transition
is
a developmental bridge
pre-adulthood and early adulthood. taining
An
early adult self
between the is
eras of
taking shape, con-
and to some extent transforming the child and adolescent
selves.
The Novice Phase
The boy-man
on the boundary between the childhood
is
era,
centered in the family of origin, and the early adult era with sibilities, roles
He
and
very
is still
choices.
life
much
He
is
half in
he
in adolescence, yet
its
73
which was
new
respon-
and half out of both worlds. is
also stretching
toward the
enticing— and forbidding— adult world ahead. In our sample, the Early Adult Transition typically began at age 17 or 18, lasted five years,
and ended
at 22 or 23. In
than sixteen or later than eighteen, and
more than seven
years.
no
case did
never lasted
it
less
start earlier
than four or
This period started at roughly the same age in
four occupational groups. elists, 5.0
it
On
the average,
years for the biologists,
and
it
all
lasted 5.2 years for the nov-
4.7 years for the workers
and execu-
tives.
The
One
Early Adult Transition presents two major tasks.
task
is
to
and Jeave the pre-adult world. A young man has to question the nature of that world and his place in it. It is necessary to modify existing relationships with important persons and institutions, and to modify the self that formed in pre-adulthood. Numerterminate the adolescent
life
structure
ous separations, losses and transformations are required. to
is
ties,
make
The second
a preliminary step into the adult world: to explore
to imagine oneself as a participant in
tive choices before fully entering
it.
The
it,
to
first
make and
test
task
its possibili-
some
tenta-
task involves a process of
termination, the second a process of initiation.
Both are
essential in a
transitional period.
•
leaving the pre-adult world.
A
major component of
this task
is
to
The process of separation proceeds along many lines. Its external aspects may involve moving out of the familial home, becoming financially less dependent, entering new roles and
separate from the family of origin.
living arrangements in
internal aspects
which one
is
more autonomous and
parents, greater psychological distance tional
A
responsible. Its
involve an increasing differentiation between self and
from the family, and reduced emo-
dependency on parental support and authority. man's family circumstances may
extreme, a young person early adolescence,
may
differ
widely in the teens. At one
leave the parental
home
in
childhood or
through death or abandonment, running away, going to
reformatory or private school. His
new
life
setting
may
provide a quasi-
home, where he functions in part as a child in relation to parent surrogates, so that he has the opportunity to wait until the start of his Early Adult Transition to work on the tasks of terminating his pre-adult life. Otherwise, this boy may be forced prematurely (say at age 12 or 14) to give up his status as child and his relationships to parents. This is very early to do the developmental work of the Early Adult Transition. Having separated
far
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
74
S
LIFE
too early in an external sense, he remains internally tied to the family as
an adult.
He may become
whose yearnings
a pseudo-adult
for parental
caring and grief for the lost family, continue to interfere with the emergence of a valued adult
On
self.
the other hand, a person
may continue living in Under these external
until the early twenties or later.
may
home
the parental
circumstances, he
be able to work
at the developmental tasks of the Early Adult by becoming internally more differentiated from parents and Transition still
externally
more
residence.
The
more genuinely
The
forty
self-sufficient in
crucial thing as
men
an adult in
is
ways other than those related to place of
to separate
enough
form a
to
basis for living
in the next period.
our sample differed widely in their relationships with
parents during the novice phase. to their parents, personally
Only seven men (18 percent) stayed
and geographically,
in the twenties.
close
This group
contained three workers, three executives and a biologist. At the other extreme, eight
men
(20 percent) had a major conflict with their parents-
most often with the father— that went on cases permanently. Six of these
men were
for several years novelists,
and
in a
few
two were workers.
Between these extremes, there were twenty-five men (62 percent) who, without bitter conflict, and in some cases to avoid conflict, moved a considerable distance geographically or socially from the parental world. Some of these
"made
men
retained close ties with parents and built a
life
structure that
sense" to the parents. For most of them, however, the
ents eroded steadily during their twenties.
The
ties
to par-
erosion had a
strong
emotional aspect— an increasing indifference or alienation. But the total erosion process was psychosocial: the his parents
found
alien, mystifying
who
the two groups, those
a world that
we combine and those who
their ken. If
experienced "major conflict"
"moved away," we have 82 percent
The
young man was entering
and beyond
of the total sample!
process of separation from parents continues over the entire
life
more accurate to speak not of course. separation but of changes in the degree and kind of attachment in various key periods. During the first two or three years of life, the child establishes the distinction between self and non-self. This brings about an initial It is
never completed.
It is
thus
separation from the mother, though the attachment remains very strong
and she provides an external centering for his life. At age five or six, with the shift from early to middle childhood, the bounds of the child's life expand beyond the household to include new relationships and
An
adolescent's world
is
more complex, but
it is still
institutions.
primarily a pre-adult
world, centered in the family and in peer groups. Adults figure as authorities,
teachers, helpers
and enemies but not
enter their world but he
is
not of
it.
as peers.
The boy may
at times
The Novice Phase
75
During the Early Adult Transition, he has to separate from the family in a
new way. He must remove
the family from the center of his
new home
begin a process of change that will lead to a
young adult
in
and
an adult world. This does not mean, of course, that the
A
ambivalent attachment to family has ended. brother or
life
base for living as a
sister,
throughout the
life
course. It
person is
is
a son or daughter,
only the character of the
relationship that changes.
The
process of separation during the Early Adult Transition involves
more than the family
of origin.
A
young man must modify or give up
tionships with other important persons
nents of the
self,
rela-
and groups, with pre-adult compo-
with adolescence as an age grade in society— with the
entire pre-adult world. All terminations bring a sense of loss, a grief for
that which
must be given up,
a fear that one's future life as a
whole
will
not provide satisfactions equal to those of the past— as well as hope and anticipation of a future brighter than the past. In the Early Adult Transi-
one must
tion
up
start to give
certain aspects of the pre-adult self
world while internalizing other aspects
as a
groundwork
and
for adult develop-
ment.
•
The second major
initiating early adulthood.
Adult Transition
coming
is
to
form a
fully a part of
it.
As
basis for living in the adult
this period begins, a
He
world before be-
young man's knowledge,
values and aspirations for a particular kind of adult
ous and colored by private fantasies.
life
are rather ambigu-
needs to obtain further training
and learn more about himself and the world. Gradually he earlier fantasies
ing.
As the
goals
and hopes into more
transition ends
and gain
a higher
he
articulates his
clearly defined options for adult liv-
make
will
measure of
of the Early
task
firmer choices, define
self-definition as
more
specific
an adult.
Most of the men in our sample had experience in the armed forces in World War II or the Korean War, which had a formative effect on the separation from pre-adulthood and the entry into early adulthood. During their Early
Adult Transitions, 26
two spent
this period entirely in
men
(65 percent) were in military service:
the military, five divided
it
between
mili-
and work, and nineteen between military and college. College is another institutional setting in which many young men begin the separation from family and do the developmental work of the Early
tary
Adult Transition. Twenty-eight of our
men
lege, including all ten biologists as well as tives.
Two
of the workers
(70 percent) completed
col-
nine novelists and nine execu-
had some college experience. The impact of and redirection of the young man's
college often resulted in an expansion
Those from more modest backgrounds often raised their sights toward higher-status business and professional careers. And many from
outlook.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
76
more
and professional
affluent business
establishment toward occupations and fulfilling or socially valuable.
lawyer, was
amazed
nature and animal
One
moved away from the styles they considered more
families life
of our biologists, the son of a corporation
to discover in college that his long-standing interest in
could be transformed into the occupation of biolo-
life
gist—and could free him from the destiny of becoming a lawyer.
Between the
military, college
homes
of their parental
noted that seventeen the
home
and other changes, most men moved out Adult Transition. Still, it should be
in the Early
men
(42 percent)
made
their primary residence in
of parents or close relatives during a considerable part of the
Early Adult Transition. This was true of seven workers and six executives
(most of class
whom
were of working-class origins). Young
population, but they also maintain direct
•
men
in the
working
enter the labor force sooner than the more affluent and educated
with their families longer.
ties
CONTINUITY AND DISCONTINUITY IN THE SHIFT FROM PRE-ADULTHOOD
to early adulthood. There nuity of the
life
are
wide differences in the degree of conti-
course as one moves from the pre-adult to the early adult
world. In a relatively stable, undifferentiated society a young man's choices are highly constrained. His adult roles
and circumstances are prefigured by
his pre-adult world. In a technologically advanced, fragmented and chang-
ing society such as the United States, he has the advantages and the bur-
More options are available in his environment. He own way rather than to follow literally in his
dens of greater choice. is
encouraged to seek his
As a
father's footsteps.
important respects from his pre-adult world. tional
and modern
world
result, his early adult
societies are,
The
and
most
in the
likely to differ in
differences
between
tradi-
however, far from absolute. In the most
stable societies there are possibilities for choice
vidual life course;
is
and change over the
fluid societies there are
indi-
massive shaping
forces that limit the scope of individual choice.
We examined the ways their origins,
and the ways
which our
in in
men
retained ties to the world of
which they changed. The
be stated simply: the great majority of the ioity adulthood quite different from that of their
overall finding can
men formed a hie parents. The shift
in early
usually
and was extended steadily or in recurrent jumps throughout adulthood. Only a small percentage of the men around age 40 lived in a world that had much in common with their started in the Early Adult Transition
childhood world.
Most income from
executives
and some workers have advanced beyond the
level of their parents.
Most
affluent families in the business-professional
class-
came world, and have moved
of the biologists
and
novelists
The Novice Phase into an academic or artistic world very different
They do not
The
differ
big difference
tinuity
is
Few
from that of
their origins.
markedly from their parents
in
income or
and
in
most
in values
is
and
life style,
77
class level.
cases the discon-
enormous.
of the
only tenuous
changed
men
strongly reject their origins, but the great majority have
ties to
the familial ethnic and religious traditions.
Thus, 18 of the 40 ethnicities.
Two
men
woman of married women
have married a
their religion or
(45 percent)
Many
have
a different religion.
of other religions or
of the workers intermarried, as did 5 or 6
men
in each of
the other occupations. In 16 cases (40 percent) the marital choice formed part of a broader pattern of solely for her
man
the
money
upward mobility: the wife was chosen not
or social background, but as part of a process by
left his pre-adult
consonant with his ambitions, values and riages of 14
men
which
world and moved toward another world more
By
interests.
contrast, the mar-
(35 percent) actively sustained their link to the pre-adult
world.
men
All but one of the
men
married during the novice phase: 20
(50
percent) married in the Early Adult Transition, 11 (28 percent) in Entering the Adult
World, 8 (20 percent)
in the
Down. The average age at The average age at marriage
in Settling
17 to 35.
that for executives (23.2)
and
first
Age Thirty Transition and
was similar to
for workers (22.9)
novelists (24.3). In each of these groups, 60
percent married during the Early Adult Transition.
The
biologists
was
distinctly slow to the altar: their average age at marriage
only one married in the Early Adult Transition.
28.1,
were
and
They were the most
strained of the four occupational groups in their sexuality tions with
1
marriage was 24.6, the range
and
re-
their rela-
women generally.
Half of our sample got married in the Early Adult Transition. This early marriage
adult
and
life. It
at the
was part of the process of separation from parents and pre-
was highly colored by the young man's struggles to terminate,
same time
to maintain, the relationships with parents
pre-adult aspects of the leave the family
self. It
often
and become more
stemmed from
adult,
but
it
and the
a conscious effort to
also served unconscious
needs to perpetuate his dependency and remain fixed in an immature child-mother relationship. (For further discussion of early riage, see
Chapter
vs. later
mar-
6.)
Beginning with the Early Adult Transition, and throughout the novice phase, a
young man
is
making choices and
will define the character of his life in early
early adult life
world: he
may
is
establishing relationships that
adulthood. In some cases his
consistent with that of his parents
live in
and
his pre-adult
roughly the same kind of community, have the same
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
78
ethnic and religious to this world,
friends expected
from those of are
much
enter an occupation and a marriage appropriate
ties,
and become the kind of person
him
but
his parents,
his basic
way
Conversely, there
life in
when
he seemed about to enter
movement
;
differ
in society
high continuity between
is
life style; a
woman
in trajectory
sharply different from the
in his teens. Discontinuity
marriage to a
may
in the
take
change
many
in religious
background
of different social
may be modulated
(although the differences
is
marked change
a
the late twenties
forms: a change in ethnic attachments and affiliation or identity;
may
and place
eras.
discontinuity
is
occurs— when a man's
develop )
of living
the same as theirs. In such cases there
the pre-adult and early adult
life
and childhood
his parents
to be. Specific features of his adult life
kind of family
life
into a class or subculture very different in values
they
and
outlook from that of the parents. In order to get a rough picture of these changes,
we
did a rating of the
"degree of discontinuity between pre-adult and early adult world" for each of our 40 life in
men. In making
we compared the character of a man's The discontinuity was rated the sample, "medium" for 42 percent and "low" this rating,
the late teens and the late twenties.
"high" for 40 percent of for 18 percent.
Among
the occupational groups, the novelists showed the
greatest discontinuity, with the biologists a close second.
executives
had somewhat
less
received by only four workers
Whatever
still
is
adolescent in
a time of
many
workers and
discontinuity, but a rating of "low" was
and two
executives.
the degree of discontinuity in a
Adult Transition
The
young man's
profound change in
respects, yet
he
is
self
the Early
life,
and world.
also a novice adult.
He
modifying or ending his relationships with parents and other family bers,
He
is
is still
mem-
with the settings and institutions of adolescence, and with his peer
groups and friends.
groundwork
for his
He
first
is
trying to
adult
make
the choices that will form the
life structure.
Entering the Adult World: Building a First life Structure The
Early Adult Transition, like
by
more
a
call this
stable period in
new
all
developmental transitions,
which a new
life
structure
period Entering the Adult World.
basic processes: exploration of self
It
must be
involves a
and world, making and
is
followed
built.
We
number
of
testing provi-
The Novice Phase sional choices (cautiously, or with a great enthusiasm
which masks
provisional quality), searching for alternatives, increasing one's
ments and constructing a more integrated
life
years— never, in our sample, more than eight or
six
and ends
There were only negligible
at 28 or 29.
differences
occupational groups in the age at which this period began.
and
slightly greater for the biologists
as well as a
than four—
among Its
the four
duration was
under
six for
the
and
latter.
timing for the various occupations,
range of individual variation around the typical (modal) ages.
In Entering the Adult World, a young
an
years. It lasts
less
novelists than for the workers
executives: just over six years for the former, just
We thus find a common sequence and
their
commit-
structure.
This period usually begins at age 22, give or take two
about
79
has to fashion and test out
between the valued
self
the center of gravity of his
life
structure that provides a viable link
initial life
and the adult
He must now
society.
from the position of child adult with a
man
new home
shift
in the family of origin to the position of novice
base that
more
is
truly his
own.
It is
time for
full
entry into the adult world. This requires multiple efforts: to explore the available possibilities, to arrive at a crystallized (though
definition of himself as an adult,
and to make and
choices regarding occupation, love relationships, faces
•
two major
The
life style
with his
and
final) initial
values.
He
tasks:
exploration.
options.
by no means
live
A
young man has
to discover
exploratory stance requires
him
to
and generate "hang
alternative
loose," keeping his
options open and r avoiding strong commitments. This task has sources in
the world and in the
self.
To
varying degrees, the external world provides
multiple possibilities and invites the young
more
before making
man to his own
try different choices
commitments. Also, youthful vitality genand wonder, a wish to seek out and discover of the new world he is entering. Even when he makes relafirm
erates a sense of adventure all
the treasures
tively
binding
initial
choices regarding marriage and occupation, they
have a provisional quality:
•
if
they don't work out, change
still
possible.
creating a stable structure. In every period, the several develop-
mental tasks are contrasting or tion requires a
make
firm choices.
something of
ment and ried,
antithetical. Just as the Early
young man both
next, Entering the Adult
to
is
still
his life."
World
He must This
to terminate requires
one
era
him both
and
Adult Transito initiate the
to explore freely
take on adult responsibilities and
task, too, has sources in
the external environ-
in the self. Externally, there are pressures to
enter an occupation, define his goals and lead a
and
"make
"grow up," get mar-
more organized
life.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
80
In the
self
there are desires for stability and order, for roots,
the tribe, lasting
The
ties,
distinctive character of this
existence of
its
two
initial
developmental period
tasks: to explore, to
making firmer commitments adult
life structure,
on the two
lies
in
in the co-
expand one's horizons and put
until the options are clearer;
to have roots, stability
one task may dominate, but the other of emphasis
membership
fulfillment of core values.
is
and
an
Work
on
and continuity.
never totally absent.
off
to create
The
balance
tasks varies tremendously.
At one extreme are men who devote themselves primarily to the task They go through the entire period on a highly provisional basis with no lasting commitments or goals. Some of these men lead a of exploration.
transient
frequently changing jobs, residences and personal relation-
life,
They ment. They
flux
and easy move-
much of the self in the world or take much of Other men live in a more stable way but they too
don't invest
world into the
self.
the late twenties,
comes to an end,
make only
the are
Toward however, as the period of Entering the Adult World the limitations of this provisional life structure become
very tentative in their choices and
evident.
by
create a loose structure characterized
ships.
The men
limited attachments.
experience increasing internal need and external pres-
and to get more order, purpose and attachment into their lives. At the other extreme are men who early in this period make strong commitments and start building what they hope will be a stable, enduring life structure. These men usually make their key choices, especially of sure to
work
at the other task
spouse and occupation, in the Early Adult Transition and try to maintain great continuity with the pre-adult world.
They tend not
tive possibilities or* to question the life structure
these men, however, regard the initial a final unalterable choice. It
is
life
they have built. Even
structure as provisional
men have
questions
Do
more fulfilling Most men
I
:
Did
want
fall
its
end, even these
commit myself prematurely? Were my horizons way of life forever, or are there
to maintain this
possibilities I
should
strive for?
between these extremes. There are many ways of trying
to balance exploration stability in
I
and not
a vehicle for entering the adult world but
not necessarily a permanent one. As this period nears
too narrow?
to explore alterna-
one part of
and
A
stable structure.
his life
and transiency
young man may opt
in another:
for
he may form a
he may devote himdream while his relationships
stable marriage but remain occupationally nomadic; or self
passionately to an enduring occupational
with
women
take the form of intense but troubled love
promiscuity or avoidance of life
all
closeness. Again,
affairs,
casual
he may lead a nomadic
with minimal commitments until perhaps 25 or 26, and only then
begin to form a more stable structure.
The Novice Phase Regardless of his
life
We
twenties.
or severe that
life
crisis in
during this time. In only
among
varied
the four occupations.
and seven
novelists, eight workers
clear evidence of crisis,
For the novelists
f
late
experienced a moderate
the forty cases was
five of
clear
it
we could not make a problems.) The incidence of
had gone quite smoothly. (In seven
firm judgment regarding the severity of the crisis
and the
late teens
men
found that 70 percent of our
crisis
likely to expe-
is
the Early Adult Transition and/or Enter-
somewhere between the
ing the Adult World,
man
course during the twenties, a
moderate
rience at least a
81
cases
occurred in the lives of nine
It
biologists.
Only four executives gave
though another four were ambiguous.
as
one might expect, the problems of making writing
an occupation were enormous. They could not earn a living from their tion, cases,
but holding a regular job gave them
little
moreover, their parents actively disapproved of novel writing
To
occupation.
pursue their
literary
make
dreams, they had to
as
an
a sharp
Not
surprisingly, the novelists
intense, intimate
and stormy relationships
break with parents and the pre-adult world.
more than the other men had
fic-
time to write. In most
with women; the love-marriage-family aspect of their
lives
was often
problematic.
World had its problems commonly assumed that young men
Entering the Adult well. It
is
firmly situated in a rather stable fact, eight of
For
Many workers went that they
five of
through
them
of the working class are
by
restricted life
if
our ten workers had
their twenties.
for the hourly workers as
their mid- twenties. In
difficulties of crisis
this
at least
proportions during
was a "rock bottom" time of
one period
would ever get married and have
in
which
it
a stable family or that they
would find steady employment with reasonable prospects work and promotion. Over
for interesting
half of our executives did not enter the managerial ranks until
they were over age 30. Before that they were engineers, accountants,
men,
life.
seemed unlikely
military officers, technicians.
Many
of them, as
from working-class or lower-middle-class backgrounds.
I
noted
Much
earlier,
or
all
sales-
came
of their
twenties was taken up not only with occupational mobility but also with a
change in
family
ment
life,
class level, educational-cultural
residential
community and
(and often religious) milieu,
usually great
The
and
situation
at times is
challenge and excite-
stress,
but the
superficially different for the biologists.
was
They
usually
in graduate school getting
Ph.D. and perhaps having an additional year or two
as a postdoctoral
member. Occupationally, they are part of a demands hard work but also promises great rewards
fellow or a very junior faculty prestigious system that
stress
almost unmanageable.
spend the period of Entering the Adult World a
The
life style.
of "moving up" generally outweighed the
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
82
to those
who perform
well.
But
group too has
this
the
stresses: getting
its
doctoral degree, dealing with the highly competitive struggles of the aca-
demic system (which
is
oneself as a "promising
no
competitive than industry), establishing
less
young
and getting
scientist/'
a faculty position in a
strong university that will facilitate one's research and career progress. In addition, as I've mentioned, the biologists are usually rather inhibited in their relationships with
women. They tend and family
culty in establishing a marriage
These findings
cast
to marry late
and to have
diffi-
life.
doubt on the widely held view that young
men
nor-
mally conclude their "adolescent" uncertainty and exploration by the early
which they choose a path and move along
twenties, after
steady, stable way.
Very few young men build that
without considerable
smooth time
difficulty
building a very satisfactory
A
man's
difficulties
and occasional Adult World
in Entering the
first
life
structure
Moreover, having a
crisis.
is
in a relatively
it
adult
no guarantee that one
is
life structure.
during this period are often accentuated by specific
aspects of his situation— economic recession, discrimination, the rivalries of a highly competitive
world— and by
his
own emotional problems
committing himself to an occupation, relating to
from parents. In addition to these
women and
specific obstacles, there
a
is
of
separating
more
ele-
mental, underlying problem: the developmental tasks of Entering the
Adult World are fulfill
an
them
intrinsically
difficult
and contradictory.
to anything like an optimal degree. It
ideally satisfactory life structure the first
period are in their nature antithetical, and
is
time around.
we
No
one can
not possible to form
The
tasks of this
are too young, inexperienced
and torn regarding our own wishes to be able to resolve the contradictions.
We
do well to have only a moderate
structure,
and to form a
basis
on which
crisis,
to create a fairly satisfactory
a fuller,
made in subsequent periods. Toward the end of the twenties, Entering a close.
adult
A man
life
more balanced
the Adult
first,
provisional
World comes
to
life structure.
This structure
women,
usually leading
has multiple facets: a pattern of relationships with
and
occupation; a
can be
has until roughly age 28 or 29 to explore the possibilities of
and to fashion a
to marriage
life
family; an involvement in
home
work which
leads to forming an
base as bachelor or married person, in a particular kind
of dwelling, neighborhood
and
larger
community;
a pattern of relationships
with parents and family of origin; an involvement, great or small, in gious, political, recreational
and other groups. Various
However, must remain neglected or allowed only
lived out to different degrees in these facets of the life structure.
some important
parts of the self
partial expression.
reli-
parts of the self are
The Novice Phase This
first life
components
structure
at the center
may be
and others
A
One
be given central importance.
him
occupational direction that permits self.
built
related task
and
few
mutually sup-
in
task
is
and follow an
to choose
to live out important parts of the
to form a marital relationship with a wife
is
ports his aspirations
around them
a
and marriage-family are the components most
portive ways. Occupation likely to
whole with
a relatively integrated
83
ready and able to join
is
him on
who
sup-
his journey. If
both of these choices have been wisely made and can coexist compatibly at the center of his life, they provide the basis for a satisfactory, well-
integrated structure.
Yet no one can succeed
fully in these tasks.
structure of the late twenties
is
remain to be made, and the direction of
To
get a
more
ness of the
life
uncertain or unsatisfactory.
life is
we
precise picture of this,
life
For most men, the
incomplete or fragmented. Major choices
did a rating of the "satisfactori-
end of Entering the Adult World.
structure" at the
We
found that 57 percent of the sample experienced their lives as incomplete, oppressive, not going anywhere or heading in the wrong direction. The life structure was unsatisfactory in important respects for eight novelists, six
workers, five executives and four biologists.
The
difficulty
can take
stable, organized life, it.
In this case, a
many
forms.
and yet important
man
feels that his life
is
Some men
achieve a relatively
parts of the self have
a sham, an
no place
in
unwanted compliance
with the dictates of parents or society, and a betrayal of what he holds most dear.
He may
directions, ried to a her,
have several strong interests leading in different occupational
He may be marand yet have doubts about whether he loves
and be plagued by choices and contradictions.
woman he
cares for
about her feelings for him, about the durability of the relationship or
the possibility of integrating marriage-family and work.
For most men, the plete
and fragmented.
no occupation or
life
structure of the late twenties
A man may
have had a
clear occupational direction.
tence without heavy responsibilities
may have
the insecurity and rootlessness of this
life
is
unstable, incom-
series of jobs
and yet have
Although a transient
suited
him
exis-
well for a while,
begin to weigh on him.
If
he has
not yet married, the question of marriage becomes more urgent and he begins to examine
more
closely his usual
such as shy avoidance of
form of relationship with women,
real contact, sexual promiscuity,
nonsexual friendships, or intense but abortive tions in his life structure
become
affairs.
intolerable. It
is
The
more
lacks
parts
he cannot
integrate.
his life has
Or he
no
center, that
realizes that
and
limita-
now if own. He
distressing
he does not have a wife or an occupation or a home base of
becomes more aware that
enduring but
it is
his
fragmented into
he made the major choices
84
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
with minimal commitment and investment of the
He
self.
feels
the need
for a change.
No
how
matter
to the fore in the late twenties. is
coming
no matter how integrated
satisfactory his life has been,
or fragmented the present structure,
and
to an end,
new
a
The
new developmental
tasks are
pushing
period of Entering the Adult
period
is
World
getting under way.
The Age Thirty Transition The Age
Thirty Transition
is
and burden.
a remarkable gift
opportunity to work on the flaws in the
life
structure
more
previous period, and to create the basis for a
It
provides an
formed during the
satisfactory structure
that will be built in the following period.
As we have
seen, the
main
tasks of
Entering the Adult
explore the adult world and to fashion a
This work
is
done by age 28 or
ordinarily
World were
to
provisional life structure.
first,
29. If adult life
were more
static,
the next step would be simply to settle into this structure and pursue further goals within
ous course, the
it.
first
If
life
adult
life typically
structure
evolved in a simple, continu-
would be
relatively
change gradually and in small steps over many that the periods.
The
stable;
We
Settling
life
Down
becomes
it
would
however,
period ordinarily begins at age 32 or 33. At
less provisional.
A man
must make stronger com-
mitments, form deeper roots and (with whatever mixture of resignation) settle for a rest of early
find,
structure evolves through a series of qualitatively distinct
life
that point
years.
new
life
joy,
structure that will shape his
apathy or
life
for the
adulthood.
Connecting the two structure-building periods— Entering the Adult
World
in the twenties
Thirty Transition. Like structure
and
and Settling all
Down
to initiate another.
A man
the thirties— is the Age
in
transitional periods,
it
serves to terminate
one
has a span of several years in
which to reappraise the past and consider the future. He asks: What have I done with my life? What do I want to make of it? What new directions shall I choose?
For our sample at age 28,
as a
whole, the Age Thirty Transition typically began
with a range of 26 to 29.
It
ended between
31
and
34,
most often
The duration was usually five years. Only minor differences were found among the four occupational groups. The average age at onset of the
at 33.
Age Thirty Transition was others.
27.6 for the workers
and 28.2 to 28.4 for the
This period had the longest duration for the biologists
(5.1 years),
The Novice Phase
85
the shortest for the executives (4.1 years). Again, the variability in the
timing of this period
enough
large
is
common
small enough to indicate a
to stimulate our interest in individual
timetable, yet
and group
differences.
During the Age Thirty Transition, the provisional, exploratory quality of the twenties
ing: "If
I
serious,
more
my
want to change
or things missing that
soon
start, for
man
ending and a
is
becoming more
will
it
I
more
like to
late."
have— this
The Age
He
"for real."
life— if there are things in
would
be too
has a sense of greater urgency. Life
restrictive,
is
that
it
is
has the feelI
don't
like,
make
the time to
a
Thirty Transition provides a
"second chance" to create a more satisfactory
life
structure within early
adulthood. All
ture at
men make some its
end
is
As with
start.
changes during this period, so that the
life struc-
from that
necessarily different, for better or worse,
at the
transitions, there are exquisite individual variations in
all
We have
the onset, course and outcome of this period.
found
useful to
it
distinguish a few broad sequences.
smooth process of change. For some men the Age Thirty
•
Transition
proceeds in a smooth, continuous fashion, without overt disruption or sense of
crisis.
As they approach
satisfactory.
They
are
They have
own
they find their
reasonably complete and
lives
with family and friends.
moving along an occupational path that
vides the desired rewards.
timetable.
vides a
30,
satisfactory relationships
The
They
suits
them
provisional life structure
formed
conditions, a
modify and enrich
his life.
The
and
man
uses the
transition
noticeable, but a transition does occur
may be
and
its
built.
Age Thirty so
smooth
outcome
is
Transition to as to
be hardly
a life structure
based directly on the previous one but significantly different from easy transition, without drastic change or turmoil,
cause a man's life
structure
life is
may occur
and external reasons)
seriously flawed, to
but he
is
it.
An
primarily be-
going well and needs only minor adjustments.
may be
pro-
in the twenties pro-
groundwork on which the second structure can be
Under these
well
are progressing in accordance with their
Or
the
unable (for various internal
acknowledge the flaws and work
at
changing them.
The illusions and unacknowledged difficulties often surface at a later time, when they exact a heavier cost. The Age Thirty Transition went rather smoothly for an executive, Leo Heinz.
On
finishing college at 23,
he married and went to work
He and
as
an
had the same aspirations: a large, close-knit family and a middle-class life based on religious values and church affiliation. He wanted to get ahead in his work but was accountant for a large corporation.
his wife
not markedly ambitious or dedicated to a particular occupation.
The
couple
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
86
moved
into his wife's
community, became part of her extended family and
religio-ethnic network, and had the
of their six children.
first
At 27 Heinz had a relatively integrated life structure. Its central elements were the family, the religio-ethnic community and a secure but limited job an accounting
in
office.
He
then took a job in middle management in the start of his
Age
he had established himself
as a
business office of a major corporation. This
Thirty Transition. Five years
later, at 32,
promising young middle manager. During his life
changed markedly: he moved from
middle-class to upwardly mobile middle diverse secularized
marked the
this five-year transitional period,
city to suburbs,
class,
from
from stable lower-
religio-ethnic enclave to
community, from extended family network
to isolated
nuclear family. In short, from a modest, secure and orderly world to one
demanding and turbulent. He gave occuthat goes with it, a more central part in his
that was affluent, competitive,
pational ambition, life.
Heinz's
new
tatively different
and
life
all
emerged out of the old and yet was qualiwould take him another ten years to understand
structure
from
it.
It
what he had gained— and what he had lost— through the change. painful transition: the age thirty
•
crisis.
For most men, the Age
Thirty Transition takes a more severe and stressful form. of the age thirty
crisis.
A man
encounters
developmental tasks of the period. times he feels he cannot go on.
It
as
We
speak then
working on the
may be
so great that at
though he had no
basis for further
The
is
great difficulty in difficulty
living.
One a
body
suggestive
metaphor
for a
of water trying to get
that he will not reach Future.
nor backward, that he himself as
swimming
is
developmental
crisis is
a
man
from Island Past to Island Future.
He
feels that
alone on
He
fears
he can move neither forward
on the verge of drowning.
A man may
experience
alone, as rowing in a leaky boat, or as captain of a
luxurious but defective ship caught in a storm. There are wide variations in the nature of the vehicle, the sources of threat
and Future. The serious doubt:
critical
thing
is
and the nature of Past
that the integrity of the enterprise
is
in
he experiences the imminent danger of chaos, dissolution,
the loss of the future.
Developmental
crises
have certain
common
characteristics
whether they
occur in adolescence, at age 30, at 40 or whenever. However, the character of every crisis
is
shaped by the developmental
in 1
issues of the current period.
around age 30 must be seen the context of the Age Thirty Transition. An age thirty crisis is not
Thus, a time of special
difficulty occurring
'merely" a delayed adolescent
crisis,
though unresolved
conflicts of adoles-
cence will be reactivated and perhaps more fully resolved in
it.
Nor
is it
a
The Novice Phase "precocious" mid-life
though
crisis,
problems of persons who,
transitional
has
it
much
in
about 40,
at
become intolerable. Age Thirty Transition was more the
common
87
with the
caught in a
feel
life
structure that has
A stressful
rule than the exception
men (62 percent) went through a moderate men (18 percent) had a fairly smooth transi-
in our study. Twenty-five of the
or severe tion,
crisis.
and
Only seven
men
for eight
(20 percent) the picture was mixed or ambiguous.
by nine of the
Crises were experienced
There was
novelists
and eight of the workers.
the executives, three went through a major
smooth
transition,
There
another four
clear evidence of crisis in five of the biologists; in
the picture was mixed, and only one had a clear absence of
and four were
no firm
is
crisis.
Among
three had a relatively
crisis,
unclear.
basis for saying
whether the age
thirty crisis
is
more
frequent in this generation, born between 1924 and 1934, than in others.
The Age
Thirty Transition
is
also difficult for the generation
born between
1940 and 1949, which entered adulthood during the "protest" decade of the 1960s and turned 30 during the 1970s.
Many young
our society and about the possibility of forming a
bility of
worth having. Perhaps every generation
feels
that
unique in character and severity— and each of them not
know
and with
Of
adults of every gen-
have serious doubts about the value and the
eration, as they pass 30,
until
full
we
how
learn
appreciation of
its
life
may be
life
problems are
right.
to study the adult life course in
its
via-
structure
We shall
some depth,
complexity.
Age Nine
the four occupations, the novelists had the hardest time in the
Thirty Transition and used of the ten novelists
had age
it
most
actively to
and
thirty crises
improve their
five of these
lives.
obtained psycho-
therapy or psychoanalysis during this time. (In comparison, while four biologists
had psychotherapy, no workers or executives
of the latter
The creative
had
novelists' crises reflected, in part, the neurotic
and self-demanding persons.
must look
at the
To
though many
Most
of
life structure,
them came from
lives
become
years trying to
occupation in the center of a
problems typical of
understand them, however,
broader framework of their
These men spent many cumstances.
did,
crises.)
we
during the novice phase. novelists
and to put
under the most
a pre-adult world in
this
difficult cir-
which novel
not contempt. They became
writing was regarded with indifference,
if
tant or actively alienated from parents
and from other important parts of
dis-
the pre-adult world. During their twenties they struggled to enter an adult
world and create a
Only one
life
sharply discontinuous with that of childhood.
of the ten novelists, Allen Perry, was in a position to
time at writing in his early twenties,
first
work
full
through a small allowance and
88
THE SEASONS OF A
much
MAN S
LIFE
scrounging, and then with the income from a successful
he had
at 26. Still,
difficulties that led to a
flawed
first life
more
novel
by inner turmoil and
twenties. After an age thirty crisis characterized
writing block, he was able to build a
first
structure in the
satisfactory life structure,
with
writing and marriage at the center, in his early thirties.
Most
of our writers earned their livelihood
by other means during
their twenties: they became journalists, teachers or businessmen as well
was not
as novelists. It
clear for
many
years (often well into their thirties
or even forties) whether novel writing could tion or survive at all in their lives.
At the end
become
in the late twenties, they had not been able to
occupation and to build a the
life
Age Thirty Transition
were stabilizing a
life in
make
changes.
which writing had a
World,
writing their primary
structure that could contain
make major
to
their primary occupa-
of Entering the Adult
it.
By age
significant,
Many
used
33 or 34, they
though
rarely un-
problematic, place.
Richard Taylor was one of two Black novelists in our study. Following
World War
a long military service in
a year later,
supplement
as a secretary to
was to have a secure
life
his
not provide the after college,
fiction,
he
ture.
tried to
but
for writing,
hers.
He gave up
aspiration
The
and
his cultural interests pulled
the
life
it
bills
didn't work.
he could not build a
life
him
she wanted. For three years
maintain a steady job that would pay the
realized that
and
aspirations
Her
Bill.
dreams were alien to her, and he could
stability so essential to
he
and leave room
children.
started college at 21, married
income from the GI
to a world she could not share. His
28,
he
within the middle-class Black community. But he
was already writing poetry and
At
II,
and immediately started a family. His wife continued her work
life
containing both his
they had was unsuitable for
them and
their
the struggle, divorced and dismantled the fragile struc-
Breaking up the family— and re-enacting the corrosive theme of the
Black father abandoning his wife and children— caused him inner wounds that took years to heal. After the breakup, he
worked harder
at fatherhood
than do most fathers in intact families.
Age Thirty Transition, from age 28 to 34, was spent in a kind moving around, often living from hand to mouth, working at
Taylor's of limbo:
transient jobs, hitting "rock bottom," nearly succeeding in killing himself,
getting psychotherapy, starting a serious love relationship— and through it all
finding time to write his novels.
order and stability, and a
new
At about 34
structure emerged.
his life
The
took on some
central elements of
were writing novels and an enduring love relationship. The made economically feasible by a hyphenated occupation: he earned money chiefly as journalist and writer on public affairs. Thus, the this structure
structure was
The Novice Phase outcome of
his
Age Thirty Transition was
tain the novel writing,
crisis in
just barely. It
and move
this structure secure
Taylor's
but
the
89
a life structure that could con-
took several years longer to make
his writing into the center of
Age Thirty Transition was
similar in
it.
magnitude to
many White writers, but the racial aspects gave it special bitterness and poignancy. The struggle to remain true to his dream is never easy for a Black man in this society. And a Black man with heroic aspirationsthat of
literary, political, scientific or
ing intensity
These
forces
of Black
all
must be
men.
whatever— draws upon himself with
increas-
the destructive forces of individual and institutional racism. part of our understanding of the adult
development
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
3 We
have examined the sequence of developmental periods in the novice
phase.
period
The periods begin with the Early Adult Transition, that boundary when the young man terminates his pre-adulthood and forms the with Entering the
basis for full entry into early adulthood; they continue
Adult World, whose primary world and to build a
Age Thirty
the first
adult
first,
tasks are to explore the possibilities of this
provisional
life structure, to
consider
how
suitable
seek ways of reforming or drastically restructuring
Each period to
of the novice phase has
do with building or modifying the
its
own
it is
particular tasks,
life structure.
The work done on them changes from one
for the self,
phase. In fact,
it is
a
In addition, the three
novice phase as a whole.
period to the next, but the tasks
Four major
3.
4.
Work
on
a
tasks can
be completed before the end of
all
of
them by the
tasks of the novice
phase
early thirties. are:
Forming a Dream and giving it a place in the Forming mentor relationships Forming an occupation Forming love relationships, maniage and iamily
There
are other
common
tasks,
such
life
structure
as relating to authorities
ing greater authority oneself; forming peer relationships with
women;
this
developmental accomplishment to have made even
moderate progress with
1.
which have
not steady and gradual, but proceeds unevenly, with recurrent ups
is
and downs. None of the
2.
to
the process of entry into
themselves are of primary importance over the entire phase. task
and
it.
common tasks which are essential to These common tasks characterize the
periods have
adulthood.
and they conclude with
structure;
life
Transition, which offers an opportunity to reappraise the
relating as an adult to people at different age levels;
and
gain-
men and
forming an
adult outlook and values with regard to religion, politics, ethnicity, com-
munity. These issues were discussed in our interviews. In reviewing the lives of
our men, however,
we found
that the four tasks listed above were
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
91
the most prominent and merited special attention. These tasks give the
novice phase vitally
shape and substance. They involve the formation of
its
important aspects of the
life
structure.
Forming and Living Out the Dream During the novice phase of
early
adulthood a
man
exploring the adult
is
world, developing adult interests and values, making important choices
with regard to work, marriage and family, and forming an adult identity.
The
process of exploration
of family, class, subculture active striving,
both
and choice and
competence and
facilitated
is
strongly shaped
social institutions. It
and
by
his
own
rational consideration of alternatives. It
and hindered by various aspects
values, talents, anxieties
by the influences
affected
is
life goals.
is
of his personality: motives,
we have
In the course of our study,
discovered another factor that plays a powerful and pervasive role in early
adulthood. This factor, often portrayed in mythology and literature,
We
considered in academic research. initial capital
call it
and emphasize our
to identify
In everyday language,
we
say that
"the Dream."
(We
specific use of the
is
rarely
use the
word.)
someone "succeeded beyond
his
wildest dreams," or that he "dreamed of a world he could never have."
These are neither night dreams nor casual daydreams. kind
is
more formed than
thought-out plan.
title
is
"dream" of
this
than a fully
the central issue in Martin Luther King's historic
It is the meaning Delmore Schwartz intended with Dreams Begin Responsibilities." Many young men the kind of life they want to lead as adults. The vicissi-
dream" speech.
"I have a
the
It
A
a pure fantasy, yet less articulated
of his story "In
have a Dream of
tudes and fate of the
Dream have fundamental consequences
for adult
development. In It
its
primordial form, the
Dream
is
a vague sense of self-in-adult- world.
has the quality of a vision, an imagined possibility that generates excite-
ment and
vitality.
connected to
At the
reality,
start it
although
it
is
may
ning the Nobel Prize or making the
form
as in
the
myth
poorly articulated and only tenuously
contain concrete images such as winall-star
team.
It
may
take a dramatic
of the hero: the great artist, business tycoon, athletic
or intellectual superstar performing magnificent feats and receiving special
honors.
It
may
take
mundane forms
that are yet inspiring
and sustaining:
the excellent craftsman, the husband-father in a certain kind of family, the
member
community. Dream, a young man has the developmental Whatever the nature of his task of giving it greater definition and finding ways to live it out. It makes
highly respected
of one's
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
Q2
a great difference in his
S
LIFE
growth whether
his initial life structure
sonant with and infused by the Dream, or opposed to
mains unconnected to aliveness
may simply
money
by
that
is
his parents,
or opportunity,
guilt, passivity,
quite different.
their twenties will
A man
and by various aspects of
If
Dream
the it
re-
his sense of
direction expressing
may be pushed
his personality,
He may
in the as lack
such
as
thus succeed in
The
conflict may extend over who betray the Dream in consequences. Those who
through various forms. Those
have to deal
structure around the
life
life
competitiveness and special talents.
years, evolving
build a
it.
and with
by various external constraints, such
an occupation that holds no interest for him.
many
die,
develop a conflict between a
Dream and another
latter direction
of
it
and purpose.
Many young men the
his life
con-
is
later
with the
Dream
in early
adulthood have a better
chance for personal fulfillment, though, years of struggle may be required to maintain the
commitment and work toward
its
realization.
During the
Mid-life Transition they will have to reappraise the magical aspects of the
Dream and modify its place in their middle adult lives. Our conception of transitions in adult development, and especially of the Dream in early adulthood, have been strongly influenced by Donald W. Winnicott's views regarding "transitional phenomena" in early childhood. In a transitional period, says Winnicott, the child imagines various possibilities of his self
in daydreams, play
believe that he
is
and world
He
in the future.
enacts these imaginings
and other "make-believe" explorations. Does the child
truly the person
he has created
answer: Yes and no; and the ambiguity
is
the
in his play? Winnicott's
nub
of
it.
The
child's play
occurs on the boundary between reality and illusion, between the clearly
"me" and the "not-me," between what play world reality
is
a
and the
"is"
and what "might be." The
boundary region between the concretely objective external entirely subjective internal
image or hope. In play the child
can transform imaginings of what might be into illusions of what preparation for the hard work of making the illusions external world.
He
self-in-world that
A
is
more
now
is,
in
real in
the
can create, experiment with, and slowly actualize a
new
just starting to take shape.
crucial aspect of mothering, according to
Winnicott,
is
to provide a
supportive context for the child's play. Winnicott offers a conception of the "good enough"
mother— not
a tyrannizing ideal, yet adequate for the
complex purposes of mothering. The "good enough" mother helps to generate a space between herself and the child where he can play creatively— can play, that reality
and
is,
without having to worry about the distinction between
illusion.
and mother
7
in
We can thus speak of a
which he
feels safe
boundary region between child
from external and internal dangers. In
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
this space
he
he can gradually define and
out a newly emerging
test
what he
can gain the mother's blessing for
"good enough" mother allows the child
as either
does not question or disparage his playful
illusions.
Through
it,
productions
and the play that can occur within explore the world and
phenomena
istic
make
a place for himself there. It
The
serve developmentally as forerunners of later,
and adaptive
efforts in
am"
This feeling underlies his often
provides a source of hope, self-esteem and personal integrity. tional
child.
the child gains the "I
it,
She
or "not-me."
produced and sustained by both mother and
is
feeling, the 'sense that "I exist in the world." difficult efforts to
"me"
and
self,
become. The
his playful-serious
without requiring him to identify them
This relationship
trying to
is
93
transi-
more
real-
the social world. Winnicott draws parallels
between the "good enough" mother and the "good enough"
therapist,
who
helps generate a space in which the patient can work-play creatively.
He
points to truly artistic and religious experiences as transitional (and trans-
formational) Similarly,
phenomena of adult life. a Dream of adult life arises
as a transitional
phenomenon
in
the Early Adult Transition and Entering the Adult World. As a boy-man begins his entry into adulthood, he^ imagines exciting possibilities for his adult
life
and
struggles to attain the "I
and world. His Dream of adulthood child. is
Though
Transition and
is
from) an adult
life
is
feeling in this dreamed-of self
initially as fragile as that of
the small
has origins in childhood and adolescence, the
it
a distinctively adult
phase
is
am"
phenomenon:
it
takes shape in the Early
gradually integrated within (or, in
many
cases,
structure over the course of early adulthood.
the crucial time for establishing the
Dream
is
Dream Adult
excluded
The
novice
in one's life.
As the novice adult tries to separate from his family and pre-adult world, and to enter an adult world, he must form significant relationships with other adults who will facilitate his work on the Dream. Two of the most important figures in this drama are the "mentor" and the "special woman." I
shall discuss First,
them
however,
I
shortly.
want
to
examine ways
in
which the Dream was formed
or neglected by the several occupational groups in our sample during the
novice phase.
Biologists
For about half of the
biologists, entry into this
tion of a powerful, exciting
began
in childhood.
in high school
Dream. Their
They thought
seriously
and made the decision
occupation was the
interests in nature
realiza-
and science
about biology as an occupation
in college.
They devoted themselves
THE SEASONS OF A
94
MAN S
LIFE
work with tremendous commitment and energy throughout the
to their
novice phase. Yet, even
when
the choice of academic biology reflected the Dream,
some
there were often inner conflicts and external difficulties. In father strongly ness or law.
wanted
The
cases the
son to enter another occupation, such
his
as busi-
father sensed, usually with intuitive accuracy, that the son's
occupational choice was based in part upon a rejection of his
The
personal qualities.
son,
who
own
values
and
and was vulnerable
also loved his father
to
such criticisms, got caught up in the conflict and could not devote himself wholeheartedly to his work.
and
One
of these
men became much more
creative
free in his research only in his early thirties, after his father's death.
For several
biologists the
Dream was ambiguous
or poorly formed.
At
the end of college, after considering various occupational options, they
decided on biology because
them and
interested
it
encouraging, but not with a sense of
its
lack of excitement about biological research of self in
work led
and
were
their professors
them. Their
special Tightness for
their limited investment
to continuing career problems.
Novelists
had
Several novelists
too the
Dream had
a youthful
various fates.
or earlier, decided in college to
Dream Four
make
becoming a
of
novelists
writer,
began writing
and
in
for
them
high school
writing their vocation, and spent the
novice phase becoming accomplished writers. During their novice phase all
of
them went through
a bitter struggle to learn their crafts, to avoid the
detours and pitfalls that constantly awaited them, and to remain true to
the muse.
By the
start of
the Settling
Down
period, three
themselves as serious, promising young novelists. several novels
give
up
ist,
fourth, having written
and some documentary nonfiction, decided
novels.
He
at this point to
cast his lot with the writing of nonfiction,
better suited to his talents partially
The
had established
away from the
and
original
but he continued to use
character. In
Dream and
making
first
his creativity in
this
which was
choice he turned
occupation of being a novel-
becoming
a first-rate nonfiction
author.
For the other selves
and
six novelists there
were
much
larger obstacles, in
them-
in their life circumstances, that complicated the effort to live out
the Dream. In
some
cases, the
Dream
of novel writing was in conflict with
other desires and with powerful external influences. Paul
Namson,
for
example, was drawn into the family brokerage business by a persuasive uncle
and by the part of himself that wanted to become a sucessful businessman (see Chapter 12) Although he did some writing during his twenties, he had .
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
to
go through a major
give writing a
some
In
crisis in
modest place
novelists, the
literary interests in college
business.
The
the
Age Thirty Transition before he could
,
in his life.
Dream remains
stunted. Carl Berg formed
but assumed that he would take over his
conflict with his father
was so
and determined to become a
writer.
two novels but was very divided
in his
left
95
severe, however, that
During
his twenties
commitment
some
father's
he soon
he published
to writing.
He
was
tremendously involved in the conflictful relationship with his father, to
whom
the idea of novel writing as an occupation was simply absurd. His
mother could not understand the meaning of writing for him and was emotionally quite distant. There was a chasm between his anti-intellectual
and the
pre-adult world
conditions the
Dream
writers'
world he was trying to enter. Under these
of writing could not grow. It was not until his early
when he had made some progress in resolving the inner conflicts and had married a loving woman, that he could devote himself more singlemindedly to writing. By this time, however, it was late to develop his talents. The initial Dream of becoming a respected novelist seemed very far from realization. Perhaps the wonder is that the Dream survived at all, thirties,
that the undernourished seedling
became even
a small tree.
Executives
The early Dream played an important part in many biologists and novelists. Only a few of were impelled by a youthful Dream. his college years
origins
An
the choice of occupation for
the ten executives, however,
example
is
Frank Radovich. During
he formed the Dream of leaving
and becoming the head of
his lower-middle-class
a major corporation.
become vice president in the corporate had amassed a personal fortune of over a
By age 32, he had company and
structure of a great
million dollars.
now
But
this
make
was merely
mark in a Age Thirty Transition ended, he founded his own small corporation. He looked forward to making his firm the giant of its industry and to becoming himself a leading figure on the international scene. Four executives made a strong commitment to work, but they did not have a special occupational Dream. Their Dream involved a certain kind of family-community life. They sought advancement as a reward for good work, but they were not prepared to sacrifice family and community ties to the claims of ambition. All of them spent the novice phase in their
the end of his novice phase: he was
new
preparing to
his
world. As the
original occupation (such as engineering or accounting)
management
in their early thirties.
and retained strong
ties to their
They were
and entered middle
of lower-middle-class origins
pre-adult ethnic worlds.
Three of them,
in
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
96
were living
their forties,
turned
down
in or near the
opportunities to
major geographical moves, but
move
towns where they were born and had
elsewhere.
in his forties
tional ambitions in favor of a stable
worked hard
most
he was
stability.
demands
The
restricting his occupalife.
All of
them
of occupational advance-
struggle was never easy
and
in
cases exacted a considerable cost.
Most
of the executives entered the managerial ranks in their
Transition, without a solid basis for long-term achievement tion as executives. Their primary interests, skills in the executive functions,
and
or accounting) or
made two
fourth had
family-community
to reconcile the conflicting
ment and family-community
The
hopes and
their
but in their original work (such
of
them became managers
numbers
large
aspirations
satisfac-
were not
as engineering
in non-occupational activities involving family, nature
Many
community.
pany needed
and
Age Thirty
and
illusions
early forties, however,
chiefly because the
com-
The company stimulated promotion. By their late thirties or
of middle managers.
about further
most managers have reached the
ceiling of their up-
The position they hold is often beyond their competence and satisfaction. They are left with neither their original occupational prefer-
ward
rise.
ences nor a managerial role through which they can live out important aspects of the
self.
Workers The
evolution of the
workers.
None
of
Dream
during the novice phase
them formed and
parable to those mentioned above.
through a
relatively
is
difficult, too, for
lived out an occupational
the
Dream com-
Only one worker, Ralph Ochs, went
simple sequence of forming a stable occupation, getting
married and starting a family during the novice phase. At the end of high school he became an apprentice plumber under his father in a manufacturing firm. a family,
lishing a
work
Over the next fifteen years he became a master plumber,, started moved out from under his father, and took an active part in estabunion. By his early thirties he was firmly settled in his occupation,
place, family
life lay in
and community.
He
took pride in his work, but the good
the total patterning of work, family and community. His adult
world had great continuity with the pre-adult world of within this world he built a
and
life reflecting his
his origins,
but
particular wishes, aspirations
values.
All of the other workers
went through
a
more complex sequence, with Most of them had a Dream
recurrent difficulties, during "the novice phase. relating to occupation,
Dream was
to
be a
but they could not
star professional athlete.
live it out.
In two cases the
Alby Russell was a
star athlete
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
in
high school and wanted to play professional
joined the military service and remained in
it
ball.
97
After high school, he
for almost
twenty
years.
At
19 he got married and soon started a family. In the service he devoted himself mainly to starring on the football, baseball and basketball teams. It in the Age Thirty Transition that he gave up the fantasy of becoming—and perhaps the illusion of actually being— a major-league athlete. In his early thirties he got seriously involved in his family life. He became a Little League coach and a teacher-mentor to young soldiers. In his abundant
was only
leisure
time he followed the fortunes of teams in several sports, watching
them on TV, reading
avidly about them,
and
in imagination functioning
as owner, manager and recruiter for each of them. His erudition in this
He
was amazing.
as a virtually full-time avocation,
pation of
in a special
but he could not make a true occu-
it.
Most workers had
them formed
end of the Age Thirty Transition, had marginal work
still
no evolving occupation throughout
various jobs but
the novice phase. Five of
others
Dream
thus continued to live out the
field
way,
their first stable occupation at the
after a rather transient
work
history.
workers go through the entire process of forming an occupational defining
it,
getting the needed support
their lives— during the novice phase.
involves a mixture of work, family
the
Dream remains
inchoate.
Two
and no defined occupation. Very few
skills
and
Dream-
and putting
training,
and community involvements. For others, perhaps
Still
it
For some, the vision of the good
into life
others,
the largest number,
begin the Early Adult Transition with fantasies about exciting kinds of
work and accomplishment, but the incipient Dream cannot be or explored. It
is
gradually covered over by the
articulated
more immediate problems
of survival.
The Mentor The mentor important, a
Relationship
relationship
man
is
one of the most complex, and developmen tally
can have in early adulthood.
several years older, a person of greater experience
the young
man
is
entering.
No
word
currently in use
the nature of the relationship
we have
selor" or "guru" suggest the
more
in
much
use the term,
it
narrower sense, to
means
all
mind
here.
is
ordinarily
seniority in the world is
adequate to convey
Words such
as
"coun-
subtle meanings, but they have other
connotations that would be misleading.
used in a
The mentor and
mean
these things,
The term "mentor"
is
generally
teacher, adviser or sponsor.
and more.
As we
THE SEASONS OF A
98
The mentoring
MAN S
LIFE
relationship
often situated in a work setting, and the
is
mentoring functions are taken by a teacher, boss, editor or senior colleague. It
may
also evolve informally,
Mentoring
relative.
is
when
the mentor
the character of the relationship and the functions receive very little
mentoring from
mentoring from an older friend or ship closely to discover the
men
the
reality:
We have
between the genders
to
examine a
of mentoring
all.
This
dominated occupations
A
men
or female,
have a salutary
mentor may be
scarce, especially in the as
effect
know from
into currently male-
on the development of
work world dominated by men
The few women who
world of work.
mentors are often too beset by the to provide
women. Some young women have male
stresses of survival in a
good mentoring
teachers or bosses
for
who
mentors. This cross-gender mentoring can be of great value.
value
is
less
than she
woman whose
ship, as girl
is
:
to regard her as attractive
Its actual
sexual attractiveness interferes
What
enhance the young man's
he may use
and advancement.
skills
and
mentor?
as
a-
He may
intellectual
friend-
charming
little
He may
young man's entry
be a host and guide, welcoming the
customs, resources and cast of characters. Through his living,
act as a teacher
development. Serving
his influence to facilitate the
occupational and social world and acquainting
ments and way of
gifted, as a
taken seriously.
are the various functions of the
as sponsor,
but not
with work and
an intelligent but impersonal pseudo-male or
who cannot be
new
younger function
often limited by the tendency, frequently operating in both of them,
make her
gifted
a
mentor can
as I
women. some evidence that women have even less mentoring, male than men. One of the great problems of women is that female
might serve
to
women
either
is
mentors are
to
the current
as well as
There
as
relation-
provides.
relationship with a female
increased entry of
will
may
further evidence of the gap
is
in our society. In principle, a
The
it
reflects
be an enormously valuable experience for a young man, experience.
student
had almost exclusively male mentors. Indeed,
friends at
the same gender or cross-gender.
my own
A
and very important
his teacher-adviser, relative.
amount and kind
in our study
women
they rarely had
serves.
it
mentors in the male gender. This
shall speak of
I
a friend, neighbor or
is
defined not in terms of formal roles but in terms of
the mentor
can admire and seek to emulate.
may be an exemplar
He may
initiate into
him with its values, own virtues, achievethat the protege*
provide counsel and moral support
in time of stress.
The mentor
has another function, and this
crucial one: to support
true mentor, in the
and
facilitate
meaning intended
is
developmentally the most
the realization oi the Dream. here, serves as
The
an analogue in adult-
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
hood
"good enough" parent
of the
adult's
giving
development by believing it
in
his blessing, helping to define the
discovered world, and creating a space in
on
He
for the child.
newly emerging
newly
self in its
Dream.
not a parent or crypto-parent. His primary function
is
be a transitional
Dream and
which the young man can work
a reasonably satisfactory life structure that contains the
The mentor
young
fosters the
him, sharing the youthful
adulthood, a young
figure. In early
man must
is
peer;
The mentor
If
he
is
he
is
very parental,
difficult for
it is
the generational difference and
and
entirely a peer,
man
cannot represent the advanced level toward which the younger striving. If
rela-
represents a mixture of parent
he must be both and not purely either one.
move toward
to
from
shift
being a child in relation to parental adults to being an adult in a peer tion with other adults.
99
he is
both of them to overcome
the peer relationship that
is
The
the ultimate (though never fully realized) goal of the relationship.
actual parents can serve certain mentoring functions, but they are too closely tied to their offspring's pre-adult theirs) to
be primary mentor
The mentor who his protege
by a half-generation, roughly 8
is
this are
both
(in
serves these transitional functions
a responsible, admirable older sibling.
than
development
his
mind and
figures.
Age
to 15 years.
differences
He
is
experienced as
much
greater or less
not common, and they pose special hazards.
a full generation older— say twenty years or
that the relationship will be symbolized
usually older than
is
When
more— there
by both
is
the mentor
a greater risk
in parent-child terms. This
tends to activate powerful feelings, such as excessive maternalism or paternalism in the elder, and dependency or Oedipal conflicts in the younger, that interfere with the
mentoring function.
When
the age difference
is
than 6 to 8 years, the two are likely to experience each other as peers.
may then be
less
They
intimate friends or collaborative co-workers, but the mentor-
ing aspects tend to be minimal. a person twenty or even fifty years older
Still,
may,
if
he
is
in
good
own and the other's youthful Dreams, function as a signifimentor figure. And a person the same age or even younger may have
touch with his cant
important mentoring qualities ing,
and
if
if
he has unusual expertise and understand-
both have the maturity to make good use of the mentor's
In the usual course, a young
man
initially
virtues.
experiences himself as a
novice or apprentice to a more advanced, expert and authoritative adult. As the relationship evolves, he gains a fuller sense of his his capability for
receiving
own
authority and
autonomous, responsible action. The balance of giving/
becomes more equal. The younger man increasingly has the experiam" as an adult, and their relationship becomes more mutual.
ence of "I
This shift serves a crucial developmental function for the young man:
it
is
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
lOO
part of the process
LIFE
by which he transcends the father-son, man-boy
Although he
sion of his childhood.
and desperately wants
21,
S
to
is
be one,
denned
officially
takes
it
many
years to
The
sense of being a son or a boy in relation to "real" adults.
divi-
an adult at 18 or
as
overcome the
process extends
over the entire novice phase of early adulthood and becomes problematic again in the late thirties (see Chapter 9). Mentors can thus play a signifi-
cant role throughout early adulthood.
have described the mentoring relationship in
I
constructive form.
and form matter.
A
of
Of
mentoring involved. Mentoring
may be remarkably
relationship
and yet be
its
most developed and
course, relationships vary tremendously in the degree
is
beneficial to the
younger person
For example, a teacher or boss cares for and
seriously flawed.
sponsors a protege, but
not a simple, all-or-none
is
he behaves destruc-
so afraid of being eclipsed that
A
may be very limited and yet have tively at crucial moments. great value in certain respects. Some men have a purely symbolic mentor whom they never meet. Thus, an aspiring young novelist may admire an relationship
older writer, devour his books, learn a great deal about his
an idealized internal figure with
whom
he has a complex relationship.
man
In a "good enough" mentoring relationship, the young
and love
tion, respect, appreciation, gratitude
weigh but cannot entirely prevent the opposite ority,
envy, intimidation. There
feels
feelings
admira-
These out-
for the mentor.
a resonance
is
and create
life,
resentment,
:
inferi-
between them. The elder
has qualities of character, expertise and understanding that the younger
admires and wants to
make
The young man
parts of himself.
spurred on by the shared sense of his promise. Yet he
doubt:
Can he
ever
become
all
that both of
ent times— or even at the same
them want him
moment—he
excited
is
and
also full of self-
is
to be?
At
differ-
experiences himself as the
inept novice, the fraudulent impostor, the equal colleague and the rising
who
star
someday
will
Mentoring
is
is
of the mentor.
best understood as a form of love relationship. It
cult to terminate in a reasonable, civil it
beyond those
soar to heights far
manner. In
between parents and grown
like the intense relationship
is
diffi-
this respect, as in others,
offspring,
or between sexual lovers or spouses.
The mentoring
relationship lasts perhaps
age, eight to ten years at most. It
jobs or dies.
Sometimes
period, the pair
with a gradual
form
loss of
a
it
comes
to a natural
warm but modest
involvement.
Most
relationship ends with strong conflict
young man may have powerful
two or three years on the
aver-
may end when one man moves, changes end and,
after a cooling-off
friendship. It
often, however,
and bad
feelings
may end
on both
sides.
feelings of bitterness, rancor, grief,
ment, liberation and rejuvenation.
The
totally,
an intense mentor
sense of resonance
is
The
abandonlost.
The
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
now experienced as destructively make one over in his own image individuality and independence. The mentor
mentor he formerly loved and admired and demanding, or
critical
101
is
as seeking to
rather than fostering one's
only yesterday was regarded as an enabling teacher and friend has
who
a tyrannical father or smothering mother.
become
The mentor,
for his
young man inexplicably touchy, unreceptive to even the rebellious and ungrateful. By the time they are irrationally best counsel, through, there is generally some validity in each one's criticism of the part, finds the
other.
And
so
it
ends.
Much
of
its
value
may be The
ships generally— after the termination.
realized— as with love relationconclusion of the main phase
does not put an end to the meaning of the relationship. Following the separation, the younger
more
fully into himself.
to listen to the voices
man may take the admired qualities of the mentor He may become better able to learn from himself,
from within. His personality
the mentor a more intrinsic part of himself.
cant figures
is
The
is
enriched as he makes
internalization of signifi-
a major source of development in adulthood.
Forming an Occupation It
is
often assumed that by his early twenties a
a firm occupational choice
This assumption
is
and be launched
the end of adolescence.
We have found that the sequence above version suggests.
tion, a
normally ought to have
erroneous. It reflects the prevailing view that develop-
ment is normally complete by
narrow and
man
in a well-defined line of work.
The imagery
superficial. It
far
is
more
more
longer and
is
of deciding
difficult
than the
on an occupation
useful to speak of forming
is
too
an occupa-
complex, social-psychological process that extends over the entire
novice phase and often beyond.
An
initial serious
when
choice
is
usually
made during the
the
first
choice seems to be very definite,
it
usually turns out to repre-
sent a preliminary definition of interests and values. interests into occupation
may
Early Adult Tran-
Entering the Adult World, sometime between 17 and 29. Even
sition or
is
The
transformation of
rarely a simple or direct process.
A
young man
struggle for several years to sort out his multiple interests, to discover
what occupations, if any, might serve as a vehicle for living out his interests, and to commit himself to a particular line of work. Often, he seriously considers
two or more occupational
novelist,
Paul
Namson
(see
directions.
Chapter 12)
.
A vivid
example
is
given by our
THE SEASONS OF A
102
MAN S
Young men who make
LIFE
commitment
a strong occupational
twenties, without sufficient exploration of external options
in the early
and inner
prefer-
come to regret it later. On the other hand, those who don't commitment until the thirties, or who never make one, are deprived
ences, often
make
a
work that
of the satisfaction of engaging in enduring
One
is
suitable for the self
human development is that we are required to make crucial choices before we have the knowledge, judgment and self-understanding to choose wisely. Yet, if we put off these choices until we feel truly ready, the delay may produce other and
and valuable
for society.
greater costs. This
of the great paradoxes of
two great choices
especially true of the
is
of early adult-
hood: occupation and marriage.
Once values
his initial choice of
and
way, a
credentials.
and
identity
occupation
He must
is
made,
a
man must
acquire
develop a more differentiated occupational
establish himself within the occupational world.
man may
fail
skills,
or drop out, to begin again
Along the
on a new path.
He may
stay narrowly within a single track or try several directions before settling
more
firmly
on one.
The sequence
lasts several years.
A
scientist or professional (such as
academic biologist) spends many years
must
novelist
as a
student in the university.
discipline himself to the solitary
work of writing out of
an
A his
own
imagination. Executives usually spend their twenties in engineering,
sales
and
management. Hourly workers
lower-level
years to explore the
work world, acquire some
need several
in industry
training
and experience, get
move beyond the apprenThe sequence varies, the course of the novice phase. Not
acquainted with a particular industry and union,
more
tice status
and
but for
occupations
all
until the
find a
The
extends over
end of the Age Thirty Transition does
and assume
pational novitiate
biologist
it
stable occupational niche.
level of
attainment a
may be an
a
man complete
a fully adult status in the
man
his occu-
work world.
reaches by age 33 or 34 also varies.
associate professor with a national reputation or
assistant professor just starting to
do independent
research.
A
A an
novelist
may be a celebrated "promising young writer" or an unknown. An executive may be on the first rung of management or near the top. A worker may be a highly skilled machinist
and shop steward or an unskilled laborer without
job security.
The sequence
of forming an occupation
and monotonic, progressing
A man
shifts in direction.
tum on
it
until
This sequence
he is
is
is
in
in a straight line
sets
some
cases relatively direct
without gross conflicts or
himself a course and maintains his
fully "in the
occupation"
and ready
well exemplified by several (though by
biologists in our study. In college they
make
momen-
to settle
down.
no means
all)
become
aca-
the decision to
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
demic
biologists.
This choice
103
consistent with intense earlier interests,
is
such as the outdoors, hiking, reproductive phenomena, a basement chemistry lab,
tinkering with the hands.
They may
consider other occupational
choices, such as medicine or engineering, but
by the end
of college they
perhaps to take them out again in a later
set aside the alternative options,
period. After four or five years in graduate school, they often take a year
or
two of postdoctoral study, and then
fessor.
Some men complete
after they
the
the
a university position as assistant pro-
Age Thirty Transition
at this time, others
have been faculty members for a few years. Only at the end of
Age Thirty
Transition, however, does a
man complete
the preparatory
phase of his occupational development. Our biographee John Barnes an example of It
is
this sequence, as
commonly assumed
steady, single-track
we
shall see in
men
that
It
among
healthy than others. Even
17.
normally form an occupation in this
manner. However,
any of our occupational groups.
Chapter
is
is
this
sequence was not the norm in
not necessarily more "normal" or
whom
the biologists, for
the university
training system exerts a powerful socializing influence, there are other
sequences of equal or greater frequency.
For example, one of the most creative biologists
Morgan, quit high school
years in military service, then returned
Not
yet ready to go out
He spent three home and completed college at 24.
on
his
own, he remained
study and did excellent independent research. shift to
in our study, Barry
at 16 against his parents' wishes.
for
He
two
years of graduate
make the
could then
graduate work in a first-rank biology department, where he com-
pleted his doctoral degree at 31.
Morgan's choice of biology was made in Adult Transition. of adult
life.
It
Still,
was consonant with
college,
he had recurrent doubts about
through a three-year
"crisis of
during the Early
his early interests
and
commitment" before
and went
finishing the
degree. It was only at 33, after a postdoctoral fellowship
and
Ph.D.
a year's teach-
ing in an elite university, that he completed the novice phase
barked upon a more responsible, autonomous career. About
was also
Dream
his
this choice,
this
and emtime he
able, at last, to get married.
The novelists went through other complications during this formative phase. They generally had strong pre-adult interests in writing. By the Early Adult Transition, in most cases, a budding novelist was actively en-
gaged in writing and had formed the vicissitudes of that
Dream
Dream
of
becoming
The
a writer.
over the next fifteen years differed widely from
one writer to another. In no case was the course simple or monotonic. of our writers, Kevin Tyrone, got married just before finishing college at age 23.
He
and completed
his
first
One
novel
spent the next four years in a
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
104
highly encapsulated writing.
Work and
and
structure containing primarily his marriage
supporting his literary
efforts.
Her work, and By age
part-time job, provided an income at low emotional cost.
he had published three books and established
become
At 28 Tyrone was
a
28,
he could begin to believe
genuine writer.
a hard
and
serious worker,
The
not constitute a money-earning occupation.
He became
his
a reputation as a creative
Now
(but not commercially successful) novelist. that he might
his
marriage were organically linked by his wife's role in
Dream and
sustaining his
own
life
LIFE
but
work did
his writing
straight line
had to
zigzag.
a part-time instructor in writing at an excellent university, with
the blessing and the sponsorship of his devoted mentor. During the next
Age Thirty
Transition, he
became an English
professor at another university, continuing his writing
and giving up the
four years, in the course of his
mentoring relationship that had served so well for about ten
many
Like
other men, and virtually
all novelists,
years.
Tyrone had formed
a hyphenated occupation. His version of this was writer-professor. In the
period of Entering the Adult World, he established the groundwork for
an identity and career
on earning tion to
a living
as a novelist;
and he learned that he could not count
by writing novels.
He
then used the Age Thirty Transi-
form a new, academic occupation. In
Settling
Down
period with a
life
his early thirties,
he started the
structure built around his two-sided occu-
pation and his family. It
is
often assumed that the
adulthood are simple and
static
:
life
courses of working-class,
they complete
get jobs, marry and start families,
all
or
most
men
of high school,
and by the mid-twenties are on paths
that will continue with minimal
change— barring
misfortune— for many
findings contradict this view.
class
men
years.
Our
surprises of fortune or
Working-
go through the same underlying developmental periods
in other classes
in early
and occupations, though they have
their
own
as those
class-related
problems of entering the adult world and establishing a place for themselves within
it.
Eight of the ten workers in our sample experienced great
difficulty
forming a satisfactory occupation in Entering the Adult World
and had
a
An
moderate or severe
example
is
crisis in
sample. In childhood
Thomas was known
(who had abandoned the brother who was more studious and
father"
the family.
the
Age Thirty
Transition.
Floyd Thomas, one of the three Black workers in our
Thomas
as the
"bad" son, "just
like his
family), -in contrast to the "good" industrious, like the mother's side of
quit high school in the eleventh grade,
worked
in a
foundry and at 18 enlisted in the army during the Korean War. While in basic training
woman who had He performed well
he married a
stable, middle-class life.
been to college and led a more in
Korea
as a
demolition tech-
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
and was promoted
nician
AWOL
he then went
to sergeant; but
105
and was
discharged.
A
civilian at 22,
Thomas
rejoined his wife in her
home
town. After a
few months of holding a menial job and living a conventional
For the next four years he lived
He worked
with his
life
own home
wife and her family, he deserted her and returned to his
"on the
a rather disorganized life
town.
street."
mostly in gambling and numbers, occasionally holding a more
standard job until
it
became too
oppressive. His
was to become a boxing champion.
It
Dream
during this time
was not possible to make boxing
his
primary occupation, but he had a manager (a partial but important mentor)
and established his wife,
who
a local reputation.
He had two
or three brief reunions with
helped him become more independent of his mother. By
age 26 he was becoming increasingly distressed with his chaotic
life
and
aware that he would never realize his boxing Dream.
Thomas's Age Thirty Transition (age 27 to 31) was a time of struggle and recurrent crisis. He used it to terminate the fragmented life structure and to create the wife,
new
basis for a
boys at the community center. ships
life.
With
the help of his manager and his
he gave up the abortive boxing career and instead taught boxing to
and strengthened
He
limited his extramarital sexual relation-
commitment
his
church at 28 and maintained a modest operator in a local factory, he
became
He
to the marriage.
rejoined the
Finding a job
tie to it.
a skilled worker
as
machine
and received
several
promotions.
By
31
he and
Thomas had
his wife
established the structure of his
worked, they could afford two
an increasingly middle-class were
less severe
life
The
style.
but recurrently acute. His
new
life.
Since both
cars, regular vacations
and
tensions within the marriage
social life
was mainly "with the
boys" playing golf and engaging in milder versions of the :
earlier
gambling,
drinking and sexual promiscuity. His world and his wife's remained largely separate. His istic,
commitment
sexually forbidding
to her
was
still
and intolerant of
conflicted:
he found her moral-
his carefree, sensual side;
but she
provided a stable center that he needed and could find no other way of obtaining.
At the end
of his novice phase
he was forming a
life
structure that
could contain and give expression to these contradictory parts of himself,
but they coexisted
in
an uneasy truce, not
fully integrated. It
work of subsequent developmental periods tically
change
For
all
to integrate,
would be the
modify or
dras-
this structure.
the occupations, our general finding
is
this:
the process of form-
ing an occupation extends over the novice phase of early adulthood.
The who make an early, intense commitment to an who remain undecided, and for those who make
process goes on for those
occupation, for those
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
106
major occupational
shifts
during their twenties. At the end of the Age
Thirty Transition, the more open, formative phase
concluded.
is
A man
must now make more enduring choices and build on the groundwork tablished by that point.
The
es-
formative process continues throughout early
adulthood, but usually within the pattern established by the early
thirties.
Forming a Marriage and Family While the wedding and the
birth of the
first
child are important marker
events in the history of the family, the process of forming a marriage and
family starts well before the marker events and continues long afterward. As
with a man's occupation, his marriage and family
go through a highly
life
much
formative process throughout the novice phase and often
The
longer.
process starts in a man's Early Adult Transition and continues in
the succeeding periods. His
first
developmental task
is
to
form the capa-
having adult peer relationships with women. These relationships
bility of
may have many components
in
many combinations:
affection, sexuality,
emotional intimacy, dependency, nurturing, romantic love, friendship, laboration, respect, admiration, enduring
young man to
commitment.
to learn about his inner resources
women, and about what they it is
about him that
women
takes time for a
It
vulnerabilities in relation
demand and withhold from him. He
offer,
has a lot to learn about the characteristics of
what
and
col-
women
that attract him,
find appealing. His pre-adult
and
development
prepares him, partially but never sufficiently, to undertake this develop-
mental work. But
it
also leaves
him with
tification.
This legacy complicates his
seriously,
and to
join with
one
a legacy of guilt, anxiety
efforts to
woman
know women,
man
remains a novice at this task until the early
relating to the feminine in others
velopmental
And tions,
and
to take
them
in the long-term enterprise of build-
ing a marriage and family. In the light of these difficulties,
der that a
and mys-
in himself should
it is
small won-
thirties,
and that
be a lifelong de-
task.
yet, ready or not,
young men
in all cultures, for countless genera-
have been marrying and starting families in the novice phase. There
has probably never been a society in which the average age at
first
marriage
was greater than 25 years. (China may become a modern exception, through rigorous government policy, but this remains to be seen.) There are, of course, individuals and subgroups who marry later for the total population
or not at
all.
Powerful forces impelling us toward some form of marriage
and family seem
to
be given
in the biological
the individual and in the nature of
human
and psychological makeup of society.
The
question
is
not
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
whether to have the family institution
is
societal conditions.
adulthood needs to form
in early
women
ships with
as well as
He
men.
relatively
some measure both the self. Under reasonably
to live out in
1
the "masculine "
and the "feminine" aspects of
favorable conditions, being a
ment.
It
husband and father contributes
developmental
in part a
is
How
a
and
and family
this occurs
on a
met
is
it
also
for society.
man-woman
relation-
crucial for the well-being of individual,
Given the fundamental importance of these
species.
unable to
is
large scale
and has destructive consequences are
to his develop-
young man
well these developmental tasks involving
ships, marriage
society
when
failure
When
function adequately in the family. reflects a failure of society
enduring relation-
also needs to accept the responsi-
and pleasures of parenthood and
bilities
but what form of family
as a social institution,
best suited to foster the development of children and parents
under particular
A man
107
tasks, it
is
we must choose a partner and start a family before we quite know what we are doing or how to do it well. This is another of the bootstrap operations so common in human develop-
astonishing that nature's timing
ment, and another aspect of
is
so bad:
human complexity, growth and irrationality. man vows to maintain a long-term relacreate and raise a family. The fact that he un-
In deciding to marry, a young tionship and, ordinarily, to
dertakes this obligation does not necessarily mean, however, that he
Most men in their commitment to wife and
pared for inner
it.
loving, sexually free If a
man
twenties are not ready to family,
is
pre-
make an enduring
and they are not capable of a highly
and emotionally intimate
relationship.
marries during his Early Adult Transition (age 17 to 22), as
about half of our sample did, he has had relationships with adult
little
women. Courtship and
experience in forming peer marital choice are likely to
be heavily bound up with the tasks of the Early Adult Transition, and pecially with his efforts to separate
grownup and
from parents.
an exploitive
forts to establish
He
is
and
others.
He
In the Early Adult Transition, a young man's
act.
is
so often a frightening mysef-
an intimate marital relationship are complicated by his
continuing sense of himself as a figure.
is
es-
wants both to be very
to maintain his pre-adult ties to parents
hardly a step beyond adolescence, where sex tery or
He
engaged
little
in a struggle
boy
in relation to a powerful maternal
both to express and to control his various
fantasies of this figure as devouring witch, feeding breast, sexual seducer,
humiliating rejecter, willing servant and demanding master. His wife attracts
him
in part because she
his inner
maternal
seems to lack the qualities he
figure.
Yet
their relationship
may
fears
and
resents in
actually contain these
and other aspects of the mother-son interaction (such as her indulging or admiring him), which in time are likely to become more problematic.
About 30 percent
of the
men
in our study got married during the period
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
108
World
of Entering the Adult
(roughly age 22 to 28). These marriages are
colored by the tasks of this period and enriched by the developmental work
done
in the Early
Adult Transition. Now, a
the termination of pre-adulthood and
He
structure.
and want to share
life
Still,
ten the
goals
planned
his
usually arises within,
and the
woman who
seeks a
he
and
is
is
is
man
more
has
first
adult
out life
emerging aspirations
will appreciate his
life
fully carried
actively building his
with him. Marriage during
consonant with, the adult world he
this period is
entering
setting.
many sources of difficulty for these marriages as well. Ofcouple who marry in this period have known each other since the there are
Early Adult Transition or before. However, the relationship formed earlier is
less suitable for
formed
subsequent periods. This
up
in the teens usually break
arability. If
the couple do marry,
it is
is
one reason why romances
after several years of
seeming insep-
frequently with serious misgivings in
one or both partners— misgivings that are suppressed out of a sense of obligation to the partner or to the family If a
man
is still
and
network.
social
a bachelor in his late twenties,
he
is
likely to "get
serious" about marrying during his Age Thirty Transition.
or pressed to marry by parents, friends
He
is
more
encouraged
and occupational network, and by
voices within himself. His bachelorhood
may
earlier
have been a delight:
an opportunity to explore, to be sexually promiscuous, to have a few ous (but flawed) love
women
Age Thirty as a
affairs,
without worrying too
or even to remain emotionally distant from
much about
having a "problem." During his
Transition, however, being unmarried
gap in his
life,
a lacuna in the life structure.
usually experienced
sample
begins mar-
did, has the pos-
advantage of knowing more about himself and his relationships with
women, and past.
is
The man who
ried life during this period, as 20 percent of our sible
seri-
He
of having resolved
more
fully
some
also has the possible disadvantage of
of the conflicts
from the
marrying under pressure.
he may make the choice in an effort to more than to fulfill a deep love relationship. Whatever the period in which marriage occurs, all marital relationships begin with some combination of strengths and problems. A couple is never fully prepared for marriage, no matter how long and how well the partners Feeling that this
"normalize" his
his last chance,
is
life
have known each other. Couples tionship
may
who
settle early for a very limited rela-
find this sufficient for a while, but in time the discontents
will erupt in gross conflict or will lead to a stagnant marriage.
developmental work periods of the tory ways.
The
life
is
Continuing
required of individuals and couples in successive
course,
stability of
if
the marriage
is
to evolve in mutually satisfac-
marriage as an institution has traditionally been
sustained by the binding forces of culture, religion, extended family
and
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
law— and,
frequently,
by the
109
acceptance of discreet extramarital
tacit
rela-
tionships. In contemporary society, as the legitimacy of authority and the
bonds of
social integration are
stitutional support
A
weakened, marital
women
man's love relationships with
many
functions.
I
want
to describe
him
is
dinarily includes loving, romantic, tender
beyond
this.
The
special
woman
is
many forms and
one type of relationship,
man.) This
as the special
efforts of the spouses.
can take
a
in
serve
which he
may
ex-
unique relationship that
or-
woman. (She
experiences her as the special (loved and loving)
perience
stability receives less in-
and depends much more on the
and sexual
like the true
too
but
feelings,
goes
it
mentor: her special quality
her connection to the young man's Dream. She helps to animate the
lies in
part of the self that contains the
Dream. She
facilitates his entry into
the
adult world and his pursuit of the Dream. She does this partly through her
own
At
a deeper psy-
own
internal fem-
actual efforts as teacher, guide, host, critic, sponsor.
him
chological level she enables
to project onto her his
inine figure— the "anima," as Jung has depicted it— who generates
and sup-
The special woman helps him to shape and live Dream she shares it, believes in him as its hero, gives it her blessjoins him on the journey and creates a "boundary space" within which
ports his heroic strivings.
out the ing,
:
can be imagined and his hopes nourished.
his aspirations
Like the mentor, the special adulthood, a
become
a
man
is
woman
is
a transitional figure.
struggling to outgrow the
more autonomous
adult.
The
little
boy
woman
special
During
can foster his adult
aspirations while accepting his dependency, his incompleteness
need to make her into something more than (and Later, in the Mid-life Transition,
With
person.
and
will
special
A only
have
he
will
need of the actual and the
more complete
his is.
in himself
illusory contributions of the
woman.
couple can form a lasting relationship that furthers his development if it
also furthers hers. If his sense of her as the special
mainly from his wishful projections and hardly at sires
and
than) she actually
have to become a more individual
further development, he will be less
less
early
and to
in himself
and
cheated.
ment
efforts, If in
stems
from her own de-
all
sooner or later the bubble will burst and both will feel
supporting his
will suffer
woman
and both
Dream
will later
she loses her own, then her develop-
pay the
price. Disparities of this
often surface in transitional periods such as the
kind
Age Thirty Transition
or
the Mid-life Transition.
A
man's wife may be his special
scribed. Alternatively, they
porting but has
little
may have
woman
in the sense
a relationship that
is
I
have
connection to his Dream. Indeed, his wife
certain crucial respects be antithetical to his
Dream.
just de-
loving and sup-
What
may
in
she loves in
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
110
S
LIFE
him, and what she wants to build into their pursuit of the
life,
may hinder
or preclude the
Dream. Choosing to marry her was, in effect, choosing to Dream. If her Dream is different from his,
follow a direction away from the or antagonistic to
be dealt with
to
their marriage starts
it,
in time.
A
tional"
only after
conflict.
an aspect of the current controversy between the various "tradi-
and "liberated" versions of the woman's
woman,
tional is
is
may emerge
disparity of this kind
produce bitter discontent and
years of marriage, often to
This
with a contradiction that will have
life.
primarily involved in her roles as wife
For the more
tradi-
and mother, the Dream
Her identity is largely him to realize his him pulls too far from him too much and preoccupies
to have a certain kind of family
and community
life.
fashioned on and appended to the husband's. She helps
Dream, unless it marriage and family. His Dream thus pursuing her interests. forties
:
The
serves as a vehicle for defining
and
big challenge for her comes in the thirties and
her husband and children need her
less
and
offer
her
less,
and she
must then form a more distinctive identity of her own. The more liberated woman tries to form her own specific Dream. If she gets seriously involved in an occupation, she and her husband must
make tremendous
efforts at
mutual accommodation and individual develop-
ment. Acknowledging and managing the is
a crucial
problem
in the relationship
hard enough to form a
life
disparities
between
between
lovers
structure around one person's
Dreams
structure that can contain the
I
have discussed
this
Ultimately, of course, of
it
the man, the woman,
The End How
satisfactory
ill
is
a heroic task
prepared
us.
must be examined from the multiple perspectives the marriage, family and society.
were the
(a)
structures of our
life
To
life
answer
men
in category a,
The
five
men
we
as the
(c)
(b) mixed
predominantly negative. There
twenty in b and
in the
Age Thirty
divided the sample
structure predominantly positive;
inantly positive" category included three workers
other groups.
men
this question,
negative, or ambiguous;
and
fifteen
It is
of the Novice Phase
into three groups:
were
and spouses.
matter chiefly from the vantage point of the man.
Transition drew to a close?
positive
Dreams
Dream. Building a
of both partners
indeed, and one for which evolution and history have
their
five in c.
The "predom-
and four from each of the
"predominantly negative" category
in-
cluded three biologists, one executive and one novelist.
While some
life
structures are
more
satisfactory than others,
no structure
Major Tasks of the Novice Phase
is
without flaws and contradictions. Even the best structure has
tions
and must
in
time be changed. Every stable period
within and enhance a particular structure.
live
tional period devoted to
the basis for a
To
tains
is
limita-
used to build,
is
followed by a transi-
modifying or destroying that structure and creating
new but never permanent
stability.
get a sense of the developmental changes that occur during the
novice phase, trast
It is
its
111
it is
instructive to
remarkable.
some elements from the
new
the context of a
compare
A qualitatively new past,
a man's life at 17
structure
and
emerging.
is
33.
con-
but their meaning has changed within
In the Early Adult Transition a man's
life.
The
always con-
It
life is still
and the pre-adult world; the process getting under way. He has a Dream, inchoate or differ-
strongly rooted in the family of origin
of separation entiated,
is
just
and diverse hopes,
Fifteen years
later, in
plans for the future.
fears, fantasies,
the early
thirties, his
adolescence seems part of
the distant past, far removed from the current world.
continued to
live in
community and
the same
have brought changes in the fabric of his in a
new
geographical locale and a
he almost certainly has remarried— and
altered dramatically.
parents
may have
becoming
is
what
it
means
to
or, if
they are
them
a parent to is
alive,
new
taking a it
By
he
this
lives
time
even divorced and
is
shifting toward his
Even
if
ways from
these choices. If they are well
The
character of
his present
occupation
contains possibilities and limitations he did cases, the
occupation
his earlier expectations.
a
man moves toward major new
choices or recommits himself to existing choices.
made— from
A
great deal hinges
on
the viewpoint of the individual's
values, talents, possibilities— they provide the center for a relatively
satisfactory life structure. If the preparatory
and the new structure ingly painful
more
has
be a husband and father has
the balance
shape.
As the Age Thirty Transition ends,
Dream,
is
or losing contact with them.
the one he had hoped for,
different in crucial
man
often, however,
not imagine in the Early Adult Transition. In most is
a
So too has the meaning of being a son: one or both
died
his occupational life
Most
if
changing times
sociocultural world.
and family— perhaps
a wife
his sense of
life.
new
Even
social context,
difficult
is
flawed,
life
work has been poorly done Down will become increas-
in Settling
and attempts to create a more and costly.
satisfactory structure will
be
The
V
Life
James Tracy, Executive (I) of
in 1924 in Exeter, New Hampshire, were about 27 years old. In 1929 they moved to Haverstraw, a small New York town, and Jim's only sibling, George, was
James Bradford Tracy was born
when both
his parents
born that same She and
year.
family revolved around Jim's mother.
fought like cats and dogs.
I
continually losing that
The
my
temper
wasn't supposed to lose
I
intelligent, a strong ruler
and
We
both had tempers, and
her or she at me. She ground
at
my
it
I
into
was
me
temper. She was a very strong person, very
clearly ran the
whole show.
His mother had graduated, Phi Beta Kappa, from Sweet Briar College in Virginia.
Our
She was ambitious,
willful, bright
personalities are quite a bit alike.
question about that, and
still
and domineering: She ruled the
does. She's always
roost,
there's
no
been very active in town.
She was president of the garden club, head of the
local welfare society,
My
mother and father got along quite well, I'd say, and still do. They have been married almost 50 years; they're about 75. My growing up was reasonably normal, if there's any such thing. I had friends, played baseball and football. I was always very interested in athletics. wheel
a big
in the
town.
Jim's recollections of his early
life
focused on his mother.
He had
less
to say about his father:
My father came from a very poor family in Maine. His father died when he was three years old and he was brought up by his mother and worked from childhood on. He was the youngest of seven children in a tiny town. He
got a scholarship out of high school to the University of Maine, went
there three years, got the war fever and a pilot
and never graduated from
went into World War I. He became There was no GI Bill, or that
college.
kind of thing.
My
father's bright,
I'm not saying he has better than average intelligence,
but he's a smart guy and had a very good job
head
industrial engineer,
not well
off
which
is
at
Owens-Corning.
a very responsible job.
He
was
While we were
during the depression, we certainly had food and clothing and
:
The were a hell of a
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
than a
lot better off
lot of people.
113
never wanted for
I
anything.
His mother's side of the family was clearly superior in terms of
and accomplishment.
creativity
A
upwardly mobile
a well-to-do Protestant family, she married a lower-class,
Catholic
New
England college dropout. Although her husband was
man and good
Robert Bradford, who was
charismatic than her husband.
and had
flower
was a heroic
My
The
Bradfords had
To young
settled in Boston.
far more powerful and come over on the May-
Jim, his maternal grandfather
figure
grades ever recorded.
He ended up
grandfather was a great big
—
a
huge man.
A
lot of
as
I
him but he and I got Anyhow, cars, came in one day and
was
My
just a little kid.
him and
take
proud of the
fact that
he threw Kettering bodily out of
to Detroit.
be one of his goddamn
basic patents,
My
with a violent
people were afraid of
Kettering, the inventor of the electric starter for
to
electrical field.
six feet four,
tried to hire
him
took a
and had the highest
an inventor in the
man, about
tall
along very well, for some reason or other, and
want
He
grandfather went to Rensselaer Polytechnical Institute.
four-year course in electrical engineering in three years
temper
a stable
might well have been a rebellious
provider, the marriage
act against her father,
class,
well-educated, genteel young lady from
flunkies.
which he sold to General
grandfather was always very
He had
his shop.
don't
I
He
didn't
know how many
Electric.
When
he was 34 years old, he accidentally lost the sight of one eye and weakened the other. He had to quit inventing because he couldn't see, and he lived for the rest of his life on his royalties. He lived very well. He had a Cadillac ,
and
a big
acres of land right
house
smack
orchards'. I
used to have to do
and then
would be able
He book
I
middle of Darien
my
chores,
in his
about four gardens and
garden every morning,
started writing history books about the Pilgrims. There's a fabulous
which he gave
collection about the Pilgrims
think
work
He had
—woods,
to play in the afternoon.
a cantankerous old bastard
my
in Darien, Connecticut.
in the
I
in his later years,
me
in his will.
He
was
but a very bright guy.
I
was closer than most anyone to him, which was strange, because
cousin lived with him. But
I
got the Pilgrim books, which were his
prize possession.
He first
gave the world things which
to
make
he did the same thing Jim's
I
think are quite important.
He
mother
for other industries.
carried the flavor
and power of
this
man. She had
temper, and so did Jim. She had his ambition, "intelligence and
made Jim
was the
printing presses run by electricity as opposed to steam, and
feel special,
will.
his
She
the favorite. She guided and sometimes pushed him.
:
1
THE SEASONS OF A
14
MAN S
LIFE
While Grandfather was the model, Mother was the one who nourished and sustained Jim's dream of himself have the same drive
I
as a leader of
my mother
had. I'm reasonably intelligent and
think I'm more like her in that respect. a quicker
My
mind than my
mother
is
who
father,
men
My
mind
I
more like hers. I have more methodical mind.
is
has a slower,
very quick.
Father paled by comparison. "He's always been sort of a shadow," Jim
"He
said.
and
I
hasn't
me
had very much influence on
Mke him, but he
just hasn't really
at
all.
He's been there,
had much influence on me." Father
remained in the background, overshadowed by the driving mother and genius grandfather.
Mother and grandfather stood
accomplishment and that was
for individual initiative,
but a
success; father represented stability,
stability
mundane.
His younger brother, George, was more passive, retiring figure.
like their
father— a shadowy,
George was the devalued one, who did not stand out
academically or in sports.
He
but he couldn't keep up with
was
good-looking and more outgoing,
large,
his older brother.
Jim Tracy was shy and introverted.
He
learned, via messages
from
his
mother, to exercise self-control and to commit himself only in situations
from which he would emerge looking good. ing to look foolish," he said at 44, a
good part of
to enter into
it,
but
I still
"I
had
when he was
hate to look foolish, just as
something where I'm not going to do
something where somebody
is
about not want-
a feeling
interviewed. "I've outgrown
my
son does.
I
hate
well. I just hate to
do
thinking that I'm compromising myself or
just looking silly."
In Haverstraw, a neighbor and retired naval captain
who had
"only
daughters," began, with Mother's encouragement, to treat Jim as a son.
When
Jim was ten he began going with the neighbor to football games at it was assumed that he would eventually attend the naval
Annapolis. Soon
academy. Jim enjoyed athletics tion,
to a
he compensated
as a boy.
With
his competitiveness
for his average ability
and was able to
and determinaexcel.
He went
YMCA summer camp which gave an award to the outstanding camper.
"Whoever won year.
Well,
I
that award automatically
won
damn
the
thing! It
very pleased, needless to say. So selor.
That's
how
I
I
went back
first
for
a counselor the next
time
I'd ever
won.
two more years
my summers." Winning that event. He had competed against his
spent
twelve was a symbolic
became
was the
as a
I
was
coun-
competition at peers,
and won.
His victory, free of parental influence and taking place hundreds of miles
from home, was an achievement of
his
own.
The
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
115
Feeling that the local high school was inadequate for her son, his mother
decided to send him to a
prep school. His father thought
was Jim might have to repeat a year of high school. Father struggled but, usual, Mother won. Through the influence of her old family friends, she first-rate
this
risky:
as
got her son into the
elite,
summer
to
school.
lost
I
had
I
He
Academy.
all-male Exeter
"half sophomore/half junior.
entered at 17 as a
and go
to take extra courses that year
only one year instead of two.
It
me
took
five years
to get through high school."
Exeter meant a marked change from the more casual Haver-
Socially,
straw public school:
During
my
a long time.
last
couple of years in high school,
Then
at the prep school
I
went with one
I
The
broke up with her.
around with in high school were interested in
athletics.
We
girl for
guys
I
ran
spent most of
our time playing seasonal sports.
I went out for track, and concentrated on being a distance runner. We played sports during the day and had movie dates on Friday and Saturday nights.
Exeter was pretty liberal as far as prep schools go.
They used
to give
weekend a month, where, if your grades were up, you could go to Boston and raise holy hell. We used to make out with local girls. Funny coincidence, a woman that my mother roomed with in college ran a local girls' school, which I thought was going to be a big "in" in terms of going us one
out with
and
I
girls. I tried it
once, but she gave
me
the biggest dog in the school
never went back. Exeter was a very tough school academically.
to study like hell.
I
had
didn't have time for anything else other than study-
I
ing and athletics. '
As graduation approached, the naval captain neighbor arranged
congressman to recommend Jim that
summer and
He
for Annapolis.
for his
took a competitive exam
placed second. r
You
talk
at Exeter
about blind luck.
were algebra and geometry.
the academy and
Then my local
The two
it
Then
I
I
had
who
Anderson traded a
to take in the
I
came
in
really got into action.
West
summer
took a seven-hour exam for
was on algebra and geometry.
friend Captain
congressman,
courses
second of 200.
He went
to the
Point for an Annapolis; sent two
guys to Annapolis rather than one to each.
Jim was being groomed by respected. It was she
who
his
mother
to
be the kind of
man she most who made
did the educational planning and
everything happen through the interventions of her Exeter friends, Captain
Anderson and the at
New
York congressman. Mother's dream that her son his Dream as well. Her family had landed Plymouth Rock. This heritage was carried by Grandfather, who symbol-
would become
a leader
was now
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
Il6
ized the heroic aspects of
American
Mother communicated
similar
and
creativity
transferred this legacy to Jim, favoring
him with
communicate
The Early Adult Jim started
it
He
themes of high achievement and leadership
to her first-born son. Father did not reject this orientation,
represent or
know-how.
industrial
a gift of cherished books.
in the
way
but he did not
Mother and her family
that
did.
Transition
Annapolis in 1943, at age 19. He was starting a transitional him into early adulthood. Because of the war, the
at
period that carried
academy had shortened
its
length of study to three years. During his
first
year, Jim did extremely well and ranked near the top of his class. He watched himself carefully, keeping tight control over his friendships and his academics.
was extremely
It
there and I
wanted
and
it's
rigid.
I
have tried to remember
an absolute blank.
to stay out of trouble.
really set
me
up.
I
.
had
a lot of history,
Dream found
Jim's its
I
.
Exeter
.
had good
four years into three and forgot a lot of courses that
did very well
I
my
first
year,
three weeks
mainly because
a very fine school academically,
is
During the war they crammed
grades.
never had
I
liked to have taken,, like philosophy.
math, sciences, a supportive
first
the "nonessential" subjects.
all
would have
my
environment
at the naval
emphasis upon authority, leadership and team
values of his family were given expression in his
We
wham wham wham.
tactics, just
effort.
life at
academy with
The
traditional
the academy.
He
taught at the Annapolis Sunday school. His grades began to drop during his
second year, and he eventually graduated in the middle of his
He then
class.
volunteered for the U.S. Marines.
At the naval academy, Jim had shown a lack ships with women. Talking excitedly about an athletic hero, he told several
was
his
Annapolis roommate,
which centered on the theme of
woman
the devouring
He
stories
of initiative in his relation-
my roommate for six months, He married a Hollywood
until
very nice guy. nailed him.
A
fabulous athlete
.
.
.
star,
but he was
he flunked
out.
He
was a
or she married him.
She
just totally innocent, and.
people would constantly take advantage of him, because he was absolutely naive.
And
boy, she did!
He
really got
taken to the cleaners.
Jim was not to be similarly consumed. In until
he met Victoria
in his last year.
fact,
She was
he did not date
seriously
a Catholic, the only child of
The an admiral
who had
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
died in combat during
World War
II.
117
Jim met her
one weekend when another midshipman brought her to Annapolis for a dance.
They began
a one-year courtship,
conducted primarily through the
mail: "She was very popular with a lot of different midshipmen. She was
thought of by various people.
relatively highly
I
dated her a
lot,
and we got
along very well. She was a good dancer."
Although Victoria was a
virgin,
Jim had had some prior sexual experi-
ence. Like his other relationships with
ship with Victoria lacked depth
women,
the long-distance relation-
and maturity.
During the Early Adult Transition, which Jim was completing at this man has to make preliminary choices out of which a new life struc-
time, a
ture can be
formed
in the next period.
academy with hopes of mindedly followed
Jim Tracy graduated from the naval
a distinguished career as a
this traditional
Marine
officer.
He
single-
path laid out by his mother and others.
little time or energy on personal relationships, especially with women. His Early Adult Transition was focused on career to the detriment
But he spent
of his personal
life.
These choices had consequences
for Jim's
subsequent
development.
Entering the Adult
World
After graduating at 22, Jim Tracy was assigned to a marine base in Virginia.
He
felt isolated.
married. "I
he
said.
having a
up
Two months
went down
"Some ball. I
he proposed to Victoria and they were
to Virginia after
I
graduated.
of the guys were married
thought
for three years. It
Victoria, the
later,
it
would be a
was lonely
I
did
I
like
as hell,"
they were
had been penned
it."
seemed a logical choice for someone hoping But there were problems from the start. For
brat,"
to rise in the military ranks.
one thing, Victoria's
great idea. ...
was a stupid move, but
"Navy
I
and they looked
religion:
They made me read a 1 500-page instrucThe head priest, a very fine guy, gave it to me, and I read it from cover to cover. The more I studied, the more I realized that I would never become a Catholic. I just couldn't believe it. And then I married I
got fed up with Catholicism.
tional book.
Victoria.
then
She went
just quit.
I
to a Catholic church.
I
went with her
never went back to church, which
for a* while
made me
and
feel guilty
every once in a while.
Victoria was quite frivolous: she spent most of her time at golf, bowling
and tennis with the other
officers' wives.
She was "kind of
cold, semif rigid,
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
Il8
and
a slob
a
poor housekeeper." Yet
my
time was "the best of
this
mar-
riage":
She didn't respond very well
She didn't
sexually.
She would be very interested
itself.
in foreplay.
much
act repulsed her, she just sure as hell didn't get
pretty happy. She was
good marriage
down
there.
Their
first
for the first year
We
had
Soon
and
a lot of fun.
who was
child, Linda,
their marriage.
lousy in bed, but
still
like the physical act
don't think the physical
I
out of
would
I
it.
say
a half, or at least the
She was
a
.
it
.
good companion.
not planned, was born two years after
anonymous women, some married, some
all
an
Irish
Victoria
became pregnant
after they returned to the States.
dren were their major
my
ties.
a pretty
time we were
but one younger than he. While he was having an intense
woman,
We were
the Tracys went to England, where Jim began
after,
a round of affairs with
.
was
A
again.
Tracy was
had no
I
That's the way I've always looked at
desire to
with
son, Robert, was born
Linda became "the apple of
love out to Linda because
affair
The two unplanned
27.
and
single,
my eye.
pour
it
...
I
chil-
poured
out to Victoria.
I'm not making any excuses for
it.
myself/'
His connection to Robert was minimal.
He
was treated equally with Linda.
didn't have the same affection for
obvious thing. that
I
It's
not that
loved her more,
if it's
I
think he must have sensed that
I
him
that
I
had
for Linda. It wasn't
him and
didn't like
possible to love
I
did like her.
I
any
It's just
someone more.
His feeling for his children contrasted sharply with his cold, distant, impersonal relationships with women. they were
The I
first affair
can't say
I
I
don't think
I
liked going to
The women were
casual types
did not have names;
*
that was really other than totally casual was an infatuation.
loved her;
desire for her. desire.
The women
literally sexual objects
was that strong, but
it
bed with
a mixture of
and others that weren't.
her,
and
some
it
I
felt a great
was an all-consuming
totally
spur-of-the-moment
wasn't a pattern other than they
It
were pebbles on the beach.
unexamined hopes
Jim's idealistic but
shattered. His relationships with other as a
husband and I
for a
good marriage had been
women made him
feel a failure
father.
didn't have any feelings of guilt as far as Victoria was concerned.
I
had a feeling of guilt as far as the family situation was concerned, because by that time I had a sense of loyalty to Linda, whom I was really very fond
of. I
think the
real
thing that kept
me
in
my
family was
my
daughter.
The As
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
Jim Tracy did well during these
a marine,
six years.
him.
in positions of authority over
him
pressed by Jim, and asked
met
marine general
kinds of people, heard
all
all sorts
of high-ranking people in the Navy.
Most
England was im-
in
college.
and was exposed
to a lot
them
of
in
war
his general to the
of things
always
Jim served for a year
his aide.
and during that time accompanied
that post, "I
A
become
to
There were
men were
promotions and the glimmer of a bright future. Older
119
now
are
admirals or
re-
tired."
These powerful men provided numerous opportunities and responsibiliTracy thrived, rose from company officer to battalion G-3, a planner
ties.
numbers of men. He attended
for large
for the paratroops, learned to tion, as a captain,
fly,
several military schools, volunteered
and became
a general's aide. In this posi-
he became an instructor of well-known admirals.
From roughly age 24 to 27, Jim Tracy knew many women. Only one of them had an identity for him— like Victoria, she was an admiral's daughter. They met while Jim was stationed at the war college. The one
that
was an admiral's daughter.
really flipped over
I
ing for the admiral and
it
would have been kind of
she was engaged to another
officer.
We
few months, and then she got married. it
was amusing.
much
four or five I
guess
it
I
of a I
I
was an usher I
sort of
broke
wasn't laughing too
live. I
off
it
.
.
We .
last
wedding, so
at the
corresponded for
sounds pretty sordid.
with the admiral's daughter, Tracy was taking a
affair it,
I
can laugh, but you know, a marine post
it.
I
about his sexual
thought about
was, running around with
risk.
a small
is
of those chances again."
frantic "prowling" quality
very badly about
felt
I
she went off with this guy.
would never take some
There was a I
were getting hot and heavy the
long as
as
it
was work-
was.
By having an
a bitch
Then
months and then
"Looking back on
community.
never forget
I'll
at the time!
I
a political scandal since
all
it
life.
quite a bit,
what
a son of
of those people's wives. It was a hell
way
to be. But I did it. I had a great sexual attraction to those girls. had an insatiable desire, something kept pushing me. I was conon the prowl, and I mean constantly.
sort of
stantly
Behind the prowling, there was I
felt a
sense of failure.
a
I
vague longing: just
had
a great, strong urge to
after people. It wasn't a guilt feeling against Victoria,
against felt
the principle. There was
that
what
faithful to
I
really
wanted was
them. That was a
married Victoria, and
I
real
but a
be chasing
guilt feeling
something wrong with me. to love
I
always
somebody and be completely
ambition that
I
was probably rationalizing
had. This was after
I
over the place.
I
all
1
20
THE SEASONS OF A MAN wanted
really
LIFE
S
somebody
to be faithful to
What
me
kept
at
it,
as
much
came right down and leave my kids,
to should
back
I'd
a
the time
woman he
anything in love
really get
I
I
was running around
was not feeling that
else,
with somebody, but
when
it
divorced and break up the family
off.
In his early twenties, Tracy's
budding career
as
madly
strongly about anybody. I'd be
his
all
madman.
like a
life
hardly knew. She lacked
had two primary elements:
structure
as a military officer,
and
many
his
new
marriage.
He
married
of the qualities required in this
occupational world. She could not support his heroic Dream. Soon the
marriage began to disintegrate, and instead of working on
By
were three elements in
28, there
Work
and the "other woman."
it,
he withdrew.
his life structure:
work, family
was central, although Jim was having serious
doubts about his suitability for military
life.
The
family was important, but
the relationship with Victoria was becoming progressively more destructive for
both of them.
Victoria. less to
He
He wanted
was not indifferent to the changing relationship with more, but
as things got worse,
he gave
less
and
tried
improve the marriage.
The
"other
woman"
played an important role: she allowed Jim to deal
with tensions by having two different series of
daughter
women
women
as foils.
Casual
with a
affairs
culminated in the intense relationship with the admiral's
when he was
27.
For the
first
time he experienced rejection by a
woman.
The Age Thirty
Transition
By
1952, at age 28, Jim Tracy
At
this point,
had had
six years of
he started asking himself:
Is
marriage and the marines.
there anything
more
to life
than the lock-pace of the marines, a cold marriage, and sexually exciting
but empty encounters with women? The rewards doled out by older
men
proved inadequate compensation for his lack of rapid advancement and his personal defeats.
He
did not have a special
woman
might have helped him sustain the Dream and give
it
or a
mentor who
expression.
On
his
own, awkwardly, he sought a new way.
Although he could not leave about leaving the marines. that his chances for
He had
becoming
desire for the military life
his family,
he began to think seriously
earned several promotions, but he
a general
were
nil.
More than
knew
that, his
was equally low. After stewing for several months,
Tracy volunteered for combat duty in Korea: "I had never been shot
at
and
The
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
Maybe
121
sounds corny, but I really meant it. I owed them something. Having missed World War II, I volunteered for combat in Korea." Volunteering for combat was a critical event. It marked the decision to end his military career. By going through the ordeal of combat, he could I
had
a peculiar philosophy.
the country educated me, and
felt
it
I
repay society, family and military, and leave the service with a sense of
The
dignity.
new ways
volunteering also reflected the desire to explore
of living. Finally, aspirations for
it
represented a turning away from his mother and her
him toward an unknown
own making.
future of his
In 1953, about a year after signing up for combat, Tracy got to Korea. It
was a remarkable experience:
The guy who was Your mission
the corps
company
only the worst is
commander
in the division,
to straighten
it
my
out." That was
sir,"
got in the jeep and arrived at this company.
my
life.
This company was something,
patrol going out that night led
"You can
I
interview.
I
had never
felt
and
hospital.
He had
his balls shot off.
being in combat and having
my
They had out?"
is
killed
to the battalion
That was always a great fear of mine; I went back to the company full
day.
The
next morning,
I
pulled off
straightened out, and then I
went back
started
it.
his
Still,
he
to the G-3 and said, "Colonel, I would combat duty. Give me a week to get them
we
will
He
be ready to go again."
said okay.
was and that
drill
Jim began to
positively to the change.
feel that it
company, and with that came a sense of great accomplishment. felt
that "lady luck" was in evidence throughout.
You know,
and
They
demoral-
went
luck
is
a strange
damn
thing.
On
were roaring down the road in wintertime and
my
totally
We ended up with a pretty good company.
The men responded was
line.
all
company, told everybody what the
to the
doing the
single night
were taking casualties and getting no recognition, which was
my company
said,
One guy was
work of the„infantry battalions that were up manning the front izing.
He
balls shot off.
found out that they had been on patrols every
like
a
patrol
radio."
We hauled one guy up
about three in the morning. That was a pretty I
lower in
The
on the
listen
supposedly set up an ambush, but they got ambushed.
and four wounded before midnight.
"Yes,
said,
asked the acting company
I
go while this patrol
I
in the observation post
sit
assigning you not
unbelievable.
just
by a sergeant.
commander, "Where do you suggest
am
said, "I
but the worst company in Korea.
parka. Suddenly I
started to
took off and
I
I
I
saw two Korean pheasants.
jump out
By
of the jeep.
was trying to get the
flap off
the pistol out, the second pheasant took
chamber of the gun and
it
went boom,
my
the third day there,
had I
my
holster.
like a
I
we
underneath
told the driver to stop
this time,
off.
.45
the
first
pheasant
About the time
pumped
a
I
got
round into the
cannon, and there were
all
THE SEASONS OF A
122
MAN S
LIFE
kinds of pheasants running around. paces from where
mean
it
was
shot
I
to,
lucky shot.
just absolutely a
pheasant, and brought
We
paced
which would be
We
went,
I
that can be so
know why
I
all
I
area.
shot at
it; I
will
The
went
jeep driver
a crack shot with a .45.
my
could hear about was
goddamn important,
I
went out and picked up the
around and told everybody that the old man was
Anywhere
was 48
It
a long shot for a shotgun.
back to the company
it
the distance.
off
.45.
Little things like
just a blind-ass lucky shot.
don't
I
never know.
made
His stories had a modest tone but
his success clear.
There was
the persistent implication that he just happened to be in the right place at the right time.
He
was always the modest, unassuming hero, but
let
there be no mistake, he remained possessed of heroic qualities.
Jim proved himself again to those in authority by turning the unit into
command." After
"the best one in the
five
months
helicoptered into Tracy's area and told him,
your nose bloody, time in his military jurisdiction over
want you
I
in
his
He
that you have gotten
headquarters." For the
women and
he had nothing to do with
life,
younger men.
ment: he had paid
command
of combat, the general
"Now
first
was given
experienced a great sense of achieve-
debt to society and his leadership
had been
skills
affirmed.
After a brief tour of duty back in the states, in 1954, Jim reassessed his
The war was ending and he was a 30-year-old captain with service. He knew that "only 3 out of 800 men from Annapolis life.
admiral or marine general." in the marines, or
am
I
It
"Am
was time to decide:
going to do something else?"
8 years of
can
make
going to stay
I
He made
plans to
leave.
was
It
seeing
just a feeling of
if I
wanting to get ahead
There were
a
whole bunch of
little
think that was the overriding thing.
He
at
my own
speed and then
could, as opposed to getting ahead at the speed of the marines.
was questioning not
Although both
his marriage
things that contributed to I
wanted very much
just the service,
and
but
his
his military career
to
whole
it,
but
I
be a general.
life structure.
were untenable, he
decided to maintain the family stability in order to cope with the instability of leaving the marines.
Tracy began looking for a job dustries,
in industry.
an arms manufacturer. For the
first
His father suggested Ajax In-
time, his father offered to help
and Jim allowed him to do so. Objectively, his father was well able to play this role, as he was an engineer and company manager who was knowledgeable about industry. Jim's ability to accept his father's help sent an effort to redress the old parental imbalance.
To
may
also repre-
an extent, he
now
The
mother and her dream
rejected the aggressive
and
favor of the helpful father
foreshadowed a new
While
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
his
own wish
as military hero, in
be an industrial leader.
Navy Yard, he put on
stationed at Brooklyn
man
to
him
although the specific shape was
life,
crossed the East River for an interview.
"a huge
of
The
123
initial
It
ill-defined.
still
a civilian suit
and
interview was dull until
with rolled-up shirtsleeves started to talk to me." They spent
an hour in excited discussion. I
went out
to the receptionist
and
His
name was
I
and four
said,
morning and made me an amount of money I was making as a captain I
accepted I
civilian suit
for
him
and got on the
until April.
Woodrow Wilson
was a
He was
was a
hell of a nice
said to
him, "Well,
brilliant.
I
August and
started the 23rd of
I
He
the most fantastic guy I've ever met.
He had
six feet five.
guy and
"The
"Fine."
got out of the marines and put
I
train.
said,
scholar, doctor of physics, Massachusetts
Tennis Champion, and about
He
I
"When can you report to work?" I was my brother's birthday. He said,
never got a piece of paper or anything.
worked
was exactly the same
It
in the marines, $6,000 a year.
said,
23rd of August," which
on my
offer.
This was about the middle of June, and
it.
do now?" He
him."
I
o'clock the next
what do
does he do?" She said,
divisions report to
went home and got hold of a Fortune article "Boy, here is one smart man." He called me at ten
Albert Hugo.
on Ajax. Instantly
"What
said,
"He's the vice president for operations
Doubles
everything going for him.
There's very few of them.
I
loved
him. Six
Hugo
months
after starting with
Ajax in
New
York, Jim was told by Al
that Hercules, an Ajax subdivision in Chicago, was having
Tracy was to work temporarily at Hercules. Within
culty.
six
diffi-
months, he
turned the company around and became a top manager.
Tracy admired Al Hugo's philosophy about work. Al told
me
responsibility.
that there are very few people
He
said that's
what he saw
ing a real desire to accept responsibility. tively don't,
whereas
that stage in
Once
again,
my
life,
I
was just
just eager to.
wanted
in
He I
He
really
said that
wanted
to prove that
Tracy had found an older
tured and helped guide him.
who
want
to accept
me, not only wanting but hav-
man
I
most people
to stick
my
instinc-
neck out at
could do things. in authority
who
nur-
was closer to Al Hugo than he had been
but there was the same quality of hero wor-
to the admirals
and
generals,
ship, a quality
first
articulated in his attitude toward another large
and
man: his grandfather. Al recognized Jim's need to be a responsible and helped him bridge the gap between the military and civilian of management.
bright
leader,
side
The
key question for Jim Tracy at 33 was whether he could adapt to
:
1
24
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
LIFE
the role of managing a civilian enterprise. After succeeding in Chicago, a management position in Hartford. He moved from few hundred workers to the "main action/' the Firearms Division of Ajax Industries. The next level was the corporate struc-
he was promoted to a subsystem with a
New York City! The Firearms Division was doing well, but its management was in a transitional stage. These changes increased the ture in
challenge and the anxiety for him. -
During
who was
his first
month
in Hartford,
Jim was assigned a
married and ten years his junior.
seemingly just another of his
many
They soon
secretary, Joan,
started
an
After a few months, by mutual agreement, he got her a job in the
ber of
Commerce and
self investing
more
in
affair,
conquests. But something had changed.
Cham-
they continued their relationship. Jim found him-
Joan than he had in other women. Obtaining a job
wish— and initial commitment— that their relationbecome more intimate and lasting. Later, he described her
for her symbolized his
ship might as follows I
consider her
my
equal. She's very intelligent, personable, has all the
and speaks very good English. Joan, somehow, has taught herself all these. She's bright as hell, but not very well read, and is therefore worried about how she comes off. She's always been a loner. I think I'm the first person she ever opened up to. She just kept everything within herself all her life. She comes from a poor, large family. She's totally different from the rest of her family. I think they don't understand her. social graces,
.
.
.
.
With
.
.
regard to her marriage, she was seriously considering divorce before
met me, but put it off. I guess after she got married, she discovered had never gotten along with her husband. Suddenly being face to face with him alone in the house really shook her up and she didn't want
she
that she
any part of him.
The
relationship with Joan matured,
women. The driven, more concerned and
loving.
at the periphery, but for the a
and he stopped seeing other
Jim was subdued; he became remained with his family and kept Joan
aggressive voice within
He
first
time he had a serious relationship with
woman. Jim was thus modifying both
his
Dream and
ence in Korea enabled him to act on his vice. Instead of
The move
becoming
a general,
his personal
life.
With
The
awakened respect
experi-
the
he would become a corporate
to civilian life involved an
devalued father.
his love life.
earlier desire to leave
ser-
leader.
for his previously
the shift in occupation, he slowly started to change
His slowness in taking direct action related to his
have been necessary for Jim to get his
diffi-
woman. It may mother and her Dream for him
culty in forming an intimate relationship with an adult
The out of his
life
Life of James Tracy, Executive (I)
more mature
before he could establish a
125
relationship with
another woman.
The
for the deteriorating marriage
responsibility
was shared. Jim's
overly negative view of Victoria suggests that he was not ready, in this
season of his
life,
to address his
own
role as failed
would have required a more balanced view of the ability to look
within for his
own
part in
it.
husband.
To do
relationship,
so
and an
This would mean a dramatic
turn from his characteristic goal-oriented attitude, a questioning of his past
and
new ways
a readiness to explore
of living.
He
was not yet ready
for this.
At to ask
28,
Tracy had started to question
what
question.
He made
life structure.
start of
him. At
and this
new
in store for
They marked the end
Down
of his
34,
Age Thirty Transition and the
period.
he decided to continue with Victoria and the children. Father-
hood remained important upbringing, although
it
to him.
He
was being true to
was painful to go on
Second, he confirmed his ecutive.
his first adult life structure
he answered
the Settling
First,
might have
three critical choices which provided the basis for a
else life
living
his traditional
with his family.
earlier, tentative decision to
become an
ex-
Tracy made a place for himself within the Ajax organization, and
held high aspirations for advancement to the top of the corporate structure.
Third, he decided to have a more intimate, enduring relationship
with a woman.
The
question of marriage had not emerged, but he was
beginning to hope that she would become special for him. In Chapter 11,
we
shall discover
around these choices, and period.
how
what kind of
life
structure he built
his life evolved during the Settling
Down
The
3
Life of
William Paulsen, Worker
William Paulsen was born
community
in the
in 1925 and raised in a Scandinavian and Irish Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn. His grandmother, a
central figure in his early years,
had come to
Norway. The family revolved around
her.
this
country
between the dominating grandmother and her daughter, belief that
if
you put two
women
from
as a child
There was continual
friction
reflected in Bill's
under the same roof you're asking for
trouble.
,
,
Each summer, Bill's grandmother left Brooklyn for upstate New York, where she ran a 28-room boardinghouse. With his mother and sister, Bill accompanied her for the summer. He was responsible for many of the chores around the boardinghouse and farm: taking care of the chickens,
milking the cows, bringing in the hay.
He worked from
It
was "a hard
life
but a good one."
5:30 a.m. to 7 at night, and called himself the "farmer
from Brooklyn." grandmother ruled his family. She was a "shrewd businesswoman, a penny-pinching Scandinavian," and Bill admired her toughness. She worked hard, ran the whole show with great Bill learned early that his
skill,
and saw
to
she wanted," Bill
it
said,
"and
if
she didn't get
provided the structure and discipline in Bill's
done her way. "She knew what
that everything was
mother was very
different.
She
it,
everybody look out." She
Bill's life.
lived in her mother's
shadow. She
was a troubled woman, high-strung and nervous,
manage on her own. She was very resentful of her control. This
who found it hard to dependent on her own mother and yet
was evident
in her
work
as a waitress in
her
mother's boardinghouse. His mother was quite protective and indulgent of Bill:
if
he wanted something, she would give
it
to him, even
if
that
meant depriving others in the family. By indulging Bill, she encouraged to lean on her, to let her do for him rather than to fend for himself. She seems to have been a helpless person who implicitly invited Bill
him
to be like her.
The
modest place
for a
in
on Wall
a stock-brokerage firm
Street.
He
a-week raise— which bothered Bill— but he
He had
during the depression years.
would
sit
down and
lucky to be working at
common
When
all
sense and was gen-
there was trouble, he and
was "more a buddy than a father." Im-
was the view of his father
failed to achieve the things Bill
Bill's
kind
as a
man who
wanted. At the same time, he was
"best friend."
family offered limited resources and models for his later devel-
Bill's
He admired
opment.
and concern with himself.
life for
his grandmother's ambition,
fairness.
From
would have
Bill
He
talk.
plicit in Bill's description
had
127
never got more than a $10-
felt
a lot of
erous with his attention and advice. Bill
William Paulsen, Worker
good man without great ambition, content to settle life. For 38 years he held the same clerical job with
father was a
Bill's
Life of
hard work, toughness
make
a better
attributes. Like his
mother,
Like her, Bill was to work to
came other
his parents
a continuing struggle against the wish to
be given what
he wanted when he wanted it, and the wish to give up and be looked after. Like his father Bill would strive to make his peace with the world and to
settle for a
his pastimes
modest place
and see them
as a
in
it.
Like him, he would come to love
major source of pleasure and satisfaction
in his adult life.
These
diverse aspects of Bill's pre-adulthood created the tensions that
ran through the core of his adult ing up; between going settling for a
modest
could find inspiring.
after
life.
He
Few
way
of living.
He
him
whose
little in
was apparent
life Bill
between ambition and
to;
his grandmother's
He
was very
way
life
mother and
critical of his
tried
There was no admired teacher,
wanted to emulate. All
in
the way of models or opportunities. in Bill's description of himself
his
all,
The importance
at 18: ".
.
.
relative
world offered
just a
of this
green kid,
had never been away from home, always ran back to Mother and Dad any of
my
problems or what not, never had to take care of
or anything."
He came
to the
end of adolescence
particular capabilities or interests.
with his
life.
he
of living, but did
loved and admired his father, but was also
critical of his settling for so little.
or friend
the tension between striving and giv-
people served as models for an adult
admired
not aspire to do what she did. to reject her
life:
and being given
He
didn't
my own
feeling that
for
clothes
he had no
know what he wanted
to
do
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
128
The Early Adult
Transition
was nothing the "green kid" wanted to do, and nothing he he could do. But it was 1943, and the realities of World War II swept him up: he was drafted shortly after his eighteenth birthday. The
At
18, there
felt
event marked the beginning of a transitional period in
He
Europe three days after D-Day. He was a dangerous and exciting job. It was up vation posts locating ton's
enemy
Bill, a
fire.
Third Army, was involved
Though
in the
in
combat
and went to
to
him
and a half
for a year
The
little
in
to establish forward obser-
member
of General
George Pat-
dash across France into Germany.
often terrified, he found the experience valuable: "It
out of us instead of
made men
boys."
military experience helped Paulsen learn to take responsibility for
himself and for his place in a larger enterprise.
manage
own
his
life
and could work
him. While he might fend
own
goals or
make
effectively.
He found But
this
that he could
was achieved in
where he generally knew what was expected of
a structured organization
his
Bill's life.
trained as a forward observer in the field artillery
for himself,
own
his
way.
he was never required to determine
Upon
leaving the service, Bill needed
He had to form a He needed a guiding
to return to earlier, unfinished developmental work. clearer sense of himself, a fuller personal identity.
vision of himself in the adult world, a his
attempts to build a
Bill left
He
didn't
Dream
that
would give direction
in
life.
the army in 1945. Re-entry into civilian
know what he wanted and was unable
choices so important in determining his aimlessness, of starting adult life
and work
late.
to
for
make the
him.
critical
There was a sense of
course.
life
was hard
life
He made
basic decisions
almost haphazardly.
came back, we wallowed around and had no direction in life that we wanted to go to. I wasn't married, not going with any particular gal at that time, and this went on for about 3 to 4 months. I didn't even go to work. Didn't Just like every other veteran that
whooped
it
know what
my
up and, of
I
wanted
course,
have any capabilities at the time. So,
to do. Didn't
we sat down one afternoon and "Hey, why don't we go to college for
best friend and his brother,
and looked
at
of years?" So
Ed and said, Ed and I decided,
let's
go to technical school.
N.Y. State Agricultural College that was
We
were fortunate to get in
what and
are
me
we going
starting
up
He
looks at
me and
turned
a couple
found
this
a technical division.
as the first technical class.
to take up?
We
I
Then the decision, "You know, you
says,
we've been fooling around with transformers and
lights,
and
The
wiring our cellars for ourselves, and
up
work?" So we
electrical
20 or 25.
We
did.
William Paulsen, Worker
Life of
.
.
we
sort of enjoy
When we
.
Why
it.
graduated
don't
—we were
and we'd never amount
terrors of Brooklyn,
known
we
take
was in the top
I
me and
had excellent grades, which surprised him and
parents because they figured that, ah
129
But
to anything.
our holy
as the three
we
guess
I
sort of proved them wrong.
Paulsen acquired a
skill
work did not involve the
ing in terms of major values, goals or aspects of the
In his
last
much
in
him away from her and she wanted
ing
mother
also
had a
feeling that
enough
that he was not "mature"
The
issue
Bill,
Catholic. She wanted
and the marriage.
him
religion.
was important for
He
Long
When York
City.
what he wanted
he married,
He
left
Bill
home
eight or nine at night.
"maturity" but
when he was 23. with Ruth in a house, a Cape Cod
in early 1949,
Brooklyn and
from
was working for
felt
Bill's
live
"a regular
his parents.
For the
his family
IBM
that his job was too
six years.
New
for supper at
demanding and didn't
he took a job with the Long Island
pany, and worked there for
time,
a willing-
and commuting into
morning and got back
allow enough time to be with his wife. Although he liked after a year. 'At age 23,
first
and
in the face of his mother's protest.
at six in the
He
likely
mother opposed the conversion
They bought
Island, sixty-five miles
ness to fight for
seems
was a Protestant, Ruth a
was demonstrating a readiness to separate from
Bill
It
and Ruth talked about:
received instructions in the Catholic
Bill to leave
place removed from his family.
But Bill's Ruth was tak-
her.
that
on to him.
Bill
Bill
to convert. His
Bill defied her.
He
years older.
for marriage.
Church, was converted, and married Ruth
type" on
felt
was joined not around the question of
around the problem of Ruth's
It
she
to hold
both
But the
much mean-
self.
met Ruth, who was two common and enjoyed being with
mother opposed the choice. According to that his
a living.
have
it
year of college, Bill
they had
felt
and
that could provide a job
realization of a plan, nor did
IBM, he quit Lighting Com-
In making this decision, Bill gave no
thought to what either company offered him in terms of future job ad-
vancement and
satisfaction.
He
was primarily concerned about the quality
of his life at the time, not the long-term consequences of his choice.
The
Early Adult Transition lasted from age 18 to 23. During this
period he
one
moved from
a life structure characteristic of late adolescence to
At 18 he was a "green not knowing what he wanted to make of
characteristic of early adulthood.
tied to his family,
feeling that
he was "without
relationships with his family years
he effected a
capabilities."
and friends
in
kid," closely his
life,
and
was built around
his
Bay Ridge. Over the next
five
His
life
radical transformation in this structure:
he started earn-
1
THE SEASONS OF A
30
own way
ing his
MAN S
in the
home away from
work world, got married, and
parents.
that in which he had
LIFE
He
lived in a
community
He had
grown up.
lived in his
own
very different from
severed his
to the ethnic
ties
community, which had been so vital a part of his early life, and had changed his religious and political affiliation. These changes reflected his
work on the developmental
The new
tasks of this period.
structure was flawed, however, by Paulsen's failure to
other important developmental work.
to
Nor
person.
self as a
He
still
did he develop a Dream. In these respects he failed
He made
do the developmental work of the Early Adult Transition.
central choices of this period primarily in terms of his wish to get
from the
Both
future. turity.
He
past.
Ruth
Bill
was oriented to the present and had
and Ruth commented on
we were married he used
And
least three times a week."
money but
used to
I
to say,
said,
"We're going
begun
Company was
at 23,
in the
Emergency
men
switchboard and directing repair
around with.
work
been
•
know what
I
remained
job,
for the
Long
Island
He
started
through the
calls
He worked up
one of the work
shifts.
any satisfaction from the type of work
didn't
I
'
Service Department.
in the field.
"a special service operator" in charge of said: "I didn't get
He had
go."
new
with his marriage and
telephone operator," taking emergency
as a "glorified
we have
if
World
relatively stable over the next six years. Paulsen's
Lighting
movies at
to the
"We'll go to the movies
we don't have the money we won't doing things when he wanted to do them.
structure
life
sense of the
little
spoke of his imma-
if
Entering the Adult The
this. Bill
the
away
told of her feeling that he wasn't ready to marry:
Before
the
do
lacked a clear sense of him-
I
Of
to being this Bill
was fooling
wanted to do, didn't have any
capabili-
ties."
The as
job offered security, paid well and
he knew,
led nowhere.
it
electronics or his training at
Long
met
Island Lighting.
There was
This didn't concern Paulsen
at the time.
tions at
immediate needs. But,
his
The job did not draw on his education in IBM, nor did it prepare him for other posilittle
with which to build a
career.
a living wage,
the kind of
home,
life
Bill set
and they
and Ruth worked
as a
they wanted at that time.
up
started
He had
They bought
woodworking shop (like .his "a nice little bank account." a
a secure job that paid
bookkeeper. Between them they had furniture for their
father's) in the
He
basement,
enjoyed drinking beer
The
Life of
William Paulsen, Worker
131
with old friends, playing tennis with his father, and doing woodwork in the basement.
Neither
nor Ruth found
Bill
it
easy to discuss personal issues
beyond
the practical concerns of day-to-day living. This, together with the ten-
dency of both to withdraw in stubborn anger from any serious disagreement, made
difficult to
it
They both wanted one
just then."
for this. It
The
work out
their differences.
children, but ''the
good Lord didn't see
to give us
fit
doctors were unable to find any physical explanation
was a source of concern and disappointment; they worried that
something was wrong with one or both of them. This tension continued for the first ten years of their marriage, It
meant
during
with almost no discussion of
a great deal to Bill that his wife's
mother
She was a wonderful person, "more
this period.
her daughter's mother."
He
it.
lived with
them
my mother
than
was very fond of his mother-in-law;
was
it
like
having a new, doting mother.
Mom
stuck
up
me more
for
do no wrong in that house. If I
had any
or whether
Bill
also
sort of
that,
my
Mom
remained close to his
He
own
than she did her
could talk to
problem with
we should do
variety of decisions. in."
I
Mom
work, or whether
could
we should do
to.
this
would give her advice.
father,
relying
on
counsel in a
his
to give advice.
Paulsen began the period of Entering the Adult
peared to be a reasonably solid position, but his a
I
wanted
he was a young kid "without a pot to piddle uncertain— as when buying his home— he would call
Whenever he felt who was always happy
on
I
felt
his father,
built
daughter.
anytime
World
first
life
in
what
ap-
structure was
weak foundation. The weakness stemmed from three main
sources. First, there
was
personal identity.
was hard for him to become adult when he so strongly
It
wanted to remain life's
difficulties.
a
his failure late in adolescence to establish a secure
boy who would be helped by others through
all
of
Second, there was the continuing lack of a Dream, a
vision of the kind of life
he wanted to create
Third, he did not find a mentor
who
could
for himself
and
his family.
facilitate his entry into adult-
hood and help him establish a place there. The job at Long Island Lighting proved to be an occupational backwater in which Paulsen wallowed for over six years— narrowing his interests, acquiring few new skills, and learning little about capabilities which might enable him to develop a career. He drifted through his twenties, enjoying himself where possible, not thinking about the future and making little effort to explore the possibilities in the adult world. With some help from his mother-in-law, father and wife, he stayed in this backwater. At 29, Bill Paulsen presented himself to the world as a responsible
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
132
LIFE
S
adult, while continuing to act in
With
many ways
boy
like a
his considerable talent for self-deception,
tied to his family.
he told himself that he
was an adult, ready and able to manage
was brought
home
him
to
in a
his life. In fact he was not. This most painful way during the next few
years.
The Age Thirty When
Transition
series of events confronted him with losses and he couldn't manage. This precipitated the breakup of the structure he had maintained during the previous six years.
Paulsen was 29, a
responsibilities life
His father died at age
me
death, Bill said, "hit
death
.
down
.
.
53, after
hard.
I
an
dumps. You'd
in the
months. The
illness of six to eight
was very down in the dumps after call
me
a nervous
wreck
at that
his
time
for a year or two."
Paulsen's
mother had depended on
Grandmother's death, when he was of looking after herself. tire
When
his father
almost entirely. After
mother had become incapable
23, his
turned to
his father died, she
Bill.
The
en-
family expected that he would take her in and look after her as his
father had.
The with
it
responsibility that hit at the time.
decisions for
my
I
don't
mother.
Bill took,
her
in,
first
all
of a I
is
possible
sudden ...
just couldn't
don't think
I
wasn't mature enough. This
the end of her
me
know ...
I .
.
I
just couldn't
make
all
was prepared for .
cope
those major it.
more probable than
Maybe
I
possible.
but the situation quickly soured. Ruth was nearing
pregnancy after
six years of
marriage. She was anxious
about the pregnancy and uneasy about living with Bill's mother. They had never gotten along well together, and having her with them soon proved unbearable. His mother was quite unable to look after herself and
demanded vide. Bill
a great deal of
care— much more than
proposed that she
Bill or
Ruth could
nursing home. She opposed
live in a
the rest of the family were angry with Bill for suggesting
this,
of sorts
and wouldn't
Ruth got because
I
talk at
all.
I
My
just
mother would crawl into about blew my cork."
so upset, she said, that "I tried to
couldn't face
it."
In the ninth
child was stillborn. In their distress
and
month
and
She remained
it.
with them, and the situation deteriorated: "It got to a point where wife was becoming a nervous wreck.
pro-
commit
my
a shell
suicide then
of her pregnancy, Ruth's
fury, Bill
and Ruth
insisted that
The mother
his
"She
live
said that
what got
me
I
to
with his
Life of William Paulsen,
But she wouldn't
sister.
didn't love her, that
be very nervous.
I
A
go.
Worker
133
battle developed.
I just wanted to get rid of her. That's became irritable and did a little over-
imbibing."
Three months go to
had come
after she
with his
live
Paulsen household. But he as his father's successor.
to live with them, Bill's
mother did
Things then settled down somewhat
sister.
that he
felt
These
had
shame and
feelings of
in the
failed in his responsibilities
were exacer-
guilt
bated by other members of the family:
Being the older son and the it
was up to me. But
I
man
of the family,
do
just couldn't
I
thought at the time
turned out to be the black
I
it.
sheep of the family. They wouldn't listen to me. That was the worst thing in the world.
thought
it
come and During
While
Nobody would
me as me for
was up to live
with
the
mother was
me
for a year,
of Bill's
and he
and
her
that
.
them, Ruth's mother became arteries,"
had been
died. Like his father, she
felt
.
.
the Paulsens faced yet another disaster.
living with
She developed "lung trouble and hardening of the
den
They Mother would
for almost ten years.
in the family
the rest of her days.
this period of turmoil,
Bill's
talk to
man
ill.
was bedrid-
a great favorite
loss sharply.
In the course of a single year, from age 29 to 30, Bill lost both his
and
father
his mother-in-law,
and support
to
him during
and began to drink
heavily,
which
about losing his job. "It was
no
life
preserver,"
he
who had been
his twenties.
like
crucial sources of
He became
in turn affected his work.
Island from
know which way
said. "I didn't
Oregon when
He
I
was going to go."
his
mother was
ill.
He
He had come
moved
he encouraged
to Florida,
Bill
and found a job that he
and Ruth to
join
to
then lived with
the Paulsens for several months while he separated from his wife. married,
worried
being in the middle of the ocean with
Ruth's brother was helpful to Bill during this time.
Long
comfort
a "nervous wreck"
liked.
Once
He
re-
settled,
him. They decided to make the move.
At 31, Bill was ready for a change. Full of the feeling that life had not worked for him in Long Island, he wanted to go somewhere else and start again. Florida seemed as good a place as any. Things couldn't be any worse there. Once again, however, Paulsen had little sense of where he was going. He didn't know what he would be getting into, what sort of people he would encounter, what jobs would be available. The only important thing was to get away. He felt a great urgency and responded directly to Bill
it.
and Ruth had a
difficult
time starting
all
over again in Florida.
1
THE SEASONS OF A
34
During the
first six
MAN
LIFE
S
months,
Bill
ing company, but was
still
worked
for a Frigidaire dealer as a ser-
Then he worked
viceman, earning $62 a week.
months
eight
getting "slave wages/' Their
for a build-
nest egg
little
disappeared.
After over a year in Florida Bill
felt
He
dispirited.
anywhere "working for ditchdigger wages." With
he determined to find a better way. Bowles & White, pany, had just opened a
new
and
IBM
he returned, he was the
first
Florida Research and
IBM
their
Development Center. His
which he could use
his training
and
for his future.
He had
He
starting salary
He had
within an organi-
was looking ahead
a satisfying occupation that
provide a better livelihood for his family in the long run.
marked the end of three
Bowles
at the
in Florida.
skills,
zation that offered opportunities for advancement.
and planning
They hired him new computers.
computer operator
was $75 a week, and he felt encouraged. At 32, Paulsen began to make a place for himself a position in
computer com-
a
training helped.
and sent him to Boston, where he learned to operate
& White
surge of effort,
plant in Fort Lauderdale, and he applied
for a position. His electronics
When
wasn't getting
new
a
years of crisis
and chaos
job
in his life.
In the transitional period from age 29 to 32, his
dismantled, a period of turmoil ensued, and a
would
The new
first life
new
structure was
structure began to
take shape. Major changes in his family initiated this developmental work.
The
death of his father
mother-in-law deprived
made him the family head, and the death of his him of a "Mom." These deaths both forced and
enabled him to become more adult, to assume more responsibility for his
own
life.
He and Ruth
could
were Ruth's mother and
them
finally establish their
in this undertaking. It
for the
first
own
family.
father there to guide, support
Bill's
was hard to build a
time they were free to
try, free
to
life
on
assume
No
longer
and influence
their
own, but
responsibility for
themselves.
Paulsen was preoccupied with this personal work Florida. His
first
that permitted lished himself
jobs there provided
some degree
when he moved
to
of financial security
him to work on the developmental tasks. After he estabmore securely as the man in the family, he was able to
work on the occupational issues. For the first time, he sought a position that would draw on his talent and training. His decision to seek work at Bowles & White signaled a very important change.
work
for "ditchdigger wages,"
offered
him
No
longer willing to
he was determined to find a position that
opportunities for advancement.
These changes represented Paulsen came to act
a substantial advance in his development.
less like a carefree
boy and more
like a
man who
The wants to make for
doing
found
a
this.
his place in the
He had
Life of
world and
William Paulsen, Worker
is
ready to take responsibility
not yet formed a Dream, however, nor had he
mentor who could help him get established
In Chapter 18
we
shall
in the adult world.
conclude the story of Paulsen's
him through the remaining middle adulthood.
135
life,
following
periods of early adulthood and the entry into
WWW
The
Settling
Period
Down
£
Building a Second Adult Life Structure
The end
of the
Age Thirty Transition
in early adulthood.
A man
and getting established
Down
Down:
Settling
period,
duces the
is
the end of the preparatory phase
has completed the allotted time for exploring
in the adult world. It
time to enter the Settling
is
which marks the culmination of
final fruits
and thorns of
Down
Transition to Settling
is
this era.
one of the
adulthood and pro-
early
The
shift
from the Age Thirty
crucial steps in adult develop-
ment.
The
underlying task
is
to "settle for" a few key choices, to create a
broader structure around them, to invest oneself as fully as possible in the
components of
various
within
A man
it.
work, family, community,
this structure (such as
and
solitary interests, friendships)
to pursue long-range plans
and goals
has a stronger sense of urgency to "get serious/' to be
responsible, to decide
what
is
and shape
truly important
his life accord-
ingly.
As
I
mentioned
Chapter
in
5,
the Settling
begins at age 32 or 33. In our sample,
than 39 or later than 42. nine years (7.8 on the average).
earlier
and executives
(8.3
and
Its
Down
period ordinarily
ended
at
40 or
duration was usually between
It lasted
among
the longest
result
mainly from the fact that Settling
and
novelists than for the others.
Down
41— not six
and
the workers
compared with
6.8 for the biologists.
ogists
among
usually
8.4 years, respectively), as
and only
years for the novelists
it
The
7.7
differences
started later for the biol-
There were negligible
the occupations in the age at which Settling
differences
Down ended and
the
Mid-Life Transition began.
The tions,
Settling
Down
and aspects of the
ing that others be
the expression of
life
structure gives certain relationships, aspira-
self a
prominent place
made secondary or put many or few aspects of
structure has a few central elements
in one's life while requir-
aside altogether. It
the
self.
which serve
A
may permit
relatively integrated
as focal points for the
which enrich and
structure as a whole,
and
expand the
However, even a rather broad, complex structure
structure.
other, peripheral elements
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
140
cannot enable one to
LIFE
out
live
all
aspects of the
self.
The
have been excluded often return to demand their due in
we
shall see.
To
the extent that the
and suitable
viable in the world
and
tively stable
satisfying
life.
not
It is
period, the Mid-life Transition, ushers in
structure
initial
is
seriously flawed,
it
Settling
initial
for the self,
it
helps
likely to
The
life
Settling
will
Down
task
is
change until the next
produce
strains it
tasks. If
the
and pressures
very difficult to
is
period presents two major tasks. Individual
men
the relative emphasis they give to these tasks and
to establish one's niche in society. To dig
1.
and pursue one's step in Settling
interests within a defined pattern.
Down.
time to deepen his
having his
A man
roots, to
pation and community. is,
structure
possible a rela-
ways of working on them.
in their
he
which
structure during this period.
differ considerably in
is
Down
make
new developmental
toward change. Our study showed, however, that
change the
aspects
later periods, as
He
own home
belonging, being a valued
needs
anchor
is
the
initial
a sufficiently ordered, stable life. It his life
more
firmly in family, occu-
takes a greater sense of pride in base, developing
member
build a nest
in,
This
competence
knowing who
in a
chosen
craft,
of a valued collective entity.
2. to work at advancement. Planning, striving to succeed, movonward and upward, progressing along a timetable. Whereas the first task contributes to the stability and order of a defined structure, the sec-
task
ing
ond involves progression within the structure. I use the term "advancement" in the broadest sense: building a better life, improving and using one's skills, becoming more creative, contributing to society and being affirmed by it, according to one's values. The goals may be wealth, power, prestige, recognition, scientific or esthetic
achievement, particular forms of
community life. The Settling Down period is the time for a man to fulfill his Dream, pursue his ambitions and become the hero in the scenario of early adulthood. At the start, he has the sense of being on the low rung of a ladder, preparing to make his way to the top. Imagery of the family and
ladder
is
an important part of
life in this
period.
2 are to some degree antithetical. Generally speaking, famcommunity are the main forces making for stability, occupation the main force for movement and change. To the extent that a man wants order and roots, he must be ready to moderate the upward striving
Tasks
ily
and
1
and
local
that might rock the boat and threaten the stability of his
a
man who
life.
Conversely,
wants desperately to make his mark, to attain great heights
of power, virtue or
achievement— Caesar, the Shakespearean
kings, Abra-
Settling
Down:
Building a Second Adult Life Structure
ham, Faust and Gauguin come
commitments one of these
mind— cannot
to
may predominate,
tasks
ates difficulty
if it
is
the other
overly neglected.
task tends to
to find his niche, get plugged into society with greater
and
the meaning of "tribe" varies widely.
It
Settling sive to
We
Down its
is
most
In
tribe.
may
religio-ethnic group, profession or nation or
part of the species has the
It is
time
commitment and
exercise an occupation
and well-being of the
for the survival
cli-
on terms he can accept: time
to join the tribe as a full adult
responsibility, raise a family
assume
adulthood reaches the
primary character of Settling Down.
tasks reflect the
man
strong
While
Own Man.
mactic phase of Becoming One's
for a
on
always present and cre-
The second
special strength in the late thirties, as early
Both
is
make
stability.
afford to
to particular persons or place great value
141
and do
his bit
modern complex
society
include his local community,
humanity
significance for him.
at
large— whatever
But everyone during
strongly connected to a segment of his society, respon-
demands and seeking the
affirmation
and rewards
The
each lasting three or four years.
and the second, which ordinarily
first
starts at
we
call
it
offers.
Down
period,
"Early Settling
Down"
have found two distinct phases within the Settling
age 36 or 37, "Becoming One's
Own Man."
Early Settling During
Down
his twenties, a
man
ship and
become
a "novice" or "apprentice" adult.
is
Down
at the start of the Settling
period
a full-fledged adult.
is
The
to go
The
task
beyond the apprentice-
initial
life
structure of this
period provides a base on which one can plan for the future and identify
long-term goals.
I
shall use the
term "personal enterprise" to include the
central features of a man's life structure plish
through
specific
Settling
them— the
direction of his
goals— with whatever
Down
enterprise
clarity or
and what he wants to accomlife,
the broad aspirations and
ambiguity they are defined.
A
man's
the main vehicle for his realizing youthful
is
ambitions and goals.
This enterprise contains
man
in
some form the imagery
of the ladder.
A
has devoted himself until the early thirties to creating a foundation
on which the ladder can be
built.
The more he
higher the level on which he starts the enterprise. period in middle
management and hopes
has accomplished, the
One man
begins this
to reach the top of his division
of a corporation. Another, already at the top of a division, begins Settling
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
142
Down
LIFE
own small corporation, with the aim of becoming The place at which both men start Settling Down bottom rung of a ladder. The top rung may be clear or vague
by forming
the giant in his represents the
in their minds,
his
field.
but both have a strong sense of being
and of aspiring to move up. toward his goals
have a more
will
man
If a
impossible, or that
is
difficult
time in the
and
is
him
gives
it
point
he
little satisfaction,
phase of Settling Down.
last
Novelists too are on a ladder, though
an organizational hierarchy. At
at a starting
soon discovers that advancement
it
not expressed in terms of
is
one novelist has written three novels
33,
regarded as "a promising young writer/' but he has yet to prove
body
that he can produce a
of
work
of the caliber
he wants most. An-
other has written a single novel that sold well but received poor reviews;
he
is
but
now
ready to
commit himself
his possibilities are
to writing as his primary occupation,
untested.
still
A
who
third,
has written several
unpublished novels, decides to make business his primary occupation and to give novel writing a peripheral place in his Settling
Down
structure,
with the hope that he can subsequently get out of the business world and
make writing central. (This case is exemplified by Paul Namson, whose life we shall present in Chapter 12.) Other men define
their plans for
advancement not
in occupational
terms, but in terms of their family or community, or in other non-work
But nearly
contexts.
the Settling
The
Down
all
men,
period with
may have many
ladder
and burning, or modestly tion of the
Dream
ternal aspects,
and
regardless of specific life circumstances, start
some hopes
of advancement.
rungs or few.
realistic.
The
The ambitions may be vast may lead toward realiza-
ladder
or in another direction. It has both external
and
a man's course along
internal forces. Externally,
it
may
it
is
and
shaped by both external
involve such things as status in an
organizational hierarchy (labor grade, managerial or academic rank)
reputation in
the community
in-
or occupation.
The
and
occupation usually pro-
vides a rough timetable for reaching various levels of advancement. If a
man
falls
unlikely
behind the timetable, he
and the
entire enterprise
ing of the ladder
human
fine the ladder
past.
and parental injunctions and
These and many other
is
mean-
Down,
then, a
man
rejections
internal forces help to de-
and to shape the meanings of success and
In early Settling
advancement
in trouble. Internally, the
welfare, the superiority or inferiority of his
class or ethnic or regional origins,
from the distant
afraid that further
colored by a man's concerns with fame, creative
is
achievement, power,
is
may be
starts a
new
failure.
personal enterprise
on the bottom rung of his own psychosocial ladder. Entering a world in which he is a junior member, he seeks to advance in the enterprise, to
Down:
Settling
Building a Second Adult Life Structure
climb the ladder and become a senior
member
of that world.
143
Over the
next several years, his sense of well-being as a person will depend upon his evaluation of
how
Becoming "senior"
The riage
is
far
start of Settling
and family.
he
If
The
is
Down
is
he
is
moving toward these
not married, he
is
man's involvement in mar-
likely to feel great pressure to
some type
to
comes not only from
decision to marry
goals.
second phase of Settling Down.
also changes a
but also from the need for a more family
fast
commit himself formally
get married or to existence.
and how
crucial in the
stable,
balanced
of bachelor
affection or love,
life in
which marriage-
a central element.
Most men have
families
by the
As
late twenties.
I
have noted, the
may be questioned and reappraised by both partners during the Age Thirty Transition. This may strengthen the marriage ties and give marriage
and mutuality to the relationship
greater richness
period begins.
If
as
the Settling
the couple has a satisfactory love relationship,
Down if
she
some degree participates in his Settling Down enterprise, and if he can do the same with hers, their overall life structure is strengthened at the center. (Later on, of course, he may come to feel that this structure was all wrong for him, and he may blame her for getting him into it or keeping him in it.) As he enters the Settling Down period, a man has a great need to maintain a stable structure. He prefers to deal with problems by making
values and to
accommodations within the
existing
framework rather than attempting
He may
decide to remain in his marriage even
though there are serious problems
in the marital relationship, the family
major structural changes. or the wider
life,
The
life
structure in
which the family
an essential element.
is
decision to stay in a questionable marriage reflects not only his feel-
ings of love or obligation toward his wife but also his
family and the
life
structure that contains
it.
He may
commitment
to the
form a relationship
with another woman, intending to make this a limited element of the structure
and not a threat to the marriage— though
it
may
well not
work
out this way in the long run, as Jim Tracy discovered (see Chapter 11).
Our
four biographees provide four contrasting pictures of marriage and
family
life in
the
Age Thirty Transition and
In any case, the early Settling life
around the
ciety, defining
initial choices. It is
Down
Settling
phase
a time for
is
Down.
devoted to building a
making one's niche
in so-
an enterprise, getting on with the work, "taking care of
business." After three or four years a also part of the Settling
Down
new phase
begins. This phase
period. It contains the
outcome
enterprise started earlier, but has a qualitatively distinct character.
is
of the
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
44
Own Man
Becoming One's The
effort to
be more
ages.
Its
fully one's
and
self-sufficient,
many
LIFE
Down:
Late Settling
and
S
form
less
each age
at
We
developmental period.
own person— to be more independent
subject to the control of others— is found at
see
it,
the character of the current
reflects
for example, in the two-year-old stub-
bornly insisting on his rights and trying to maintain his a world that seems forever to
own
initiative in
be constraining him. In the Early Adult
Transition, the adolescent-becoming-adult has a special concern for his
own independence
he struggles to pull away more completely from
as
parents and from the pre-adult self that
still
is
so strongly tied to them.
This issue takes a new form, and a central place, in the end phase
Down. This phase is so distinctive that we have given it a name: Becoming One's Own Man. It ordinarily extends from about 36 or 37 to 40 or 41. It represents the culmination of Settling Down and, more
of Settling
and the
broadly, the peaking of early adulthood
first stirrings
of
what
lies
beyond.
A
man's primary developmental tasks in Becoming One's
Down,
are to accomplish the goals of Settling his ladder, to
clearly
to
with his
become
viduals
become
and
There
less
own
a senior voice, to
institutions in his
is
a built-in
as well as externally)
on more authority, and on other indi-
On
man
member
of his enterprise, to speak
have a greater measure of
dependent (internally life.
dilemma
here.
the one hand, a
be more independent more true to himself and sures
and blandishments from
others.
On
firmation in society. Speaking with his
no one listens— but he
the wish for affirmation makes
and susceptible to It is
not clear
voice
is
important, even
afif
for
independence leads him
essential, regardless of
consequences;
sensitive to the response of others
their influence.
why
occur at this time.
began
him
wants to
vulnerable to pres-
be heard and respected and
The wish
do what he alone considers most
less
the other hand, he seeks
own
especially wants to
given the rewards that are his due. to
Own Man
to advance sufficiently
It
a developmental phase having these tasks should
was not something we expected to find when we
this study. Rather,
with the other periods,
we
its
discovered
onset
is
it
in the course of our work.
As
not linked to a single dramatic event
or condition. It does not have a single, specific source in the individual's biological, psychological or sociocultural evolution.
The
basic sources lie
Settling
in all of these,
individuals
and
Down: Building
and many
a
Second Adult Life Structure
specific factors operate variously in
man
In the late thirties a
societies.
ily
more
senior,
established.
in early adulthood,
He
and the
is
peak of
at or near the
a full
He must become
generation older than those just entering adulthood.
more ment
different
becoming
is
145
his advance-
possibilities for his future life are heav-
many men, the sense of bodily The concern with decline and death
influenced by what happens now. For
decline
is
a
goad to greater
become even
will
striving.
stronger and take on additional meanings in the next
period.
The developmental
tasks
Down
through the Settling
Becoming One's Own Man— carrying becoming more senior and expert,
of
enterprise,
and getting affirmed by society— assume primary importance during the
A man
late thirties.
is
likely to
be rather
sensitive,
even touchy, about
anything in the environment or in himself that interferes with these aims. Since the successful outcome of this period that he has not accomplished
own man. He may have
we must
not assured, he often
enough and that he
a sense of being held
by others and restrained by
These concerns
is
reflect
own
his
conflicts
external realities
is
feels
not sufficiently his
back— of being oppressed
and and
inhibitions.
internal processes,
and
take account of both in our efforts to understand this phase.
External circumstances during these years are frequently restrictive and
damaging to
self-esteem. Organizations often operate so rigidly or cor-
ruptly that an individual, places his career in jeopardy right or eager to take the ball
and run.
It is
if
he
is
very forth-
generally safer to avoid con-
a loyal member of the "team"— and not speak too loudly own voice. As a man advances, he comes in closer contact with senior men who have their territories to maintain and protect. Their interest in him often contains a subtle mixture of support and intimida-
troversy
and be
with one's
tion.
He
receives a double message:
together with
"Make
"Be
a
good boy and
you'll
go
far,"
trouble and you're dead."
The difficulties of this period have important internal sources as well. The wish for affirmation and advancement makes him especially vulnerable to social pressure. A man who has prided himself on his ability to act autonomously realizes now that he is not as independent as he had thought. In crucial situations he has been too eager to please, too sensitive to criticism, too
convictions.
He
conforming to speak and act on the
wants to be his
to be understood
own man, but he
and appreciated, to have
also
basis of his
own
wants desperately
his talents affirmed, to suc-
ceed in his enterprise.
But the
difficulty goes
deeper than
this.
Own Man A man wants
Becoming One's
represents a peaking in the aspirations of early adulthood.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
146 to
become
a "senior" adult, to realize the fruits of the labors of the past
twenty
fifteen or
base for his
manly
years, to
accomplish goals that in turn will provide a
in the years to
life
a resurgence of the
become
of the desires for
little
boy
in the adult.
not necessarily a sign of pathology or impaired development in
is
adulthood that
early
wants, in short, to
The urgency
than ever before.
in a fuller sense
manhood, however, bring about It
He
come.
many
boyish qualities operate with great force.
shape in the twenties
self that takes
The
but a small step beyond adolescence
is
and normally contains many aspects of the child and adolescent self. The boy continues to exist, providing many of the strengths as well as the vulnerabilities of the
and
like qualities
young man. With
luck, a
man
will sustain his child-
changing forms, throughout the
his youthfulness, in
life cycle.
The
activation of the boyish self during the late thirties
normal psychosocial development. The
is
part of
Becoming One's
effort involved in
Own Man
activates the unresolved pre-adult conflicts, including the boy-
ish wishes
and
flict is
anxieties. Indeed, the intensification of the
boy-man con-
a step forward. It creates the possibility of resolving the conflict
at a higher level.
During
this period,
however, the intensified conflict becomes an inner
The member of
source of difficulty.
adult self desires to
a productive
society,
that this demands.
bilities
many ways with
and to bear
The
boyish
and discontent.
sition
He
and idealism,
boy
little
authority helpless
is
self
his sense of adven-
also a source of
is
oppo-
his brow.
He
wants things to go
way, without having to consider the conflicting needs or
requirements of others. the
be
responsi-
wants to attain great heights through magical
omnipotence rather than the sweat of effortlessly his
he can the
contributes to this effort in
self
his imagination, energy
and wonderment. However, the boyish
ture
certain values, to
fulfill
as best
When
feels totally
restrictive or
sufficient recognition
is
not forthcoming,
deprived and humiliated.
When
imposing,
boy who
it
and intimidated. The boyish
the
is
little
becomes the
self
a boss or other feels utterly
ingratiating syco-
phant, the ever-agreeable "nice guy" or the impulsive, self-defeating rebel
—but not
the persevering worker or the leader
constructive,
humane
ends. It
tors,
the
is
forms the ordinary mortals with
he
uses his authority for
boy inside the man who
little
whom
who
is
trans-
involved— bosses, wives, men-
colleagues— into tyrants, corrupters, villainous
rivals,
seducers and
witches.
There ences.
is
always
To some
some mixture
of reality
and distortion
in these experi-
degree the persons and institutions in a man's
tyrannical, corrupting
and
exploitive.
He
often finds
it
life
are
hard to sort things
Down:
Settling
During
out.
Building a Second Adult Life Structure
time he frequently
this
147
between the extremes of
vacillates
(when he feels absolutely inept, impotent and lackand paranoid rage (when he blames an evil or
depressive self-blame
ing in inner resources)
uncaring world for suppressing or ignoring his enormous talents and
When
tues).
height,
it
is
vir-
these internal conflicts and external stresses are at their
indeed to maintain one's good judgment and
difficult
ini-
tiative.
During the period of Becoming One's be
ships are likely to
mentor
of a close tie with a process.
he
tor,
A man is
He must
especially just
Own Man,
stormy and vulnerable.
now
in his late thirties
is
is
mentor
The
relation-
termination
often a mutually painful, tortuous
not only giving up his current men-
outgrowing the readiness to be the protege of any older person.
mentoring relationship not because
reject the
harmful but because
has served
it
its
purpose.
it
is
has helped
It
intrinsically
him
to
make
a basic developmental advance.
Whereas in early
in pre-adulthood
he was a boy-son
adulthood he has become a young-man-apprentice in relation to
an admired mentor.
The mentor
but young (junior) adult. In the
move toward becoming teachers and bosses. thority, father, is
in relation to a father,
He
in turn has regarded
new
late thirties a
and
a senior adult
himself must
and friend of other
of the essence of adulthood. If a
,The formative steps
Becoming One's
A
man must
a mentor, constructive au-
This developmental achievement
man
is
assume responsibility
to
others and for himself during middle adulthood, he ity."
as a full-fledged
peer of his former mentors,
full
become
adults.
him
task arises: a
must
attain his "senior-
in this process are taken during the
Own Man
for
time of
and the Mid-life Transition.
man's struggles with his mentor and his hardships in being a pro-
tege are intensified during struggle with the little
Becoming One's
boy
in himself.
The
Own Man little
by the renewed boy desperately wants
the mentor to be a good father in the most childish sense— a father
who
make him special, will endow him with magical powers and will not require him to compete or prove himself in relation to would-be rivals.
will
It is also
the
little
ther—a depriving, uses
one
for his
boy who anxiously makes the mentor into
dictatorial authority
own
needs.
The
who
a
bad
fa-
has no real love and merely
relationship
is
made untenable by
the
yearning for the good father, the anxiety over the bad father, and the projection of both of these internal figures onto the mentor,
who
is
then
caught in a bind. Central features of the pre-adult self— involving the boy's elemental struggles with dependency, sexuality, authority
and the like— often come
to the fore with special strength during the phase of
Becoming One's
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
148
Own Man. When
severe conflicts
must be seen both mentor
work of becoming more
not
is
difficulties
occur at this time, they
renewal of pre-adult problems and as a reflection
as a
of the developmental
of the
and
fully adult.
The overthrow
an irrational re-enactment of boyish Oedipal
just
Even more, it is part of the developmental process by which a young man becomes an adult and mentor. This process cannot evolve revolt.
along purely rational to
Many
lines.
be excellent teachers and
Own Man
Becoming One's
persons in early adulthood have the
advisers.
is
essential
skill
But the developmental work of in moving further and acquiring
the maturity to be a wise mentor.
One
of our novelists, Allen Perry, presented us with a vivid
mentor
of a significant
had happened service, Perry went
relationship.
At
44, he
and becoming
yesterday. In his early twenties, after college
He
to
New
York with the
single
aim of
example
the story as
recalls
if
it
military a writer.
who was then
took an extension course taught by Calvin Randall,
an editor at a leading publishing house. They immediately formed a close
bond:
me tremendous support and encouragement. I was very man enormously, deeply committed to him in fact. He had
Randall gave close to this
—
a wonderful quality,
but
later realized that this quality
I
was good only
you were very young, and once you became a man yourself it almost became a matter of competition. I had to break, and it was too bad beif
cause there was a lack of insight oh his part,
But the break occurred some
I
The
years later.
relationship flowered
and publication
in Perry's mid-twenties, during the writing
novel. The book was a commercial and
think.
of- his
first
and established
success
critical
promise. For the next several years he traveled a good and wrote a few minor pieces, but was not able to complete the novel he had in mind. Although the relationship with Randall contin-
him
as a writer of
deal
ued, they were not in close contact.
The
next chapter began
when
the second novel and taken editor-in-chief
nection with uscript.
I
and
my
it
Perry was 35.
to his mentor.
eluded. I'd
just
work."
It
finally
met,
it
was ever
it's
come
him.
a person
He
to his
con-
to the
man-
was a great disappointment:
my work
who demonstrated
really lost
completed
time Randall was
known figure, "due partly him two weeks to get around took
realized that (he wasn't interested in
sin of hubris,
this
a nationally
And, when they
career. If there
He had
By
so
much
as his
own
the sad effects of the
touch with his proteges, myself in :
to discuss a manuscript
hours describing his great publishing plans.
and he'd spend two or three
When
he moved
to another
Down: Building
Settling
it
me
he asked
firm, as
was,
Second Adult Life Structure
a
him.
to shift with
the relationship had remained
If
wouldn't have hesitated. Instead,
I
149
decided to give
I
him
up.
I
remember These are close
to the actual words:
the fact that
admire you so much, would be an admission that you are
I
my
absolutely essential to that this
but
it
is
the letter
distinctly
still
not true.
It's
letter.
He
"To go with you now, even
to
my
who was
it
was an act of
there that he burst into tears felt
comes
no longer dependent on those
now
vulnerable period.
when
that
on
earth,
just the
I
can remember
was 35
I
but in
I'd
reality
I
be the
I
realize
when all.
was in
I
have a sympa-
that 35
my
when
had betrayed
I
a point is
when
we're
really a very
twenties thinking
most debonair,
jauntiest,
wasn't at
that
liberation. It's nice to
thetic person to ricochet things off, but there figures.
talent,
integrity as a writer."
was hurt for a long time and
him. For me, however,
including
your credentials or your
insult to you,
learned later from someone
I
I
development, when in fact you must be aware
no
would have been demeaning
he read the
wrote him almost ten years ago.
free individual
Breaking with Calvin Randall was
beginning of some liberating process.
Allen Perry's bitterness did not destroy his attachment to Randall.
named after the mentor. now amicable but reserved— perhaps as good as it can
His son, born at the time of the break, was
The. relationship
is
be.
I'm very thankful at this
moment
grown man, you know, and not
We
are friendly, but
with Randall.
my
I
it's
that we've patched
his boy.
I
I'll
ever have that again, or want
est or skill at
it.
Men
have mentors after about 40.
lationships with family, friends, counselors tor relationship in things, as part of ability
and
its
all
up. I'm a
not the kind of passionate relationship
don't think
turn to give that help to others, though
rarely
it
have an excellent editor now.
developed form
is
I'll
I
Now
had it's
never have Calvin's inter-
A man may
have valued
re-
and co-workers, but the men-
rare. It
is
surrendered, with other
Becoming One's Own Man. One mentor to others.
interest in being a
it.
result
is
a greater
^ive Sequences Through the
flfTk
Down
Settling
The
Down
Settling
man
time for a
period
it
the culmination of early adulthood, the
is
What
to realize the hopes of his youth.
ways of going through
found
Period
this period,
and what
are
its
are the various
We
outcomes?
have
useful to distinguish five ways of establishing a second adult
structure
Own Man.
and Becoming One's
about these
five categories;
But
scribing variations.
is
life
nothing absolute
they are simply a convenient means of deof our forty
all
There
men— and
others
whose
lives
we
have studied— went through one or another of these sequences: A. Advancement within a stable
life
structure
B. Serious failure or decline within a stable
C. Breaking out: trying for a new
D. Advancement which E. Unstable
cline.
major
his
The
C
life
structure
goes at least moderately well and a
life
goals.
In
B he
C
and
D
the
man
man
is
relatively stable.
forms a stable structure at the
and external
Own Man
tle his existing life
in
income and
edly, into a
Down
formed
at
and create
world.
E
differs
all.
a
new
one. In Sequence D, advancement
from the others
Instead, the Settling
Down
Down
period.
him, often unexpect-
in that a stable structure
is
not
period begins with very tenuous
choices that cannot be followed up, and the
over the entire Settling
phase
Becoming
attempts to break out, to disman-
status during his late thirties propels
new
Sequence
man
(36 to 40), the
start
forces lead to change. In
the structure established in the early Settling
(age 33 to 36) proves to be intolerable. During the phase of
One's
advances
experiences considerable failure or de-
of the period, but various internal
Sequence
structure
produces a change in
structure in both cases
life
In Sequences
life
structure
structure
life
In Sequence A,
toward
itself
life
life
structure remains in flux
Five Sequences Through the Settling
Down
Period
151
Sequence A. Advancement Within a Stable Life Structure Here,
life
proceeds more or
Down
early Settling
according to expectations. During the
less
man makes
phase a
primary commitments, de-
his
an enterprise and gradually enriches and elaborates the
fines
initial
life
Becoming One's Own Man, his ambition heightens from within and an emphasis on advancement is intensified from without. He defines more precisely the last few rungs of his Settling Down ladder and magnifies his efforts to reach the top. To a large extent,
structure.
In the phase of
he succeeds. but the
He may
experience a good deal of hardship and suffering,
manageable and the
stresses are
outweigh the
satisfactions
diffi-
culties.
In our study, 55 percent of the men followed predominantly the pattern of Sequence A, and several others showed significant aspects of this
The remaining 45
percent had major diffioutcome was less satisfactory for them. experienced the advancement of Sequence A
pattern (see table, page 152).
during this period, and
culties
More
novelists
and
biologists
its
than workers and executives, but the differences were not dramatic. Since our sample is more middle class and probably more stable in occupation and marriage-family than the population as a whole, these findings may underestimate the degree of difficulty experienced by
men
during their
thirties.
The
final goal of
advancement in Sequence
cretely in terms of a key event success. society.
This event
The young
carries
which
in the
or,
35
often defined con-
want
He
to write just another book.
He
hopes above
an established writer of a certain kind and quality.
all
to
The
be
aca-
become a full professor, to achieve seniority in university and discipline, to make a major breakthrough in his research if truth be told, to win the Nobel Prize. The executive knows by that he must reach a certain level by 40. Otherwise, he will be un-
demic his
is
the ultimate message of his animation by
writer does not
wants to make a quantum leap in his writing. identified as
A
man's mind symbolizes true
biologist aspires to
able to advance further. eral
He
will
promotion" that represents
in one demoted
be trapped failure, or
position, given a "lat-
to
make room
for the
men now moving up. The worker too seeks a higher job grade or a supervisory position. He may obtain a union position such as shop steward, which' carries another form of seniority. Or he may define his younger
goals less in terms of occupation
and more
in
terms of family, leisure
or community.
Whatever
their goals, the
early in the Settling
Down
men
in
Sequence
A
period and maintain
form it
a life structure
throughout. Impor-
SEQUENCES
Down
Five Sequences Through the Settling
may occur— in
tant changes
Period
153
place and kind of residence, job, income,
life
family pattern— but these represent advancements, enrichments or
style,
within the existing framework and not a change in the basic
difficulties
There may be great hardship along with the progress: times when advancement is in serious question, problems of marriage and family life, serious illness or death of loved ones, frequent moves and stressstructure.
The
ful living conditions of various kinds.
and the
ever,
advancement within
Around
hardships are tolerable, how-
sequence during Settling
overall
Down
primarily one of
is
a relatively stable enterprise.
men
40, these
reach the top rung of their Settling
Down
lad-
der and attain goals that represent the culmination of years of striving.
Reaching to be
The
ladder.
a
this level
not the end of the
is
climbed— but the next
new
top of the
The
ladder.
He
different world.
first
step
is
There are new heights
story.
not simply another rung on the same
ladder turns out to be the bottom rung on
successes of this period bring a is
now
a
newcomer, entering a
man
into a
new and
''senior" world. In the
process of establishing himself he has joined an establishment. It bears
the responsibility for
many people— whether
in industry, the university,
writing-publishing, trade union, or extended family. this
world and,
if
he remains
in
it,
ticipated ways over the course of middle adulthood. directly
from the
new
tion of a
life
structure of the Settling
structure.
There
He
starts
Down
He
crucial
changes
their considerable progress in the Settling
men
in
Sequence
of self-esteem, of proving themselves
There
is
Down
some mixture
always
of satisfaction
may
enterprise
is
Clearly, this
The
is is
it
is
want.
really
man's sense
genuine to the extent that
his Settling
and
illusion in this.
and that
it
enables
his sense of
him
to live
achievement and
the actual values of his performance.
a matter of degree.
experience of advancement and success
Even when
degree on illusion. he may be gaining rewards that value for him. His
life
may
a
man
is
is
always based to
some
doing well in an external sense,
will turn
out to have
little
meaning or
provide genuine satisfactions but at great
inner costs. In order to devote himself to certain goals, he neglect or repress important parts of the for
period,
A
self,
consistent with
Down
life.
generally have a strong sense
consonant with his Dream, that
out important aspects of the contribution
is
A
These
occur.
and getting what they
of reality
and well-being
move
period to the crea-
changes have a strong influence on the shape of his subsequent
Given
unan-
does not
an intervening developmental period—
is
the Mid-life Transition— in which
not surprising that the
afresh in
his life structure will evolve in
self.
Finally, a
may have
man's
to
strivings
advancement are often stimulated by a fantasy that has the magical
— 1
THE SEASONS OF A
54
MAN S
qualities of a fairy tale:
everything
I
is
though
it is
life
my
get to the top of
I
wanted and
really
rarely conscious
fantasy
of
"If
LIFE
ladder,
I
have
will
happily ever after." This omnipotent
live
Own Man
during the Becoming One's
phase,
The man himself may become aware when he attempts to reappraise his The biologist John Barnes exemplifies
often evident to others.
during the Mid-life Transition,
it
and penetrate
this sequence, as
his
we
illusions.
shall see in
Chapter
17.
men
People are inclined either to idealize or devalue the
who
A. Those
evidence of steady progress or of meteoric success, assume that
good ing a
for
anyone who
is
more debunking
and the great arrive at a
in
Sequence
take an uncritically favorable view may, impressed by the
receiving such recognition attitude,
may emphasize
costs involved in pursuing
it.
must be
life
and reward. Others,
tak-
the limitations of success
Neither attitude allows one to
balanced evaluation of a person's
life.
The
question
is
much
more complicated. Any individual life is a mass of costs and gains. Sequence A is one way of going through the Settling Down period. In this pattern, a man's advancement is in accord with his own timetable, the stresses are
manageable, the gains outweigh the costs of the struggle, and
his inner sense of success exceeds his sense of failure. In the next develop-
mental period, starting
around 40, he
at
the course and outcome of his
life in
will
have the task of reappraising
the thirties.
lutely necessary to re-evaluate his goals
He may
and seek new
then find
it
abso-
directions.
Sequence B. Serious Failure or Decline
Within
a Stable Life Structure
About 20 percent
of our
men
exemplify this sequence.
Some
of
them
fail
and obvious ways during the course of Settling Down. Others achieve a good deal of external success but fail in certain crucial respects which make the entire enterprise pointless in their own eyes. We found this in gross
pattern in two workers, three executives and two biologists (see page 152).
None
of the hourly workers
found
vance in job level during their late
and found other ways— through to gain a sense of progress
and
it
possible to
thirties.
A
make
their unions, families or
seniority.
Two
were trapped in a constricting, oppressive
life
a significant ad-
few were reconciled to
community
this
life
of the ten workers, however,
that held
little
promise for
the future.
Luke Doby, a Black man, had been steadily employed as a construction worker. At 39, however, he was forced by a series of illnesses and operations to give
When
up heavy work. He became a janitor, which he found degrading. income fell below the poverty level, it was supplemented by wel-
his
Down
Five Sequences Through the Settling
Period
155
payments. This in turn undermined his position in the family, which
fare
until then
and
had been
and
relatively well integrated
had become quite marked when we saw him physically dying. (His life after 39
An example whose
of
is
more moderate
His
stable.
The
value for his fapiily, society and himself.
less
at 43:
life
continue his story in
Chapter
less
he was mentally and
described in Chapter 18.)
failure
the worker William Paulsen,
is
through the novice phase was presented in Chapter
life
held
process of decline
We shall
8.
18.
Down
Equivalent kinds of failure in Settling
were found
our
in three of
ten executives. All three had with great effort achieved a position in middle
management by
their mid-thirties.
They
Becoming came to
started the phase of
One's
Own Man
with great hopes for
them
as a bitter
disappointment. Mike Gallagher was an engineer from
Carnegie Tech.
He became
advancement, and
head of an important unit
failure
in his
company
at
34 and was regarded as a real comer. At 37, however, he received a "lateral promotion" which meant exile within the company, and his career was in ruins.
When we
saw him
at 39
able to advance and not ready to
in a state of quiet desperation, not
he was
move
elsewhere.
Other middle managers received occasional promotions and were able to remain in the
company without too much
humiliation.
however, they had reached their ceilings
thirties,
in their goals,
but their sense of direction and their
The
By the
late
not only would they
:
fail
possibilities for the
management in industry is pyramanagement for every 15 or 20 in middle management. Since the culture of management places a great value on upward mobility, most middle managers are doomed to personal failure,
future were undermined.
structure of
midal, with only one position in top
ranging in degree from moderate to devastating.
A similar pyramid exists— although universities.
industry.
The outcome
Two
with different characteristics—in our
of that competition can be as devastating as in
of our ten biologists
went through Sequence B, and the
ex-
perience of failure figured strongly in the lives of several others at this time.
Some
of them, faculty
late thirties that they
members
at
an
elite university,
would not be promoted
would have to leave the following year. This
were told in their
to tenured professorships is
more the
ception in such universities: the majority of younger faculty like
middle managers
them go
in
to other universities, at various
academic
Norman Kromer, about himself
levels
both advancement and
accompanied by the most contradictory
failure
members-
industry— do not gain senior positions. Most of
case the change represents is
and
rule than the ex-
a biologist
who was
as a scientist
and
a
and
let
go
at 39,
He
In each
kind of demotion.
self-evaluations
a person.
salaries.
and
had strong felt that
It
feelings.
feelings of
he had not
1
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
56
been able to speak with
eminent
nition as an
his
"Where can
begin by asking,
mental questions: "Have Shall
my
maintain
I
own
my
limited success?
I
I
He had
more funda-
to start with
anything important to contribute as a scientist?
primary commitment to theory and research, despite
Or
shall
settle for a position involving
I
I
(and
my
mainly teach-
discipline) value these less?
should get out of the university altogether and pursue other
I
ests that
planning his next move, he could not
get a job?"
ing and administration, though
perhaps
and therefore could not gain recog-
voice,
biologist. In
Or
inter-
have neglected for years/'
I
Another
Steven Brenner, was in a very different situation. At
biologist,
37 he had a national reputation and became a tenured associate professor. The promotion was given in reward for his past accomplishments and,
even more, in anticipation of his future contribution. In accepting the pro-
motion he was, ered shortly.
in effect, giving a promissory note for products to
He was
be
deliv-
then starting a research partnership with a colleague
working at another university. By the time Brenner had reached
39, the
and received great acclaim. His collaborator's laborahowever, had done the bulk of the work and was given the primary
project was completed tory,
credit.
Although Brenner received recognition
the work, the other
through.
It
was not
and to what extent an at 39
was done. Despite
injustice
he regarded himself and
New
own
his
defeat,
his considerable success,
for
man
in his late thirties experiences
with new awareness
greater urgency the flaws of the life structure established at the start
Down
of the Settling this structure,
may
of a real break-
Life Structure
In Sequence C, a
and
major contributor to
his life as essentially a failure.
Sequence C. Breaking Out: Trying a
as a
man was seen as the creative source clear how much Brenner colluded in
focus
period.
He
previously
but now, at age 36 or
upon one
area,
such
as
37, his life
work
foundly alienated from his entire world.
and without space
in
cannot go on
has.
as
he
had some
dissatisfaction
becomes
or marriage, or
He
with
intolerable.
he may
feels suffocated,
constrained
which to be himself and to do what matters most.
Life experiences of this sort can occur at any age. specific to a given period.
What
is
distinctive here
They is
are
He
feel pro-
He
by no means
the overall pattern
and the developmental context in which it occurs. Just a before, the man had committed himself to certain choices and
of self-in-world
few years
started building a life structure that would,
family for
some
time. In
most of these
he hoped, serve him and
cases, the Settling
Down
his
structure
Down
Five Sequences Through the Settling
Period
157
made
involved a reaffirmation of choices (especially in marriage and work)
The paradox
during the twenties.
much
invested so
that now, after he
is
time and effort in
he
it,
and
have
his family
finds this structure increasingly
oppressive and feels compelled to break out.
Sequence time of
as a
C
is
crisis.
perhaps the most dramatic example of the late
when he
Just
made
mentally wrong. Having
he cannot continue to
much
to destroy
he
bed
his
Yet
to
to
become
that there
feels
own man and
his
something funda-
is
(marital, occupational or whatever),
change
is
to tear the fabric of his
life,
As he
that he has built over the last ten or fifteen years.
make
struggles to
lie in it.
most eager
is
to fulfill his adult aspirations,
thirties
put— he
the fateful decision— to break out or to stay
is
be moody, uncommunicative, alternately resentful of others and
likely to
blaming of himself.
The ture
is
difficulty lies partly in the actuality of his life.
indeed flawed.
aspects of the
Man
is
boy
it is
now
a
to
time.
Own
and have been
be more
who
ties to
man
life struc-
be someone he can no longer
essential to pursue the
in himself
women. As
him
This man's
to live out crucially important
some
tolerated, for
Dream,
fully a
man,
to
to
be a person of
be
enslaved
less
desperately needs to be cared for and
who
powerful, exploitive adults.
process of "breaking out"
ships with
him
because the tasks of Becoming One's
integrity, to
victimized by his inner
The
requires
flaws have existed,
independence and little
it
intolerable
are so urgent:
by the
does not permit
and
self,
But the
accept.
They become
It
may go on
in marriage
struggles with the little
struggles as well with the maternal figures in himself
and
and other boy
relation-
in himself,
his wife.
He
he
experi-
ences his wife largely in maternal terms: at best, a good mother benignly
nurturing her flock and managing the family
witch or in line
selfish bitch,
life;
using both her strength and her weakness to keep
and prevent him from becoming what he
As he
sees
it,
at worst, a destructive
his wife
cannot hear what he
is
truly
him
wants to be.
trying to tell her, nor can
she appreciate his need for a greater measure of autonomy and intimate
From
sharing.
her point of view, he
but inchoate grievances, suddenly
is
unaccountably upset,
critical of
labored so long to achieve, yet unable to is
difficult to sort
actually like;
creating of
them
tell
her what he
full of life
now
strong
they have wants.
out the various elements in this situation: what she
what he
projects onto her;
and maintaining
how
It is
they both participate in
what extent each more mutual, adult relationship with a new attachment and separateness. Both, I must emphasize, have been
is
balance of
her and of the
a relationship hurtful to both; to
ready to form a
involved in creating the relationship, and both will have a part in deter-
mining
its
outcome.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
158
The
may be
result
A
as well.
separation and divorce, but there are other outcomes
"cold war" truce in which a poor marraige
and
external
may end
period of open warfare or silent conflict is
kind of
in a
endured because of various
some cases the couple are able to and make their marriage more satisfactory
internal constraints. In
change themselves and their
lives,
than before.
men (13 percent) were predominantly in Sequence C These included two workers, two executives and a novelist.
Five of our forty (see page 152).
In several other cases, including some biologists, "breaking out" occurred in
another pattern or in a subsequent developmental period. Sequence probably more
men who
common
and
40 to 45 are likely without breaking out.
to have pursued this occupation for
This sequence highlights the
biologists at age
some
years,
and potential
difficulties
man
starts
the phase of Becoming One's
and he
is
Own Man,
faced with a terrible dilemma.
If
forming
costs of
Down
a badly flawed life structure at the start of the Settling a
is
than in our sample, since
are executives, novelists
less tolerable
C
in the general population
period.
As
become
the flaws
he remains
in this
become his own man. On the other hand, he has already made major commitments within the early Settling Down structure and changing them may be hurtful to family, co-workers and others who depend on him. Breaking out of this structure there
structure If a
is
the danger that he will be unable to
is
a tough undertaking indeed.
man
tries to
terminate his occupation or his marriage,
The
through the process of separation.
several years to carry
tion
and marriage-family
life,
though they
will
it
will take
first
occupa-
continue to occupy a significant place in his
have new meanings and a new place in the structure.
will
The breaking out may be dramatized by a single decisive act, a marker event such as moving out of the home or quitting a job or going to another part of the country.
But the process
of breaking
away began
earlier
and
will
go
much longer than is usually recognized. The process of breaking in —making new choices and building a new life— is also time consuming. A man may remarry soon after leaving his first wife, but it will take several years to establish a new marriage (and, often, a new family). If he makes on
for
a change in occupation, he will go through a period of transition as he leaves
one occupational world and gradually enters the next.
Finally,
and
this
is
out at 37 can create a aspirations,
aspirations
life
structure in
all:
and
illusions
come
a major life
Own Man,
into question.
change
went through
before a
which to
he enters the Mid-life Transition
who attempted One's
the hardest blow of
new
at
man who
40 or 41.
We
Now
all
of his
found that every
man
Becoming considerable instability and
in the late thirties, as part of
a period of
breaks
realize his early adult
.
Five Sequences Through the Settling
flux lasting eight to ten years. It
Period
159
not possible to establish a new structure
is
and
until the Mid-life Transition ends
Down
a
new
stable period, Entering
Middle
Adulthood, begins in the mid-forties (see Chapter 18)
Are the
highly flawed Settling stay put
and
Down
try to repair or
The problem
is
C
Sequence
costs of
greater or less than the gains?
endure
it?
Down
predict the costs
he
that a
and gains of any course
may
forming
his life struc-
A
highly flawed
man
whether he
in this
stays
put or
predicament cannot
of action. Small wonder, then,
if
either choice: staying
lead to a kind of living death (or suicide); breaking out
destructive to his loved ones
Of
is
overwhelmed by the negative prospects of
feels
put
in
are very hard to modify.
structure will be extremely costly in any case,
breaks out. Part of the difficulty
man
There are no simple answers here.
man makes
that the key choices a
ture at the start of Settling
Should a
structure be dismantled, or should a
and not bring the better
life
he
may be
craves.
between remaining passively
course, there are intermediate options
stuck within the existing structure and making drastic changes that entail great sacrifice
by the
in the life structure ever,
More modest accommodations How-
his family.
judicious, "reasonable" course.
because of the high stakes and the intense passion involved in a devel-
opmental
crisis,
moderate change
choice can be made,
A
man and
might be the more
it is
problem of marital
often not feasible. Before a realistic
is
essential to place the
problem
in wider perspective.
conflict or job dissatisfaction during the late thirties
frequently reflects a deep fault in the
must be based on an understanding
life structure.
Efforts at
of this structure
and
its
improvement
roots in self
and
world.
Various discussions of "mid-life in "the
crisis" refer to
times of great difficulty
middle years," which may cover any part of the span from 35 to 65.
Crises occurring at different ages within this span have
common. The
nature, sources
and consequences
however, in different developmental periods. thirties will
Own Man.
A
"mid-life crisis" only for to identify others
crisis
crisis
occurring in the late
occurring in the early forties will reflect the
We prefer to use the term
one that occurs within the Mid-life Transition, and
by the name of the period
example, Jaques showed that
many
artists
in
have
which they happen. For
crises in their late thirties
(the peak age being 37). In our view these are crises of
Man, although they
Becoming One's
usually extend into the Mid-life Transition.
of our four biographees exemplify the pattern of breaking out in
the Settling
Down
features in
be shaped by the developmental context of Becoming One's Likewise, a
developmental issues of the Mid-life Transition.
Own Two
many
of the crisis will differ,
Down
period. In
Chapter 11 we
period of James Tracy, the executive,
shall describe the Settling
who broke
out of his
first
mar-
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l6o
riage; in ist,
Chapter
who broke As
12, the Settling
out of his
,
Down
period of Paul
Namson, the
novel-
occupation.
first
a briefer example, let us consider Philip Abbott, a technician in the
He dropped
electronics industry.
out of college after one year, married at
19 and obtained some engineering training in the army before returning
home
to his
town. Over the next ten years he took occasional college
courses, read widely in the technical as well as humanistic-psychological literature,
and held increasingly good
jobs in "research
a small plant
and could have remained
and development"
he became a manager in
or as a production supervisor. In his early thirties
at this level.
But he soon
quit.
He
concluded that a manager had to compete mercilessly with other managers
and put company ready to do
At
34,
profits
ahead of more humane values, and he was not
this.
Abbott took
another company.
a supervisory position
He now found
management. With Yet
It
as a
an hourly worker in
he understood how poor
his managerial perspective
management was causing problems ships.
as
himself suspended between workers and
and of human
of production
relation-
worker he was not in a position to do anything about
this.
was painful to be part of a hurtful system and do nothing to change
Although he
tried to detach himself emotionally
from the work
he continued to experience alienation and helpless
rage.
it.
situation,
At 37 he and
his
wife began to talk about alternative possibilities. She too was expanding
her horizons and wanted a better to a
Western
state
life
for
both of them. At 38 they moved
with the idea of living more in nature (an old love)
and developing an occupation outside of the occurred in the context of Becoming One's
how
it
worked
industrial firm.
Own Man. We
The move
do not know
out.
Sequence D. Advancement
Which
Itself
Produces a Change
in Life Structure
In Sequence A, as ture; style.
we have
seen, a
There may be changes
But the
in job,
man
advances within a stable
income, family,
basic character of the
life
social
life
structure remains relatively un-
changed. In Sequence D, however, advancement brings with
change
life struc-
network and
it
a significant
in life structure.
The
basic pattern
increase in income.
opportunity to
is
At
as follows
first
:
A man
receives a
promotion or a
drastic
glance the increase seems to be a great boon, an
and do things that he has long wanted to do. But into a new world in which he has new roles and rela-
live better
this gain propels
him
tionships. Ibactivates
new
aspects of the
self,
while providing
little
room
for
*
Five Sequences Through the Settling
Down
the expression of other, formerly important aspects. In short,
change
may
The advancement
in his life structure.
is
mixed
a
Period
161
leads to a
it
blessing,
and
it
turn out to be a curse.
*Three of our forty
D
emplify Sequence types": they
men— a
went through
partly as a result of
an executive and a novelist— ex-
biologist,
Another three
(see page 152).
were "mixed
cases
a change in life structure in the late thirties,
advancement, but other factors (such
as
breaking out)
played a more significant part.
This sequence
is
Mohn.
well represented by an executive, Roger
getting his engineering degree, he returned to his
home town and
took a
job in a large manufacturing firm, where he has worked ever since.
he got married and began a
During
this
life
that
Mohn
little
desire for
advancement. By
his early
was the head of the shop, and traveled around the country
developing and testing
age 31 and 35. This
new
products.
time— the
He and
He
early Settling
his wife
bought a home
life.
had what was
him an optimal
for
He
Christ of the metals shop."
community
Down
in a
at his
period— was the high
loved his work and devoted long hours to
point of his adult
level of responsibility: "I
it.
He
was the Jesus
was building a family and doing well in
of his origins.
When Mohn was ment
24,
He found
modest middle-class neighborhood. Their two children were born
the
At
stability until his mid-thirties.
time he worked in a shop that made special products.
the work interesting, and he had thirties
had great
After
37 the
company rewarded him with
position as purchasing manager.
Unable
a
middle-manage-
to refuse this
advancement,
he entered a new occupation and a new world. The promotion was a step in changing his life structure.
He
first
gave up the leadership of the small,
production-centered world he loved, and took on managerial functions in
an impersonal, competitive world that
he enjoyed
it less,
lay
beyond
his earlier ken.
he was excited by the challenge and did
Although
well.
As he
turned 40, he was offered a senior position as manager of manufacturing,
with responsibility for 400 people.
From
37 to 40 Roger
Mohn
succeeded occupationally beyond his most
extravagant dreams. But the advancement changed the character of his life.
It
eliminated what had been the central element of his earlier
structure— the metal shop and his distinctive role within a major
new element: an
and motivation, and
for
move out
which he was given minimal
was markedly above
him among
his,
of the lower middle class in
his family of origin
and
It
life
introduced
executive position for which he lacked experience
job tripled his income and placed class level
it.
his
It
training.
colleagues at
enabled
him— or
The new
work whose
forced
him— to
which he had been firmly rooted by
own commitments.
In brief, Roger
Mohn's
.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l62
promotions during the phase of Becoming One's to 40, took
much
mitted
and
him
off
Own Man,
greater external success but was
alien to his primary cultural world.
from 41 to 44 were the low point of The biologist Arthur Treloar through advancement
as
offers
an
his
ladder per-
primary aspirations
overreached himself.
a
The
years
Chapters 13 and 18)
his life (see
example of change
different
Down. Trained
in Settling
gan his academic career at 32
He
beyond
from age 37
The new
the ladder he had earlier chosen.
he be-
in biochemistry,
and "promising young
assistant professor
researcher" in a prestigious university.
During the next few years he
ized that he greatly enjoyed teaching.
He
research was small
and
his interest
real-
also realized that his talent for
even smaller. As he told
us, 'Til
never
win the Nobel Prize." At 38 he was promoted to a tenured position, and with this came the freedom to leave.
an innovative but
as professor in
The
next year he accepted a position
less prestigious university in
the West.
His major function in the new department, and the thing that most attracted him, was to develop new courses of his own and to plan a new curriculum for the undergraduate major. His research productivity was not essential here.
The change
in job represented
a breaking out (Sequence
authority.
From
was more than
great,
period, research life
structure.
made It
in
D) and
academic rank and
the point of view of the scientific community, this gain
offset
by the drop
his reputation as a researcher.
vancement was
both an advancement (Sequence
C). The advancement was
but
it
in the prestige of the university
From
own
Treloar's
Now, although he was from
a major career change:
still
in
point of view, the ad-
was to a new ladder. In the early Settling
and teaching coexisted uneasily
and
as central
Down
elements in his
an academic biologist, he had
scientist to educator.
was not until the phase of Becoming One's
Own Man
that Treloar
make the change, and the differences were crucial. Research was a peripheral element of the new life structure, and teaching was central. He could
was becoming an educational administrator. In time he would advance further to be department chairman or university administrator.
The move west
thus represented a change from the
around the research ladder symbolized by the Nobel
He dreamed
initial career built
Prize. It involved a
new life in a new world. The new university would be more benign and devoted to humane educational ideals. He would devote more time to his family and change in other respects
as well.
his leisure interests— skiing,
of starting a
mountain climbing, the enjoyment of natural
beauty.
Treloar in
an
made
this
effort to live
change
at the height of
Becoming One's
with greater autonomy and fulfillment.
Own Man, Much
self-
Five Sequences Through the Settling
analysis,
Down
planning and exploration went into the choice of a
Period
new
163
life setting.
for pulling up his fragile roots and taking this At the same time, he was making a big bet: the new world might not be up to his expectations, and he might not have the talent or
There were sound reasons
new
direction.
new
character needed to succeed in the
enterprise. His anticipations of
the future were cautiously hopeful— and extravagantly optimistic. His plans
were realistic— and
Our
filled
with
illusions.
We
story ends at this point.
barking upon a
new
life.
He
is
em-
leave Arthur Treloar at age 40,
about to enter the Mid-life Transition,
the existing structure comes into question,
when
when
illusions are confronted,
when new aspects of the self demand expression and new paths must be formed. The character of his life will change, in part because the new situation will bring new opportunities and demands, and even more, because he is in a process of inner growth that will lead him in unexpected directions.
Sequence E. Unstable Life Structure In
all
the previous sequences, a relatively stable
in the Settling
Down
A
period. In Sequences
structure
life
and B
in the
phase of
In Sequence E, the
life
formed
this structure
Down, whereas in C and Becoming One's Own Man.
tained to the end of Settling
change
is
D
there
structure remains relatively unstable
throughout the entire Settling
Down
period.
None
of the
men
is
is
early
main-
a major
and
in flux
in this se-
quence actively sought or welcomed the recurrent change and transiency of his life. All of
them made an
effort to
work on the
tasks of Settling
Down.
In each case, a variety of external circumstances and internal difficulties conspired to prevent the structure this
decade
choice.
man from
as a
but we believe they are
E
rare.
live
The
be grave
in the years that follow.
men
:
a worker, a biologist,
a novelist (see page 152). In three other cases, a biologist
and two
was rather precarious but stable enough to
be included in one of the other sequences.
Our mode
gave us an overrepresentation of more stable
A
life
psychological and sociar costs of following
in the thirties are likely to
executives, the life structure
up
one whose
happily in this way during these years,
This sequence was found in three of our forty
and
No
his thirties experienced
time of personal fulfillment or of reasonably happy, free
There may be men who
Sequence
achieving his aims.
went through frequent change during
of sampling probably
lives.
Hank McCloud, went through Sequence E. He had grown poverty and isolation of the West Virginia mountain country. At
worker,
in the
17 he volunteered for the army and spent two years as a loner, with minimal
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
164
education and job
He
skills.
years in a military hospital. This
wounded, and he spent three point in his
For the
life.
then had the luck— good or bad?— to be
first
time he had the
leisure, social
was
a high
supports and
Without formal schooling he became managed a staff, and formed a Dream of becoming a radio or television personality. At 22, Hank McCloud left the army "like an eagle on its first flight from the nest." Unfortunately, the army hospital had nourished his hopes of flying but had given him very little in the way of education, occupational resources to lead an interesting
life.
a radio operator, established a hospital radio station, recruited and
skills
or preparation for civilian
nouncer he held a articulate
series of jobs
life.
After getting training as a radio an-
around the country.
young man, 'Very big with the
relationships with
women
teenagers. "
He was an attractive, He had many casual
but no strong attachments or commitments. In
time he experienced more acutely the emotional emptiness and purposelessness of this
life.
clinging to the
—and
Periodically he returned to his father in
hope
of securing their relationship
and
West
Virginia,
starting a life there
learning again and again that the relationship was impossible and the
situation intolerable.
The time from 27 '
his
nomadic
At 29 he had
for McCloud. He began to hate more stable, purposeful life in the East. army illness and spent several months in a
to 29 was a
and then to seek
life
a flare-up of his
low point a
convalescent home. During this time his old interest in nature returned
and he
started painting landscapes.
•salesman, purchasing agent
Over the next few
and counselor
years
he worked
in a boys' reformatory,
as a
but he
could not establish a clear occupational direction or a stable work history.
At
33,
he married a
who
but strong person
woman
nine years younger than he. She was a gentle
shared his love of nature. In his mind, she was almost
too good to be true— the special trying to
make
it
woman. He was
still
the lost country boy
urban world. She was of that world, the
in the genteel,
only child in a stable, lower-middle-class family, the apple of her parents' eye.
He
build. his ize.
looked to her to be a center for the
The
marriage helped
hopes of establishing a
life
he so desperately wanted to
him to begin the process of Settling Down, but more secure occupational base did not material-
In the next four years he held office jobs in three different firms, and
in each case
he quit or was
fired after getting into conflict
Just after our interviewing started, at 37,
with his boss.
he was given notice on the
cur-
rent job.
At
37, then,
McCloud's
been married for four
years,
life
presented a very mixed picture.
owned
a small
family was the central focus of his
however, he was
still
in total flux.
life
home and had
and
During
a
first,
He had
child. His
a strong support. Otherwise,
his twenties
he had
lost all con-
Down
Five Sequences Through the Settling
nection with his pre-adult world in
beginning to put
down
West
Period
165
he was
just
Virginia, but at 37
fragile roots in his wife's
New
England world.
He
would have to decide soon whether to keep trying to form an occupation in the business world, or to early identity
and
skills,
do work that stemmed more
even though
Hank McCloud knew
it
was
it
late to
was
less
middle
work on the
It
was
terms of his
also late in terms of his
Down
tasks of Settling
and Becoming One's
talking about his prospects after the current job failure,
comes
to
it,
I
can always do carpentry or
accept this possibility, with
full
from
his
be working on these choices— late
in the timetable of the occupational world, late in
and family requirements.
directly
class.
pump
gas."
He
own
goals
developmental
Own Man. he
said,
"If
In it
was trying to
awareness of the grim implications.
It
meant that he had to curtail his aspirations for a more affluent life just at the time when advancement was so important. His wife might have to. work again as a nurse and have her parents care for the baby. And that meant that her parents would let them both understand that their predictions about him were coming true. He had to face the fact that he was not yet master of his own ship, and the ship was in stormy seas. These are the period.
The
and
from the major developmental
tasks
same time, men work on these
tasks in
comes to an end
at
is
the same for
all
men.
It
stems
all.
At the
myriad ways and there are
infinite
issues confronting us
Whatever its course and outcome, around 40 as new developmental tasks gain
variations in the individual life course. this period
Down
possibilities— and the tragedies— of the Settling
basic character of this period
primacy and a new period begins.
The
JJ
James Tracy
of
In Chapter 7
we
followed the
When we
Transition.
from military to
Life
left
civilian life.
three main components: his
of James Tracy through the
life
him
at age 34,
He
his fragile
ture
had
its
he had
just
new
Age Thirty
completed the
was establishing a new
built
life
with his wife and children;
life
but growing love relationship with Joan. This
contradictions and tensions, but
create for starting to Settle
Just as things
shift
around
executive position in Hartford with the
Ajax Corporation; his continuing family
and
(II)
struc-
life
was the best basis he could
it
Down.
were getting stabilized, Tracy's mentor, Al
Hugo,
left
Ajax.
had tremendous respect
I
that hired
me and
sent
me
for Al.
I
out on
my
a fight with the president of Ajax.
resigned.
Whether he
body would
fire
might have.
I
They
got fired or not
him.
The
first
I
He
loved him.
literally
was the guy
Then he
assignment.
got in
got at cross purposes and Al
will
never know.
I
doubt
No-
it.
president was kind of a knucklehead, so he
have seen Al
off
and on
since.
He
is
now working
as
an
executive vice president for a smaller company.
Tracy too thought of leaving Ajax. His descriptions of the corporation at this
He
time are
felt
filled
its
cliques
he would have had to include
clique at work,
their relationship social
with criticisms of
and the
social pressures.
To
participate in the
his wife.
But he knew that
vulnerable because he wouldn't conform.
was shattered, that he and Victoria could not join
in a
network.
When
Al
Hugo
left,
mentor, he had only a job. out again
if
work had
He
little
filed his aspirations
conditions improved.
Without a away, ready to take them
meaning
With Ajax
for Jim.
in transition,
and Hugo gone,
could he maintain his job? For the sake of fatherhood, could he improve his marriage? If
he wanted more intimacy with a woman, could he sustain
the necessary effort?
From
age 34 to 37, these questions and tensions grew. Jim Tracy's posi-
The became
tion
more
progressively
in the center of his
difficult
current situation and construct a
but he was unable to make up total defeat of his marriage
father;
to offer love.
it.
He
Joan more
to break out of his
Joan offered that opportunity,
It
was hard to acknowledge the
chance with another
a
167
thought constantly of
He wanted
life.
mind.
his
and take
He had
he now faced the
new
He wanted
and absurd.
and Victoria out of
life,
Joan and their possible future together.
seemed
Life of James Tracy (II)
woman who
always prided himself on being a dutiful
conflict
between
responsibility to his children
and
to himself.
The
worldly accomplishments that had seemed so important in ado-
The
lescence and early adulthood no longer represented the whole dream.
elements— work, marriage and the "other
three major
more than
woman"— conflicted
he had to modify them and integrate the fractured
ever;
life
structure.
1
Own Man
Becoming One's It
took Jim Tracy until age 37 to be able to take a decisive step. At this how unfair he had been to himself and to Joan: "I just
point he realized
kept stringing her along, saying that together." Joan was bitterly
marry Jim.
He
when
unhappy
the children are older, we'll get
in her
own
marriage and eager to
understood the duplicity in the relationship and
finally
had to act Since
didn't
I
felt
I
damn
to leave the children,
from them.
enough about her
strongly
remember the and
want
me away
strong to pull
incident.
I
was thinking about fool.
I
called her
mind." The minute
I
happened it,
and
got
make
to
and
to
it
I
had
to
be something pretty
was strong enough, or
seem worthwhile. ...
I
I
just
be in a hotel room in Los Angeles,
finally said,
said, "I
home
it
Finally, Joan
you know,
have had
was going to
it.
I
have
I
am
being a god-
just
made up my
talk to Victoria,
and
I
did.
Jim and Joan agreed on a complicated arrangement that would enable them both to get out of their respective marriages. Jim told Victoria that he could not live with her, and moved out. had not loved her for years and she was getting under my skin. I just I had had it. She tried very hard to keep it from happening. Finally, she agreed that I should go live by myself for a while. Her hope I
told her that
was that
I
would get straightened out and come back. She kept the thing
dragging for over a year and then
finally
consented to divorce
me
with a
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l68
very liberal settlement. She cried hysterically for a couple of days, off and on, and
By
He
this
I
just steeled
myself against
time Jim had
it.
sympathy toward Victoria.
inclination for
little
was impatient to get on with the task of building a new
much
would be
feeling for her
a threat to his decision.
To show
life.
There was no
place for self-doubt, no turning or looking back.
Over
a fourteen-month period,
and were married.
He
was
38,
and she
called this period of separation
ment and I
Jim and Joan obtained their divorces with a 3-year-old son. Jim
28,
and remarriage with enthusiasm,
a sense of accomplishment, not unlike his experiences in
was
really
taken to the cleaners
when
I
was divorced.
My
re-
excite-
combat:
bank account
was down to $75.60. I had a 1957 Ford convertible and the clothes on my back. I had the salary check and then the big alimony, but we started with nothing. Joan didn't have any money. rented a house in Glastonbury for the
and
finally
found
this place. It
We
first
was very
bought
I
paid
all
the
bills at
once.
We
and then Joan went around but small, a four-room house
year,
nice,
and added
to it twice, and bought some additional property. It's got a nice river down from the back yard and it was in terrible disrepair as far as landscape went. I was so damned happy to be out from under that I didn't realize how tough it was going to be for a little while. But it worked out.
with a big living room.
Jim's enthusiasm helped
divorce and remarriage.
they entailed.
it
him deny the problems emanating from the
He minimized
While supporting
the emotional and financial costs
Victoria and their two children, he and
Joan and her son were living in a small rented house.
For an action-oriented man, the introduction of uncertainties was upsetting.
He' suppressed the doubts and
and pursued an objective
fears,
course of action. His plans and strategies masked the chaos within him.
Tracy defended himself strongly against there
may have been
all
inner doubts. Underneath,
a fear of retribution for his violation of a traditional
pattern of behavior.
Tracy began making his new family more central to him: he spent time with them, bought land, developed a new home. True, there were eco-
nomic and emotional
stresses.
held exciting possibilities for pattern, bility,
But he had brought about change, and it the future. He had broken out of the old
and he could hope that the new one would give him more
sta-
intimacy and love.
Shortly after Jim left Victoria, there was a major reorganization at Ajax.
Donald Bond and Walter Johnson came
in
from Chicago "to turn
Ajax around." Bond, eight years older than Tracy, was a hard-driving man.
The
Life of James Tracy (II)
169
In the general housecleaning he instigated, Tracy was the only local execu-
who
tive
was a very exciting time. Tracy had great respect for
survived. It
Bond, who took him into of the
him
his confidence, gave
a deeper understanding
company, and most importantly, revealed the
highest
company
Don
was a very tough-minded businessman who
He was one
percent return on investment.
he was doing and had great school every day of the week.
had a
I
I
lapped
just
turned Ajax a 10
who knew what Bond was like going to up. I watched every move
of these guys
Working
will.
literally
we now were making
around. After losing millions in the gun plant,
he made.
personalities of the
executives.
for it
close business relationship with
him.
We
just sort of
got along together. It was the greatest thing that ever happened to me,
working for this guy directly for three years. ... He was a fine manager and had tremendous insight into people. He did an awful lot of things for me, let me grow, and taught me things. Don would tell me things
anyone
that, Christ, he'd never tell
else in the world,
New
about his relationships with people in to
me
know. He'd ask
questions about
it,
York that
not even his wife,
had no business
I
—
he'd bounce things off
sort of
a sounding board,
Don Bond,
emerged
close in age to Tracy,
was much more intimately involved
as a clear
mentor
He
figure.
in Tracy's life—even attending the
wedding to Joan— than any of the other powerful older men who had previously helped his career. And Tracy was considerably more receptive to kind of intense relationship than he had been
this
During
The
his late thirties,
earlier.
Tracy was outstandingly successful
previously powerful aspects of his mother's influence
He
was moving
to Joan
had opened
the more positive parts of his father were being integrated.
both
closer to
men and women. The new commitment
him up and made
man
as well.
possible to have a
it
Don's
more intimate
at work.
had diminished;
relationship With a
on the scene and the developing mentor relagrowth and sense of worth. This period, from age
arrival
tionship facilitated his
38 to 40, was marked by excitement, accomplishment and future potential.
He was becoming his own man.
The their
but
it
make
Tracys bought a plot of land in Glastonbury and began designing
"dream home."
it
"just right."
saw Joan life
Initially
this
was a small four-bedroom structure,
was gradually extended. Architect's plans were constantly revised to
as a
When
"helpmate"
Jim was 40, their son
who would
facilitate
Tommy
to replace the previous restless, frantic searching.
woman who would pression to his hopes
help
him
She was
pull his life together, enrich
and dreams.
He
was born.
the development of a
it
new
a special
and give
ex-
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
17O
Then, suddenly,
LIFE
Don Bond
left
Ajax to become chief executive of a
smaller company. Walter Johnson was promoted into Bond's position and
became the number one executive in Hartford. Tracy was number two, the general manager of the Firearms Division, but on a probationary basis. He still had to prove himself at this level. At 40, Tracy felt that his mentor had abandoned him and left him exposed to the machinations of the organization. He began looking "in a half-assed way" for another job. He experienced the year between 40 and 41 as a time of testing. In addition, Tracy was
When my
in
I
hit 40,
young guy on
anymore.
At
41,
was a
I
really
his
When
viewed myself as a young guy his
way up, and
cannot do things
I
own
aging.
traumatic experience. As long as
myself as a kid.
thirties, I visualized
that. I'd always
a
it
now concerned about
all
who
of a sudden,
once did.
I
I
hit 40, is
I
I
was
really felt
doing pretty well,
am
not a young guy
kind of scary.
It's
Jim received a firm promotion to general manager and vice
president of the Firearms Division, one of the largest and most profitable divisions of the corporation.
He now had
authority over thousands of em-
ployees in Hartford and two Midwestern plants. This was the "culminating event" of his early adulthood. Settling
Down
ladder.
The
full
evident only in the next few years.
and into
his Mid-life Transition.
He had
reached the top rung of his
meaning of It
this
turning point became
launched him into a new world—
We shall continue the story in Chapter 19.
f\(j\
The
J ^J
of Paul
Life
Namson,
Novelist
Paul
Namson was born in the summer of 1926. Two years later his only was born. The setting was West End Avenue in Manhattan—
sibling, Joel,
an ordered, comfortable Jewish world.
It
was
a business
New
grandfathers had been successful businessmen in early
1900s. His father's father
had been
Both
family.
York City
in the
the cosmetics business in
in
Budapest and come to the United States in the 1880s. Paul's father also
made
Though
a reasonable success of the cosmetics business.
and appealing, he was nonetheless
attractive
a "bullshit artist," often dishonest with
himself and his children.
A
His mother, on the other hand, was "absolutely straight."
woman, she read popular books and enjoyed going
and finishing-school
theater with old friends from her childhood
She took
pleasure in the social
little
playing cards.
household
who dominated the Namson The two men whom Paul respected most were
was her family, the Asches,
It
as Paul grew up.
Noah
brilliant
and her
and dynamic businessman, he was a millionaire
emulated. Noah,
thirty, a cultured
who became
lence in the world of the
men
favorite
Handler. Cyril came to play a central role in Paul's
by the time he was
the
years.
her husband loved— at the clubs,
life
Cyril Asch, his mother's brother (and Paul's godfather), cousin,
shy
and the
to concerts
arts,
a
Manhattan
executive, a
model
famous poet, was admired for
though
life.
A
several times over
some
also regarded with
to be
his excel-
disdain by
in the family because of his homosexuality, artistic qualities
and
rejection of the business world.
For Paul
his
mother was "very shadowy." "Early
disappeared; she never seemed to be there." brother's birth,
when he was "farmed out
his brother. Paul
felt that
he
the start and never regained
He
in
my
life
to an aunt" to
make
lost his close relationship to his
it.
He
was
my mother
related this absence to his
much more
it
easier for
mother
at
emotionally involved
with his father. His brother, on the other hand, was close to his mother,
who "pampered" him. Paul's brother, Joel,
knew
very early in his
life
that he
wanted
to
be
in
the
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
172
He would
arts.
be an
LIFE
actor, a writer
and
a director of plays.
"By the
time he was eight or nine Joel knew exactly what he wanted and never strayed
minute from
for a
From
that."
close
his
mother, Joel could move more comfortably into the into a homosexual
relationship arts
and
to
his
also, later,
life.
For Paul, more tied to
his father, the arts
were not an acceptable
When he was didn't Paul decided he want to follow father into the young his quite cosmetics business. Father was popular and could sell anybody anything option-— not part of a man's world. But where was he to go?
but he was a card-playing con
man
down on by
looked
Paul did not admire these qualities of his father's.
man
elsewhere for a
Although
his father
he moved up
have to look
to emulate.
also socially ambitious sion,
his wife's family.
He would
was
relatively
uneducated, a "simple man," he was
and took good care of
in the
world through his
his family.
own
Despite the depres-
efforts.
In the depression
years, there was a drop in the barriers that had kept Hungarian Jews out
of the upper-middle-class German-Jewish world
moved
new home
he aspired
When
to.
they
1937 Paul was able to leave public school and enter a private school for boys. He was accepted by his schoolmates and to a
their friends,
many
of
in
whom
were the children of upper-class German
Jews. His years at this school were
happy ones;
his
account of them
is
full
of
names and scenes and people he felt connected with. In the private school he began to develop a sense of what he might do
as
an adult. Although idea
I
girl
be a good
When "a
was very confused about what a psychiatrist. I'd
and done very well
literature,
with a
I
wanted to be
whose father was
done
I
wanted
to do,
in the sciences in high school.
a doctor.
So
it
I
had
a vague
a lot of reading in psychiatric
seemed
to
me
I
was in love
medicine would
career.
he graduated,
just before turning 16,
member of the Swank Set." He chose to attend Brown
the yearbook described
him
as
University largely because he wanted to get
New
York City and from his family. Paul now carried the Dream of his parents. He was making a place for himself in the GermanJewish milieu, and gave promise of realizing his father's hopes that he away from
would move
to the top in this world. Paul's next steps were to graduate
from a good
college,
go into a business or profession, and marry into
this
world.
At 16 Paul felt tied to his father— one of the "beautiful Namsons"— and yet he rejected much of what his father stood for. He was similarly
The torn in relation to his mother.
and the business and
He
Life of Paul
Namson, Novelist
was drawn to her qualities of character her family. At the same time he strug-
artistic values of
gled under the burden of her family's attitude toward the arts.
be interested in them, but should understand that a an
These inner
artist.
struggles, deriving
played a continuing role in Paul's adult
nessman
like Cyril,
wish to be an
homosexual world.
It
from
Noah. But
He
does not
should
become
his early years in the family,
wish to be a busi-
artist" like his father.
be an
to
man
He might
life.
but not a "bullshit
artist like
173
artist
He might
was to enter a feminine,
was no place for a man.
Early Adult Transition Paul was that
still
ternity that
much
seemed
It
fall.
very
in his parents'
world when he arrived on campus
natural, therefore, to join a 'Very tony" Jewish fra-
was "almost monolithically German Jewish." But, in contrast
to his account of his high school years with the fullness of
and
named
friends
close intimacies, the story of his college years contained a relatively
anonymous group of young men, "all headed for family businesses." Three events stand out in Namson's account of the first two years college: joining the fraternity; deciding not to
"my
of
go to medical school; and
discovery of literature." His interests quickly shifted from psychiatry
and science
He began
to literature.
to feel a
new
He
read a great deal and began to write in secret.
sense of animation.
In June 1944, just as he was finishing his third semester at Brown,
the Allies invaded Europe and he volunteered for the navy. "It was the
most broadening experience of Semitism;
now he was
my
He had never experienced antiLST with a group of white Southship. "It was made clear to me pretty
life."
assigned to an
erners— "the only Jewish boy" on the
was aware of
fast. I
it all
the time
up
all
my
satisfied
but
it
values."
realized that
It
a
The navy was an
was also an experience that "shook
he had been
atmosphere." "The Navy threw
made me
He
He
was on that ship."
I
experience in learning to fight back.
me
raised in
an "arrogant
self-
harshly into the big world,
more compassionate person."
got out of the navy in the
summer
of 1946, just after turning 20.
York only briefly and returned to Brown. Now certain that he did not want to be a doctor, he switched his major from pre-med to English, with a minor in economics. He took writing courses and wrote
He
stayed in
New
for the college
humor magazine. He
tion about his navy experiences
also wrote, semi-secretly, serious
and about the
conflicts
between
fic-
his family's
:
TI* E SEASONS
174
MAN
OF A
S
LIFE
and those he had encountered
values
An
in that "big world."
man
He
began to
him
into the writing
world: "I took a lot of creative writing courses. Several of
them were with
receive support for this work.
Austin Garrison.
wrote in
He
older
started a literary
invited
magazine and published a story
I
my senior year."
At the same time he developed an interest in business. During one summer he worked in the new underwriting firm of Asch and Company, which Cyril Asch had just started. Paul was interested in seeing for himself what
his hero's business
During
world was
seriously involved with
Nora belonged writing and wanted to become and
of contrasting dispositions
She appreciated
like.
he became
this time, too,
his
values.
Paul she was "like Rebecca at the well, the person to
whom
he showed
me
"She came and found have done
The met to
Paul/
other
told
He
very shyly and said,
To
Tou
really
Nora was
whom he had and Nora appealed
time was Sarah,
in Paul's life at this
"She had such a sensuous
face." Sarah
serious, intellectual, a writer. Sarah
helpmate
for a rising
young businessman.
love with and decided to marry.
him
later,
me
independent, "one of the best social dancers of
tion," a perfect fell in
a writer herself.
mature, serious." She was
large,
his serious fiction. After reading a story,
and kissed
different sides of Paul.
spirited,
women
"
woman
at a dance.
two
was
it,
two
to his writing world.
in tears, "I
hope you
will
When
It
my
Nora discovered
be very happy with that
genera-
was Sarah he this,
she
social butterfly."
married Sarah at age 21, just before graduating from college. Years
he started
married a
my
telling us his life story
with these words: "It
all
began
when we were in college over twenty years ago." He woman who represented the familial, Jewish, business world and
eloping with
wife
At the same time the marriage was in part his separation from his parents. The couple married suddenly and secretly. After the ceremony they returned to New York and told their families. Paul's father had a raging tantrum. The gist of his tirade was that Paul had married beneath his level. "Look what I had done with all the chances he and my mother had given me. He meant I could have married a more socially acceptable girl." Namson went on supported his connection to
it.
an act of rebellion and a crucial event in
I
got married as a
way
of not returning
been away from home since
16.
The
home.
I
whole problem. what would happen after that.
liant irrational solution to the
didn't think
Paul didn't have a plan for the future. going to Mexico "and
I
would
write."
I
me most
at
came up with a brilwould elope and get away.
graduation was the idea of having to return home.
I
was almost 22 and had
thing that frightened
He and
I
Sarah had thought of
They would
live
on the income
The from
a $20,000 legacy
Namson, Novelist
Life of Paul
he had received. Their marriage produced so much
turmoil and distress in Paul's family, however, that they didn't do guilt
he decided to remain
work, the
fall
175
in
New
found him withouta
He had
also
a vision of himself as a creative writer.
who
Austin Garrison and by Nora,
In his
summer
job.
Paul had used the years from 16 to 22 to begin the separating from his family.
it.
York. After some part-time
begun giving shape to
He
affirmed
was helped in
him
in this
work of
difficult
Dream:
a
this
work by
view of himself. At
the same time, just as he had minored in economics, so he lield a minor
Dream— a
view of himself
as a cultured
businessman
work
like Cyril. In his
made a tentative approach to the business he moved another step toward this world and
with Cyril, he
world. In marrying
Sarah,
its
He
values.
was
thus heading in two directions at once, toward writing and toward business.
The
tension between writing and business was to dominate his
life
through-
out early adulthood.
World
Entering the Adult In the
of 1948,
when Namson was
combined business and
that his
fall
becoming
writing.
22, Cyril
Asch came up with
He persuaded
Paul that his chances of
a successful writer
were
much
At the very
least,
Paul should give business a
cessful businessman.
could write on the
side. Cyril
had
just
less
a plan
than of becoming a suctry.
bought an apartment house.
He He
proposed that Paul manage the building and oversee the modernizing of the kitchens.
He offered
Paul $50 a week and an apartment in the building.
Paul accepted the offer and tentatively became a businessman-writer: I
expected to stay
long enough to write a best-seller and leave.
'just
basic idea, at least initially, I
was to write evenings and weekends.
did have a lot of spare time and
—
attracted to short forms
cause
it
stories,
I
sat in this office
My
Initially
and wrote.
I
poetry, prose poems, brief essays
was
—
be-
was very hard to sustain the writing. Somebody would always
have a leaky faucet or a John that didn't work.
He it
wrote a
lot that first year,
was shocking."
It
but "the rejection
was a discouraging experience.
ment house, however, went
well.
At the end
came back so fast The work in the apartslips
of the
first
year, Cyril sug-
gested that he apprentice out to another brokerage house as a salesman of stocks
and bonds. Paul again accepted
He went
to
work
of high finance.
He
for
his offer.
an established firm and got involved in the world
was able to make some substantial deals and earned
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
176
large commissions, the
money he had made on
first
salesman he had a great deal of free time.
and the
in painting
seemed
paintings leries
art world. "I
to
me
began to
his
He became
own. As
a freelance
intensely interested
drift into a lot of art galleries;
and meaningful world." The
a very real
the
art gal-
helped relieve the strain of "mechanically turning on the charm and
sincerity" to sell stocks.
At the end
when Paul was
of this year,
asked
24, Cyril
him
to join
Asch and Company. As usual, Cyril was being proved right: Namson was failing as a writer and succeeding as a businessman. He was attracted by the opportunities of the business world. For the third time he took Cyril's advice,
and joined the family business.
In their middle twenties, then, Paul and Sarah
Manhattanites, a
Namson became young
handsome couple about town.
Going ga-ga over these town houses and wanting that, beginning to get more and more involved in high living. We wanted to get to the chic parties and the interesting lofts. We were both interested in that. And I think some of our relationship was a little bit like Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald.
I
don't
mean
to suggest
have his talent or
I
will
ever have his
success.
The work with Cyril Asch provided the base for his entry into "the life." The investment house was small but flourishing, and he and
high
Asch were becoming important was
I
I
had.
I
I
While becoming
He
He
was a very stimulating
more
got into the investment business the
got interested in the dynamics of
increasingly fascinating.
writing.
or something.
guess, in- terms of emulation, for a considerable period of time.
The deeper I
man
Cyril's right-hand
example,
to each other.
wrote
I
responsibilities
money making and found
a businessman, Paul
five novels
managed
to continue with his
during his twenties.
They
did not seem
good books to him and he was unable to get them published. These appointments were "a
it
did a very good job.
lot to
dis-
stomach," and they influenced his decision
to write criticism for the art magazines of the 1950s. I
began, at
gallery
first,
almost as a self-education for myself.
opening on Saturday morning and take
write into the night to have
these art pieces than
By
28,
I
Namson was
He
ready.
my
I
found
notes. it
I
On
much
would go Sunday
I
to a
would
easier to publish
fiction.
writing in art journals and was buying important
abstract expressionist paintings. this world.
it
did to publish
my
grew with
it
The
early
1950s were exciting years in
and was developing
as
an appreciator,
collec-
The and
tor,
critic of
the visual
arts.
Life of Paul
The
Namson, Novelist
collecting was probably the major
outlet for his creative needs at this time.
The
art criticism
seemed mere
"advertising copy," promoting his friends' work. This writing was a part of his life as a businessman than of his
The
were important
paintings, though,
him
volved
177
in
more
work
as a serious writer.
their
own
right
and
in-
complicated and interesting world. Business gave him
in a
the financial means to participate in this world. But business also involved
him
it
Namson
world of action and power, and
in a
over,
enjoyed
this.
More-
was what his family wanted for him. Once they could see him
established in business, his peripheral interest in the arts was not upset-
By
ting.
Dream
his late twenties, his early
dormant.
tively
He
of writing fiction was rela-
was barely connected, through
his art criticism, to
a writer's world. His view of himself as a creative writer
backdrop to the In creating a
toward Cyril and "high
life,"
first
adult
was
structure during his twenties, Paul
He and
to that glorious
was
like his
He
in the ascendancy.
and Zelda Fitzgerald. Art
father,
and that aspired to be
was moving toward the
to be. This was the life Sarah
closer during this time than they
The Age Thirty
moved
His creative writing withered.
life.
tured businessman and, in this way, becoming the
him
a
Sarah were drawn to the Manhattan
a romantic world like that of Scott
side of Paul that
Cyril,
life
his world.
became an appendage
The
was truncated,
rest of his life.
man
life
like
of the cul-
his family
wanted
wanted and could support. They were were to be in the years ahead.
Transition
At 28 Namson's relationships in the art world led him to an intense mentor relationship with Sheridan Fisher, a sculptor and a central figure in that world. Fisher came to represent the primacy of writing and the rejection of the business world. Through their relationship, the tension between these two sides of Namson re-emerged as the central issue in his life.
In the
autumn
of 1954, just after
Sheridan Fisher sculpture.
He
Namson
turned 28, he bought a
piece on Fisher's work, and was drawn into the small circle of people interested in him. Very few of Fisher's pieces had then been bought by collectors, so a mutual also
friend brought Fisher around to
with the
first
meeting.
was drawn to him
wrote a
meet Namson. Their friendship
Namson was drawn
as well.
critical
to Fisher
and
felt
started
that Fisher
That spring they found themselves having
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
178
dinner together as often as twice a week. Fisher was in psychoanalysis and
would
drive into
New York
from
He would
home.
his country
stay in
the city for two or three days and spend some of his evenings with
The
son.
friendship
became more
Nam-
intimate.
I was attracted to the idea of a man who had gone all the way and had somehow survived. I can only guess about what his feelings were toward me. Maybe I'd be safer talking about how I felt about him. I mean he did represent to me something like a heroic figure in the sense
Basically
in art
of the art hero. Art
a trackless waste; there are
is
signs for the kind of artist Fisher
He one
was extremely
He was
direct.
much more
feelings.
and there
no
are
thought mine was. There was
I
rather inarticulate, but
When
intellectual than
back. He'd say, "But what does
interest
rules
romantic identification with him.
own
about one's
talk
or to be
me
my part a
on
no
also represented a fantasy of a
more American background than
wilder and certainly
He
is.
I
am
I
it
he
insisted that
tended to digress into today, he
mean
art theory,
would keep pulling
to you, Paul?
Why
you? What's your commitment? What's your involvement?"
does I
it
mean
those were his favorite words, "commitment," "involvement" and so forth.
"How are you
involved?"
Fisher saw through Namson's compromises and pressed troubling questions. at
once?
How
How
could he lead a "schizophrenic
life"?
Paul had to face in
himself the conflict "between the excitement of the
New
York
scene and a growing desire to write as a full-time occupation."
mentor
discovery of a desire to
He
whom
commit himself
he wanted to
financial
With
the
join as a creative artist, the
to his writing took root again.
was fourteen years older than
I,
and
my
feeling toward
him was some-
toward a dream father or older brother, that kind of thing. Cer-
thing like
word "hero"
tainly the
romantic
him with
could he possibly be committed to two things
is
not an overstatement. For
figure, heroic figure. Typically,
we
together, we'd walk along the beach together, we'd
ber croquet games.
A
me he
was
didn't talk about art.
swim
a hero, a
We drank
together.
I
remem-
certain kind of roughhousing, trading punches, that
kind of playfulness and male camaraderie. But there was a side that was
and tender. It was one of the freest relationships I ever remember having with another man. And without wanting to make it sound queer, this punching and bear hugging, great admiration, great
very loving
affection,
The
I
guess there was something like love.
following summer, two weeks after Paul's
Fisher died suddenly of a heart attack.
The
It
funeral intensified his awareness of
to him.
was a
how
thirtieth
"terrible
birthday,
shock" for Paul.
important Fisher had been
The I
remember the shock
amazing experience whole
up
life
for
of feeling
me.
to that point
Life of Paul
how good
was to
it
went before
my
he stood
was a
I
After Fisher died,
a
Namson began
man
It
My
man and what
and
of elegance
to recast radically a novel
was entitled The Dealer.
who
taste
into conflict with an exuberant, arrogant
young woman, who
love with the painter.
Namson
and the
art dealer
own. Her story
Like her, Paul
is
felt after his
With
again.
ness—and an uncertainty
painter.
Between them and
mistress to the art dealer
own
is
half in
both of them and the
center for her
sort out.
The woman
art
life.
much
Paul's
has relationships
no occupational
painter, but she has
very
but disappeared, comes
all
leaves
he had
aging art
of these characters represented parts of
all
he was trying to
himself, parts
An
slowly destroying himself
is
young
tries to find a
recognized that
and growing
is
At the end she
world they represent, and
with the
an
just
child.
So maybe the word "love"
eyes.
because the world he once belonged to has
a beautiful
179
for.
written about the art world. dealer,
was
cry. It
hadn't really cried since
I
too strong. There was an intense attraction both to the
isn't
of her
Namson, Novelist
and
reflects his
own
identity search.
experience with Sheridan that he was alive
this feeling
as to
where
came a sense of wonder and happiit would lead.
During those two years Fisher's entry into
their "high life" disrupted
the "romantic relationship" Paul and Sarah had maintained through their twenties. life.
At the same time, Sarah
tried in
another way to change that
She had been wanting to have children, and Paul had not.
that the business and writing were as
children to his
life
much
as
He
felt
he could manage; adding
would swamp him. As they approached
need became so great that he agreed to have a
child.
When
30,
Sarah's
conception
did not occur, he again acceded to her wishes and they decided to adopt a child.
At 32, when he was rewriting the novel, they adopted an infant son and named him Sheridan Namson. "When Sheridan arrived, we pretty much made up our minds that we would have at least one more child, and space seemed a necessity." They bought an elegant twelve-room brownstone looking out on a garden. and the East River. They set about making it into a family dwelling. Sarah had a housekeeper-cook and an au pair girl to help with Sheridan. Paul had a writing room where he could isolate himself, "a solitary character in an unfurnished room."
During the Age Thirty Transition, two developments substantially altered the provisional life structure
vious period. to
move
The
Namson had
created during the pre-
relationship with his mentor, Sheridan Fisher, led
creative writing
more
to the fore in his
life.
He
him
was determined
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l8o
commit himself
to
Adopting for her
to
work
that solitary
Sheridan and buying a
little
These two changes, each
life.
room while Sarah busied
The
foundation of this
life
his
"unfurnished room."
if
a
new
focus
important to Paul and
critically
Sarah, tended to separate them. It was as
writing
in
new home gave Sarah
Paul isolated himself in his
herself with the
new
child
and home.
was the role of the cultured businessman,
on the boundary between the business and art worlds. Namson was businessman by day and a writer at night and on weekends. The con-
living
a
demands
flicting
of these pursuits were exhausting. Devoting himself to
these two parts of his
What
life,
he had
time and energy he had
in this structure
left
went to their "high
was enormous: "It was
my
Settling By 1959 33,
Down
life
new child. The tension
their
life."
fate always to
ach tied in knots." Nevertheless this was the
he began the Settling
and
to give Sarah
little
have
my
structure with
stom-
which
period.
Down
Cyril
Asch was
living part of the year in Florida,
and Paul,
at
was a vice-president and director of the company. was involved profoundly and increasingly
I
in business at increasingly
With Cyril away part of the year I was almost running the company. The choice of investments and the envisaging of their proper development was as much my responsibility as anyone's.
higher
levels.
In 1959 Asch anc*
Company was
still
a family-held
were planning to form a publicly held corporation. time.
company, but they It
was an exciting
chips were getting larger and larger." In roughly ten years
"The
the firm had grown from 7 or 8 people to 140, and from a net worth of $200,000 to $100 million. As one of the main officers, Paul was offered stock participations and he began an intense effort to
buy
as
many
shares
of stock as were offered to him.
was borrowing money to take these participations. I had been working for about eleven years now, and I had about $600,000 in debts and about $1,000 in the bank. But this tremendous potential ... At 33, I was very anxious to cash in some of these chips, but I It
was
up
seemed
still
a
like lunacy.
I
few steps from becoming a millionaire and
in the excitement of big-time
Wall
still
very
much caught
Street.
same time his involvement in the visual arts reached a new peak: he became chairman of the building committee for a major new museum of modern art. He was taking his place among the New During
this
The
Life of Paul
man
Yorkers so admired by his family: he was a ness with a
The
commitment
to the cultural
Paul and Sarah built around the
social life
structure together during these years.
life
and
parties,
ships with artists
and
others. This
"high
a "vast social network"
network enlarged
international scene in
summers
in
to include
and London. Their
Paris
was expanding.
life"
In the midst of
form to
Paul tried to maintain his writing
this activity
all
world, encapsulated in the small at giving
City.
helped hold their
arts
dancing until dawn and developing friend-
of art openings
Southampton and an
They had
181
of excellence in busi-
New York
of
life
Namson, Novelist
room
his "distilled fantasies."
self,
more than
first
ten years" gave way:
in the past,
bedroom. Here he worked
off their
He
did this by removing him-
from Sarah. The romantic marriage of "the
It seemed we were drifting apart. My situation in business was taking more and more of my time. And my interest in writing was becoming more and more serious. I was not only not seeing her during the day, I was probably a bit impatient at night. I wanted time to read and write.
At
34,
section."
he wrote "the
He worked on
to time portions of
this novel for
were published.
it
A
kind of diary,
of the
story of Currents
first
writing imaginative fiction from his
immediate,
alive.
The
reader
is
own
From time wound like a 42. In con-
of a sybaritic luxury he
knew
intimately.
hero, a businessman-poet with "a
The
story
he openly
is
loves
mental criticism of
funny-bitter. it
all;
it
The
hero
Through
is
himself and the
authentic,
this
and
theaters,
world dances his
so carefully about
reflective
it
It is
at last
writes of the world
restaurants
dream looped
a wish to leave
self-portrait, a description of
was that he was
Namson
and lurking behind
and
life.
inner experience.
captured as
Manhattan skyscrapers and boardrooms, of
neck."
opening
other major writing he did during this period, the Currents diary
The triumph
as
it
between 34 and
life
contained his joyous, celebratory feelings about
of
lyrical
the next several years.
bright thread through the fabric of his trast to
most
part of Currents, the
first
and removed, even
his celebration
behind. life
my
he was
is
a funda-
a remarkable
It is
leading. "Just
the waiter, quietly, you want more," he wrote.
tell
As Namson turned
34,
the adoption agency told them that their
re-
came a big They canceled the second adoption and This was the start of a momentous year. The
quest for another child would be granted. Soon after this surprise:
Sarah was pregnant.
eagerly awaited the birth. first
story in Currents
was published in a
event in his writing career, their
little
girl
little
magazine—a climactic
was born and he became a
a
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
182
millionaire.
It
could have
it
looked
and
business, family
By
as
gut
I
wasn't."
"On
He was
the surface
he
was successful. In
I
so plagued by "tremendous
that he drank and smoked marijuana more heavily
stomach tension" an attempt to
in
re-
Dream had grown. Asch and Company and write
Moreover, his need to realize the
lieve his distress.
full
if
What had seemed
had become oppressive.
life
to be a great integration soured.
my
as
be able to combine writing,
really
social life into a cohesive life structure.
however, this
35,
compromises had worked out,
his
if
Perhaps he would
all.
Namson desperately wanted to leave time. He longed for the autonomy he
could have as a writer but
would never get as long as he worked for Cyril. Sometime by the end I
wanted
what I
I
really
had made
He had
wanted the
all
to
I
needed to make this,
new way,
a writer.
With
notice of
me
was absolutely certain
I
made up my mind
finally
mark
his
Namson
make himself
in business, to
more
felt
a mil-
free to leave the business
at the center of his life.
a feeling buttressed by his
He
was committed
new
recognition as
the publication of his story in 1961, "I received a writer."
as
that
was to write, and certain because
life
needed.
and more able to put writing to writing in a
had
I
my
do with
money
Having done
lionaire.
of the '50s or the early '6os
to leave. Certain because
A
serious critic,
doing a survey of
some
literary
...
magazines, singled out his story as "one of the sizeable nuggets
a
softly sizzling portrait."
At the same time, he knew
that his
was beyond the understanding of ness to write betrayal of
commitment
his parents
and
becoming
would be viewed by Cyril and the others
them
a writer
as a
betrayal—
personally and of their values. His departure from Asch
and Company would not be amicable. In
Cyril's
thing Paul could do in his spare time.
He wanted
trusted
to
uncles. His leaving busi-
nephew and "crown
prince,"
who would
mind, writing was somePaul at his
side,
a
maintain and inherit the
family business. "Cyril can read Proust and appreciate him, but he can-
not understand
how
a
young man
in his
own
family could leave the
world to spend his time writing novels." In his anguish over this "gnawing conflict" Paul found help in an
unexpected quarter.
He
was invited to Boston where Timothy Leary was
studying hallucinogenic drugs. Paul volunteered as a subject. prise the experience his struggles.
conflict
I
But
He
between
made
could see more his values
and
the speech in 1962.
in those
months
before,
I
his sur-
gave him a detached view of
clearly,
he thought, the fundamental
Cyril's.
I
To
It
was quite helpful.
At
35,
he resolved to face Asch:
had thought about would get up and
it
from the day
stalk
I
started.
around and say to
The Sarah, "I
am
obligations
other
He
going to chscuss this with Cyril.
we
have, and then
I
—— I
wilt leave
all
I
will
183
complete whatever
and we
will
go to some
life."
told Cyril that
he would complete
two more
for nearly
years. "I
present obligations, but
all his
"Cyril kept adding obligations." These kept
pany
Namson, Novelist
Life of Paul
Namson
was never more
Asch and Com-
at
alert or efficient in
the years there." But he was taking drugs regularly, and his sleepless-
on the proportions of insomnia. His guilt over turning away from Cyril, knowing how important he was to him, was almost more ness took
than he could manage. His distress was reflected in his writing, where, as always, he struggled to
come
to grips with the turmoil inside himself.
He
began a novel about
his darker, despairing feelings regarding the business world.
The Bridge Game, was at his highest level. The
This novel,
attempt" to write a long work
game symbolizes the high-finance "games" like Namson, respects as games but has
bridge
which the hero,
of big business
no respect
his "first serious
for as a
life.
The
in a never-never land of
ences and parties.
He
hero
is
a professional bridge player
who
lives
high-powered bridge tournaments, drug experi-
lives
an empty, cynical
life,
and
dies in a senseless
accident at 29.
From
age 34 to 36 Paul worked steadily on Currents and The Bridge reflected mainly his love of the business world, the other
Game. The one his despair of
it.
This writing grew out of his ambivalent relationship
with this world and, ultimately, helped him to leave
37th birthday, Paul gathered himself together and
Just before his
made
It
the final break with Cyril.
It
When
it
was
last
we
like
finally
had
I
I
was
a
way
of
life
and
I've ever
done."
complete rejection of Cyril's values.
He
had become committed
values that was their did.
out
it
was the "hardest thing
walking out on the family.
twelve years
it.
felt
to a
that in the course of the
way of
their set of values.
life
And
and
a set of
for a while
I
don't think he realized what a serious involvement writing had
become.
They parted that
in a cloud of guilt
and acrimony.
When
he couldn't stop Paul from going, he turned away
have had almost no contact
Cyril realized in fury.
They
since.
Namson left Asch and Company in June 1963. The Namsons began summer on Cape Cod. Sheridan was six and Lucy was two. He wanted to complete The Bridge Game, the novel he had been working with a
on
for the previous
two
years.
This book reflected his disenchantment
with business, with drugs and with himself, and led back to Sheridan Fisher. It contained Fisher's experience of bitter weariness at the
end of
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
184 his
Namson understood
as
life,
it,
together with Paul's experience of
few years with
bitter weariness in his last
Cyril. In the novel the
uses drugs to sustain his pursuit of prizes despite his weariness
He
spair.
can't leave the competitive world
able to remain. Paul completed the
two
in a period of
When
years,
the
and yet he
book that summer.
last half in
finds
and de-
it
unbear-
"I did half of
was accepted for
it
three months."
New
York that September, The Bridge publication and Namson began work on another
they returned to
hero
Game novel,
Markers, which was to trace the history of his
life in
looked good at that time. Leaving Asch and
Company brought an end
to his "stomach tension."
He
business. Everything
experienced a gratifying burst of energy
hundred pages of new manuscript.
resulting in three
be able to establish himself
as a writer
That fall, however, he began to realize that the more time and effort than he had imagined. He
seemed he would
It
without great
difficulty.
transition
would take
learned, for example,
that the termination of his involvement in the business world could not
be accomplished
easily or quickly.
set
up
trusts for the children
takes time.
such
I
Although Namson was no longer work-
Company, he was
ing at Asch and
still
and gave quite
him
money
him
as
much
as
Gordon
"I
away. That
called." His
he had expected;
world of high finance and philanthropy.
in the
to various institutions, including the
affairs.
writers don't have,
and there were banks and stockbrokers who
as property,
kept
a bit of
had so many other things that most
fortune of about $5 million did not free it
involved in business
He
gave
Archives, where he
money became
a trustee.
During the ture of his
first
life
few years of trying to be a full-time
writer, the struc-
both changed and remained the same. Namson did
He
suc-
ceed in putting writing more at the center of his
life.
him of room and turned that
found that without a
tary to relieve
secretary
more life"
business concerns. "I took over Sarah's dressing into a secretary's office.
I
couldn't get anything done because of the
I
my
and on
time." Such efforts helped
him keep
limited, but they did little to reduce the
he and Sarah
He
was trying to
life"
demands
of the "high
to.
graft writing
But the old
onto their old conflicts
life
between
together, a life
writing, business
It
making
he
and
remained, in altered form. Moreover, he was struggling
with the pain of losing his place in the business world, and with the culty of
me
demands on
his financial activities
lived.
remained attached the "high
hired a secre-
diffi-
a place for himself in the writer's world.
was a profound shock
change was that
I
as well as a
was spending
profound change. The profound
my morning
energies,
my
best energies,
The doing exactly as
I
wanted.
The
Life of Paul
Namson, Novelist
biggest shock was the realization that
was doing was not useful from the point of view of
what
What
society.
185
I
I
had
done before, even with the ambivalence of being in the investment business, was very well regarded. I had been in a position where my days were a parade of people wanting things from me, which I had the power to give. was in a position of great power and great reward.
I
Now
suddenly
was working harder, although that
I
But four hours
world's point of view.
much
is
a
is debatable from the morning of concentrated writing
harder than eight hours in a business day.
out of yourself and
from the outside.
are dragging stuff
and with no help
mean, nothing comes
I
through the phone
You
a very intense kind of activity,
it's
—
to you through the mail or coming out of your past and unconscious and
it is all
so forth.
Writing was "a much more
solitary
kind of achievement," and he
wanted to prove to himself that he could "do
it
all
alone."
He
missed
the sense of achievement and the affirmation he had received in the business world.
He wanted
news to come Here
I
in, telling
him
that he was a writer.
am, working away
at these books.
As defined by American
erate.
for
it.
The
no longer
my
Suddenly
I
realize that this
worthy
exist. I lived in a
be validated only
effort.
it
was useless and there was no reward
much more profound than
activities just don't
But there was yet another
He would
society
sense of uselessness was
of money. Suddenly
itary
waited for the
not an activity the world recognizes, not a multi-million-dollar conglom-
is
I
He
a similar experience as a writer.
kind of void until the book was published. struggle,
if
which occurred
exist,
achievement" would have been made.
38. It
was
Game
at the
modest.
It
he would
exist,
And
did not?
if
was reviewed
in a
in the
it
and the
it
a
"sol-
in the fall of 1964, just after Paul turned
time he most needed affirmation.
came
after publication.
the world read the book and found
Then the product would
The Bridge Game came out at best
at the level
matter in the world. Suddenly
muted
The
affirmation was
voice, out of his past:
'The Bridge The New
Saturday Review of Literature and
York Times. But the best review was written by my old teacher Austin Garrison and published in his small magazine." Indeed, the reviews were bitterly disappointing.
His second published novel, and his most ambitious effort to date, thus gave ness, of
him
very
not existing.
little.
He
was
left
with the awful sense of useless-
What
he began in June 1963 with such high hopes was not working well eighteen months later. At
and
serious intentions
this
point he had been hard at work on Markers for a year, and the writ-
ing was going well.
He
was able to sustain the hope that he would sue-
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l86
The Bridge Game. He
ceed with Markers, despite the lack of success of
was disappointed but not defeated.
Namson began
searching for an undertaking that would give
sense of usefulness and at the
He
New
decided to leave
him
to write
more
There was It
same time
York. Leaving the "high
sprang up in the years
when
I
been a buildup over these years of
New
York, and
energy on parties.
me
it
mean
I
ing.
You can go through
He
thought of teaching
New
in
while
might enable
York, and distraction.
was
I
art criti-
There had
in business.
art reviewing, of a really hectic, art-social
seemed
just
the fact
to
me we
that
is
you're drinking heavily and so forth,
New
life"
was most involved with writing
cism, which was an easy thing for
life in
were spending too
isn't that easy to write in
it
the morn-
really write.
would get him away from what seemed eminently useful work.
as a possibility. It
in
His job explorations led him back to Brown and Austin Garrison,
him
tive
appointment
a one-year
much
you go out every night and
if
day hungover, but you can't
a business
York while involving him
offered
a
productively.
mounting sense of pressure
a
him
the writing of Markers.
facilitate
as
an
who
assistant professor in the Crea-
Writing Department. It
seemed exactly what we wanted. There was something appealing, a I had a very definite idea of what I thought might be use-
nostalgic value.
ful to students of creative writing.
felt
I
I
had
a
few things to show the
academy.
Paul began his search for a teaching position in January 1965 in the
wake
of the publication of
Brown
The Bridge Game. He began
in the fall of 1966, a year
and a half
later.
teaching at
During the interim
work on Markers. This was his "major effort"— an attempt to write a book beyond anything he had yet done, and a demonstration to himself and the world that his previous failure could be over-
he continued
He
come.
his
completed
it
in the spring of 1966, a
few months before turn-
ing 40.
Markers was accepted immediately by the publisher. But they offered
me
had gotten $2500 as an advance for The Bridge Game and it seemed to me this book was a step forward and more ambitious. It was also the most autobiographical book I'd done. I felt an advance that
in
some way
buying
me
I
I
felt
was being asked to
in that sense,
His publisher had
them
was insulting.
let
as a serious writer.
and
I
I
sell
myself too cheap.
just couldn't let
it
I
felt
they were
go for that.
him down. He had wanted to be treated by They did not refuse him encouragement, but
The they offered mation,
it
it
He
was not enough.
This was
his
it,
and
He went
was
prise
major
his
my
he
that
summer
to the Cape.
At the
discouraged and in need of isolation.
felt
effort to establish himself as a writer of serious
and he had not been
fiction,
"outraged and disgusted." "I asked
second major defeat, and in our view the "culminating
his fortieth birthday,
He had made
felt
affir-
never have submitted that novel again."
I
event" of his early adulthood.
time of
187
For Paul, who desperately needed
in small measure.
agent to withdraw
Namson, Novelist
Life of Paul
whole writing
affirmed. Indeed, the
enter-
he had broken out of
in serious question just three years after
the executive world to pursue his Dream.
Namson's
life
structure during the
first five
years of the Settling
Down
from age 32 until 37, was relatively stable. Writing was a small component, an appendage to his life as a cultured Manhattan business-
period,
man. As we have
He
and the business world. values
had
and not the
for
was shot through with
seen, however, this structure
irreconcilable conflicts.
he must break away from Cyril
realized that
was imperative to build
It
family's; to
him; to speak out
pursue his
clearly
and
his life
Dream and not own voice.
business to the periphery of his
center. In taking this step
that the world
would
own
the dream Cyril
in his
At 37, he broke with the man who had been ther, mentor and boss, and plunged into writing
move
about his
life
a
combined time.
full
structure
uncle, fa-
He
tried to
and writing to the
he was betting that he could become a
affirm his writing
work
as
had
it
writer,
his business work.
He
was trying to become his own man. By his fortieth birthday he had completed two novels. Neither brought him the affirmation and the sense of usefulness that were so important to him. In
this sense his
gamble had
failed.
What
could he reasonably ex-
now? What modification of his Dream would make it more consonant with his talent? To keep faith with the Dream, Namson would have to create a life
pect of himself
structure giving stronger support to the writing.
lem
in planning the
Brown
year.
His present
space to business concerns and the "high
life
He
addressed this prob-
structure gave too
life"; it
much
could not provide ade-
A radical change would have to be made. At the same time, Namson was beginning to realize that the business world had served valuable functions for him. He needed to keep some quate space for his writing.
parts of
it,
things that
or to have something equivalent in his
had excited him
side his writing
room was
there.
life.
Some involvement
He
missed
in the
many
world out-
necessary to nourish and sustain his writing.
Although he needed a "bare room"
in
which to
write,
he
also
needed
a
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
l88
"fussy
room"
to provide the experiences out of
tion. Earlier, business
could see that his art. It
it
which he crafted
had seemed an overwhelming
had
also
been an
distraction.
was the nexus from which he had created The Bridge
jective fantasy as
I
could."
Where would
felt I
had done
his material
fic-
he
nourishment for
essential source of
and Markers. Having completed them, "I
his
Now
as
Game
much
sub-
come from now?
His beginning awareness of this problem influenced his decision to seek
an academic position. had,
it
At
If
the academic world stimulated
might provide new 40, therefore, Paul
Namson
entered a
new
of
moving from
follow his
however, as a
life
early to
its
life.
He
his life structure,
middle adulthood. In Chapter
through the Mid-life Transition and
we must have
as business
period of his
was faced with the task of reappraising and modifying
and
him
material for his fiction.
18,
we
shall
aftermath. First,
a look at the character of the Mid-life Transition
developmental period.
The
Mid-life Transition
and Entering Middle Adulthood
m The
The
Transition
mark the culmination of
late thirties
man
forty a
early adulthood.
Own Man.
set himself in
the enterprise of Becoming
Success here means that the enterprise has flourished:
he has achieved the desired position on ber of that world with
man
he has been affirmed becoming a senior mem-
his 'ladder";
within his occupational and social world; he
Often a
At around
can make some judgment regarding his relative success or
meeting the goals he
failure in
One's
Mid-life
is
the rewards and responsibilities seniority brings.
all
mind
looks forward to a key event that in his
carries
the ultimate message of his affirmation by society. This "culminating event" takes on a magical quality in his private fantasy. right way,
happy
he
know
that he has truly succeeded
and
poor outcome, on the other hand,
will
will
A
future.
If is
it
goes the
assured of a
mean
that
he
has failed in a profound sense, that not only his work but he as a person
has been found wanting and without value.
When
a
man
experiences a developmental
in the late thirties,
crisis
stems from the overwhelming feeling that he cannot accomplish the
it
tasks of
Own Man:
Becoming One's
he cannot advance
sufficiently
on
his
chosen ladder; cannot gain the affirmation, independence and senior-
ity
he wants; cannot be
his
own man
in the terms defined
by
his current
life structure.
Whatever the degree
whether he
advancing brilliantly or in the depths of crisis— as long
a
man
is
is
of his success or failure— no matter
from the period of Becoming One's
At around ordinarily has fifteen
as
concerned primarily with these questions he has not yet emerged
men
40, a its
new
Own Man.
period gets under way.
onset at age 40 or 41 and
in our
sample
who completed
lasts
The
Mid-life Transition
about
five years.
For the
this period, the average age at
We
doubt that a true Midtermination was 45.5, the range 44 to 47. Transition can begin before age 38 or after 43.
life
The
Mid-life Transition
dle adulthood. past •
As
and prepare
One
task
is
is
a bridge
in all transitions, a
for the future.
between
early
adulthood and mid-
man must come
Three major
tasks
must be worked on.
to terminate the era of early adulthood.
his life in this era
to terms with the
He
and reappraise what he has done with
it.
has to review
THE SEASONS OF A
192
•
A
second task
is
MAN S
to take his
adulthood. Although he
first
steps toward the initiation of
not yet ready to
is
start
new
building a
middle
life struc-
he can begin to modify the negative elements of the present
ture,
and to
ture •
LIFE
A
test
third task
division in his
new is
life.
struc-
choices.
to deal with the polarities that are sources of
deep
Let us consider the three tasks in turn.
Reappraising the Past The is
focus in the Mid-life Transition
initial
on the
is
to reappraise the life structure of the Settling
past.
The major
Down
task
period, within
the broader perspective of early adulthood as a whole and even of pre-
adulthood.
A
future. His
need to reconsider the past
man's review of the past goes on
in the
arises in part
shadow
of the
from a heightened
awareness of his mortality and a desire to use the remaining time more
and future
wisely. Past
the
life
for granted. It life?
he
suffers
from the
doubt that they can be joined.
corrosive
Now
coexist in the present, but
What
do
structure itself
comes into question and cannot be taken
becomes important to I
really get
ask:
What my
from and give to
have
done with
I
my
wife, children, friends,
work, community— and self? What is it I truly want for myself and others? What are my central values and how are they reflected in my life? What are my greatest talents and how am I using (or wasting) them? What have I done with my early Dream and what do I want with it now? Can I live in a way that combines my current desires, values and talents? How satisfactory is my present life structure— how suitable for the self, how viable in the
world— and how
shall
change
I
it
to provide a better basis
for the future?
As he attempts
to reappraise his
has been based on illusions, and he
ment. By
this expression
I
that long-held assumptions
mean and
life, is
a
throughout the
about
self
It
is
On
how much
it
and world are not
true.
illusions play so vital a role
life cycle.
The profound human ambivalence toward everyday language.
discovers
a reduction of illusions, a recognition
beliefs
This process merits special attention because in our lives
man
faced with the task of de-illusion-
illusion
is
reflected in our
the one hand, illusion has a negative connotation.
associated with magic, sleight of hand, enchantment, errors of per-
ception and belief. In a culture highly committed to science, technology
and
rationality, illusion
gerous.
The word
is
itself
generally regarded as inappropriate or even danderives
from the Latin ludere, to
play.
While
The
Mid-life Transition
193
playful illusions can be accepted as part of the imaginative world of child-
hood, an adult
The
expected to be more
is
loss of illusions
On
is
realistic, practical,
down
to earth.
thus a desirable and normal result of maturity.
the other hand, our culture recognizes that illusions have their
value even in adult
enjoy magic as a
and that giving them up
life
game
of illusion.
refer to a painful process
in anything."
This
it is is
to
To be
become
We
often painful.
is
use the term "disillusionment" to
through which a person
cherished beliefs and values. lost one's illusions;
We
disillusioned
is
stripped of his most
is
not merely to have
cynical, estranged,
one possible outcome of the
"unable to believe
but
loss of illusions,
not the only one.
To
identify the broader process
Transition,
I
which
is
so important in the Mid-life
use the term "de-illusionment."
The
process of losing or
reducing illusions involves diverse feelings— disappointment,
wonder, freedom— and has diverse outcomes.
bitterness, grief, feel bereft
may
and have the experience of
also feel liberated, free to develop
others in a
more genuine,
Illusions can
of great nobility
less idealizing
flexible values
is
most persons during
now
and
also inspire
all illusions in
works
a crucial, helpful
early adulthood.
appropriate and beneficial, but
possible nor desirable to overcome
He
to admire
way.
and accomplishment. They play
reduction in illusions
relief,
suffering an irreparable loss.
more
be tremendously harmful; but they can
hurtful part in the lives of
joy,
A man may
it
is
and
Some
neither
the Mid-life Transition
or even by the end of middle adulthood. Illusion continues to have
place— a mixed
way
best is
blessing, or a
to avoid illusions
mixed curse— all through the
is
hardly a prescription for a
bilities
and
ground
A man
reality, if
and
ideologies, so that
self
and
early
And
that
full life.
fertile
even in the face of
The
not to want anything very much.
drives are at their peak.
Early adulthood provides a
its
life cycle.
need
be— and
for illusions. Individual capa-
must "believe
in"
he can shape a course toward a better
others, according to his lights.
himself—
in significant persons, groups life for
him-
"Good enough" development
in
adulthood means that he has aspirations, makes commitments to
persons and enterprises, and strives with
toward valued
some enthusiasm and
discipline
goals.
Modifying the Life Structure As the Mid-life Transition proceeds, the emphasis gradually shifts from past to future. A man must make choices that will modify the existing
THE SEASONS OF A
194
structure
life
MAN S
LIFE
and provide the central elements
new
for a
He must
one.
begin planning for the next phase. As he makes a commitment to these
upon a new pattern of existence, the transition new period— Entering Middle Adulthood— begins.
choices and embarks
over and a
Some men make
is
significant changes in the external aspects of the life
structure during the Mid-life Transition.
The more
drastic changes in-
volve divorce, remarriage, major shifts in occupation and
life style,
marked
decline in level of functioning, notable progress in creativity or in upward social mobility.
Other men make fewer and
They tend
changes.
less visible external
same mar-
to "stay put" during the Mid-life Transition, remaining in the
and family, the same surroundings, occupation and even work
riage If
we look more
however,
closely,
obvious changes have occurred.
A
we
man's marital relationship
for better or worse. His children are growing
new
up and family
place.
though
find that important
is
less
different,
life is
taking
become more dependent, and as son and family member. the character of his work has been
forms. His parents have died or have
this has considerable
Even
if
he
is
in the
impact upon his role
same work
place,
altered as a result of changes in technology, in organizational structure
or in him. Seemingly small promotions or demotions have greatly affected his
work
activities, his position in
the work world, and the personal mean-
ing of work for him. Finally, he has been influenced by changes in the
movements
nation and the world, such as war, depression and social kinds.
These changes
affect
of
all
everyone in some way, but the effects are me-
diated by a man's age and period of development.
The
Mid-life Transition also brings significant changes in the internal
aspects of a man's issues that
life
structure.
have special urgency
He
in social outlook, in personal values, in in
what he wants
to
be
works on various developmental
at mid-life.
for himself.
He may
change appreciably
what he wants
The
to give the world,
conscious and openly expressed, or subtle and hidden.
out in dramatic external changes. Even fabric of his life without grossly altering
if it,
may be highly They may come
inner changes
the changes merely color the
they give
it
a substantially dif-
ferent meaning.
A
primary task of the Mid-life Transition
ture of the thirties
and
to middle adulthood. as
The
final test of
in all transition periods,
emerging from
it.
is
to create the basis for a
is
to modify the
new
the developmental work done here,
the satisfactoriness of the
Whatever the nature
and however modest or profound the
life struc-
structure appropriate
life
of the developmental
structure
work done,
structural changes wrought, the in-
dividual's life in the mid-forties will differ in crucial respects
from that
The In Chapter 16
in the late thirties.
we
The
examine more
shall
changes occurring in various elements of the
Mid-life Transition
195
closely the
life structure.
Individuation Process
Throughout the
life
cycle,
but especially
in the
key transition periods
and the Mid-life Transition, the developmental process of individuation is going on. This term refers to the changes in a person's relationship to himself and to the external world. The infant,
such as infancy, pubescence
leaving his mother's
He must
womb, must
gain
decide where he stops
some
idea of his separate existence.
and where the world begins.
separate himself from his mother, yet maintain a tie to her.
form a sense of
him
"reality" that allows
He must He must
to accept his surroundings as
having an independent existence not necessarily subject to his control.
The
child's
and
friends;
world gradually expands to include his family, neighborhood
and
becomes more complex through
his self
his relationships
with other persons and institutions.
These changes
are part of the individuation process. In successive pe-
riods of development, as this process goes on, the person forms a clearer self and world. He forms a stronger sense of who he and what he wants, and a more realistic, sophisticated view of the world: what it is like, what it offers him and demands from him. Greater individuation allows him to be more separate from the world, to be more
boundary between is
independent and self-generating. But
it
also gives
and understanding to have more intense attachments
more
feel
fully a part of
initiation: the termination of
tion of a
new
it
as
I
have
an existing
said,
existing life structure. This
would perhaps be impossible
neously playing a
role.
world and to
life
involves termination
structure
one. In order to accomplish this, a person
and modify the job;
in the
it.
Every developmental transition,
and
him the confidence
if
is
and the
a challenging
and
and
difficult
individuation were not simulta-
In a transition period, individuation
lying process that links termination
initia-
must reappraise
is
initiation. It prepares
the under-
the inner
ground, laying an internal basis on which the past can be partially given
up and the future begun. In the Early Adult Transition, a boy-man begins his novitiate in the adult world and takes an important step in the individuation process.
must loosen
his ties to the pre-adult
ing in large part on
how
world and the pre-adult
self.
He
Depend-
well individuation goes at this time, he forms a
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
196
valued adult identity and becomes capable of living with a greater degree of
autonomy.
competence
At
He
has
more
and others and gains
responsibility for himself
in his various social roles.
man
however, a
best,
adolescence. His pre-adult
in his mid-twenties
with
self,
its
ties
but a step beyond
is
and the pre-adult
to parents
world, operates with great force throughout early adulthood. Although
some developmental gains may be made in the Age Thirty Transition, he will not be much more individuated in the late thirties than he was at 25. After the Early Adult Transition, the next great opportunity for develop-
mental work on individuation
man must modify
is
the Mid-life Transition. In this period, a
the early adult
self
(including, as
does, the baggage
it
from childhood and adolescence) and the
of unresolved problems
structure of the late thirties. Greater individuation
needed
is
if
he
life
is
to
more appropriate for middle adulthood. What are the most significant changes to be made in mid-life individuation? Most investigators emphasize a single facet of the process.
form a
life
structure
Erikson gives primary emphasis to Generativity
vs.
Stagnation as a stage of
ego development in the middle years. According to Jaques, the central issue at mid-life
is
coming
to terms with one's
own
inevitable
man must own death is
mortality: a
now, more deeply than was possible before, that
learn
his
and that he and others are capable of great destructiveness. In
her biographical study of Goya, Martha Wolfenstein proposes that the
working of destructiveness was the basic process in
re-
his transformation, dur-
ing his forties, from an excellent court painter to an artist able to deal with
the universals of mid-life
change
human as
a
Neugarten
tragedy. Bernice
growing "interiority"
:
identifies the basic
turning inward to the
self,
decreasing the emphasis on assertiveness and mastery of the environ-
ment, enjoying the process of living more than the attainment of
specific
goals.
Jung half of
new
first
life,
proposed the distinction between the
effort at individuation begins at mid-life
remaining years. Unlike his
first
with the years around forty as the meridian.
many
later writers
complex understanding of
its
and the second
He showed
that a
and continues through the
who adopted
his
term but not
meaning, he distinguished many facets
of the individuation process.
somewhere between the single-factor emphasis of some investigators and the tremendously complex approach of Jung, we shall discuss four tasks of mid-life individuation. For a given individual some of these may be more problematic or more conspicuous than others, but all of them are present and all must be considered in a general understanding of adult development. Each task requires a man to confront and Steering a course
reintegrate a polarity— that
is,
a pair of tendencies or states that are usually
The experienced as polar opposites, as
if
a person
Mid-life Transition
197
must be one or the other and
cannot be both. As he becomes more individuated in middle adulthood, a man partially overcomes the divisions and integrates the polarities.
Four Tasks of Mid-life Individuation The
whose resolution is the principal task of mid-life indiYoung/Old; viduation are: (1) (2) Destruction/Creation; (3) Masculine/ Feminine; and (4) Attachment/ Separateness. Each of these pairs forms a polarity in the sense that the two terms four polarities
represent opposing tendencies or conditions. Superficially, that a person has to be one or the other
would appear
it
and cannot be both. In
actuality,
however, the paired tendencies are not mutually exclusive. Both sides of each polarity coexist within every
many
self.
At
but he also has a sense of being
respects,
man feels young in He feels older than
mid-life a old.
the youth, but not ready to join the generation defined as "middle-aged."
He
young, old and "in-between." His developmental task
feels alternately
make sense of this condition of in-between and to become Young/ new way, different from that of early adulthood. The Destruction/Creation polarity presents similar problems of conflict and reintegration. The Mid-life Transition activates a man's concerns with death and destruction. He experiences more fully his own mortality and the actual or impending death of others. He becomes more aware of is
to
Old
in a
the
many ways
in
which other persons, even
destructively toward
What
is
him (with malice
his loved ones,
or, often,
have acted
with good intentions).
perhaps worse, he realizes that he has done irrevocably hurtful
things to his parents, lovers, wife, children, friends, rivals
what may
have been the worst or the best of intentions )
he has a strong
desire to
become more
.
(again, with
At the same time,
creative: to create products that
have value for himself and others, to participate in collective enterprises that advance
human
welfare, to contribute
erations in society. In
middle adulthood a
more
man
fully to the
coming gen-
come
know, more
can
to
than ever before, that powerful forces of destructiveness and of creativity coexist in the
human soul— in my soul!—and
can integrate them in
new
ways. Likewise, every
man
at mid-life
must come more
fully to
coexistence of masculine and feminine parts of the
self.
terms with the
And he must
integrate his powerful need for attachment to others with his antithetical
but equally important need for separateness.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
198
All of these polarities exist during the entire
be
fully resolved or transcended,
life cycle.
They can never
though some Utopian thinkers have held
out this promise and some great religious prophets have been seen by
(though
others
by themselves)
rarely
having done
as
so.
They
are not
but they operate here with special force.
specific to the Mid-life Transition,
Every developmental transition presents the opportunity and the neces-
moving toward a new integration of each polarity. To the extent man does this, he creates a firmer basis for his life in the ensuing phase. To the extent that he fails, he forms inner contradictions that will be reflected in the flaws of his next life structure. It is human both to sity of
that a
succeed and to reach
new
fail
even
in these tasks:
integrations,
we
as
we
resolve old conflicts
also create the contradictions that will in
and time
stimulate further change and development.
The
individuation process and the integration of polarities are
mately internal and must be carried out within the person. emphasize, however, that a polarity of a man's
life.
The opposing
is
I
not solely an inner matter.
tendencies exist both within the
ulti-
want It is
self
to
part
and
in
the external world. As individuation progresses, a person not only becomes internally tive
more
differentiated
and complex; he
also develops
more
effec-
boundaries that link him to the external world and enable him to
transact with
it
more
fully.
Moreover, the factors that influence
The
deals with a polarity are external as well as internal.
and old or
of masculine
and feminine occurs
man's struggles to reintegrate a polarity only within the context of his
life
The
social
if
We can
we
polarities will
understand a
place these struggles
and take account of both
Developmental work on the four Chapters 14 and
young
and
in our culture
institutions as well as in each individual personality.
how he
splitting of
self
and world.
be discussed further
in
15.
Mid-life Transition as Developmental Crisis
Some men do
very
little
questioning or searching during the Mid-life
Transition. Their lives in this period tinuity.
They
show
are apparently untroubled
meaning, value and direction of their
a
by
lives.
good deal of
difficult
stability
and con-
questions regarding the
They may be working on such become evident in later
questions unconsciously, with results that will
periods. If not, they will pay the price in a later developmental crisis or in
a progressive withering of the self to the
self.
and
a life structure
minimally connected
The Other men
in their early forties are
know
changes, and
aware of going through important
come
to understand the nature of these changes, to
to terms with the griefs
and
They
a highly painful one.
and to make use of the
losses,
growing and enriching their
a
199
that the character of their lives will be appreciably dif-
They attempt
ferent.
Mid-life Transition
possibilities for
For them, however, the process
lives.
is
not
manageable transition rather than
are in a
in
crisis.
But
men—about
for the great majority of
tumultuous struggles within the
this period evokes
ternal world. Their Mid-life Transition crisis.
Every aspect of their
by much that
fied
selves
and
new path
others.
and with the
They
ex-
moderate or severe
comes into question, and they are
lives
revealed.
is
self
a time of
is
horri-
are full of recriminations against them-
They cannot go on
as before,
but need time to choose a
or modify the old one.
Because a regard
80 percent of our subjects—
him
man
in this crisis
often
is
somewhat
may The man him-
irrational, others
"upset" or "sick." In most cases, he
as
is
not.
and those who care about him should recognize that he is in a normal developmental period and is working on normal mid-life tasks. The desire to question and modify his life stems from the most healthy part of the self
The doubting and searching question is how best to make use
self.
by the
are appropriate to this period; the real
of them.
The problem
fact that the process of reappraisal activates
is
compounded
unconscious conflicts—
the unconscious baggage carried forward from hard times in the past
which hinders the improve one's
life
logical anxiety
They make
A
pathology
but in the obstacles to pursuing
and
earlier years, that
The
effort to change.
guilt,
keep a
it difficult
for
is
not in the desire to
this aim. It
the patho-
is
the dependencies, animosities and vanities of
man from him
profound reappraisal of
to
examining the
real issues at mid-life.
modify an oppressive
this
life structure.
kind cannot be a cool, intellectual
must involve emotional turmoil, despair, the sense of not knowing where to turn or of being stagnant and unable to move at all. A man in this state often makes false starts. He tentatively tests a variety of new
process. It
choices, not only out of confusion or impulsiveness but, equally, out of a
need to explore, to see what in
is
The
interests
life
it
to engage
challenges the illusions
existing structure
structure of the thirties was initiated
ful forces in
make
on which the
its feels
occupation or solitary pursuit. Every
genuine reappraisal must be agonizing, because
and vested
how
possible, to find out
a particular love relationship,
is
and
based. stabilized
by power-
the person and his environment. These forces continue to
their claim for preserving the status quo.
radical critique of his life at
40
will
be up
A man who
attempts a
against the parts of himself that
THE SEASONS OF A
200
MAN S
LIFE
He
have a strong investment in the present structure.
by other persons and institutions— his
conformity— that seek to maintain order and prevent change. With
social
he
will also receive
support from himself and from others for the
examine and improve
effort to
Why
do we go through
his
life.
stemming from the
Why
this painful process?
often be our lot at mid-life? In Chapter 2 culty
be opposed
which he works, the implicit web of
leagues, the occupational system in
luck,
will often
wife, children, boss, parents, col-
I
between
era shift
should a
crisis
noted several sources of early
so
diffi-
and middle adulthood.
Moreover, we need developmental transitions in adulthood partly because
no
structure can permit the living out of
life
create a life structure
choice
I
its
try over a
I
reject
many
the
life
and
Committing myself
my
life
within
tolerate the costs
it,
it
To
self.
making a to a
to realize entails.
structure necessarily gives high priority to certain aspects of
and neglects or minimizes other
self
Down
Settling
aspects of the
set priorities. In
others.
span of time to enhance
potential, to bear the responsibilities
Every
all
must make choices and
one option and
select
structure,
I
aspects. This
structure of the thirties as of
all
is
as true of the
others. In the Mid-life
Transition these neglected parts of the self urgently seek expression.
man
experiences
them
as "other voices in other
rooms"
(in
A
Truman Ca-
pote's evocative phrase). Internal voices that have
been muted for years
now clamor
vague whispering, the
to
be heard. At times they are heard
as a
content unclear but the tone indicating grief over lost opportunities, outrage over betrayal by others, or guilt over betrayal
times they stating
come through
as a
names and times and
done to
right the balance.
thunderous places
A man
roar,
by
oneself.
the content
all
At other too
clear,
and demanding that something be
hears the voice of an identity prema-
turely rejected; of a love lost or not pursued; of a valued interest or rela-
up
tionship given internal figure
in acquiescence to parental or other authority; of
who wants
to
be an athlete or nomad or
artist,
an
to marry for
love or remain a bachelor, to get rich or enter the clergy or live a sensual
become what he now is. Durmust learn to listen more attentively to and decide consciously what part he will give them in his life.
carefree life— possibilities set aside earlier to
ing the Mid-life Transition he
these voices
Sequences Through the Mid-life Transition In Chapter 10
Down
we
period: (A)
distinguished several sequences through the Settling
Advancement within
ous failure or decline within a stable
a stable life structure; (B) Seri-
life structure;
(C) Breaking out:
The trying for a
change
new
structure;
life
(D) Advancement which
(E) Unstable
in life structure;
life structure.
itself
A
Down period influences the way upon the Mid-life Transition and works on its
which he em-
through the Settling
in
tasks.
ways
men
life
in each of the five sequences
produces a
man's sequence
barks
overview of the various forms of the
201
Mid-life Transition
To
get an
course, let us briefly look at the
moved from
Settling
Down
through
the Mid-life Transition.
Sequence A. Advancement Within a Stable Life Structure
The twenty-two men
exemplifying this sequence had achieved moderate
Down, according to the terms of on page 152). They had "come their and during thirties had moved from junior to senior long way" a positions in their worlds. Still, as the phase of Becoming One's Own Man or notable success by the end of Settling
their particular enterprises (see the table
draws to a close the struggle
is
often acute.
mark the outcome
ing event that will
A man
is
awaiting a culminat-
Down
of his efforts in the Settling
period.
The
Man
culminating event
and the
start of
we must
cance, however,
In
ess.
some
a marker for the
end of Becoming One's
place
it
To
understand
its
Own
signifi-
within the ongoing developmental proc-
cases this event served to precipitate the Mid-life Transition
with great force, as Transition
is
the Mid-life Transition.
is
it
did with the biologist John Barnes, whose Mid-life
described in Chapter 17. In other cases, such as Jim Tracy
Chapter 19), this event occurred after the Mid-life Transition had begun to take shape. A man's reaction to the culminating event is heavily (see
influenced by
when
it
occurs in the transitional process.
Occasionally the culminating event
and
in the
is
a great success both externally
man's private experience. This was rare in our sample.
great majority of
men
The outcome was a total disaster,
good enough so that
usually
and
The
experienced this event as a failure or a flawed success.
in the eyes of others
in certain crucial respects
it
it
was blemished,
it
could not be considered
was often quite favorable. But it
did not sustain
all
the special
hopes he had had in mind.
We can better elucidate the main of entry into the Mid-life Transition
themes and variations on
this
mode
by considering the four occupational
groups in turn.
•
the novelists.
A man who
thirties as a serious novelist
novel.
is
As he comes to the end
has
won
a place for himself during his
no longer content merely to write another Becoming One's Own Man, he wants the
of
a
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
202
LIFE
next novel to be special: to win the Pulitzer Prize, to be acclaimed by the
mark him as the best contemporary comedy or whatever) and a
or general public, to
critics
of his genre (classical novel, mystery,
The outcome
successor to the earlier giants. It rarely works out this way. is
below the man's fondest hopes. Even
usually well
he
received,
promise.
He may
established writers, but he
What
subjectively not
terrifying
really there. All right,
do well
not enough. His original for posterity?
is
evoke a man's worst
or— the most
writer of books that
ful-
hardly unique.
is
likely to
is
realize his potential,
was never
well
is
take his place within the ranks of the
qualified success at this time
gross failure. It
tial
this novel
regarded as "good" but not "great," as not yet having
is
filled his early
A
if
writer fitting
in the
Dream was
much
will never
thought of all— that the poten-
he has proven himself commercial or to
better than a
he
fears: that
as a
competent
That
critical arena.
be much more.
What
place will he have in the history of the novel?
is
he leave
will
Whereas
earlier his main aim was to establish himself as a novelist, he now has a more formed identity and is concerned with the value of his "body of
work"
•
as a
whole.
the executives. Like the
novelist, the executive in
Sequence
A
ad-
vances during his thirties toward a marker event of special significance—
key promotion, a better job in a new company or some other change cating that he has
"made
it."
To
works out favorably, the executive completes his Settling is
launched into a new occupational and
For a few executives
most
who
it
was a
this
indi-
the extent that this culminating event
Down
ladder and
social world.
event had a highly favorable outcome, but for
For every executive
failure or a flawed success.
at
about 40
and the affirmation he has been seeking, there are perhaps twenty who get little or nothing. (The failure results partly from indigains the prize
incompetence,
vidual
partly
from organizational power
struggles
and
mainly from the pyramidal structure of management.) If
a
man
success; the
had anticipated and life. If
he
he must deal with the bittersweet consequences of
succeeds,
world he enters
fails in
little
themselves:
what does world
I
and how
hope
To what
it
likely to differ
certain crucial respects,
implications of the failure.
point has
is
enormously from anything he
to raise fundamental questions about himself
A man who
for further
me
as a
I
he must come to terms with the
is
stopped or slowed
down
at this
failed?
What
does the failure
mean—
person and about the occupational-social
have been so involved in? feasible are they?
his
advancement. Nagging questions present
extent have
say about
and
What
alternative options interest
me
The
Many
Mid-life Transition
203
work
situa-
executives remain stuck for several years in a painful
tion—feeling humiliated, knowing they have no future there, doing work of
no importance to themselves or the company— until
finally,
through
some combination of inner readiness and external pressure, they are able Chapter 19). Those who more quickly will spend several years exploring various possibilities, and working on the developmental tasks of the Mid-life Transition, before they can start building a new structure and restabilizing their lives in the to leave. This was the case with Jim Tracy (see
leave
next period.
the biologists. Those we studied had faculty universities and had been identified by their early •
young plify
scientists.
positions in first-rate thirties as
promising
Five of the ten continued their career advance and exem-
Sequence A. By 40, they had achieved some degree of national recogand were members of the scientific establishment in
nition as scholars
their special fields. at age 39 to 41,
Yet
for all five the entry into the Mid-life Transition,
was marked not only by a well-deserved sense of success
but also by severe disappointment and in some cases despair.
They had indeed reached the top rung
Now
the question was:
Where do
I
Down
of the Settling
go from here?
It
ladder.
was no longer a
matter of climbing a well-marked ladder by performing in well-defined
The rules had become more complex and the stakes had grown. A man now had to demonstrate his real creativity and develop significant ideas at the forefront of his field. And he had to do this at a time of stock
ways.
taking, just
when he could
tions of his previous work,
was running
creativity
see
period ways.
men
but
all
afraid that the well of
continued to work produc-
devoted a good deal of time and
the developmental tasks of the Mid-life Transition. And, as this
came
The
and inner •
than ever before the limita-
clearly
dry. All of these
tively for the next several years, effort to
more
and when he was most
to an end, their careers
biologist
despair, as
John Barnes
we
shall see in
is
and
lives
had changed
in
Chapter
the workers. Only the most limited
17.
possibilities of
continuing occu-
pational advancement are available to the worker after 40.
shape of his occupation in the company thirties.
After that he
may
important
a classic example of external success
is
The
general
well established by his mid-
gain in seniority or in small advantages, but he
has almost no prospects for major advance or for creative fulfillment in
the job. At the same time, life
we found more
diversity in
work
history
and
in
course than most images of the industrial worker suggest.
Of the
ten workers
we
studied, five
showed some degree
of advance-
.
MAN S
THE SEASON S OF A
204
ment within
men were started.
LIFE
Down. Two
a stable life structure over the course of Settling
doing quite well by their
own
lights as
the Mid-life Transition
Nick D'Amico had moved from mechanic to freelance draftsman
to Designer
(the top level for hourly workers).
I
under construction
and the
in the suburbs
He had
possibility of
a
new house
promotion onto
the bottom rung of management. Ralph Ochs had worked in the company's plumbing department since age 18 and sought no further promotion.
He
enriched his work
active union ers;
member and
life in
the forties by being a shop steward, an
a senior figure in relation to the younger work-
and he found important
satisfactions in the family.
Three other workers had shown some advances, but their lives were more in question. Vincent Minelli at 40 had security but no satisfaction as
an unskilled White worker in the supply department of a company with
an increasingly Black labor
force.
His satisfactions came chiefly from his
moonlighting work, his children and his senior position ethnic family. skilled
He had
fantasies of
moving
in the
extended
to Australia. Larry Strode, a
Black worker with fifteen years' seniority, a shop steward and occa-
sional foreman, felt increasingly oppressed started his
own
by the factory
situation.
He
barber shop (a culminating event after years of moon-
and completed high school. At
41, he planned to and get into an occupation of greater value to himself and the community. At 45 he did become a mental health worker (see Chapter 18)
lighting as a barber)
leave the factory in a few years
Sequence B. Serious Failure or Decline
Within The
a Stable Life Structure
seven
biologists
Down
men
group include two workers, three executives and two
in this
(see the table
period, they
knew
on page 152). Before the end of the Settling that they were doing badly and their prospects
were limited. Only with the
start of
the Mid-life Transition, however, did
they honestly face the bleak reality and begin to consider alternative possibilities.
One might
his situation,
suppose that, once a
he would
arrive at a
man acknowledged
new adjustment
the gravity of
within a few weeks or
months. Actually, we find that the process of accommodation ordinarily requires several years.
During the course of the Mid-life Transition, he has
an opportunity to assimilate the fact that
and he can come this period
his earlier goals are
beyond him,
to terms with the blows to his self-esteem. It
approaches
its
end, however, that a
on which to build a new life. At the start of the Mid-life Transition,
man a
is
not until
can make firm choices
man
in
Sequence
A
has
The gained a senior position in his chosen world and
beyond
that,
something very
special to him.
Mid-life Transition
is
A man
205
trying for something
in
Sequence B, on the
other hand, does not achieve senior membership in the enterprise of his
dreams. As the Mid-life Transition begins, he must decide what to do with
now
his life
that he
knows he cannot be
a foreman, a great novelist, a
corporate executive, a scientist of a certain standing, a respected
member
community. Some men never recover from the crushing defeats they suffer in Becoming One's Own Man. They enter a decline from which no escape is possible, for internal as well as external reasons. An of his local
is Luke Doby, the Black worker described in Chapter 10. At age he was divorced, alone, unemployed, increasingly disabled and approach47 ing death. Another example is Mike Gallagher, an executive: over the
example
course of the Settling
moved
laterally in
the
Down
some
cases, a
man whose
at
was divorced, and
alcoholic,
to a "non-position."
viewed him, he had nowhere to go; In
became
period he
company
At
when we
inter-
Own Man
went
39,
40 he died of cancer.
efforts at
Becoming One's
new
badly uses the Mid-life Transition to form the basis for a failure
is
some
in
respects a boon. It shakes
him out
His
life.
He
of a rut.
is
able during the Mid-life Transition to free himself from the tyrannical
hold of the Settling
new
Down
commitments, which often were
unrealistic.
He
new satisfactions, new aspects of the self to be developed and enjoyed. Without giving up entirely his interest in advancement, he defines the ladder more broadly. External success and failure become less important as criteria for inner well-being. The quality of his total life finds
goals,
acquires greater significance than the quantity of his success
on any
single
dimension.
An
example
is
Leo Heinz (see Chapter 5), a middle manager who at a failure and was shifted to a non-position. He spent five
39 was defined as miserable years stewing in this job, until at 44 he left the company and became a business consultant. He then used his technical skills but avoided
the stresses of managerial authority and
liam Paulsen, the worker whose in
Chapter
Chapter
8.
We
life
New
is
Wil-
we examined
through the subsequent periods in
shall trace his steps
18.
for
Life Structure
In this sequence, a lives
Another example
through the novice phase
Sequence C. Breaking Out: Trying a
rivalry.
within
Own Man
it
man
establishes a life structure in early Settling
for three or four years,
(say at age 36 or 37) finds
and then it
early in
Down,
Becoming One's
unbearable and "breaks out."
The
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
206
breaking out includes a distinctive marker event such as leaving his wife, quitting his job or
moving
to another region.
new
effort to build a
makes a concerted
values and aspirations. Unfortunately,
change
radical
By
promise.
he
still
is
time in
at this
40,
is
the one hand, he
in
it.
Transition, this
new
a
be a com-
likely to
is
in his situation,
but
when he
man
finds himself in a
which he
trying to achieve the goals to
is still
engaged in the
actively
still
is
Own Man. On
Becoming One's tion the
structure
make
not able to devote himself sufficiently to his
committed himself; he
recently
with his
in accord
involved in relationships he had seemingly given up
new activities and choices. At the start of the Mid-life
On
more
extremely, difficult to
is
he may have made important changes
took the decisive step, and
bind.
it
The new
life.
For the next few years he
structure
the other hand, he
effort of
beginning to ques-
is
pattern of living and to see the illusions and contradictions
In the Mid-life Transition he has to ask again what
wants. Having
made
move
a big
only three or four years
new
faced with the possibility that this
world or suitable for the
self.
it is
He
is
course
that he really
he
earlier,
may not be
entering a transition longer and
profound than that in Becoming One's
We find that a man whose life takes Down
life
more
Own Man. this
sequence goes through a
of painful changes over a span of twelve to fifteen years or more: a flawed Settling
now
is
viable in the
structure at 33, breaks out of
it
series
he forms
at 37, discovers
at 41 that the current structure has crucial flaws, and uses the Mid-life
Transition to modify
he
will start
it.
At
if
46,
he has done enough developmental work,
forming a more satisfactory structure in the period of Enter-
ing Middle Adulthood.
The outcome some
of these
better life— a
men, while
we
followed his
plete the story in
life
One
Mid-life Transition and
its
18.
The
Change
lot.
attained by
is
Two
many
of our biographees
the novelist Paul Namson. In Chap-
other
is
Down
period;
we
shall
com-
James Tracy, the executive;
his
aftermath will be described in Chapter 19.
Sequence D. Advancement a
is
through the Settling
Chapter
rather disappointing for
had before and than
struggled less to improve their
exemplify the latter sequence. ter 12
is
for others the years of struggle finally yield a
richer than they
life
who have
others
of the Mid-life Transition
Which
Itself
Produces
in Life Structure
In this sequence, advancement during the late thirties brings about a modification in the Settling
that
is
Down
life structure.
A man
takes an
not just another advance within the same structure.
qualitative
change
in the character of his life.
He
gets
upward step
It
produces a
more than he
bar-
The gained
for.
207
Mid-life Transition
This change has major consequences for the onset and course
Three of our men
of the Mid-life Transition.
on page 152). An example is the executive Roger
are in this category (see the
table
thirties
Mohn
Chapter 10). In
his early
he was an hourly worker with considerable responsibility
in a job
(see
he loved. At 37 he became manager of the purchasing department in his plant. This advance changed his occupational world and led him to a new
At 40 came the culminating event: he was probe head of manufacturing, with a budget of $9 million and an
neighborhood and
moted
to
life style.
enterprise of 400 people. His great success
was
also his downfall.
The
years
from 41 to 44 were the low point of his life, in contrast to the high point from 33 to 36 when he ran a shop. During the Mid-life Transition he had a serious illness of uncertain prognosis, which intensified his concern with death and with the meaning of his
life.
He
got through this period largely
through his attachment to his family and the strength of his increasingly
When
he was 44 a company reorganization led to the departure of many colleagues and to his lateral shift into a less responsible
independent wife.
position.
He was
in the throes of the Mid-life Transition, trying to decide
whether to stay put
in a secure
but humiliating position in the only com-
pany he had ever worked ,for, or to step, see
Chapter
try for
something
better.
(
For the next
18.)
Sequence E. Unstable Life Structure Only three of our men— a worker, a biologist and a novelist— are in this category. They did not reach 40 during the time we studied them. None was able to lives in
see
stabilize a life structure in the Settling
how any
them could
of
worker,
period. Their
It
was hard to
attain a genuine sense of seniority or resolve
the contradictions in his adult
The
Down
the late thirties seemed to, be built on quicksand.
life.
Hank McCloud, had
and seemed unable to hold a
job.
cent marriage and family. In his late biological research to teaching
not yet formed an occupation at 37,
His main source of strength was his thirties,
Curt Ruger was moving from
and administration. At
39,
he was not quite
an academic biologist and not quite an educational administrator. that he
had made
other aspects of future.
At
36,
novels, doing a
a series of
life.
Now
compromise choices
he had a meager
re-
basis
He
in work, marriage
on which
felt
and
to build for the
Darryl Osborn lived a chaotic life— occasionally writing
few movie
scripts in
Hollywood, bouncing around the coun-
He had no structure within which to work at Becoming One's Own Mair! At the end of the Settling Down period, the men in Sequences C, D
try
on and
off of drugs,
unmarried and without stable relationships.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
208
E
and
have not formed a
quate place for the
Sequence
E
Dream
or for other important aspirations.
have lived within an unstable structure throughout
and the
costs of the instability
quences
C
Down
and
D
and then
the late
thirties.
at this time.
a
become
increasingly heavy.
tried to
change
Unfortunately,
it
(via breaking
it is
new
in
Those
in Se-
out or via advancement) in
very difficult to create a
Despite a man's good intentions and heroic
Own Man
Becoming One's
compromise between the oppressive
desired
Those
this period,
formed an integrated structure at the start of Settling
ture he tries to create in it is
an ade-
stable, integrated life structure containing
new
efforts,
structure
the struc-
contains serious flaws:
earlier structure
and the ardently
one, containing elements of both in uneasy # coexistence.
He
cannot quickly eliminate the negative elements from the past, no matter
how new
may seem.
intolerable they
Similarly,
he cannot quickly incorporate
elements or give formerly minor elements a central place in the
structure.
A man
in
Sequence C,
a life structure that
him
led
to seek to
is
D
or
E
thus begins the Mid-life Transition with
quite fragile and beset by the contradictions which
change
it
during the Settling
Down
period.
He must
also
begin the Mid-life Transition without having reached the top of his ladder.
During the Mid-life Transition, strong
and
to question the goals of
him both to pursue Man. The outcome of
forces impel
Own
Becoming One's
the process started in the late thirties will be discernible only as the transition
comes
to an
Thus, at
38,
end
in the mid-forties.
James Tracy divorced
his first wife
and remarried, but not
46 was he able to include both families in his life structure and to stabilize his relationship with his second wife (see Chapter 19) Paul Namuntil
.
son quit his executive position in the family firm at 37, eager to a full-time novelist, but
become
he could not give novel writing a central place
his life structure until age
46 (see Chapter 18) In .
his mid-trurties,
in
William
Paulsen started trying to get out of his working-class occupation— a mixture of
advancement and breaking out— and only
coming
in his mid-forties did
to terms with the failure of this effort (see
he begin
Chapter 18).
m As
Mid-life Individuation:
Young/Old, the Major Polarity
mentioned
I
in the previous chapter, individuation
a process in all
is
developmental transitions. In the Mid-life Transition, individuation creates a link between the ending of early adulthood and the start of middle adult-
hood.
It
period
provides a basis
modified and a
is
some
discuss
upon which the
new
of the specific
life
changes
Mid-life Transition. In this chapter
the
more underlying process
We Each
life
structure
structure of the Settling
is
made
created. In
Chapter 16
Down shall
I
in the life structure during the
and the
next,
want
I
upon
to focus
of individuation.
have identified four primary tasks in the individuation process.
fundamental polarity in the char-
task involves the reintegration of a
The
acter of living.
polarity has sources within the self
and
The
in society.
four polarities, already briefly described, are Young/Old,
Destruction/
The one Young/Old polarity.
Creation, Masculine/Feminine and Attachment/Separateness. that
is
most
In
common
times "I
am
it
it,
the
is
the next with the remaining three polarities.
parlance, children are young, the elderly are old,
rest of us are in
sometimes
change
central to all developmental
This chapter will deal with
between. But our language
refers to
an age category: those
ambiguous.
is
who
are elderly or aged.
refers to a process of aging or decline, as
getting too old for this sort of thing,"
when
and
is
a
man
told,
and the
The term
"old"
At other
of forty says,
"You're only as
old as you feel."
In their fullest meaning, the terms "young" and "old" are not tied to specific age levels.
biological
and
young and old remain young
They
are symbols that refer to basic psychological,
social qualities of at every age.
We
human start
life at
every age.
becoming old
We
are
both
we
at birth, just as
in certain respects during old age.
Ultimately, "young"
is
an archetypal symbol with many meanings.
It
represents birth, growth, possibility, initiation, openness, energy, potential. It colors rise,
the
the meaning
New
we
give to
many
concrete images: the infant, sun-
Year, the seed, the blossoms and
rites of spring,
comer, the promise, the vision of things to come.
We
are
the new-
young
at
any
THE SEASONS OF A
210
MAN
S
LIFE
age to the extent that these associations color our psychological, biological
and
social functioning.
Conversely, "old"
is
a
symbol representing termination,
structure, completion, death.
ity,
Grim Reaper, the Rock of midnight. The immovable of youth. I
I
Its
Wise Old Man,
Ages, the
fruition, stabil-
images include Father Time, the the dotard, winter,
object of age confronts the irresistible force
use the terms "young" and "old" in this symbolic sense, and
use other terms in referring to a particular age level or the process of
aging.
Being Young, strengths
and
To
meanings.
tive
but
bilities;
and
Old,
Each
be Young
also to
it is
in experience
may be
being
like
limitations.
be
is
to
advantages
has
and disadvantages,
can be given positive
state
be
lively,
as well as nega-
growing, heroic,
full of possi-
imperfectly developed, impulsive, lacking
fragile,
the Old person (whatever his age)
solidity. Similarly,
seen as wise, powerful, accomplished, "able to hear the dictates
of heaven"
(Confucius)—but
nected to the
life
also as senile, tyrannical, impotent,
uncon-
around him.
Young and Old, and the human development. It is the basic polarity to be worked on in every developmental transition. The symbolization of being both Old and Young— of death and rebirth, destruc-
The Young/Old
turing
and
polarity— the splitting of
them— is
effort to reintegrate
the polarity of
restructuring, mortality
and immortality— is inherent
very nature of a developmental transition.
coming
to an
lives
feel
Young, since the potential
Old
new
in
the
in that a phase in
Yet we
to pass.
also
period carries with
it
the qualities
major developmental task of the Mid-life Transition
is
to confront
of rejuvenation
A
feel
end and must be permitted
our
is
We
for a
and growth.
Old within oneself and seek new ways of being Young/ up certain of his former youthful qualities— some with regret, some with relief or satisfaction— while retaining and transforming other qualities that he can integrate into his new life. And he must find
Young and
the
Old.
A man
positive
the
must
give
meanings of being "older."
For Jung, an archetype
is
an elemental image that has been established
human evolution. It has come to exist human mind. To understand its function, consider how we employ
over thousands of generations in in every
psychic or instinctual energy. is
We are born with a pool of such
energy that
transformed, over the course of development, into a variety of more
specific drives
and impulses
power, creativeness.
from the life,
start.
depends on
The
How
it
specific
relating to aggression, sexuality, dependence,
potential for
develops,
complex motives and
and what forms
it
feelings
is
there
takes in the individual
circumstances and experiences.
Mid-life Individuation:
an archetype
Similarly,
whom
initial,
figure." It
undifferentiated image into an
becomes
a person in one's head, a
one has an ongoing relationship— loving,
fighting, admir-
depreciating— much as one does with a person in the external world.
ing,
We
have archetypes for the bad
just
my
me
211
Polarity
a potential for further development. It evolves
complex "internal
increasingly
being with
is
from an
in the individual r3syche
Young/Old, the Major
in
exist
self
and the good
particular mother, but a maternal figure
numerous ways ) God, ,
self,
who
the mother (not
helps and threatens
muse.
devil, authority, healer,
The
archetypes
within us as organizing factors that shape and are shaped by our
experience over the
life
course. In each person,
some develop
to a high
degree, others remain dormant.
In Jungian theory, the Puer a youth, a person of any age
the archetype of being
is
who
is
Young— a
In childhood, this archetype evolves as the child experiences brings plans
and
possibilities into realization,
animals, flowers, projects, relationships. (in Winnicott's sense), the child
child,
developmental process.
at the start of a
its
own
growth,
and observes the growth of
With "good enough" development
forms an internal figure of himself as
Puer: a budding person with remarkable potentials in a world full of opportunities and dangers.
The Senex
in Jungian theory
is
the archetype of being
Old— elderly,
who is at the end of a developmental process. we form a sense of what it means to be aging, declin-
senescent, a person of any age Starting in childhood,
ing, suffering a loss of
our former powers, dying.
tribute to this process. People
Many
around the child get
experiences con-
sick, infirm,
conspicu-
ously old; they die. So do pets, plants and other living things. Toys
other objects are destroyed and exist no more. or hurt in
some way
that arouses his
own and
The
child
may
others' anxiety.
and
get sick
Not
yet
understanding the nature of aging and death, he develops primitive fantasies
that give
meaning
He
to these symbols.
tries to
grasp the distinction
between "living" and "dead" beings, and between animate beings and inanimate objects. Just as the experience of being
Young
can, under favorable conditions,
continue through old age, so does the experience of getting Old begin in childhood.
The
child's experience of his
own and
others' aging contributes
to the formation of an internal figure of himself as Senex: a person in decline,
no longer
full of
promise but having to relinquish the powers so
essential to the Puer.
In every transitional period, throughout the
life
cycle,
the internal
Young and Old— what Jung called Puer and Senex— are modified and placed in a new balance. The end of the preceding period stimulates Old thoughts and feelings about being in a rut, rotting, coming to the figures of
THE SEASONS OF A
212
brink of death.
The
MAN S
LIFE
new
the
start of
feelings
about being reborn, making a fresh
ities in
the
is
and new
self
to create a
new Young/Old
discovering fresh possibil-
The
task in every transition
integration appropriate to that time of
Especially with the change in eras, there qualities of maturity,
start,
the world.
vistas in
Young thoughts and
period stimulates
judgment,
is
normally an increase in the Old
self -awareness,
structure, breadth of perspective.
life.
But these
magnanimity, integrated
qualities are of value only
if
they continue to be vitalized by the Young's energy, imagination, wonder-
ment, capacity for foolishness and fancy.
The Young/Old connection must
be sustained. It is
not easy to maintain the balance.
A person
prematurely Old and lacking in youthful qualities.
been so deprived that he the future.
He
is
against emptiness
of any age
A
may become may have
child of six
loses all sense of excitement, play, anticipation of
emotionally a withered old man, fighting a futile battle
and
decline.
An
may be
adolescent
so weighted
down by
a morally constraining family, or by having prematurely to take on heavy
adult responsibilities, that his youthful passions are stifled and he cannot sustain the dreams
may be to the
on which
adulthood
early
Old
so in the grip of the
that he
is
is
built.
A man
of 40 or 50
stagnant, dry, hardly connected
world around him or to anything he can value in himself, having
to give others or to receive
from them.
It is as
little
though the Young had been
totally extinguished.
At the other extreme,
a
man may become
so anxious about aging
and
dying that he denies these concerns altogether and attempts to remain the
We see this in the man of twenty-five who remains tied who leads a transient life without serious attachments and He is, as it were, poised between boyhood and early adult-
perpetual Young., to the family or responsibilities.
hood, unable to complete the Early Adult Transition and make the com-
mitments on which at the
a
first
adult
life
structure can be formed.
He
is
terrified
thought of becoming an adult, yet he can no longer remain a child.
Living in a kind of limbo, he acts very "adolescent" but feels lost and unattached.
We insists
also see this clinging to the
on remaining youthful
Young
in the
the good times that he earlier missed. His problem
be youthful, but that he remains stuck
Young and Old. His developmental that
is,
qualities
middle-aged.
To do
man
of 40 to 50
in the early adult sense, trying to
this,
task
in is
is
have
who now
not that he wishes to
an early adult conception of
to
become
older than he
was—
he has to make more use of the Old
than before, while finding age-appropriate forms through which
to express his youthful qualities as well.
Throughout the
life cycle,
the archetypal
Young and Old
coexist within
.
Young/Old, the Major
Mid-life Individuation:
us.
The
ment
Young
internal
in
many
Polarity
213
has great energy and capacity for further develop-
directions.
The
internal
Old has
attained a high degree of
and can now Young/Old balance. In pre-adulthood the Young is normally predominant, the Old just taking shape. In early adulthood, the balance is more even but the Young is normally stronger. Middle adulthood should be the time of optimal Young/Old structure, has
gone
he can
as far as
develop no further. Every era has
balance: a
man
in realizing his potential,
its
characteristic
can have a firmer structure with which to use his consid-
and capacity
erable energy, imagination
becomes heavier and the
internal resources
more
The Sense
of Mortality
In the Mid-life Transition the
As
early
though the
limited,
fears of the "loss of youth."
and Wish
Young/Old
for Immortality
polarity
experienced with
is
man is assailed by new Young— variously represented
He
feels that
the
and the youthful adult
in
himself— is dying.
The imagery of old age and death hangs over him like a pall. A number of changes commonly occurring at around 40
A man
sense of aging.
them
anxieties
One
experiences
but others
in stride,
some
strike
of these changes as
about getting old and confronting him with important change, as
his earlier
much, do with he remembers formation.
He
peak
we have seen,
levels of functioning.
as little sleep as before.
well and finds
less
it
intensify the
minor and
with great impact, arousing his
is
his
own
He
mortality.
the decline in bodily and
psychological powers. In his late thirties and early forties a
below
possi-
adulthood comes to an end, a
as the child, the adolescent
takes
is,
adulthood the structure
action and development continue.
bilities for vital
special force.
Middle adulthood
for change.
in this sense, the center of the life cycle. In late
cannot run
man
falls
well
as fast, lift as
His vision and hearing are
less acute,
harder to learn masses of specific
in-
more prone to aches and pains and may undergo a serious him with permanent impairment or even death. These widely an their severity and their effects on a man's life. Reis
illness that threatens
changes vary
duced strength and
agility
may be
less distressing to
an accountant than to
a professional athlete (or a fierce competitor at tennis lose his standing
The
decline
on the is
normally quite moderate and leaves a
capacities for living in
trophic.
make
A man
life
who cannot
middle age. But
fears that
worthwhile.
bear to
local ladder)
he
When
will
it
soon lose
youth
is
is
all
man
with ample
often experienced as catas-
the youthful qualities that
totally lost, all that
is
left
is
to be
THE SEASONS OF A
214
totally old.
MAN
LIFE
s
At an archetypal
Young
level,
immortal, Old
is
the brink of
is
death.
Reminders of mortality
and
meaning they have he
A man may
loss of others.
him
for
by the more frequent
are also given
will
suffer distressing losses at
depend
sixties or seventies, are
more
on the developmental period early forties, the probability
or getting seriously
ill.
now
parents,
ordinarily in their
be faced with problems of more people, it seems, are dying
likely to die or to
and dependency.
retirement, illness
any age. The
and
up considerably. His
of such losses goes
death
partly
in at the time. In his late thirties
is
illness,
There
are
A
lot
more accidents and heart
more
attacks,
divorces, depressions, alcoholism, job failures, troubles with children or
parents, suffering of
A man's
kinds.
all
sensitivity to the increase in others'
own
accentuated by his these problems
he
partly because
The sense
more is
in others, starting to
of aging
misfortune and suffering
is
He
notices
and resonates to them with greater
feeling,
entry into th^ Mid-life Transition.
come
and mortality
to terms with his
own
mortality.
accentuated by the change in genera-
is
around 40. In the terms of Ortega y Gasset (see Chapter 2), part of the 'initiation" generation from about 30 to 45. He is
tional status at
a
man
*
is
establishing his niche in society
and pursuing
his youthful aspirations.
Dur-
ing the Mid-life Transition, from about 40 to 45, he starts taking his place in the
"dominant" generation. By the middle
eration senior to that of the thirties.
new
enter a respect,
generation but on what
competence,
The
question
now form an
No
hood.
Even
if
ment,
he
is
At around 40
how
man
Down
so
no longer
much
and
is
on the path
toward success and
failure
crucial to climb another
ness toward others, his
it.
to greater attain-
normally begins to
rung on the ladder— to
more
of the rewards that
in the past.
more
He
is
especially difficult
has to deal
contempt toward himself, and
would now be marvelous tasted
He must
early adult-
letdown in the Mid-life Transition.
a great deal
has not attained his earlier goals.
A man may be
enterprise intensifies his
done with the ambitions of
Giving up the intense concern with success
man
of satisfaction,
from those of
write another book, get another promotion, earn
meant
not whether he will
reaches a turning point.
well or poorly he has
his basic orientation It is
a
likely to experience a
he has accomplished
change.
is
clearly in a gen-
is
status.
enterprise qualitatively different
matter
his thirties,
he
terms— with what degree
Finally, the culmination of the Settling
sense of mortality.
forties,
if
first
with his
if
a
bitter-
his illusion that life
only he had been able to seize the gold ring.
free to question the real value of success,
But the man who manages
once he has
to reach his youthful goals often gets
Young/Old, the Major
Mid-life Individuation:
He may
caught up in the excitement of success.
how little meaning it has for him. Every man in the Mid-life Transition fairy tale
does not enter a
that the hero
comes
a
is
to an end.
life
He
sees, indeed,
and accept the symbolic death
to grieve
He
of the youthful hero within himself.
will gradually discover
new
the heroic qualities he can keep, which
how he might be
develop in himself, and
the hero of the
starts to see that
die or be transformed as early adulthood
A man must begin
context of middle adulthood.
215
need a few years to discover
of eternal, simple happiness.
who must
youth
Polarity
which of
he can discover and
qualities
a hero of a different kind in the
Humanity has
wisdom for conmiddle-aged man." That archetype
structing the "portrait of the hero as a
as yet little
poorly evolved.
is still
For many reasons, then, before that he
marrow event.
going to
is
die.
He
feels
of his being. His death
An
man knows more
40 a
at
deeply than ever
in his bones, in his dreams, in the
it
not simply an abstract, hypothetical
is
unpredictable accident or illness could take his
Even another
thirty years does not
seem
so long:
more
years
life
tomorrow.
now
lie
behind
than ahead.
Why
should the recognition of our mortality be so painful?
we not come adolescence?
be
know
to
Why
it
does
partially resolved
and
and accept
it
come up
it,
once and for
in every
in
all,
Why
can
childhood or
developmental transition, to
partially denied, only to confront us again in the
next?
A
primary reason,
and
of the strongest
I
believe,
is
the wish for immortality. This
least malleable of
human
great force during early adulthood as an aspect of the
young man has the
is
one
motives. It operates with
Young
desire to live forever, to play a part in
A
archetype.
some
eternal
drama, to be assured permanent tenure in heaven or in history. Like other elemental drives, this one
But
tions.
also a
it is
is
many
the source of
fundament
for our love of
illusions
and
self-decep-
our sense of
life,
self,
our
urge to create products of lasting value, our wish to be involved in the world
and experience
richly
what
it
offers us. It
is
reflected in the
trauma that
ac-
companies every advance toward acknowledging our short-lived existence this world.
standing of
At
We it
never entirely give
normally change as
mid-life,
it
up, though our awareness
we become more
A
individuated adults.
the growing recognition of mortality collides with the
powerful wish for immortality and the it.
man's fear that he
is
many
not immortal
is
illusions that
help to maintain
expressed in his preoccupation
with bodily decline and his fantasies of imminent death. At the most
mental
level,
he
in
and under-
feels that
he
is
lighting for survival.
thought of being dead, of no longer existing
He
is
terrified at
ele-
the
as this particular person. In
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
2l6
the words of the old song, "Everybody wants to go to heaven, but
nobody
wants to die."
Beyond the concern with personal survival, there is a concern with It is bad enough to feel that my life will soon be over. It is even worse to feel that my life has not had— and never will have— sufficient value meaning.
for myself
and the world. The wish
man's reappraisal of his
in a
for immortality plays a powerful part
He
life at 40.
often feels that his
now
life until
some redeeming qualaccrued value. life not enough feel that his has likely to ities, he is still He has not fulfilled himself sufficiently and has not contributed enough to Even
has been wasted.
the world.
What
in cooler
if,
moments, he
finds
he has been and what he has produced are of
little
conse-
quence. In the remaining years he wants to do more, to be more, to give
meaning that
his life a
will live after his death.
A man at 40 may have been so beaten down by an oppressive environment, or so consumed in the struggle for survival, that he cannot make the developmental effort to give his is
a
new meaning. The
inner flame
extinguished and no further potential can be brought into being.
without hope or sense of value. Such
exists
or
life
men
He
often die in their forties
The immediate cause of death may be illness, accident or alcoholThe basic cause is that neither he nor society can make a space for him
fifties.
ism.
to live,
and he
just withers
away. There are too few available resources, ex-
ternal or internal, to sustain his trivial
existence
if
life.
Alternatively,
he may
live a
long and
he finds a protective environment and accepts a limited
life.
A dramatic During
end, with tion.
example of decline
this era
He
all
his power,
he died of
could invest his
his self in
in
middle adulthood
he converted a small fortune into
starvation, disease
money with
is
Howard Hughes.
a fantastic empire.
great profit, but
At the
and emotional
isola-
he could not invest
any enterprise or obtain psychic income from
He
it.
finally suffo-
cated within the cocoon he had built around himself. Mid-life defeat has been portrayed in countless novels
and
plays. It
is
a recurrent theme in the work of Chekhov, Ibsen and Strindberg (especially
the plays they wrote after age 40)
.
In
The Iceman Cometh, Eugene
depicts the small world of Harry Hope's saloon of
its
members
but have about 40,
men who maintain The central character,
are middle-aged
lost all real visits
hope.
O'Neill
and boardinghouse. Most their youthful illusions
Hickey, a salesman of
annually to nourish their dreams and to indulge himself
in the role of savior
and Santa Claus. At the end, Hickey and acknowledges
own
gives
up the
illu-
illusions, his struggle
with
the archetypal figure of Death (symbolized as the Iceman), and his
feel-
sory rescue of others
his
ings in the aftermath of killing his wife. O'Neill wrote this play in the after-
math
of his
own
debilitating mid-life
crisis.
Young/Old, the Major
Mid-life Individuation:
217
Polarity
Autumn Garden deals with similar themes in a more genteel, Southern world. In a later comment on this play, Hellman said: "I suppose the point I had in mind is this—you come to a place in your life when what you've been is going to form what you will be. If you've wasted what you have in you, it's too late to do much about it. If Hellman's play The
Lillian
you've invested yourself in
you're pretty certain to get a return. If you
life,
are inwardly a serious person, in the
the Mid-life Transition, oneself or invested in
it
life,
is
middle years
hard to
it
will
pay
During
off."
know how much one
has wasted
and what kind of further return one
will
have
during the middle years. This was clearly a question for Hellman herself
when
she wrote the play, in her middle forties.
man
development has not already been too impaired, a
If his
Mid-life Transition begins to accept his mortality
and
to give
up
in the
his
most
grandiose illusions of immortality. This does not mean, however, that the
wish for immortality disappears.
On
the contrary, with normal development
more subject to reflective thought, more its aims. Making an effort to increase the actual value of his life, he strengthens his claim on the immortality for which he still deeply yearns. Whatever his religious views or his secular philosophy of life, he believes that this claim depends largely on his own self-fulfillment and social contribution. He wants to leave a trace, however small, on the course of humankind. A man in the Mid-life Transition is troubled by his seemingly imminent death. He is beset even more by the anxiety that he will not be able to make his future better than his past. As he seeks to modify and enrich his life, this wish becomes more modest and realistic in
conscious,
he has self-doubts ranging
"Can
I
too old
in intensity
from mild pessimism
to utter panic:
make my life more worthwhile in the remaining years? Am I now to make a fresh start? Have I become obsolete? What shall I try to
do and be
for myself, for
worst feeling of
all is
my
loved ones, for
my
tribe, for
humanity?" The
to contemplate long years of meaningless existence
without youthful passions, creative
effort or social contribution.
The
self-
doubts are intensified by the Old, which evokes powerful feelings of disinte :
and death. It is his voice within that says, 'There is no more time— the end is here." During and after the Mid-life Transition a man tries to transform the Young/Old of youth and create a middle-aged self, wiser and more mature gration, despair
than before yet tion
and daring.
still
connected to the youthful sources of energy, imagina-
He comes
the continuity of the its
form,
bility for
lies
to grasp
human
more
species.
within that larger
human
clearly the flow of generations
and
His personal immortality, whatever continuity.
He
feels
more
responsi-
the generations that will follow his own. Acquiring a greater indi-
viduality, a firmer sense of
who he
is
and what matters most
to him,
he
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
21 8
more deeply
also understands
that he
emerges a middle-aged
a drop in the vast river of recedes,
and
in
human
his
place
with more knowledge of his limitations as well
power and authority.
as greater real
poem
In a
man
is
Young hero
Slowly the omnipotent
history.
written
Roethke portrays
Dying Man,"
is
when he was about
50,
the American poet Theodore
his experience of mortality.
This poem, entitled "The
dedicated to Yeats. It reflects Roethke's struggles, in the
flower of middle adulthood, to accept the actuality of death while his vitality
...
and
own
desire for immortality are at their height:
he dares
Who stops
to Jive
being a bird, yet beats his wings
Against the immense immeasurable emptiness oi things.
Although
a
major
effort
in the Mid-life Transition, a
toward the recognition of mortality begins
more profound
spiritual
poem
not likely to occur until late adulthood. Yeats's lished
when he was
the fierce still
67, depicts this process.
The
title
acceptance of
it
is
"Vacillation" pub-
suggests that, despite
pride with which Yeats wishes to approach death, his
spirit
is
clouded with uncertainty.
No longer in Lethean
foliage caught
Begin the preparation for your death
And horn
the fortieth winter by that thought
Test every work of intellect or
faith,
And everything that your own hands have wrought, And call those works extravagance of breath That are not suited for such men as come Proud, open-eyed and Jaughing to the tomb. It
may have
taken Yeats some years longer to imagine entering the
tomb
neither "open-eyed and laughing" nor in sadness and fear, but with quiet
acceptance of the unknowable losses and gains to come.
The Legacy Imagery of the legacy tends to flourish during the Mid-life Transition, part of the passes
work on the Young/Old
polarity.
man's legacy
on to future generations: material possessions,
enterprises,
influence on others.
Men
differ
about what constitutes a legacy. Although the is
A
impossible to measure, in his
mate value
mind
of his life— and his claim
it
is
as
what he
creative products,
enormously
in
real value of a
their views
man's legacy
defines to a large degree the ulti-
on immortality.
Young/Old, the Major
Mid-life Individuation:
219
Polarity
some men place the highest They
In estimating the merit of their legacy,
value on raising children and maintaining familial-tribal continuity.
want
their children to
During
traditions.
grow up and
early
man may
them develop
begetting children and seeing
accord with family
live as adults in
adulthood a
During middle adulthood, however, the
take special pleasure in
own
in variations of his
satisfaction
is
ferent order. His offspring take their place in the adult world. riences their self-development
adult labors. Their
lives, their
and attainments
image.
somewhat
of a
He
dif-
expe-
as the fruits of his early
personal satisfactions, accomplishments and
He
contributions are an essential part of his legacy.
on
will live
partly
through them.
The
joys
and despondencies parents
The
excessive.
make more
feel
parents' preoccupations with
sense
when
in
middle age often seem
"how the
children are doing"
seen in the context of the legacy: they reflect basic
parental feelings about the value of one's contribution to posterity and one's claim
on immortality.
No man who
truly cares
about his fatherhood
can be without these feelings. In moderation, they enrich
become an
they
A
albatross
and
others.
At
he often becomes increasingly concerned
mid-life
with the value and security of his
estate.
He
gets
more
interested in
ing charitable contributions and helping worthy causes.
about the well-being of
He
community,
his
union, professional society.
It is
bequeathing something to
ism
is,
it
religious
cares
mak-
more
organization, college,
add to
his
is
of enduring value; only then
own enduring
value.
The
altru-
in part, a vehicle of the search for immortality.
For many life
men
structure
at mid-life,
work
is
the most significant component of
and the major source of the
craftsman, builder),
who
creates his
legacy.
own unique
winning the Nobel
Prize, the Pulitzer Prize, or the
in his local society
is
The
artist (scientist,
products, wants his
to constitute a treasure that can live forever— in his
award
He
important to him that they merit his sup-
needs to believe that an institution
will
the
offspring.
man's legacy may include the material possessions he hands down to
his family
port.
In excess,
life.
around the neck of both parent and
work
name. The idea of
"Man
suffused with this meaning.
of the Year"
A man who
de-
velops and manages institutions— a political leader, educational administrator,
his
owner of
his
own
monument, an
his legacy.
that his
The man
work
small shop or
edifice that
farm— would
like his institution to
he helped to create and that
will
be
be part of
in a health, education or welfare occupation
hopes
as healer, teacher or reliever of suffering will create a legacy
of better lives in future generations.
During the Mid-life Transition he must move toward a more realistic view of his occupational legacy. If he is very successful at 40, he may have a rather inflated view of his past achievements
and
his future prospects. In
THE SEASONS OF A
220
MAN S
LIFE
the Mid-life Transition he comes to the depressing realization that his previous successes are not so grand as he had imagined.
best, they
form a prelude to the main work, a
substantial
project can be constructed.
the future. His
by no means
initial success is like a
if
he
not be as monumental
as
nor will
it
give
is
on which
At more
a
But the important achievements remain
a guarantee of better
to realize that, even
basis
promissory note: an assurance but
work to come.
the omnipotent
It is still
new work,
very effective in his
him the expected
for
more
deflating
the result will
Young man might have
happiness.
To
wished,
the extent that he heals
the wounds produced by this ego deflation, he can get on with the serious
work and form
"good enough" legacy. Indeed,
a
as
the work
itself
becomes
may become more genuinely productive than we shall see in the cases of Tracy, Barnes and Namson. man who has worked hard during his thirties comes to recog-
more interesting to him, he ever before, as
Often, a
nize in the Mid-life Transition that his cumulated achievements and
do not provide
a basis for further
never
will
rise to
He
advancement.
educator, political leader or violin
maker
skills
cannot become a writer,
of the caliber
he imagined.
He
the level he sought in the military, the corporation or
He will fall far short of his early Dream. This is a crucial turning point. He may decide to continue in his present job, doing work that is increasingly routine and humiliating. He may change to another
the church.
job, or
another occupation, that offers more challenge and satisfaction.
he may reduce
his interest in
Or
work, performing well enough to keep em-
ployed but investing himself more in other aspects of
life
such
as family
or leisure.
The withdrawal of involvement in the job is a well-known phenomenon among low-status workers in many organizations who have 'nowhere to go" occupationally after a certain age. It also occurs among business executives, professionals and others who complete a first career at mid-life. While remaining nominally in their defined occupation, they spend much '
of their time in a variety of philanthropic, civic
and other
serious activities
through which they hope to generate a legacy. Several executives told us with quiet eagerness of their intention to retire
from business
themselves not to to working
early,
making
perhaps at 50 or
55.
They would then devote
a profit or achieving production objectives, but
on improving the quality of
life
for others. This
is,
so to say,
the "Hyde-Jekyir complex. In Stevenson's novel the virtuous Dr. Jekyll
was transformed
at times into the villainous
sequence, an executive regards himself
who
will
someday (before
valuable Jekyll.
He
it is
as a
Mr. Hyde. Reversing the
mercenary, exploitive
Hyde
too late) transform himself into a socially
cannot yet allow himself the luxury of living the good
Young/Old, the Major
Mid-life Individuation:
but he hears
life,
him
Jekyll's voice urging
to save his soul
Polarity
221
and create a
legacy for immortality.
A
man's legacy involves family, work or other valued contributions that
ensure his immortality. Immortality
may mean
that his eternal soul exists
human hisThe desire for an immortalizing legacy is a powerful, "normal" human urge. It stems from the wish for omnipotence and the archetypes of the Young and the Self as eternal figures. This desire can have destrucin
an eternal heaven, or that he has a place, small or
large, in
tory.
tive
consequences
grows, unchecked, into overly elaborate, magical
it
if
On
forms, as in the Faust legend.
by
early failure
the other hand,
and disappointment,
and a denial that anything
self
may
it
in
if it is
nipped
in the
bud
lead to a loss of belief in the
the world
is
worth bequeathing a
legacy to.
With "good enough" development, enriches a man's
the wish to create a valued legacy
middle adulthood. The developmental work of
life in
the Mid-life Transition modulates the tyranny of his
demands
of ambition
to be himself
and
is
mean, however, that
and
and competitive
less
driven to
it is
time
responsibility in society.
at
He
rivalry.
meet
tribal
He
Dream and
the urgent
has more inner freedom
requirements. This does not
40 or 50 to withdraw from involvement
has major contributions to offer as father,
grandfather, son, brother, husband, lover, friend, mentor, healer, leader,
mediator, authority, author, creator and appreciator of the
These contributions constitute In every era, a erate a legacy.
man
But
in
human
heritage.
his legacy.
normally has the need and the capability to genthe Mid-life Transition the meaning of legacy
deepens and the task of building a legacy acquires
mental significance. As we learn better
how
to foster
its
greatest develop-
development
in adult-
hood, "creating a legacy" will become an increasingly important part of
middle adulthood. This
will
add both to the personal fulfillment of
vidual adults and to the quality of
life
for succeeding generations.
indi-
r|
[Q
J
^
We
turn
Mid-life Individuation:
The Other
now
Polarities
to the three other polarities that figure so centrally in the
Mid-life Transition. All of these polarities transitional period,
made during
and they are never
come up
for reworking in every
fully resolved. Still, the progress
the Mid-life Transition provides a groundwork for reapprais-
ing and modifying one's past
life
and
new
for building a
life
structure in
Entering Middle Adulthood.
The Destruction/Creation
Polarity
man
reviews his
In the Mid-life Transition, as a greater meaning,
give
it
tion
and creation
own
of his
process.
as
he must come to terms
fundamental aspects of
mortality makes
Knowing
him more aware
own
that his
death
is
not
life.
creative.
The
creative impulse
is
new way with
of destruction as a universal far off,
even a spoon or toy,
pendent existence. In the mind of will enrich the lives of those
Thus, both mid-life.
The
sides of the
who
life.
its
creator,
it
are engaged with
on an indeits
own and
it.
Destruction/Creation polarity are intensified at
acute sense of his
own
ultimate destruction intensifies a is
man who
is
accompanied by
human
life
gen-
ready to look, death and destruction are every-
where. In nature, each species eats certain others and
tion
to
in himself.
For the others.
It is
song, a paint-
has a being of
a greater awareness of the destructive forces in nature, in
and
A
in a spirit of creation, takes
man's wish for creation. His growing wish to be creative
erally,
eager to affirm
is
wants to be more
not merely to "make" something.
made
if
he
He
bring something into being, to give birth, to generate ing,
destruc-
His growing recognition
himself and for the generations to come.
life for
and considers how to
life
in a
The
is
eaten by
still
geological evolution of the earth involves a process of destruc-
and transformation. To construct anything, something
else
must be
Mid-life Individuation:
destructured and restructured. In
sperm are joined to create
new
a
human
The Other
reproduction, an
many of man
being; but
every species (with the possible exception
223
Polarities
ovum and
a
others are left to die. In in the
next evolutionary
phase), far more offspring are created than will live through adulthood.
The
vast initial supply
meets the food requirements of other species, allows
for the ravages of a harsh environment,
and
adults to ensure the survival of the species.
mixture of destruction
harmony and evolution
A bird
and
Both are
creation.
"balance of nature"
is
of a
to the overall
essential
of the world.
snowstorm does not wish to hurt the
is
number
yields a sufficient
The
trees that fall in its
wake.
A
worm or damaging a bush, but in The human being, however, often acts
interested not in destroying a
obtaining food and building a nest.
out of hatred, malice and vindictiveness, with the specific desire to cause pain and destruction.
on
Homo sapiens
is
one of the very few species that preys
engages in collective torture and individual sadism, and creates
itself,
social structures in ically deprived,
Yet ours
is
which
large
segments of the population are systemat-
oppressed, destroyed in body and soul. also the only species that seeks to transcend
nature" and to attain
new
its
"animal
heights of moral, intellectual and esthetic devel-
opment. The evolution of human society
is
a testament to these visionary
pitifully slow.
In working toward a higher
dreams, but our progress
is
Good, we
antithesis— the conception and the actuality of
produce
The answer
Evil.
how
also
its
not to give up our creative aspirations, but to learn
is
to live better with the Destruction/Creation polarity.
No man tiveness.
can get to age 40 without some experience of human destrucOther persons, including those closest to him, have in some ways
damaged his self-esteem, hindered his development, kept him from seeking and finding what he wanted most. Likewise, he himself has at times caused great hurt to others, including his loved ones. In reappraising his
come
to a
new
or imagined
during the Mid-life Transition, a
life
damage they have done him. For
immobilized by the helpless rage he friends
what
is
and loved ones who, even more
as
difficult,
feels
he now
a time
he may be
bilities for
have
I
He
sees
it,
"How
have
I
failed
loved ones and for enterprises that affect
failed myself
and destroyed
utterly
have hurt him badly. And,
he must come to terms with
has to ask himself:
real
toward parents, wife, mentors,
grievances against himself— for the destructive effects he has
and himself.
man must
understanding of his grievances against others for the
my own
my
many
possibilities?
his guilts— his
had on others adult responsi-
persons?
How
can
How I
live
with the guilt and remorse?"
His developmental task
is
to understand
more deeply the place
of de-
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
224
own
structiveness in his
work on
this task
LIFE
S
and
life
in
unconscious.
is
human
What
affairs generally.
Much
involved, above
all,
is
working of painful feelings and experiences. Some
men
is
of the
the
articulate their
re-
new
awareness in words, others in the esthetic terms of music, painting or poetry.
Most men simply
must come
live
out in their daily
it
to terms with his grievances
lives.
In any case, a
man
and guilts— his view of himself
as
victim and as villain in the continuing tale of man's inhumanity to man.
burdened excessively by
If
he
to
surmount them.
is
he
If
ness does not exist,
he
loving and affirming
life.
It
destructive capabilities.
man
be impaired
will
be unable
recognize and take responsibility for his
Even without
hostile intentions,
he
for others.
discipline his children for the best of reasons
effects.
he
in his capacity for creating,
damaging consequences
act in ways that have
may
his grievances or guilts,
forced to maintain the illusion that destructive-
will also
necessary that a
is
is
own
will at times
As
a father,
he
and to the worst of
In a love relationship, his feelings cool unexpectedly and he with-
draws from the relationship;
it
makes no sense
to marry, yet the other
person feels abandoned and betrayed. As a boss, he must demote someone
who
is
worthy but incompetent, damaging that person's self-esteem and
future prospects.
No
act can
the power to do great good, cause some harm— and
will
be
totally
we must
benign in
its
consequences.
To have
bear the burden of knowing that
in the end, perhaps,
we
more harm than good.
we can be unwittingly destrucwe have destructive wishes toward others, even loved ones. There are times when a man feels hatred and revulsion, when he would like to leave or assault his loved ones, when he finds them intolerably cruel, disparaging, petty, controlling. He often It
is
tive. It
feels
hard enough to acknowledge that
is
most painful of
all
to accept that
an intense range or bitterness without knowing what brought
or toward
whom
to loved ones
it is
directed. Finally,
it
on
he has actually done hurtful things
on purpose— with the worst of intentions, and
in
some
cases
with the worst of consequences.
Men
at
40
differ
sponsibility for their
they have done
widely in their readiness to acknowledge and take
own
harm
guilty about the real or
destructiveness.
to others or
Some have no
might wish to do
imagined damage they have
so.
re-
awareness that
Others are so
inflicted that they are
not free to consider the problems of destructiveness more dispassionately
and place
it
in broader perspective. Still others
that a person
may
some awareness each
case,
feel
have some understanding
both love and hate toward the same person, and
of the ambivalence in their
the developmental task
is
self-knowledge and self-responsibility.
own
valued relationships. In
to take a further step toward greater
The Other
Mid-life Individuation:
Even the most mature at mid-life
man
or knowledgeable
225
Polarities
has a great deal to learn
He
about workings of destructiveness in himself and in society.
has to learn about the heritage of anger, against others and against himself, that he has carried within himself from childhood.
He
has to learn, also,
about the angers he has accumulated over the course of adulthood, build-
on and amplifying the childhood
ing
And he
sources.
has to place these
internal destructive forces within the wider context of his ongoing adult life,
setting
them
ways to integrate
The
learning
lectual. It
against the creative, life-affirming forces
them I
and finding new
middle adulthood.
in
have
just referred to
not purely conscious or
is
intel-
cannot be acquired simply by reading a few books, taking a few
some psychotherapy, though all of these may conThe main learning goes on
courses, or even having
tribute to a long-term
developmental process.
within the fabric of one's
life.
During the Mid-life Transition, we often
learn by going through intense periods of suffering, confusion, rage against
others
and
The in the
ourselves, grief over lost opportunities
and
Destruction/Creation polarity surely played
middle adulthood of the poet John Milton
existed.
lost parts of the self.
as
as in
fundamental a part any
man who
ever
Living in mid-seventeenth-century England during a period of
cataclysmic social change, blinded at 42, suffering severe misfortunes in his
personal
dedicated to a lawful social order, believing in a just
life,
God and
enraged at the injustices perpetrated in God's world, he was a respected statesman and scholar and one of the great poets of Western civilization. In the following lines from Paradise Lost, he gives us a glimpse into his
(and our) experience of the mid-life struggle:
Which way shaJJ I Infinite wrath
and
Which way I fly is hell; And in the lowest deep Still threat' ning to
To which
One of life."
the hell
fly
infinite despair?
myself
am
hell;
a iower deep,
devour me, opens wide, I suffer
seems
a heaven.
possible fruit of a man's labors
The
tragic sense derives
on
this polarity
from the
is
the "tragic sense
realization that great misfor-
tunes and failures are not merely imposed upon us from without, but are
own
largely the result of our story. In a sad story
tragic flaws.
the hero dies or
A
tragic story
fails in his
is
not merely a sad
enterprise or
is
rejected
by
outcome is brought on by enemies, poor some unexpected deficiency in the hero.
his special love; the unfortunate
conditions, bad luck,- or
The
tragic story has a different character.
extraordinary virtue and
skill in
a noble quest.
Its
He
is
hero
is
engaged with
defeated in this quest.
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
226
The
defeat
above
due
is
in part to
from an internal
all
part of the heroic striving.
two
flaw, a quality of character that
The
is
them
is
an
it
stems
intrinsic
flaw usually involves hubris (arrogance, ego
sides of the
same heroic
But genuine tragedy does not end
coin.
simply in defeat. Although the hero does not attain his
he
but
difficulties,
omnipotence) and destructiveness. The nobility and the defect
inflation,
are
formidable external
initial aspirations,
ultimately victorious: he confronts his profound inner faults, accepts
and of humanity, and
as part of himself
formed
into a nobler person.
The
to
is
some degree
trans-
personal transformation outweighs the
worldly defeat and suffering. Shakespeare's King Lear
King Lear voluntarily
is
one of the great
tragic stories in
our
literature.
up the throne: he seeks to relinquish
gives
his
monarchical and paternal power, hand on his legacy to the next generation,
and begin a new
life.
The
quest
Lear's failure
fails.
and
his final trans-
common source in his tragic flaws. He wants to give up keep it. He is unable to bestow his legacy and blessing upon
formation have a
power— and
to
because his paternal love
his daughters sistic
is
too tarnished by pride and narcis-
self-indulgence.
His two older daughters, like him, are power. They
him and
flatter
less interested in
daughter, Cordelia, will say only that she loves ing. After the succession, the
war and invasion. Caught
becomes sane is
as
at last ready to
The
he
gives her noth-
He
civil
Lear goes mad, and in the process
reconciled with the loving Cordelia and
is
be a parent and person
engulfing power of
him— and
ascending forces of destruction lead to
in the^ chaos,
never before.
love than in
receive the royal inheritance. His youngest
human
in the
most
destructiveness
life-affirming sense.
is
stated in the follow-
ing lines If that the
heavens do not their visible
Send quickly down
to
tame these
spirits
vile offences,
come,
It will
Humanity must perforce prey on
itself,
Like monsters of the deep.
The
"heavenly
spirits"
are not metaphysical.
forces within every psyche which,
the inner "monsters of the deep." Cordelia. She of love
women. flaw,
and
is
the
spirit of
forgiveness.
and
They
But these
are represented in the play
by
qualities exist not solely in her, or in
his reconciliation with her is
are the creative
imagination, the feminine principle, the source
Lear's early rejection of her
His victory
They
developed' sufficiently, can transform
if
the discovery of this
is is
a crucial expression of his tragic
the basis for his ultimate victory.
spirit
within himself. As he becomes
:
Mid-life Individuation:
and
able to recognize
moderate
The Other
integrate the Cordelia in his
his destructive, power-seeking, narrowly
At the end, Lear welcomes the prospect Come,
let's
We two alone will sing like birds
away
i'
own
Polarities
227
psyche, he can
masculine desires.
of imprisonment with Cordelia
to prison;
the cage.
When thou dost ask me blessing, I'll kneel down And ask oi thee forgiveness. So we'll live, And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh At gilded
butterflies
And
take
upon
As
we were God's
if
the mystery oi things.
's
spies:
and
we'll
wear out,
In a wall'd prison, packs and sects of great ones
That ebb and flow by
The
th'
moon.
"packs and sects of great ones/That ebb and flow by the
are the groups that split
humanity into warring
forces in collective life that
make
sects.
They
for destructive antagonisms,
forces in the self that propel each of us toward these ends.
terbalanced by the forces of love, play, reconciliation.
it
The
cannot be
fully realized
speare himself. Plays such as King Lear and
and middle
Even
as
is
balancing of
exemplified by Shake-
The Tempest,
written in his
represent the highest flowering of his genius.
forties,
he wrote of King Lear's voluntary retirement from the throne, and
of Prosperous retirement from his rule of the magic
own
contemplating his
up writing It is
in his late
Shakespeare was
isle,
voluntary retirement from the magic world of
power struggles of the commercial forties and died at 52.
writing and from the
theater.
He
gave
almost too painful to contemplate what further flowering Shake-
speare might have fifties
The
and the are coun-
there— or ever.
reworking of destructiveness at mid-life
early
They
can advance significantly in middle adulthood,
these opposing forces
though
moon"
represent the
and beyond.
come
He
had he been able to continue writing in his wrote King Lear and The Tempest during his Midto,
own conflicts between destruction and At this point power and love seemed totally antithetical to him. To seek and wield power was destructive, vain, illusory. To be loving,
life
Transition, in the heat of his
creation.
especially with daughters,
was to be joyous, blessed, forgiven, engaged in
"the mystery of things/' In his plays, as in his personal resolve the conflict
world of love. This
life,
he sought to
by renouncing power entirely and entering a quiet is
not really a solution. Lear dies before he can
newfound wisdom, and The Tempest conveniently ends the sea journey that will lead to his
as
test his
Prospero begins
new life.
Unfortunately, Shakespeare himself was not far enough into middle
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
228
adulthood to have made
much
not to
is
sponsibilities, or to try vainly to free oneself
from worldly
retire early
from
re-
passion and destruc-
all
but to seek a new balance of power and
tiveness,
The
progress in resolving this conflict.
great developmental task of this era
love.
It
is
critically
important, both to society and to the individual in middle adulthood, that
he accept the burdens and the pleasure of exercise authority with
he learn to
responsibility, that
some wisdom and compassion, and
that
he
tolerate
the guilt and pain that are the price of the self-conscious use of power.
Examining the
lives of several
hundred
many
artists in
and
countries
go through a mid-life
historical epochs, Jaques concludes that all artists
They become more aware of their mortality and must face their destructiveness more directly. Some men terminate their artistic careers crisis.
during this time. Those
who
continue their
work
artistic
in
middle adult-
hood, perhaps after a fallow period of several years, undergo a change
from what Jaques
calls
'precipitate" to "sculpted" creativity.
work, while not necessarily better in universal. It reflects the
all
respects,
The
latter
more profound and
is
developmental changes that begin with the Mid-
Transition.
life
If artists
talents
exhibit creativity in
its
most dramatic forms, men with other
demonstrate their individual modes of creativity
as they
The
resolve the great polarities of mid-life development.
begin to
not
result does
have to be a remarkable painting, symphony or novel. Creation takes myriad forms— products of enterprises.
comes
Whatever
in part
from an
from
its
his
all
kinds, relationships, imaginative acts, social
form, a man's
new
own
middle adulthood
distinctions
will use
between male and female, masculine and feminine, are
them.
The
then a woman.
me
briefly state their
meanings
as
terms "male" and "female" refer to biological genders.
A male is a boy in pre-adulthood, a man With few
in adulthood.
exceptions, every
human
A
female
being
is
a girl
and
starts life
with
A male
fetus
the biological potential to be a male or a female, but not both. will
and
destructiveness,
Polarity
"obvious" and yet often unclear. Let I
creativity in
intensification of the loving, life-affirming aspects of the self.
The Masculine/Feminine The
new
relationship to his
develop a reproductive system, musculature, and other biological fea-
men from women. The terms "masculine" and "feminine" refer to the meanings oi gender. They go beyond the purely biological to the social and psychological differtures that distinguish
The Other
Mid-life Individuation:
ences between male and female. In the course of our
229
Polarities
lives, all
of us receive
powerful messages regarding the fundamental differences between boys and
men and women. Images
girls,
tained in
The imagery
tutions.
and the feminine
of the masculine
ideologies, family patterns
all religions, political
though
exists in every society,
its
and
are con-
social insti-
content
specific
varies.
Every male selectively draws upon and adopts the gender images of his culture.
and
Gender
plays an important part in his relationships with
father, brothers
and other
figures
and
who
sisters,
male and female
mother
friends, teachers, lovers,
exist in reality or in his imagination.
Through the
experience with his mother, for example, a boy develops powerful feelings,
and conceptions regarding the feminine: the nurturing, good
fantasies
mother; the depriving, destructive mother; the
mother.
erotic, seductive
Out of these relationships he genwho represent the forms of masculin-
Likewise for father, siblings and others. erates ity
an internal cast of characters
and femininity that have
He
significance for him.
develops attitudes,
wishes and fantasies about the masculine and feminine in himself and
about linity
he
is
his relationships
with other
and femininity enter into man, who he wants
as a
men and women.
Feelings about mascu-
a man's gender identity— his sense of
to be,
and who he
is
terrified of being.
In most societies, there has been a splitting along gender lines: are masculine,
women
tion of masculinity certain religions cess.
are feminine,
and no one can be both. The
and femininity has been advocated
and philosophies, such
as
(Even here, the integration was seen
elite, chiefly
upper-class or monastic males,
who
as a spiritual goal
Buddhism, but with as achievable only
and only
men
integra-
by a small
after years of struggle.)
In the lives of most persons, and in the social institutions of almost societies, the splitting of
masculine and feminine has prevailed.
Two
and feminine, and dark, Yang and Yin— distinguish male from female.
thetical principles— variously identified as masculine
During the
last several
hundred
years, there has
There
in the ancient gender distinctions.
women same
now
are not categorically different
desires as
men and
can develop
is
by
rare suc-
all
anti-
light
been a slow reduction
a greater recognition
that
from men, that they have much the
much
the same
skills.
Women
are
allowed to be more "masculine" and to engage in certain traditionally
masculine pursuits, while
men
are permitted to
be more "feminine." None-
considerable splitting between masculine and feminine
theless,
a
exists in
our social institutions and our individual
yet clearly established the degree to
lives. Scientists
still
have not
which the various social-psychological
meanings of gender coincide with basic biological differences between males
and females.
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
23O
LIFE
The Masculine/Feminine polarity was of great importance to all the men in our study, though the specific content and conflicts varied enormously. Every man has his own gender identity. It is plain from their lives that the effort to attairr one's manhood is at its peak in early adulthood. As a young man starts making his way in the adult world, he wants to live in accord with the images, motives
and he tends
to his sense of masculinity,
aspects of his
self.
Any
and values that are most central
to neglect or repress the feminine
part of the self that he regards as feminine
experienced as dangerous.
A
young man struggling
to sustain his manliness
frightened by feelings and interests that seem womanly.
is
this anxiety
that
much
What
does
mean
it
to
One meaning
Masculine/Feminine
of femininity in a
man
that other forms are so tabooed
are far
is
is
that they are considered "signs" of uncon-
from
identical.
and personal
Many
homosexuals have strong masculine
qualities,
and many men who
heterosexual in their love lives have intense interests, deriving from feminine aspects of the
men— two
Five of our forty
homosexual
about them, and
One
his youth.
still
biologists
he was
are strongly
and
feelings
and three novelists— discussed seems
likely that a
few others
but were not ready to
interests
had homosexual
had had
biologist
When
others
traits
self.
activities or concerns. It
had had homosexual experiences or level.
feelings at a
homosexual
a period of extensive
in graduate school the
career only after he agreed to give
activity in
homosexuality was
They allowed him to continue up and enter psychotherapy. Over
it
next ten years he had several heterosexual love a year at age 29 to 30. his love life
was
When we
still
last
saw him,
through his interest in
age thirty
he decided on
on
his relationships
and
his
formed
commitment
at 39,
and was married
dis-
his
the for
he had not remarried
problematic. Another biologist entered a gay world
in his twenties, crisis,
affairs
talk
more unconscious
covered by the university authorities.
and
for
the form of femininity that
unadmitted homosexuality. Actually, femininity and homosexu-
identifications
their
personal quali-
polarity?
the most anxiety and moral outrage. Indeed, one of the main reasons
scious or ality
result of
homosexuality— the desire
is
a sexual relationship with another man. This elicits
What
be masculine or feminine?
are included within the
ties
One
of the self cannot be lived out or even experi-
in early adulthood.
enced
•
is
is
art
and
theater.
During a severe
own to obtain psychotherapy and work with men and women, his fears of his own creativity his
to biology as an occupation.
a satisfying marriage, started a family,
By
his late thirties
and entered a highly
he had creative
phase in his work. •
Another
set of qualities often associated
with manliness
is
bodily prow-
The Other
Mid-life Individuation:
and toughness— the stamina
ess
endure severe bodily
stress
undertake long, grueling work and
to
without "quitting." As opposed to
of masculinity, the feminine
is
conceived of as
attack, not having the bodily resources
toward valued
marine, the wrestler and the surgeon;
As we have
meaning
this
weak, vulnerable to
frail,
needed to sustain a persistent
goals. Masculinity in this sense
various occupations.
231
Polarities
we found many
seen, this
effort
often symbolized by the
is
other forms in the
image of masculinity was of
great importance to Jim Tracy as athletic boy, youthful military officer
young executive. The
rising
expressing a similar imagery in his
and
and
John Barnes (see Chapter 17) was involvement in hockey, skiing and sailing,
biologist
in his sense of himself as the indefatigable scientist
who
could spend
endless hours in the laboratory without complaining or giving up.
The
novelists
were more aware of the
draw upon
sidered feminine, but they could conflict.
They were by no means
sides of themselves they con-
free of the
it
only with considerable
"machismo" masculinity
usually
attributed to other occupations. Six of our ten novelists had a strong con-
cern with bodily endurance and prowess.
Some
had served
of these
military, trying desperately to prove themselves as
men
in the
combat and
in
having to overcome fears which they regarded as cowardly, shameful— and feminine.
Many had
and
a lifelong interest, as participants
competitive sports such as football, basketball and boxing. say whether they were
bodily •
It
A is
skill,
more
Nobel
This theme
was hard to
by the
meaning of masculinity involves achievement and ambition.
portrayed by the heroic
woman
It
attracted by the competitive aspect or
endurance and power.
related
Grail, the
spectators, in
is
man on
a quest for a treasure,
be
it
the Holy
Great American Novel or the Executive Suite.
Prize, the
related to the traditional division of labor in the family.
The
has been primarily responsible for raising the children, managing
the household and other work that keeps her within the domestic orbit.
The
man, on the other hand, has been the primary link between family and community. He has had the ultimate authority. His primary responsibility, carried out through his occupation,
well-being and
community
increasing separation of family steadily
more important
is
and occupation, a man's work has become
as the basis for his contribution to
for his self-esteem as husband, father
The
to provide for the family's material
standing. In the last few centuries, with the
division of labor
the family and
and person.
between husband and wife
aspect of the Masculine/Feminine polarity.
The
intensifies
another
qualities regarded as
mas-
culine involve success in work, getting ahead, earning one's fortune for
the sake of
self
and family. The
qualities regarded as
feminine involve
building the nest and ministering to the multiple needs of husband and
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
232
LIFE
The feminine woman
children.
her husband's advancement.
is
who
the devoted wife
she has a job,
If
as
it is
tries to
further
an unmarried
woman
seeking a husband, or in an occupation such as teaching or nursing where
she
appropriately maternal, subordinate and non-competitive with
is
To
man
the extent that a
own and
kinds of work, he must deal with his thing
missing in
is
him
as a
and 18).
Similarly,
stemmed
his
from
partly
its
difficulty
work was giving
in
and
painful feelings,
some-
feminine meanings
Namson
his career as
a vehicle for his masculine
writing
to
novels
as a creative, esthetic activity: it
came out
of his
own
was considered "queer" in several respects within
it
We
and business world.
find another version of this polarity in
Paulsen (see Chapters 8 and 18), the worker
Bill
of Paul
life
himself
no immediately useful product,
writing yielded
his family
the
in
was hard for him to give up
It
business executive, partly because this strivings.
others' feelings that
man.
This conflict played an important part (see Chapters 12
men.
has these "feminine" qualities or engages in these
who
Becoming
to enter the managerial ranks of industry.
a
sought desperately
manager represented
in part a validation of his manliness. His self-deceptive "puffery"
was
a
way
of handling the anxiety that he did not quite measure up, that he was
doomed
forever to remain with
joining the •
men who
The concern
the "girls" on the shop floor rather than
run the show.
with power and weakness
Masculine/Feminine
polarity.
is
yet another facet of the
For many men, the essence of masculinity
is
power: exercising control over- others, being (and being recognized as) a person of strong
symbolized
will, a leader
as feminine,
victimization by others exploitively.
is
to
who
"gets things done."
The
opposite pole,
be weak, submissive, unassertive, subject to
who have more power and
are ready to use
This version of the masculine and feminine
in terms of social relationships, of the
is
it
the analogue,
concern with bodily toughness-frailty
noted above.
When the splitting of power and weakness takes an extreme form, a man regards any sign of weakness in himself as intolerably feminine ous.
He
goes to great lengths to deny
ened by every sign of biological and
most marked form of line
on
this
theme
Finally, the
tinction
social decline at mid-life.
is
Masculine/ Feminine polarity
logical
intellectual, cooler,
feeh'ng. It
interested in
how
supposed to be more emotional and
is
height-
in all
men.
often reflected in the
women— more
things work.
intuitive,
more
dis-
men
are
analytical
and
often assumed that
is
and "reasonable" than
more
is
Perhaps the
the authoritarian personality. Vari-
be found, however,
between thinking and
by nature more are
are to
and danger-
existence. His anxiety
with excessive overvaluation of the mascu-
and anxiety about the feminine,
ations •
splitting,
its
Women
likely to
in turn
make
de-
The Other
Mid-life Individuation:
cisions
on the
basis of feelings rather
of masculine and feminine linity to skilled
thinking machine.
emotional needs of children and husband.
for the
this polarization requires a
extreme form,
its
than careful analysis. This definition
part of the broader pattern that ties mascu-
in a specialized occupational structure, femininity to
work
motherhood and caring In
is
233
Polarities
To be
He
occupation in a highly impersonal way.
man
be
to
a
kind of
he must devote himself to
truly masculine,
his
can allow himself a narrow
range of "manly" feelings relating to assertiveness, rivalry and task attain-
ment. But he
is
not permitted feelings that involve dependency, intimacy,
grief, sensuality, vulnerability.
feelings are associated with childish-
Such
and femininity. Within our study, the men who
ness
most highly
specialized
in thinking at
the expense of feeling were the biologists. For the most part, they were not
involved in the power-seeking, "macho" forms of masculinity.
compete
for political
power or
financial success or sexual conquest. But,
despite their often gentle manner, they
competed
the intellect. Trying to establish themselves in the science, they
showed no mercy
one, including themselves,
They did not
and
to their rivals
who might
to
fail
the realm of
fiercely in "first
felt
make
it.
rank" of biological
contempt
for every-
James Watson, win-
ner of the Nobel Prize for his part in discovering the structure of the
Helix.
The
philosopher Bertrand Russell wrote of his
of this pattern (see in
Chapter 2). John Barnes
is
own
DNA
The Double
molecule, has vividly described the competition in his book
efforts to get
out
but one of the biologists
our study whose one-sided commitment to the battle for intellectual
supremacy was accompanied by an alienation from feeling and aspects of the self that
he experienced
as feminine. In
all
other
Chapter 17 we
shall
witness the strength of this polarization in his early adulthood, and the efforts If
he made to reduce
we
it
in the Mid-life Transition.
look at the entire set of qualities just described,
a multifaceted pattern of masculinity in opposition to a
pattern of femininity.
A
unifying
theme
concern with doing, making, having.
in the
A man
is
we
discover
complementary
masculine pattern
is
a
supposed to get out there
and do something: perform, accomplish, produce, bring home the bacon. If his body is a vehicle for demonstrating his masculinity, he tries to acquire special strength, endurance, sexual
mind
is
virility,
athletic prowess. If his
the preferred vehicle, he uses thought as a weapon in the struggle
to win, to outmuscle his
rivals,
be
it
the arena, he wants to establish his place in the world of
men.
He
thoritative
Whatever work and of
in science, art or chess.
wants to become a productive, independent, responsible, au-
man who
has the mental and bodily capacities needed to attain
his goals.
The feminine
is
at the opposite pole.
To be
feminine
is
to lack bodily
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
234
LIFE
more concerned with
strength and stamina, to be
A woman may
thought.
be clever
expected to be consistently to analyze a
view,
that leads
to experience great depth of feeling, to
Perhaps the ultimate difference
be
is
imagery, the masculine form of creation it
work
difficult
him
to
be
task, or
and dependent,
soft
to accept second best rather than fight for the top. It
ing
than with
letting her feelings get in the way. In this
man
the feminine in a
it is
with a
logical, to stay
problem without
feeling
feminine way, but she can't be
in a
is
feminine of him
"sensitive," submissive, esthetic.
in is
the ways of creating. In this to produce
something by mak-
own design: planning, molding, erecting, transinto a new product. The specifically masculine form
according to one's
forming raw materials of creation
is
to build a bridge, invent a mousetrap, improve the design
The feminine form a sense, a woman
of a car.
dren. In
represented by conceiving and raising chil-
is
creates
an embryo, an infant and an adult.
But she does not "make" the child grow. Rather, she enables it to grow, this best when she accommodates to the inner laws of growth
and she does that govern
its
evolution.
Artistic creation
is
strongly feminine in this respect.
The
painter,
com-
poser or writer often has the experience of starting with a rudimentary
image or that
idea.
being pregnant: he has within himself a seed
like
It is
must be nurtured, given
When
female.
birth to, brought into being.
a youthful artist
The muses
are
cannot accept the creative-feminine
as
may imagine it as a muse inspiring his creative efforts. In middle adulthood he may become more accepting of the feminine, and allow the muse to be an intrinsic part of himself. This is a task of part of himself, he
the Mid-life Transition.
As
have
I
said,
young men
differ
widely in the relative predominance
of the masculine over the feminine
and
nine must be inhibited or
from the conscious ego.
be almost feminine.
entirely cut off
He
power
a
his
it
will it
be narrowly
will
A man may
exclude
masculine
his
No
seeker of
matter what vehicle he
in accord with his masculine
all
own weakHe may
strivings.
military hero, an ambitious
or of intellectual accomplishment.
and
which the femi-
no intimacy, no awareness of
no deviation from
a fearless adventurer,
fashions, values,
in the degree to
from the aspects of himself that he considers
allows himself
ness or dependency,
become
split off
imagery and
feminine qualities except those that are
expressed unconsciously.
A man who
is
afflicted
with this exaggerated masculinity
responsible father, but his children will experience tant
and demanding.
not both.
To him
He
will regard
women
him
as either
may be
a
as unloving, dis-
maternal or sexual;
the former are devoted mothers and wives but are
The Other
Mid-life Individuation:
sexually unexciting.
The
good
latter are
to have an intimate,
very
little
does not wish to
He
course, the splitting
or lover often tionship. ings, the
cannot have a friendship with a woman.
know any woman
himself well— especially the
Of
He puts He is contemptuous of the woman on a pedestal, but he is
puts the virtuous
emotionally close to neither.
He
not possible for this
mutual relationship with a woman.
of himself into any relationship.
woman and he
sexual
is
235
and fun, but
for sexual conquest
horrifying as mother, wife, sister or daughter. It
man
Polarities
work out
is
well because he
is
know
afraid to
masculine aspects of himself.
less
usually not so severe.
A man
and
his wife
a psychological "division of labor" in their rela-
The man is primarily responsible for certain interests and feelwoman for others. They establish a modus operandi in which the complement the weaknesses
strengths of one
of the other. Usually, his
special functions involve the qualities considered masculine, hers, femi-
nine.
There may
also
be interesting
cooking or the sharing of feelings, or
he
in occupation.
A ness.
complementarity of
this
While each partner
cover a wide range of
form a whole person.
is
kind
when he has an interest when she is more involved than
reversals, as
in
is
both strength and weak-
a source of
some respects, between them they and modes of living. Together, they
lacking in
skills,
feelings
A man may
relationship, as
he
relies
one-sided.
With
The same
is
in degree, the
and
values.
No
matter
how much
traditionally
great majority of
men
ness
of great importance to him.
still
so,
greater priority to the masculine as
but he cannot
difficulty in integrating
hood has many of adolescence;
he
is
A
strives to take his place in
it
to
feel
some
he understands
some
anxiety about
degree.
it.
He
He must
give
can make room
fully integrate the two.
the masculine and feminine in early adult-
sources. It stems partly
from personal immaturity.
He
he must
the feminine and must control or repress
for the feminine,
young man wants to grow
a
narrow view of masculinity, the idea of manli-
the world as a male adult. In doing
The
gender distinctions oper-
The
adulthood form an identity suffused with "masculine" images,
beyond the is
of the
and a good
true for her.
ate with great force in contemporary society.
desires
time,
he may come to accept and develop these qualities. As long on her to supply them, however, he remains incomplete and
Although there are variations in early
many
thus derive from his wife
feminine qualities he cannot nourish in himself.
young man
from cultural in his twenties
traditions, partly is
just barely
not developmentally ready to resolve
adult conflicts and achieve a highly integrated personality.
with what he's got," which means building a
first
adult
life
He
all ha.*
out
his pre-
to
"go
structure that
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
236
reflects
and
sustains his inner conflicts.
The
also from the magnitude of his evolving thirties his energies are
difficulty in integration
stems
In the twenties and
life tasks.
devoted to forming an occupation and a family.
Ordinarily he must meet heavy financial demands, pursue his goals, and face the stresses of day-to-day living.
There are
also biological reasons for
the usual predominance of the masculine over the feminine
among men
in early adulthood.
In short, a culine
man
normally works out a partial integration of the mas-
and feminine
in the late teens
He may
early adulthood.
and
early twenties, at the start of
resolve the conflicts further during the
Thirty Transition. During the phase of Becoming One's his late thirties, there
to achieve a
more
is
senior,
Age
Own Man,
in
a surge of masculine strivings, an intense effort
"manly" position
strength of the "little boy" in the
self.
in the
world and to reduce the
Most men
get to the late thirties
with roughly the same balance of masculine and feminine they had in
The
the early twenties.
Mid-life Transition
is
the next major develop-
mental opportunity to reintegrate the Masculine/Feminine
Developmental Gains
in
polarity.
Middle Adulthood
In the Mid-life Transition the balance
may
be improved. This
finally
is
not simply a matter of a quantitative drop in the strength of the masculine emphasis,
come
and an increase
new
qualitatively
new ways with
to terms in
femininity.
A man
typal figures in his
must form
required
is
life
structure
structure, the feminine will
task
is is
a
to
the basic meanings of masculinity and
new
a
What
The developmental
relationship to the various arche-
head that represent maleness and femaleness.
modify the existing
new
in the feminine.
integration of the two.
and work toward
have a larger and
a
new
He must
one. In this
freer part.
The mascu-
line may be reduced in some ways, but it may also gain fuller expression when one is less constrained by the need to inhibit the feminine. Finally, when masculine and feminine are less rigidly divided within the self, a man can combine them more creatively in work, in personal relationships,
in solitude
and
This change to the figure of
in his personal experience of living.
may
involve a man's relationship to his mother, especially
mother within
mally carries within himself a in a
complex
relationship.
his psyche.
little
boy and
In early adulthood he nora
The mother may be
mother who symbolized
are engaged
as a
powerful
enemy who can deprive, who may abandon him or
source of care and protection; as a powerful
smother and destroy him; leave
him open
to assault
as a
weak
figure
from a vengeful
father;
and so on and on. In
The Other
Mid-life Individuation:
the Mid-life Transition a
and
He
anxieties.
is
devour and seduce.
man
then
He
can partially free himself from these images
less
woman
with a
woman's power
afraid of a
to withhold,
can give more of himself, receive more from her,
and accept her greater independence. tively
237
Polarities
or to
work
He
more ready
is
work
to
collabora-
under her without
as a subordinate
feel-
ing emasculated. Similar processes are involved in his efforts to free himself
from the tyranny of internal fathers who make
become more manly and
to
him
difficult for
it
to utilize the feminine.
Likewise, the Mid-life Transition opens the possibility for change in
women. In
the character of a man's love iehtionships with peer
man wants
adulthood, a
a special
woman
numerous
to a large extent lacks within himself. This pattern, with
been the traditional
tions, has
A man
varia-
basis for stable family life in early adult-
hood. In middle adulthood, however, necessary nor desirable.
early
he needs but
to provide things
can
this
now
division
of labor
neither
is
reclaim the qualities he formerly
denied in himself and projected onto women.
He
can begin to recognize
that various archetypal figures— the inspiring muse, the tender lover, the
one who nurtures the young— are
growth and use
them, love them, and integrate them within
more able
to love a
he cannot accept
The life also
woman
if
he
his life.
will
He
for herself, rather than, for providing
makes
easier
it
mentor
a
some
of an adult.
and more rewarding to become
in a fuller sense until the forties.
of the
mentor.
a
A
and
make the
will
as a fully
is
hard to
novice or junior a child,
and developmental
he
will
but he
capabilities If
he
be overly giving or con-
relationship too unequal.
On
the other hand,
developed adult, he will be of help in certain
specific respects (such as providing
information or job opportunities) but
not grasp and respond to the younger man's developmental needs.
With is
it
A man
"good enough" mentor must; take account of both.
he regards him will
A
dependency and incompleteness of
regards His protege primarily as a child,
he
what
in himself.
also has the independence, inner resources
if
then be
further integration of the Masculine/Feminine polarity at mid-
adult has
trolling
in-
acknowledge will
can serve various mentor functions in early adulthood, but
become
These
in actuality parts of himself.
ternal figures are capable of further
greater resolution of the
better able to
Masculine/Feminine
combine the multiple aspects
can be more caring for a younger
man
polarity, a
man He
of the mentoring role.
without getting anxious about the
homosexual meanings that are actually involved or that may be attributed to
him by
others.
Not having
to maintain a rigid division
(thinking, performing, achieving) ing, fostering
between work
and personal relationships
(loving, car-
development), he can combine work and friendship
in vari-
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
238
He can be more critical and task-oriented in personal more compassionate and judicious in the exercise of authority. As his needs for power and success are modulated, he can give of himself with less competitive rivalry, envy and fear of being surpassed. As ous admixtures. relationships,
his sense of his
own development
strengthened, he can better under-
is
stand and support the development of other adults.
The work on
this polarity also enables a
man
to have
men woman is the man she
mentoring relationships with women. Very few
more developed
usually
and occupational
works
in the social
ment
to his position
than
scale
may be
entirely closed to her.
much for;
men do
The
a
in-
is
major-
not form serious friendships or non-romantic relationships
with women. Being a woman's mentor
man in early woman who is his If
lower
advance-
Much more
volved, however, than social distance or lack of opportunity. ity of
adulthood
in early
have female protegees. In the work world, a
a
is
hardly imaginable to
many men.
adulthood does begin a mentoring relationship with student, subordinate or friend, he tends to shape
it
to suit his masculine orientation. Seeing her as a bright student or worker,
he may emphasize her
intellect
regard his female student as a well but cannot
smart
girl
hope ever
to
man; she has no
to raise their family
abilities
to the exclusion of other
Or he may paternalistically charming little girl who does her lessons grow up and do a man's work. Daddy's
up to be the
traditionally grows
a successful
and
her femininity.
personal qualities, including
intelligent, cultured wife of
occupation of her own, but she works hard
and promote
advancement.
his
If
she enters a highly
masculine work world (such as law, medicine or business), a find herself
and
becoming "one of the men," with
all
woman may
their masculine strengths
limitations. Exaggerated masculinity can distort the personal devel-
of women as much as of men. The male mentor may discover that his protegee is an attractive woman. He may then offer limited mentoring largely as justification for a sexual
opment
mentoring
relationship; this kind of tate her development. In
some
is
fraudulent and not likely to
cases they
facili-
form a complex relationship
The value of these lovingThe woman may gain a good deal and occupational development, though she may
that has sexual, loving and mentoring aspects.
mentoring relationships
varies greatly.
in terms of her personal also
long.
be badly hurt.
By
its
modest friendship serious
It
is
hard to combine mentoring and romance for
nature, mentoring almost invariably ends in separation or
romance
is
after a
few
years,
whereas the preferred outcome of a
an enduring, equal relationship in marriage.
If
mentoring couple do marry, they have the advantage of considerable
the in-
timacy but they are faced with the problem of transforming the relationship to eliminate the mentoring.
A
husband cannot remain
his wife's
Mid-life Individuation:
The Other
239
Polarities
mentor. Like anyone in the recipient position, she must in time grow up
and go out on her own, or her development will be impaired. Fuller integration of the Masculine/Feminine polarity enables to
mentor younger women with
He
and sexual needs.
values
a
can appreciate a woman's feminine qualities
without having to deny or exploit them. As he seeks to develop his feminine
He
side,
own
he can learn from her and have a more equal relationship. without having
freer to enjoy the erotic aspects of their relationship
is
man
hurtful intrusion of his masculine
less
to be directly sexual. His efforts at integration offer her a
own
source of moral support for her
efforts to
model and
be a person who
is
a
both
feminine and achieving. Mid-life struggles with the Masculine/Feminine polarity— and their
frequently mixed success— are evident in the lives of
we
biographies in
some
are presenting. In the following chapters
men
detail the lives of these
four
all
we
men whose examine
shall
in the Mid-life Transition
and
its
aftermath.
The Attachment/Separateness
We
Polarity
use the term "attachment*' in the broadest sense, in order to en-
compass
all
attached
is
the forces that connect person and environment. to
Attachment
be engaged, involved, needy, plugged
in this sense
and takes many forms. that
I
care about
it,
hate
it,
many
want to obtain what
feelings
My
tached
when
I
am
sources
it offers,
find
it
interest-
inner readiness to be attached
and motives— dependency,
gression, ambition, affection, envy.
engagement by being
many
attached to the external world to the extent
ing or confusing or frightening.
strengthened by
To be
seeking, rooted.
a general condition that has
is
am
I
in,
The environment
too
sexuality,
may
elicit
exciting, challenging, hostile, depriving. I
is
ag-
my
am
at-
trying to adapt to, participate in or master the external
world.
At the opposite pole isolation or aloneness.
is
A
separateness. This
person
who
is
is
not the same thing as
alone, yet actively involved in
planning a future activity or in feeling resentful over a past rejection, nonetheless firmly attached to the external world.
when he
is
primarily involved in his inner
fantasy, play. His
main
interest
outside, but in constructing
closed world of his inner
is
A
person
world— a world
is
is
separate
of imagination,
not in adapting to the "real" world
and exploring an imagined world, the en-
self.
Separateness fosters individual growth and creative adaptation, though
it
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
24O
when
can be harmful
carried to
an extreme. The most pathological
represented by the schizophrenic person whose and who has only minimal relationships to people the environment. A more "healthy" form of extreme sepa-
form of separateness world
LIFE
is
totally private
is
and objects rateness
in
meditation and reverie, in which the person temporarily with-
is
draws attention from the environment and
A
experience.
The
in play.
between play in
though
it
The is
and is
he has
entirely occupied with inner
is
extreme example of separateness
the child absorbed
is
play goes on, as Winnicott has told us, at the boundary
"reality"
characters
The
less
and
The
"illusion."
child creates a setting, a cast of
a scenario depicting his imagined possibilities for living.
for the self:
it
allows the child to explore
mind for the future. may prepare him for
It is of
who he
is
and what
direct value in the world, al-
later adaptation.
composer
professional novelist or
involved with his
no
work
at
is
separate in that he
drawing upon his inner resources and trying to
self,
create a product that will be esthetically pleasing to himself. Since the
writing of words or music tion of attachment.
He
to a certain audience
is
is
part of his occupation,
he
also in a condi-
is
trying to create a product that will be pleasing
and that
him an income and
will provide
reputa-
tion.
The
creative artist thus works
and separateness.
He
on the boundary between attachment
sees himself as part of
humanity, and he cares about
the fate of his products in the future of humanity. Art
Through
he participates
it,
in society
and
is
is
his occupation.
attached to society.
To be
however, he must maintain some degree of separateness. His work must express and please himself, must be true to his own vision. Although his techniques and products are shaped by various external pressures, their ultimate source is within himself. If he cannot withdraw sufficiently creative,
from the engagement with others and draw upon sources, his
work
Persons of
all
become
will
ages
Separateness polarity.
world
is
lost
his
own
creative re-
and unconnected to the
self.
and occupations must deal with the Attachment/ If-
we become
and our capacity
attached to the environment,
growth and creative
repetitive, dry
effort.
rateness must be found
too separate, our contact with the
for survival jeopardized. If
we endanger our
we become
Although a balance of attachment and
at every age,
it
too
capacity for self-renewal,
will necessarily
sepa-
change from one
era of the life cycle to the next.
In pre-adulthood the child his
is
developing an ego capable of managing
powerful drives and using them for socially constructive purposes.
The
emotional forces of attachment must be harnessed in the service of adaptation.
The
child has to form stable relationships, acquire information
and
Mid-life Individuation:
and mature
skills,
where he can begin
to the point
independent adult.
With "good enough"
Polarities
241
living as a relatively
conditions of development, he
and character
acquires the learning, values
The Other
traits
required for adaptation
within his culture. Nonetheless, the forces of imagination and fantasy
some degree of separateness from the external him to nourish his creativity, sustain his individuality and develop his inner Dream. He must be attached enough to make a place for himself in society; but he must be separate enough to be able to strike out on his own, question the traditional forms, and enable
him
to maintain
world.
The
separateness allows
make
life
better for himself
and
others.
In early adulthood the balance ordinarily shifts markedly toward
at-
tachment at the expense of separateness. During the twenties and thirties, a
man
work
is
tremendously involved in entering the adult world and doing his
for the tribe.
He
forms a family and occupation, and accepts a
ries of increasing responsibilities (each step usually
quite ready to take
He must
it).
cope
coming before he
seis
with the stresses of financial hard-
ship, changes in residence, illness, death, war, depression, natural disaster
and
God."
"acts of
It is difficult
to find time for separateness— for soli-
tude, play and quiet self -renewal. Separateness
is
made
difficult partly
by
must be paid, the children cared for, the met. There are also the internal urgencies: establish his niche in society, attain his goals, become a hero. "make something of his life," and the tribe insists that he
external urgencies: the rent
work accomplished, the he wants to
He
tries to
crises
pay his dues. Between the internal push and the external
pull,
the Attach-
ment/ Separateness balance tilts strongly in the direction of attachment. Middle adulthood requires a more equal weighting of attachment and separateness.
During the Mid-life Transition, a
man
needs to reduce his
To do the work of reappraisal He has to discover what his He wants to find and lick his
heavy involvement in the external world.
and de-illusionment, he must turn inward. turmoil
is
about, and where he hurts.
wounds. Having been overly engaged to
become more engaged with
takes
on greater
someone
figure, to.
The
really
He
Self
want?
is
is
definition
and
man
the "I" a
do
I
feel
has in
about
my
living are in certain crucial respects
life?
How
shall
I
live in
not right for the
separate himself from the striving ego
To
becomes a more active internal must learn to talk with and listen mind when he asks, "What do I
vitality. It
feeling, in effect, that his present relationships, goals
he can better hear the
voices
the extent that a
man
he needs
himself. In this period the archetypal Self
that the conscious ego
How
in his worldly struggles,
and the external
Self.
the future?"
and
He
style of
needs to
pressures, so that
from within. succeeds in this task during middle adult-
THE SEASONS OF A
242
MAN S
LIFE
hood, the Self acquires an importance for him roughly equal to that of
He
the external world.
can draw more upon his inner resources and
dependent on external stimulation.
He
enjoys solitude more,
thus
less
since
he has internal company when other persons are absent.
value on possessions, rewards and social approval.
less
is
He
He
lives
places
more
in
the present and gains more satisfaction from the process of living— from
More
being rather than doing and having.
he can be more
As
man becomes more
a
touch with his
in
own
feelings,
esthetic, sensual, aware.
individuated and
a process of "detribalization" occurs.
more oriented
He becomes more
to the Self, of the
critical
tribe— the particular groups, institutions and traditions that have the greatest significance for
He
is
ues,
him, the
dependent upon
less
more able
which he is most attached. more questioning of tribal val-
social matrix to
tribal rewards,
to look at life
from a
universalistic perspective.
He
can
better appreciate his social origins without having to disparage other peoples
and
cultures.
Having
groups, he
is
away from
his origins,
He may
less
need to
and
idealize certain individuals
condemn others. If as a young man he broke he may now attempt someiorm of rapprochement.
inclined to
less
feel that
he was cheated or done
in
by the
tribe during early
may go through a stormy period when, like Job, he rages tribal God. To the extent that he resolves these conflicts, he
adulthood, and against the
can
move toward
a broader, less dependent perspective.
good and
universal view of
ence in himself and in
all
evil,
and a more
humanity. His
forms a more
tragic sense of their coexist-
spirituality
of an explicit religious doctrine, but often
He
he
may
take the form
tries to free
himself from
formal doctrine in order to attain a personal understanding of what
means
to
The less
be human.
turning inward and the detribalization are part of the shift toward
attachment.
The
result of this shift
gagement from the external world but
and separateness. to
End
it
A
A man who
normally not a marked disen-
major developmental task of middle adulthood
a better balance
society.
is
a greater integration of attachment
between the needs of the
attends
more
to the
self,
self
is
and the needs of
who becomes
less
tyran-
nized by his ambitions, dependencies and passions, can be involved with other individuals and perform his social roles in a more responsible
than ever before. his offspring self is
He
and other young adults
and responding to
less
way
can respond more to the developmental needs of
its
needs.
if
He
he
is
more
in
touch with his
can develop greater wisdom
focused upon the acquisition of specific
skills,
own if
he
knowledge and
rewards.
In order to care more deeply for others, he must
come
to care
more
Mid-life Individuation:
deeply for himself. Caring means that he
is
The Other
Polarities
243
mainly concerned not with
material comfort and success, but with self-development and integrity.
means that he will exercise authority with greater imagination and It means that, while he enjoys the power and the tangible he gains even greater satisfaction from creating a leadership, of rewards legacy, enjoying the intrinsic pleasures of work and having more individIt
compassion.
ualized, loving relationships.
A man
in early
adulthood
is
full
of intense desires: to win, to
be
Dream, to be highly regarded by those who matter (or, perhaps without admitting it, by everyone). With further development in middle adulthood, some of these desires fade away. Those that remain have a less urgent quality. They can also be realized more right, to achieve the noble
He
fully.
can be more loving, sensual, authoritative, intimate, solitary-
more attached and more
separate.
Conclusion he
If
is
to
make
pation, leisure
come more
significant mid-life changes in love relationships, occu-
and other important aspects of
individuated.
He must
basic divisions in the individual tal
a
and
his life, a
man must
be-
confront the great polarities that are in society. In successive
developmen-
periods from infancy through old age, especially the major transitions,
man
Though he
has an opportunity to reduce the internal splitting.
can never entirely overcome the divisions, he finds new ways of being Young/Old, Masculine/Feminine, Destructive/Creative and Attached/ Separate, according to his place in the life cycle.
Some men have early adulthood,
suffered such irreparable defeats in pre-adulthood or
and have been able to work so little on the tasks of the and outer resources for creat-
Mid-life Transition, that they lack the inner
ing a minimally adequate
life
middle age of constriction and decline. Other that
is
men
form a
life
face a
structure
reasonably viable in the world but poorly connected to the
They perform but their Still
They
structure in middle adulthood.
their social roles
lives are lacking in
other
men make
and do
their bit for themselves
and
self.
others,
inner excitement.
a start in the Mid-life Transition toward a mid-
dle adulthood that will have its own special satisfactions and burdens. For them, middle adulthood may be the most loving and creative season in
the
and
life cycle.
They
are less tyrannized
illusions of youth.
They
by the ambitions,
instinctual drives
are more deeply attached to others and yet
244
THE SEASONS OF A
more
separate,
its
MAN
LIFE
S
more centered
in the self.
For them, the season passes
in
proper rhythm.
The growth.
Mid-life Transition
Work on
is
not the
opportunity for change and
our developmental tasks can continue through middle
adulthood and beyond, and there are tate the process.
last
As long
later transitional periods to facili-
as life continues,
no period marks the end of
the opportunities and the burdens of further development.
r|^
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition
At the deepest level, a man's tasks in the Mid-life Transition are to work on the polarities that animate and divide him. This inner reintegration enables him to modify the life structure of the Settling Down period. In Chapter 13 we considered changes occurring in the domain of work: the meaning of success and failure and the place of a man's occupation in his life structure. I want now to discuss changes in three additional components of the life structure: the Dream, mentoring and fathering young adults, and marriage. In Chapter 18 we shall see how these
new
various modifications contribute to the formation of a in the ensuing period, Entering
structure
life
Middle Adulthood.
Modifying the Dream As a man attempts
in the Mid-life Transition to reappraise his life dur-
ing early adulthood, he
Dream
in
or left out?
If
coming One's
Most
tries to
understand and evaluate the place of the
In what ways has the
it.
Dream been
lived out,
there has been a "culminating event" at the end of Be-
Own Man,
of the
men
what consequences does
in our study
had
it
have for the Dream?
Dream. There were
a discernible
great variations, however, in the changing place of the
evolving
life
compromised
structure.
The Dream may be modest
Dream
in the
or heroic, vaguely
defined or crystal clear, a burning passion or a quiet guiding force, a source of inspiration, strength suit of the
Dream
and corrosive
conflict.
Some men make
the central element in the
everything else around
it.
life
structure
For other men, the pursuit of the Dream
continuing conflict with another occupation or way of flict
is
a
dominant motif
articulated
the pur-
and build
in their lives. Still other
living.
men
is
in
This con-
never form an
Dream.
The Dream grows
out of a primordial sense of self-in-world.
It
lends
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
246
excitement and
vitality to one's life. It
the experience that "I
ing:
matched, that
My
my
appropriate place in
my out,
my
and
self
my
world.
If I
is
Certain aspects of the
"If
this:
are conscious
attain the
I
live
it
meaning.
Dream and
Dream— if
illusory.
become
I
mixed
a
is
blessing.
But other
tied to reality.
and more
aspects are less conscious, less rational is
an
it
have no Dream or can find no way to
Dream
self.
legitimate and viable for both
Like most profoundly good things, the
lusion
feel-
properly
are
have a Dream and give
I
life— a place that
lacks genuine purpose or
life
and world
self
can be myself and can act in accordance with the
I
enriched to the extent that
life is
am"
associated with the "I
is
that
exist/'
The
central
il-
a great novelist or
make a special contribution to humanity or to my clan, if I gain great power— then life will be good and everything really important will come to me."
scientist,
if
I
For example, a young biologist wants to work university, to
investigator
do research
and
vate fantasies
professor.
and
and
in genetics,
Beyond
He
aspirations.
in
in a particular
however, he has other, more
this,
He
specific goals will bring all sorts of other rewards.
importance in his
field.
pri-
imagines that success in achieving the
a senior but a distinguished investigator, a historic
kind of
time to become a senior
Or he
Nobel
be not merely
will
laureate, a figure of
will achieve distinction at a
more
local level, through his contributions to the university or the community.
Whatever the
specific goals, reaching
them is— in John
— "the key to the treasure," the basis for the good
if
no
he
fails
to attain these goals his life will
be
life.
Barth's apt phrase
The
corollary
a total failure
is
that
and have
value.
The Dream aspirations
and
thus contains an imagined
self
having a variety of goals,
values, conscious as well as unconscious,
quest within a certain kind of world.
an imagined drama in which he engaged in a noble quest.
is
A
man's Dream
error,
his
myth,
complex world: a natural land-
scape, a varied cast of characters, social institutions
The
and pursuing
his personal
the central character, a would-be hero
portrays a
It
is
plot involves elemental struggles between
and
conflicting groups.
good and
evil,
truth and
beauty and ugliness, and the outcome has portentous consequences
for that entire world.
The
ures in the man's
To
self.
"hero of the Dream"
is
but one of many
fig-
the extent that this figure plays a predominant
part in the evolution of the life structure during early adulthood, other internal figures
The
and
youthful
parts of the self tend to
Dream
is
a
be neglected.
prime example of the ground
a vision of the adult self living the
sions develop. It
is
creating a soil in
which
joyful
hopes can flower,
it
in
good
which life.
illu-
While
also nourishes illusory
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition beliefs: that
I
am
capable of accomplishing everything the
my
ages, that certain others will unequivocally support
Dream
247 envis-
efforts, that ful-
the Dream will bring me true happiness. The Dream derives in part from the normal omnipotence fantasies of early childhood, when the distinction between wish and reality is poorly established. Some degree of "normal omnipotence" is required to strengthen one's courage in early adulthood when the possibility of realizing the Dream often seems slight. The hero can use a touch of arrogance, though in the end it may be his downfall. As Goethe said, "For a man to achieve all that is demanded of him, he must regard himself as greater than he is." One function of the mentor, and the wife, is to sustain the young man's Dream without questioning it too much or filling
making excessive demands that he A young man's Dream becomes as
he works to build
it
into his
it.
life.
He
basis in reality,
reality-based
gains admission to the appro-
skills
and
qualities of character,
strives to reach his goals.
Yet he
is
not simply
A
myth always has
and we must take account of the
reality in seeking
pursuing his career within a particular social matrix.
some
and
increasingly rational
needed
priate institutions, develops the
makes concrete plans and
attain
when we say that a man is enacting his Dream, are making plain that his activity has or his we myth, pursuing a far more profound meaning. A myth is a construction; it serves human to understand
needs and
it
its
workings. But
reflects
meanings stemming from deeper, often unconscious
sources in the personality
The more
and
in the culture.
course of the Mid-life Transition.
most pervasive after. is
Dream become
illusory aspects of the
illusions:
if
Discovering that this
is
not
have already mentioned one of the
I
the hero
is
so,
often a mind-boggling process for Transition.
life
Most men whose
evident during the
successful
he
will live happily ever
and dealing with the consequences, highly successful men in the Mid-
lives are
imbued with
Dream have
a
to
deal with the consequences of failure, or of flawed success.
There to the
times this
is
also the illusion of
omnipotence:
as
long
Dream he is invincible; he may suffer all may appear lost, but if he perseveres he
as
the hero
momentary will
One's
is
taking shape and has less grounding in reality, and in
Own Man, when
one has the "now or never" urge to
aspirations of early adulthood.
Jung speaks of "ego
inflation,"
experiences his internal hero figure as all-powerful.
as
it is,
deflation
is
at
The
when
a necessary step in
the
Becoming realize the
when
inflation
lowed, says Jung, by a period of "deflation" in which the hero
wounded. Painful
true
triumph. Beliefs of
kind tend to be strongest in the Early Adult Transition,
Dream
is
and
defeats
is
a is
man fol-
badly
overcoming the
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
248
dominance of the hero and forming
internal
a
more
integrated self dur-
ing the Mid-life Transition.
The tendency to minimize those parts Dream leads to various illusions about
the
to acknowledge that
Dream foils,
the
self.
He may
it.
A
background players— in the myth-drama.
fit
into
hard for a
man
and makes things
role,
illusion
enemies,
allies,
man's wife
which
often a
is
if
and
generally maternal
is
him. But he has
easier for
have the
he loves and rewards her
this process:
she performs well in her appointed
also
part— as
to play their
life exist solely
major beneficiary and victim of
caring
It is
he wants things that have nothing to do with the
or are actually antithetical to
that others in his
of the self that don't
difficulty regarding
her as a whole person and considering her independent talents and aspirations.
Finally, there
matters
no
is
flaws.
The
is
must be
enterprise
the illusion that the ultimate outcome of the heroic
The only success that fail. The hero can have
total success or total failure.
total success. To succeed partially is to The Dream must be perfectly realized.
the sense of omnipotence and the excitement of heroic
illusions,
drama give the Dream
its
intensity
and
But
inspirational qualities.
its
they contribute also to the tyranny of the Dream. Reducing this tyranny is
major task of the Mid-life Transition, whenever the Dream has had
a
an important place task
is
not to get
power: to make
and a
in a
rid of
its
man's the
and he
life
Dream
demands
is
in the grip of
its
altogether, but to reduce
less absolute; to
make
myth. The
its
excessive
success less essential
failure less disastrous; to diminish the magical-illusory qualities. Later,
man may
continue to seek excellence, but he gains more intrinsic en-
joyment from the process and product of cerned with recognition and power.
his efforts
and he
The men who have
is
less
con-
written most
eloquently about the corrupting effects of ambition, and about the im-
portance of "being" and "self-actualization," generally came to their sights in
middle adulthood
after a
in-
Mid-life Transition in which they
began slowly and painfully to reduce the tyranny of a powerful Dream. In reworking the Dream, a ladder.
As we have
seen, the
the definition of the Settling
man
also modifies the
Down
enterprise.
At around
man
reaches the top rung of his early adult ladder, a
the ladder
itself.
It is
definitions of success
tion the basic meanings of success If a
man
Of what
and
failure,
my
when he
well he has
has to ques-
and the value of the
has largely attained his goals, he asks
value are
40,
:
"What good
accomplishments to others, to
in
has to reappraise
how and failure. He
not just a matter of evaluating
done within the current
meaning of the
image of the ladder plays a central part
society,
ladder.
are they?
and
es-
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition
What
pecially to myself?
here?"
If
live
It is
achieve what
I still
wanted? Can
I
go from
accept the failure
I
without the things success might have brought?
alternatives— can
way
find a better
I
man
time in the Mid-life Transition for a
power and
he comes to be
excellence,
less
all
What
coming
of living for the
imagery of the ladder. Without losing
erful
I
he has failed in significant respects, he asks: "Is the failure
irrevocable or can
and
Where do
have been the costs?
249
to
are the
years?"
modulate the pow-
desire for accomplishment,
driven by ambition and
more
aware of the magical qualities he formerly attributed to reaching the top of the ladder. It to
fail.
He
is
no longer
more emphasis
and
failure in
to the quality of experience, to the intrinsic value of his
work and products, and
The imagery of The youthful hero Faust story
is
meaning
their
the ladder
and
to himself
others.
widespread in literature and mythology.
is
(warrior, artist, noble contributor to
gaged in a quest that
The
no longer catastrophic more complex terms, giving
essential to succeed,
evaluates his success
humanity)
is
en-
movement. mid-life making a
often symbolized in terms of upward
is
a classic portrayal of the
man
at
desperate effort to achieve omnipotence by selling his soul to the
last
power through knowledge— the hubris
Devil. In his case, the goal was of the scientist. Yeats,
who wrote
his greatest poetry after mid-life, often
poem
depicted his experience of major developmental transitions. His
"The Circus Animals' Desertion" .
I
.
.
Now that my ladder's gone
must
down where all
lie
contains these lines:
y
ladders start.
In the foul rag-and-bone shop oi the heart.
The relationship between Jung and Freud began when Jung was 31. Freud was 19 years older. It ended when Jung, then 38, stormily withdrew both from the friend-mentor ties and from his position of leadership in
the psychoanalytic movement.
was
in the
The
separation occurred
developmental period of Becoming One's
a severe mid-life
and established
crisis,
his
he went
own
his
own
when Jung
Own Man.
After
way, did his most creative work
school of depth psychology. In his late adult-
hood Jung was pressed to authorize publication between Freud and himself conducted during his his reluctance to publish
of the correspondence thirties.
Acknowledging
"that accursed correspondence," he wrote a
friend:
For
me
it is
an unfortunately unexpungeable reminder of the incredible
my
from cloud-cuckoo-land back to
youth [NB: age 31-38, DJL]. reality lasted a long time. In
my my hand
to the little clod of earth that
folly that filled
the days of
grim's Progress consisted in until
I
could reach out
The
journey
my
case Pil-
having to climb down a thousand ladders I
am.
THE SEASONS OF A
25O
Men who its
MAN S
LIFE
have pursued the Dream in early adulthood must reduce
hold in the Mid-life Transition. Other
and must deal with
man who himself.
this. Elia
men
40 began a valiant struggle to
at
He had become
have betrayed the Dream,
The Arrangement is about a regain his lost Dream or to kill
Kazan's novel
an advertising executive rather than the novel-
Dream. Having succeeded
in climbing the wrong ladder, empty life. His marriage was based on a relationship between his wife and the executive (but not the novelist) in him. They had been living for some years in an arrangement that ist
of his early
he was now trapped
in a fraudulent,
was destructive to both of them. parts of himself
He had
He
was withholding the most valued
from the world and could not
really love,
work or
play.
Greek ethnicity and with the parents and extended family who represented it. During his early forties, he sought lost
touch with
his
to confront the realities of his
life,
overcome the
to
illusions, to get off
the ladder and to understand what he really wanted. Alternately clear-
headed and
''out of his
mind," he had to sink to rock bottom before
finding a basis for change.
It
took several years before he could commit
new
himself to the choices around which a
life
structure
Reviewing Kazan's novel when he was himself novelist
James Baldwin poignantly stated the
Though we would like to live without we have none, this is not really
insist that
might be
built.
in his early forties, the
issue:
regrets,
and sometimes proudly
possible,
if
only because
we
are
When
more time stretches behind than stretches before one, some assessments, however reluctantly and incompletely, begin to be made. Between what one wishes to become and what one has become there is a momentous gap, which will now never be closed. And this gap seems to mortal.
operate as one's final margin, one's
between the
self as it is
even harder to gauge. lives, to
make
and the
Some
last
self as
opportunity, for creation.
one
sees
there
it,
is
And
also a distance,
of us are compelled, around the middle of our
a study of this baffling geography, less in the
hope of con-
quering these distances than in the determination that the distance shall
not become any greater.
Baldwin's hero.
own
He found
early
adulthood was very different from that of Kazan's
far greater obstacles
on the path
to the writing career,
though perhaps fewer seductions to lure him away from
it.
Still,
Baldwin
remained true to the Dream. By age 40 he was a distinguished writer and probably the foremost Black American writer of his generation. Yet he too had to acknowledge the distance "between the self as
us
who
one
sees it." In this
book
review,
he
self as it
The
and the
make a study may extend the
"are compelled, around the middle of our lives, to
of this baffling geography."
is
links himself to the rest of
geographical study,
if
I
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition
metaphor,
is
mapping expedition
a
some
traveler discovers that
others
real,
and that the
been able to
A
in a territory often experienced as a
with long stretches of sand enlivened by occasional oases. The
desert,
make
of the perceived water holes are mirages,
how
Slowly he learns
see.
more
territory contains far
resources than he has
below the surface and
to look
to
use of the treasures he finds there.
person like Baldwin,
and with greater on
heavily
fidelity to
who
has lived his early adulthood
Dream than Kazan's creating a new structure
the
his earlier life in
Adulthood. Yet he too goes through a mid-life
between
disparities
had hoped
for
Dream and
early
and the
life
Acknowledging
for
crisis.
gap
is,
as
He
experiences the
his
Middle adulthood can be
free to
a creative era
if,
and only
he must be a remarkable
if,
When
a
never be oppor-
last
and expresses more of
Young
Relationship with
man comes
man no
his
own
he
longer is
more
wishes and talents.
chances are that he will contribute more to society to
a
writer, craftsman or leader,
be himself and to work according to
more
he
illusions that are so cen-
even the most creative early adulthood.
contributes
now
Baldwin claims, "one's
and contradictions and
to terms with the gaps
feels that
life
success— and, be-
•
tunity for creation."
tral in
fully
more Entering Middle
present reality, between the
he has forged. Despite
this
more
hero, can draw
cause of his success— he has the sense of "a gap which will closed/'
The
251
when
his life
his self.
Adults:
Mentoring and Fathering There a
are, as
we saw
earlier, parallels
mentor and that with
—goes through
a
between a man's relationship with
woman. The termination
of an intense
many ways like the ending of a love affair or crisis. The younger man— and usually the older as well process of de-illusionment. The younger man realizes,
mentor relationship a time of marital
a special
is
in
with some mixture of insight and distortion, that the relationship as beneficent as
he had imagined; the mentor
is
less
admirable,
is
less
not de-
voted to him, more concerned with his own needs and more human— than he had previously recognized. If he can come to appreciate and tolerate the mentor's human frailties, and if the two of them can find a mutual basis for being friends or colleagues, they may find a way to form a new relationship. Usually, they do not.
interests— in short,
Again, a key issue for the
man
in the Mid-life Transition
is
whether
THE SEASONS OF A
252
he can confront in himself
who
MAN S
LIFE
He must come
his illusions.
man must
gles to
become the
Dream
in their early adult forms, so
the early forties
it
hero.
is
As
a
give
must he
man
boy
strug-
up the ladder and the up the mentor. After
It is
time to become more of a
has had good enough mentoring, and
greater responsibility for furthering the
young man
may do an
in his thirties
ing and guiding younger persons.
he must
The
first
but he
becoming
adults.
A
excellent job of teaching, supervis-
To be
a
mentor
in a
a
mentor
deeper sense, how-
in the Mid-life Transition
A man
of 35
closely tied to people in their twenties.
tion older than they,
As he passes
eration.
on
will gladly take
have done the work of the Mid-life Transition.
process of
is still
he can resolve some
if
he
development of young
lated in part to the change in generations.
and more
in
40, however, the difference
Young people
him more
regard
He
is
is
is
re-
fully adult,
a half-genera-
the position of older brother than
more separated from him by the
feel
he
give
of the basic polarities of the Mid-life Transition,
father.
as
oneself.
If a
ever,
him
almost impossible to be a protege, though one can
always use good counsel and friendship.
mentor
to terms with the little
urgently needs a mentor figure to sustain
is
increased to a full gen-
than peer, and
as boss or "dad''
barriers of age, authority
and
social
network. Initially
he may
feel great
disappointment and
from the youthful generation. But gradually he ing.
He
is
entering a world of work, family and
most immediate
his
He
ties.
is
ferent
hood
he too
community
He
is
distant
becoming
chang-
is
life in
relationships are with people in their forties
becoming more
of early adulthood.
being ejected
loss at
finds that
which
and
fif-
from (and dominant over) the world a "senior" adult,
from the "junior" adulthood of the
thirties
something quite
and the "novice"
dif-
adult-
of the twenties.
The movement toward
a
more
senior position
is
clearest
when
it
in-
volves a tangible advance in status: promotion to a higher level in the
work organization; recognition
as
a
more
established writer, physician,
skilled worker; entry into the senior level of the
responsibilities for the older
and younger generations; gaining
spected, senior position in religious, civic are
many forms
advancement
is
of seniority
extended family, with
and many
a
more
re-
and other organizations. There
levels of
achievement, but some
man
can make a place for himself in the
man may have much
contact with persons in their twen-
neeeded so that a
middle adult generation.
At ties
mid-life a
and
thirties,
Even when the them something
but he cannot participate
as a full peer in their world.
relationships are equal in
many
respects,
he must
distinctive that reflects his greater maturity, his
offer
member-
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition ship in the generation of middle adulthood.
own
his
more
generation, he can
As he forms
a social base in
the generational
readily reach across
He
boundaries and establish relationships of mutual benefit.
what
Old
is
and use
middle age to enrich
his
younger and older generations.
himself, his ties
he
own
be isolated from his
will
is
and he may then
his relationships
he remains too
If
can keep
Young
youthful in himself, get in touch with both the
in others,
tied to
253
young
'and the
with the
he
adults,
Old in At the other extreme,
generation and split off from the
lose all generational ties.
may atrophy; but this is likely to mean that Young in himself and has become prematurely
with younger people
alienated from the
Old.
Being a mentor with young adults tionships available to a
mentor
faction of the
and
man
lies
women— facilitating
one of the most
is
in furthering the
to lead better lives according to their
development
form and
their efforts to
own
tal
It is
the
is
live
and
values
the development of children and adolescents function in early adulthood.
significant rela-
middle adulthood. The distinctive
in
of
man
young men
out their Dreams, abilities.
Nurturing
a major, age-appropriate
more elemental form
impulse. During middle adulthood, a
satis-
of the paren-
can take a further step and
nurture the development of young adults. Mentoring utilizes the parental impulse, but
it
individuation.
is
more complex and
As he
some degree of mid-life self, and of his own conman is more able to foster
requires
gains a stronger sense of
tinuing development in middle adulthood, a
the development of other adults.
There
is
obligation, of doing
altruism
is
something for
involved: the mentor
making productive use of is
mentoring— a sense of meeting an another being. But much more than
a measure of altruism in
is
doing something for himself.
own knowledge and
his
learning in ways not otherwise possible.
He
is
skill in
middle
He is He
age.
maintaining his connec-
He
tion with the forces of youthful energy in the world and in himself.
needs the recipient of mentoring is
time that
The
this
as
much
as
the recipient needs him.
It
simple truth become more widely known.
self-rejuvenation
and
creative
work of both mentor and subject
are furthered in "good enough" mentoring. But there are numerous haz-
and no relationship can be entirely free of them. The mentor is tempted to play the omnipotent Pygmalion, who, like Professor Higgins
ards,
in Shaw's play
and
My
Doolittle (female or male)
end Eliza must rebel Another hazard
is
make his Eliza own choosing. In the own development.
Fair Lady, egocentrically tries to into an image of his
in order to
that the
pursue her/his
mentor
is
continually tempted to exploit
the relationship, guiding the subject's work toward his it
for his
own fame
own ends and using may outshine
or fortune. Or, fearful that his protege'
THE SEASONS OF A
2 54
him, the mentor trol.
MAN S
LIFE
may engage
and con-
in destructive forms of discipline
At the other extreme, the mentor may devote himself with
altruism to the student's needs, creating an imbalance that destructive for both.
Of
make
course, both parties
is
excessive
ultimately
their contribution to
the nature and outcome of every relationship.
Mentoring "generativity."
part of a developmental process that Erikson has called
is
Through
this process, a
a growing awareness of the continuity of
He
erations.
who must him
in
feels a
man in middle adulthood forms human life and the flow of gen-
concern for the upcoming generation of young adults,
time be ready for the responsibilities of middle age.
It leads
to accept other burdens of his generation— exercising authority, pro-
viding leadership, making decisions that will have significant consequences for a
widening
circle of others.
worker in
in his village, the
The
basic process
similar for the farmer
is
his factory or union, the executive in his
firm, the political leader at a local, national or international level.
In his biography of Gandhi, Erikson has vividly portrayed the years from
40 to 60. At the
start of
middle adulthood, Gandhi returned to India from
South Africa and embarked upon
his political career. At 50, he led the became a testing ground for militant non-violence and established him as Mahatma, the leader of the entire nation against colonial rule. As he formed new relationships with his followers and with the generation of young adults, Gandhi was also working to be a good father to his young adult sons. The coexistence of his political success and
Ahmedabad
strike that
his paternal failure,
and the
intensity of his investment in both, illustrate
the complexities and paradoxes of adult development.
We
have discussed in Chapter 15 the ways in which a man's mid-life
work on the Masculine/Feminine polarity can affect his capability for mentoring, especially for being a mentor to women. This is potentially one of the
most
significant gains of the Mid-life Transition.
Good mentoring
is
one of the
middle adulthood can make to
special contributions that persons in
society.
Given the value that mentoring
has for the mentor, the recipient and society at large, little
of
it
actually occurs.
We
are held back
it is
tragic that so
by limitations
vidual development and in our institutional structures.
in our indi-
These limitations
and undermine relationships
serve to intensify intergenerational conflict
between the youthful and middle-aged generations.
The
process of
coming
a father in
As
a
man
becoming
new ways
a
mentor has
to offspring
parallels to the process of be-
who
are entering early adulthood.
passes 40, his older children are likely to be in or near adolescence.
Both father and
offspring
must
give
meaning
approaching early adulthood while he
is
a youthful father raising small children, he
to the fact that they are
leaving is
it
behind.
a father entering
No
longer
middle age
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition
and seeking new ways of spring.
As
their generational status changes,
tionships that include
some degree
tion than the rule. If
this
fail
not easy, and
is
entirely
them
to treat
to develop their
may move away in defiance and contempt. The difficulties between parents and their examined almost
rela-
it is
more the excep-
if
they were small
as
or they
youthful offspring have been
from the viewpoint of the
controlling, rejecting, moralistic, seductive
offspring.
Much
has
their variously doting,
and withholding
parents. If
we
from the vantage point of the parents,
also consider these relationships
are less prone to
responsibilities
own autonomy,
been written about the damage done to the youth by
we
new
faces
of loving, teaching, learning, supporting,
he continues
may submit and
he
off-
can form mutually satisfactory
best, they
working and playing together. But children, they
and young adult
relating to his adolescent
and new opportunities. At
255
make one
generation the villain and the other the
victim of the struggles that are so inherent in cross-generational relationships.
ing
Each
side
may
also
it
necessarily part of the problem; with greater understand-
is
be part of the solution. Looking
we can more
developmental perspective,
at the
readily appreciate
youth from a
how
their adoles-
cent growing pains are reflected in their conflicts with parents. Well, parents too have growing pains; and they too need to be understood from a developmental perspective.
I
problems hold for mothers
as well,
shall speak here of fathers.
though the
specific
The same basic issues may be
different.
At around 40
a
man
is
deeply involved in the
Young/Old
polarity.
This
developmental process has a powerful effect upon his relationships with his
and with young adults generally. When his own aging weighs upon him, their exuberant vitality is more likely to arouse his envy and resentment than his delight and forbearance. He may be preoccupied offspring
heavily
with grievances against his that they have inflicted
make him direct If
less
own
parents for the damage, real or imagined,
upon him
at different ages.
These preoccupations
appreciative of the (often similar) grievances his offspring
toward him.
he
feels
he has
lost or
betrayed his
own
early
Dream, he may
find
it
hard to give his wholehearted support and blessing to the Dreams of young adults.
When
his offspring
their adult goals,
he
is
own. Yet, when they do guilt
may undermine
show
signs of failure or confusion in pursuing
afraid that their lives will turn out as badly as his well,
he may resent their success. Anxiety and
his efforts to
be helpful and lead him instead to be
nagging and vindictive. Feeling acutely the failure or emptiness of his
they will have
ments.
it
better, that their success will
The genuine
desire that his children
life,
he may resolve that
make up
for his disappoint-
be happy, according to their
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
256
lights,
one of the great
is
a parent has
gifts
When
to offer.
a father
desperately wants his children to have the specific things he himself has
missed, however, the paternal interest too easily becomes a tyrannical de-
mand from which As he
they must in time free themselves.
resolves the mid-life polarities within himself, a father can respond
He
with more genuine care and wisdom to the needs of his offspring.
and
value their youthful hopes, accept their youthful awkwardness, his gifts
can
offer
with respect for their individuality.
Modifying the Marriage Many men forties
acknowledged.
from the
and
are able to consider seriously in their late thirties
A man may come Without being
start.
to recognize that the marriage
strongly in love,
he married
early
dimly
problems that they previously ignored or only
marital
was flawed for reasons
such as family pressure, convention, rebellion, social mobility or It
was thus
tionship.
Over time things got worse
first
a great fog of illusion has
time to see his wife
relationship.
He
is
assailed
of insight, distortion
and
them; he cannot share
him more
as
been
as a person
by new
lifted.
main
life,
Suddenly he
realizations,
interests
one of the children than
each with
there
is
it
and
He
thirties,
lover; she
society,
is
disap-
resentful over
is
he comes to
is
very differ-
different
man and
feel that his wife regards
him
experiences her as overly controlling or smothering in
depriving and humiliating in others.
is
from one
he may become acutely
with his marriage. Struggling to become more a
more by
her; she regards
or period that his marriage
seemed. But the process of change
period to the next. During the late fied
own admixture
its
have involved him in a world she cannot enjoy or share.
A man may discover at any age ent from what
the
their
no excitement between
pointed over his failure to accomplish their early goals; she his successes that
remained in
feels free for
and concerns with
as a friend
rela-
children and tradition.
and to understand the nature of
self -justification:
his
He
rather than better.
the marriage mainly out of attachment to family
Now
guilt.
the couple to create a satisfactory marital
difficult for
He may
find another
to
dissatis-
be affirmed
as a little boy.
some
respects,
woman who
is
more understanding, sharing and sensually evocative, and with whom he feels more of a person. This may lead to a "breaking out"— divorce and perhaps remarriage— or to a "other
of
life
structure that includes both the wife
and the
woman."
When a man becomes dissatisfied with his marriage during the period Becoming One's Own Man, he tends to attribute the problems more
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition to his wife than to himself.
and about the marital illusions
He may overcome
relationship, but
he
certain illusions about her
finds
it
about himself. His developmental thrust
the external world than toward exploring the
257
difficult to
is
examine
his
more toward mastering
self.
man is more able to look at himself and deal with illusions about himself. He is more ready to ask: "How did I contribute to the marital difficulties? Did I want my wife to be a certain kind of maternal figure? What led me to enter the marriage, to stay in it In the Mid-life Transition a
and then to question
for so long,
Working on
these questions
it?"
never easy, and the
is
man
himself
is
often
only dimly aware of his changing thoughts and feelings. At the height of
he may be unable to talk clearly about it or to sort out the own mind: he feels trapped and without clear direction, pulled
trie difficulty
issues in his
ways from the outside,
in opposite
Sometimes
it
is
the wife
more
marriage. Being
who
full of conflict
inside.
free of familial responsibilities in her late thirties or
early forties, she seeks to
expand her own horizons and
home. She becomes the voice
outside the
and despair
takes the initiative in reappraising the
start
new
enterprises
development and change.
of
Through the "division of labor" that often occurs in a marriage, the husband may then become the voice of the status quo. Moreover, a man who feels that his own youthfulness is in jeopardy may be more threatened than pleased by his wife's invitation to modify their liberation
from a primarily domestic
role,
lives. If
he can accept her
the partners can work together
toward a new and more intimate relationship, sharing well what they have in
common and
pursuing their separate interests on a more autonomous
basis.
In some families, the wife's growing assertiveness and freedom are
accompanied by the husband's severe decline. involvement in family this occurs,
Often
it is
it
life
a serious
and
the husband
is
feels increasingly
problem
a strong need to modify their
way— to
she
afraid of rocking the boat.
as
is
convey
the
Own Man
life.
fused
has less authority and
obsolescent at work.
When
for the entire family.
who makes
Becoming One's
In the period of
He
He
first
steps toward change.
or Mid-life Transition, he feels
tries— usually in an
this to his wife.
awkward
Though sympathetic
She regards
his
or con-
to his plight,
disappointment and malaise
an indirect assault upon her— an accusation that his troubles are basically
her
fault.
She
would lead and
life
structure. In this case
muddled
he
more is
serious
is
if
faced by both of them,
problems
in their marriage
the initiator of change, though often
in his initial efforts to clarify the
tion, while she
The
fears that his dissatisfactions,
to the recognition of
problems and find a new
direc-
the voice of stability and self-restriction.
marital difficulties that surface in the Mid-life Transition
may
lead
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
258
from separation and divorce to reworking and improve-
to various changes,
ment
some cases the grievances remain and They may divorce later (often, at around 50)
of the marriage. In
divide the couple.
for years in a state of
A
useful in understanding the marital
is
often becomes obvious, after
the husband and wife have developed
The
directions.
flaws that
some
years of marriage, that
at different rates
were present
one of the
partners.
them and
grievances, denies
come
usually
The
to a
clings to the status quo.
head during
a
new
Own Man. The
become unbearable
The
to
The
more
it
and
crisis in
Becom-
for several years, until
in circumstances upsets the
relationship will improve only
work conjointly on
efforts
may be contained
marked change
many
marital strains
period— especially the Age
a transitional
conflict
transitional period or a
equilibrium.
in different
other partner, while actually having
Thirty Transition or the Mid-life Transition— or during a ing One's
and
in the marriage at the start, plus
other problems that entered over the course of time, to
or continue
war or cold peace.
developmental perspective
difficulties. It
increasingly
if
both partners are ready
are able to synchronize their developmental
fully.
A man at this age may enter a serious love relationship with a younger woman. The spouse who "flies the coop"— it is usually the husband, but increasingly the wife— is typically the object of moral judgment rather than critical understanding by others. Those who place great value on the stability of the family often make an automatic negative judgment: men who do such things Or they see him as fine
are seen as morally corrupt or temporarily unhinged.
suffering
from "middlescence," a term that
on the other hand, are often equally stereotyped worthy for getting out of If
we
his rut
are to understand
it
and doing
his
we have
better,
with the Young/Old polarity: he
is
fixed
is
more
new in
will
relationships with
the Masculine/Feminine polarity.
If
he
is
to
is
be in vain.
women
to look at the extramarital It reflects a
man's struggles
being crushed by the dry,
On
the other hand, the ex-
of various ages
may
enable
him
He may
then be able to
utilize his
youth-
form appropriate to middle adulthood.
As the Mid-life Transition nears
make new
praise-
touch with the feminine in himself and others and to resolve
ful energies in a
to
man
seeking merely to recapture his adolescence, or to keep
immutably, the search
ploration of to get
he
If
in finding a
thing.
asserting his youthful vitality at a
time when he fears that the Young in him dying Old.
own
from a developmental perspective.
relationship
it
carries a
mixture of sympathy and depreciation. Ardent advocates of liberation,
its
end
in the mid-forties, a
man
has
choices or recommit himself on different terms to old choices.
improve
his current marriage, or to enter a
new one
that will
Modifying the Life Structure During the Mid-life Transition
be an improvement on the
He
self.
old,
some
has to accept
he must become
less illusioned
259
about him-
own
responsibility for those aspects of his
motivation and character that keep him from forming more adult relationships with
women. He
will
have to work for several years to develop a new
kind of relationship with a wife or lover
mutual to
effort.
Otherwise he
both partners, or he
of relationships with
will
who
women)
ready to join
him
in this
remain in a stagnant marriage destructive
embark upon
will
is
a
new marriage
(or a
new set new
that repeats the old hurtful themes with
variations.
The biographies to be many of the changes
nate
presented in the following chapters will illumiI
have
just discussed regarding marriage, father-
hood, mentoring and the Dream. In Chapter efforts life
made
to reappraise
and modify the
Transition lead to the formation of a
Entering Middle Adulthood.
life
new
18,
we
shall see
how
structure during the
the
Mid-
structure in the next period,
—
The
av
Life
of John Barnes,
Biologist
John Barnes was born in 1925 and grew up in a well-to-do, conservative, New England family with strong Puritan traditions. Integrity,
upper-class
control over emotion, avoidance of
Victorian sexual mores,
strict
display, high intellectual
achievement and public service were emphasized
in his pre-adult
successful
Wall
world and exemplified by his father, a minister's son and Street lawyer.
John was the youngest child of middle-aged
parents, a replacement for their
and been
self-
one previous son who had recently died
He was
mourned.
greatly
cared for by servants and sent to board-
ing school at age 13.
As a
who
he
child,
felt closest to
the caretaker of his parents'
summer
estate,
taught him cabinetmaking and "was almost a foster father" to him.
His family lacked intimacy and the free flow of affection. to his parents, especially his reserved father, with of the sea
and
sailing.
John was often I
critical
and
the parents being so
when
was attached
I
much
sisters
choose to believe, from a feeling of being low
But
older.
To some
who,
in a very
in the days
And the member complex," which
result of this I
still
is
extent, this was related to
major way
when
the crunch came, they were right and
the problem was.
it
was related to
made any
difference
was wrong, no matter what
I
that
it
I
had
"youngest
a very severe
have to a very major extent, I'm
His early experiences of being a "mere replacement" and "low the totem pole" in the family, and far from are the beginnings of a recurrent life
ing to be
first,
a love
controlling.
the totem pole in our family.
having two older
He
he shared
His mother preferred her oldest daughter and toward
have always suffered,
man on
whom
yet ending
up second,
first
afraid.
man on
in his mother's affections,
theme: the desperate desire and
after
striv-
all.
In a series of elite private boys' schools, he was a highly successful stu-
dent and athlete. Falling short was always distressing to him. Though not very gregarious, he always had one or two close friends. his oldest sister
law,
one of
began graduate school
whom
in biochemistry.
When Both
John especially admired, were biological
he was
8,
brothers-inscientists as
The
Life of John Barnes, Biologist
261
By age 12, he had formed the specific Dream of becoming a biochemist who would make great discoveries. Family encouragement, school success in science and hours in his home chemistry lab nourished his Dream and well.
built his confidence.
summers but afraid of intense involvement, constrained by family taboos and "being beaten out" by more forward fellows. Looking back, he
John was attracted to was shy, afraid of
several girls during his high school
he retreated to the security of
feels
about these other things,
I
his lab: "I didn't
have to be concerned
could always imagine that they weren't that
terribly important."
The Novice Phase John Barnes went through
Adult Transition (age 18 to 23) as an Harvard College and in military service. For many young
undergraduate at
men,
this
is
his Early
a time of discontinuity
and experimentation. In John's
there were few changes during these years. His school
with parents and others, his
Though
visions.
Dream and
secretly worried
ings with the few girls
life
goals
case,
his relationships
life,
underwent no major
re-
about the impersonal quality of his deal-
he managed to
date,
he found no way to change
this.
In service, from age 19 to 21, in environments very different from those of his pre-adult world,
became
he
felt freer to
open himself to new experience.
fascinated with the construction machines his outfit
imagined himself running a construction company. This pears in his fantasy to this day. first
sexual experiences.
Though
He
21,
started to
blossom in the army.
was
my
from
first
my
ding.
At
sexually
and
felt
"We
He
soon began an
interests that
affair
had
with Ellen, an
got right into the sex routine here, fairly
point of view, enjoyably.
I
guess
I
was carried away.
married."
Ellen were married right after graduation from college, largely
he believes because out at the
his
experience along those lines. Carried away in the sense that
we eventually got
He and
reap-
,
attractive Vassar student:
It
now approach women
he returned to college and pushed aside the
rapidly and,
Dream
some excitement
man.
like a
At
rival
these were neither full-fledged love affairs
nor intimate friendships, he could
more
also recalls with
He
employed and
last
this
was "the right thing to do." She
tried to
back
minute but he persuaded her to go through with the wedthem was able to face the problems in their rela-
23, neither of
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
262
He
tionship.
was unaware that Ellen did not enjoy their lovemaking but
could not discuss
which held no
Dream. Their
with him. Also, her interest turned from science to
it
interest for
art,
him. Neither could get involved in the other's
relationship was not intimate, but he was not aware then
that anything was missing. "It was not quite like an 'arranged marriage' in
the foreign sense, but
might
it
just as well
have been."
In the period of Enteiing the Adult World, from age 23 to 28, John
was an enthusiastic and successful graduate student
Ph.D.
and stayed on
in biochemistry
During these
he did research under
years,
he admired. She was
clearly his
mentor
at Yale.
He
earned his
for a year as a postdoctoral fellow. a
prominent
woman
scientist
in the sense of being teacher, adviser
He
and sponsor, but the relationship did not become very personal. completely dominated by his Dream: "Science,
me
my
all
waking hours.
concerned— other than
It
is all
one
would never have occurred else in those days.
to
me
to be openly
something
that—
like
Grand times
in the lab
did, really."
Barnes recognizes that his exclusive concern with mastery of his pline, with hardly a thought about the wider
was typical of the apprenticeship years
He
Dream and with
to the I
would turn
He years.
connects
my hand
it
The
But he
in the physical sciences.
about himself and the world
with his extraordinarily strong commitment
his
omnipotent feeling that
to,
simply by deciding
was not able to invest
much
I
"I could
wanted
do anything
do
to
it."
of himself in his marriage during these
their first child
parenthood
failed to
The Age
when he was
26, the
second two years
They
later,
but
improve the marriage.
Thirty Transition, from age 28 to 34, was a time of important
changes in every area of Barnes's
and advancement. At
28,
his mentor's laboratory.
citing
com-
sexual relationship was suspended for long periods. Ellen
plained of his absence and his unresponsiveness to her feelings.
had
disci-
scientific or social implications,
also feels that his narrowness reflected naivete
around him.
was
work, the lab occupied
a lunchtime conversation or
about national policy or anything
and that
my
problem of
his
By
His career was marked by rapid growth
relatively
unformed novice, working
30, after a fellowship abroad,
own on
assistant professorship at
life.
he was a
he found an
the frontier of his field and accepted an
Columbia
University.
He
felt at
home
major institution in the Eastern intellectual establishment. school to which his father and
in ex-
many
It
in this
was the
generations of his family had gone.
In joining the Columbia faculty, he strengthened his
ties
with family
tradition.
Two
years of painstaking, solitary experimentation led to an important
discovery at 32, clearly a high point in his his
life.
He
work and of "The Time of the Big Excitement"
spoke of the joys of
:
The I
mean
absolutely
it's
consuming
.
.
Life of John Barnes, Biologist
but you can only maintain
.
The drudgery
of excitement for relatively short periods of time.
doing
it
The high
took a couple of years.
levels of
263 kind
this
of actually
excitement don't
last
for very long. In this sense they are quite equivalent to, say, sporting events,
the other thing test, it
showed
obvious
—
whole
just like
letters.
We
up
it
were
photometer,
opening up
field
And
opening a door.
The most dramatic time have to look
As soon
get a big kick out of.
I
a
my
in
sitting
just carefully
in
my
.
that
it's
we made
as
and
.
is
this
the one crucial
was instantaneously
the exciting part!
scientific career
lab book, but in
.
all
came
that December. I'd
written out in big capital
the lab one night in front of the spectro-
mixing carefully prepared solutions, and we got
which I am now famous. I mean, there is no magic went through some perfectly straightforward operations and came up with what was at the time a very unexpected result. You don't a spectacular result for to
We
it.
just
it today. But that was very exciting. And in the course week we produced more fundamental information than in the of my scientific career, either before or since. I've actually done
think twice about of about a entire rest
then.
fairly well since
of real excitement.
It's
worth a
lot of dull
They wouldn't
excite
drudgery to have such periods
anyone
else obviously. It's a very
personal thing.
With
the publication of his discovery, he "became recognized ... as
a promising
young biochemist!" Early promotion
position was a powerful affirmation.
He
felt
(at 33)
that he
to a tenured
had proven
his
worth
in the scientific elite.
Many
engaged in a modern form of the ancient heroic
scientists are
quest, complete with the vanquishing of rivals for the prize.
(More than
damsel in
their first marriages, as rescuers of a
Barnes was
now
discoveries
and the acclaim of
in his marital life
improvement.
A
for a divorce.
She was
An
distress.)
In fantasy, John
the young hero, charging ahead toward a future of ever
more fundamental
The change
supreme (Nobel)
half of our scientists also experienced themselves, in
few months in love
was
his world.
initially painful, yet
after their
move
with someone
else
ultimately an
Columbia, Ellen asked
to
and wanted
to remarry.
attempt at reconciliation was followed by a "civilized" divorce. Despite
Barnes's relief at this solution to a mutually hurtful situation, the breakup of his marriage initiated a crisis
Well, unaware, I
it
was a big shock to a number of things. One, to be so
initially,
that the situation was getting as bad as
was perfectly aware that
anything extreme.
And
been carrying on with time, a fellow this,
but that
I I
knew
a
it
wasn't very good, but
it
it
totally
obviously was.
didn't occur to
me
there was a very personal insult in that Ellen
young man without
didn't recognize
it.
my knowing
about
The insult was not that And that really shook me
perfectly well.
it
for
as
had
some
she was doing up. Obviously
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
264
was not tuned
I
in
the local environment and
to
that message
came
through very strongly.
From
moment
the
of the initial break, through the next few years of
trauma, the development of awareness of what people were thinking, with or without their saying
damn
took place. I'm no expert at
it,
sight better than
was.
I
I
time
it
it
now, but I'm a
from that point, because never
my lack of concern with this kind of thing been brought so my attention. It had been stated often enough by other people,
before had
forcefully to
but I
used to write
I
must
say,
but
It finally
it off.
My
still.
came home
at that point
—
a
little late,
wife tried to explain what she missed in our rela-
tionship by referring to "understanding" and "feelings."
But
I
simply did
not understand what these words meant to her. They didn't mean to
me
at the time.
And
among
therapy session, are what catalyzed the change, think she was probably right, even though
was talking about
much
discussions along these lines, including a family
at the time. It's
During the next three years
made
I
didn't really
other things.
know what
I
she
a lot sense since.
as a bachelor,
Barnes deliberately
He
room
in his life for personal relationships.
sisters
and her family than ever before, and had
made more
got closer to one of his
several affairs.
At 33 he
felt
ready to marry again. His courtship of Ann, though somewhat deliberate
and awkward, provided a good
basis for a relationship that
became
increas-
ingly intimate over the years.
Ann was
own
single, his
age,
and an extremely competent research
associate in a different area of biology.
to get the Ph.D. degree
and
She blamed
herself for her failure
for her limited professional
advancement, and
much satisfaction in her work for admired senior scientists. Her background, formative experiences and interests were so similar to John's that the two seemed to be "cut from the same cloth." Their rela-
she found
tionship,
though not very romantic or passionate, grew from congeniality
into a deep
bond
of affection
experienced before.
than competing
admired
his
and mutual understanding neither had ever well suited to play complementary rather
They were
roles, in
the social as well as the psychological sense. She
work and understood
his struggles in the competitive
academic
system. He, in turn, respected her as a scientific, intellectual and sports
companion and supported her
career aspirations.
They married
at 34, after
a year of courtship.
Settling
Down and Becoming
Barnes's stable 41,
life
One's
structure of the Settling
Down
Own Man period,
from age 34 to
was built upon the choices and developmental changes of the Age
The Thirty Transition. faculty
He
defined his tasks as a
and worked very hard
his wife
for
a
modest house
harbor. Avoiding formal social
of the senior
whenever
life
life
together and
became
town with
in a lovely small
possible, they led
a yacht
an active
often just the two of them, enjoying each other while working together
life,
in
new member
265
advancement. At the same time, he and
developed their relationship, built a
They bought
parents.
Life of John Barnes, Biologist
house and garden, hiking and
away from
Ann
but above
skiing,
relationship, as a
their beloved boat
others.
person and to share his personal concerns.
and emotional
issues that
was supportive to her through three her (and his) late
is
Occupationally, the Settling
self-confidence.
A
Ann
often drew his atten-
he had ignored. He,
the world; 'saving the world'
Down It
research career,
period began in the aftermath of his
is
some question
in fact, going to save
always couched in the terms that the world
have been saved and give you due adulation."
from the it
original discovery. If
three years
last
was high time to define a fundamental new problem and
most promising direction
had
He
he wanted a distinguished
to organize a large research enterprise. His uncertainty about
time, he
during
was a time of high hopes and great
with a shock, that he had been working for the
spin-off
in turn,
difficult years of psychoanalysis
was doing professionally was,
I
will recognize that they
grew into a minor
for his research
what was the crisis.
serious doubts about his creative talent. His
running a construction company fantasies of
deepening
their
year later, at 35: "There began to be
about whether what
first
more percep-
thirties.
big discovery and early promotion.
realized,
Through
he gradually learned to sense her moods, to understand her
tion to relationships
on the
on
Barnes, too, strictly controls her emotions, but she
and more strongly involved with
tive
all
it all.
now
reappeared in
full
force.
running bulldozers and of leaving science altogether.
For the
Dream
of
He had
The
crisis
short-lived, as he embarked on an ambitious new project. But young Professor Barnes found himself increasingly involved in the governing structure of his department. He became known as an articulate
was
much of He felt in-
speaker and leader. Teaching and administration began to take up his time, while his research project
moved
at a snail's pace.
creasingly constrained under an autocratic chairman.
At offers,
37,
Barnes became director of his
and received an
early
promotion to
own
lab,
refused several job
full professor.
His project had
been funded, but progress was slow and the chances for success uncertain.
At this on him
point, an old friend in the university administration put pressure
decline.
As
to take
on the chairmanship of
his friend
Barnes's ambition to
was well aware,
a related
department that was in
this special mission
become number one
appealed to John
as well as to his aristocratic sense
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
266
of noblesse oblige— all the tie
to Columbia.
would
On
more important because of his strong family knew that the chairmanship
the other hand, Barnes
and he had the
interfere with his research,
of administration as a
scientist's
low opinion
form of work. Despite serious misgivings, he began
the chairmanship at 38.
become
Barnes's striving to
attempt to become a
his
and
search;
own man proceeded
his
rank through pioneering
scientist of the first
advancement to leadership positions
his
along two lines:
in the laboratory
re-
and
the university. Between 33 and 37 he became a "senior member" in his institution. Yet, as hi told us several years later, he still felt very "junior,"
much
he had
as
was
too,
still
in relation to his family in childhood.
very limited.
The
His inner autonomy,
largely unrecognized "little
boy"
in
him
still
needed to become number one and constantly sought recognition from colleagues. This
deflected
made him
him from the
his
vulnerable to the pressures of the university and
pursuit of his
Dream.
John Barnes took his administrative mission seriously and strengthening the department during his three-year term. He
Predictably,
succeeded in looks back
on
ship to himself.
most of loss:
it
He
much
gave
to others.
He
in his view of society,
life,
less
and
in his relation-
time and energy to research, delegating
experienced this change with a profound sense of
he was separated not only from "the
lab," the symbolic cradle of
but from the creative part of his
At the same time, he
science,
came
Self.
be-
increasingly involved in policy issues affecting his department, his
university
and
his discipline at the national
became chairman tus
done. But the chairmanship brought major
this as a job well
changes in his professional
from the
in 1963,
crisis in
and
his social
the nation's
life
and international
levels.
He
involvement received great impeduring the 1960s.
He wanted
to
contribute not only to basic science but also to the solution of social
problems.
When
John and
not succeed.
Ann
Ann
were married, they tried to have children but did
then reconciled herself to
this
and invested more
in her
At 40 "the bombTerrified that parenthood would destroy pregnant. she was dropped" shell her career, her marriage and the degree of inner equilibrium she had achieved through psychoanalysis, she was angry with her husband for career.
She was
in psychoanalysis during her late thirties.
:
making her pregnant. John was pleased with the prospect of another child, but accepted her decision to get a legal abortion on the grounds of age. Legal permission for abortion was not granted. As she later realized, she
was
secretly delighted to
At
41,
Ann
father. Despite
become
a
mother.
delivered a healthy boy they
ample means
time mother for a while.
for paid help,
The
first
two
named Henry after decided to become
Ann
years of her "retirement"
John's a full-
were
ex-
The tremely
John Barnes, Biologist
Life of
She missed her work keenly and struggled with
difficult.
of resentment, depression
feelings
and anxiety about motherhood. This
stressful
own
mid-life
when her husband was moving
period began just
267
into his
crisis.
Barnes's lieved that
Dream assumed most
creative
greater urgency as
work
in science
is
he approached
done before then.
40.
A
He
be-
conversa-
made a lasting he had by now accepted
tion with his father's lifelong friend around this time
impression on him. his failure to
The
become
man
older
a "legal star"
confided that
and was content
respected tax lawyer.
He had
with the good
was "perfectly
life; it
be a competent and
to
decided that stardom all
right to
time, however, Barnes was not ready to scale
is
not synonymous
be second best." At the
down
own
his
ambition.
he decided to give up the chairmanship and devote himself
Instead,
fully
to his research.
He
stepped
project
moved
down from into
its
the chairmanship as he approached 41, and his
final phase.
This was a crucial time for him, the
culmination of years of striving. For several months, one distraction after
He became
another claimed his attention and heightened the suspense. father of a little boy,
and
Yale. Flattered
But
offer."
change
in the
excited,
he
end Barnes
felt
were
said:
now
that this was his "last chance for a big
said no.
of
"The kudos almost
the
a prestigious chair at
He
found that he could not make a
at this stage of his work. Also, their ties to family
their love of place,
She
and that same week was offered
much
and
greater importance to
got him, but
now we
are
and
friends,
him and Ann. both glad we
stayed."
The A
Mid-life Transition
few months after refusing the Yale
project
and solved the problem.
To
offer,
Barnes completed his research
his great disappointment, a
team
at
another university had found the solution two weeks sooner. Neither
Barnes nor his
rivals
were nominated for the Nobel Prize. Although
his
was
an achievement of great importance and brought him international recognition, Barnes
had
line of research
now
shifting
a feeling of
begun twelve
deep
failure.
years before.
At
The
41,
he had completed a
frontiers of biology
and there was no chance that the body of
his
work
throughout early adulthood would merit the prize in the future. not become a scientist of the
would ever do his early
so.
first
rank and there seemed
little
were built
He had
chance he
Completion of the project was the culminating event of
adulthood and the beginning of his Mid-life Transition.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
268
The
year immediately following the end of the project, from age 41 to had the character of a moratorium, a breathing spell when he avoided making new commitments but did a lot of inner work. In his mind, he
42,
and
was a
failure
later,
memories of
he could hardly
so painful that
still
was more able to identify what had happened:
often have wondered what would have happened had the problem been or 35 rather than 41. He finished it at the same "I-don't-know-ism" comes on at least judging by
when he was 25
finished
time that
—
this feeling of
our friends. Oh,
all
time were
this
discuss them. His wife I
During the interviews two years
his life lacked direction.
my
brother had
terribly.
it
He
was
But
just awful.
it
seems to get over by the time you're 45 or so. So that, combined with a sabbatical, finishing his problem, Henry suddenly forcing John to think about kids again ... he was
And
old enough now!
at the time. All of these together
three years.
The Barnes a
And added
While
while.
Guggenheim
was
I
made
to the fact that
it
had
fellowship. Barnes
where
my
his friend
ally.
He
more
fruitful,
found
I
first
it
two or
for
for a
very hard.
year in Europe, supported by
a post as a visiting professor at the
Dennis was a leading field.
Every-
scientist.
These
six
months
and were of even greater value person-
discovered that several of his European counterparts, even those
successful than he, were plagued
uncertainty
One
my
of
feelings of
disappointment and
fessionally
than
We
I
He
is
if
you
and approach
will,
discussed
to
age, marital
life.
It's
all
aspects of our family problems
suffering
And we both
and our
feelings
and the intimate
about where the future
very
it isn't
have
is
details
going.
from the same problem, you know: we've done what
—now what? He's
out to do ten or fifteen years ago
But
in
it.
Royal Society, a big wheel solved.
is
both have very strong professional drives which we discuss
of our professional lives
set
who
advanced pro-
a little further
considerably and aren't sure they're a very good thing.
We're both
with Dennis:
am, but we are almost identical in terms of
the tendency to lone-wolf
We
talks
very good friends happens to be an Englishman
problems, business problems,
amusing.
by
much like his own. He had long and intimate
almost precisely the same situation.
we
him
miserable for
where, Barnes was recognized as a pioneer in his
were professionally very
other^kids are just about
was not very helpful there
I
retiring, so to speak,
family spent half of that
British university
Oh,
just thinking:
the messy department situation, which was obvious
for
scientifically.
him and
it
You'd think
isn't for
me.
We
a fellow of the
this
would be
all
worry and talk about
this a great deal.
Although they preferred to consider these problems options and rational choices, Barnes and his friend
in terms of external
came
to confide
what
The
Life of John Barnes, Biologist
269
each could barely admit to himself: acute disappointment at not winning the Nobel Prize, a feeling of failure in the face of considerable achieve-
ment. They agreed that they had an inordinate desire for recognition, that
were
their lives
removed from
far too
dominated by ambition. They were self-contained,
others. In
good husbands or human Little
some way, not
clear to
them, they were not
Henry was then only
and Ann was having
a year old
a difficult
time with new motherhood and the interruption of her career. Both
and John
they were receiving
felt
as
beings as they wished to be.
Ann
from the other than they had before
less
the child was born. She was resentful toward
him
for the pregnancy.
He
resented her decision to care for the youngster in their comfortable English
house rather than accompany him on a
warm
Dennis and
friendship with
trip to
his
the Middle East. Only the
family kept
them from
feeling
utterly miserable.
During the year following improved
greatly.
Ann made
and learned that her
became involved
in
their return to
difficulties
community
were no worse than the
activities.
trips.
He
They bought
others'.
She
They enjoyed
taking
him on
kept them from long-distance sailing but
otherwise didn't interfere with their middle-aged feared.
life
Henry, a healthy and active but
"pretty easy" 3-year-old, was a great pleasure.
hiking and camping
Columbia, the family
friends with mothers of children Henry's age
a choice piece of land
lives as
much
as they
and made plans to build
and bigger home. This expressed Ann's growing sense of
a
had
new
herself as a wife
and mother and of her place within the community. She was much more content with her
life
and was not
suffering
from the old depressions. One
remaining problem was Ann's reluctance to have sexual relations because of her fear of another accidental pregnancy. Despite this,
43
this
year— felt very committed to
his marriage
John— who turned
and spoke warmly of
their increasing closeness.
Barnes's professional
life
too was in a state of transition.
It
took almost
monograph on the major project. He obtained grants to continue research in this area, and many students and junior faculty were employed in his lab. But his own interest in it was limited. He began a small project in a new area but was not ready to make
three years to complete his full
a big personal
Just as
investment in
it.
he began the new work, the university administration urged him
to take the chairmanship of his original department,
perate
straits.
accepted
Now
it
He was
which was
in des-
the unanimous choice for this mission and reluctantly
for a three-year term.
44, Barnes started the chairmanship
department.
He
also
became an
associate
and began to rebuild the
dean of the medical school and
THE SEASONS OF A
27O
MAN S
LIFE
informed himself about the school's organizational structure,
He
personalities.
challenge excited
politics
invested enormous time and energy in these tasks.
him and he was
Yet he did
clearly a fine administrator.
not see this as a valued or enjoyable part of his professional
and
The
life.
He
denied
any interest in leadership or power, and was frustrated because administration kept
him away from
research.
He
strongly maintained that he accepted
At the same time, he understood that this temporary assignment offered him a way to keep busy and feel useful while he did the inner work that would enable this
burden only out of
him
to take a
Barnes
new
felt
a sense of obligation to the university.
step.
that he had reached an impasse in his
now, he had been unable to make the basis
becoming
first
a scientist of the
critical decisions that
on which
Worse, he could not find a
For some time
life.
to
faced him.
make them. His Dream
of
rank had formerly given meaning to his
and provided clear goals. The enterprise of the first half of his life was now completed, but his Dream was unrealized and, as it seemed, unrealizlife
Suddenly there was nothing to
able.
strive for. Life
had no meaning.
In interviews just before and after his 44th birthday, Barnes expressed
an urgent need for a worthwhile enterprise to which he could devote his life.
But how could he define what was worthwhile?
ered giving up his profession. Perhaps
path chosen
when he was
12 years old.
it
He wanted
bution but could not think of a suitable over
all
aspects of his
tion: should
life.
He
seriously consid-
was a mistake to continue on
role.
to
The
make
ten interviews ranged
Again and again, he returned to the same ques-
he recommit himself to research? Each time he approached
the problem from a different angle, bringing out another conflict.
came
clear that
ing to cially
he was working on a number of mid-life
manage the
issues
It be-
and attempt-
painful feelings associated with them. This was espe-
hard because of his
One problem was
rationalistic
approach.
the discrepancy between his youthful
Asked whether he had come
actual accomplishment. failure to
a
a social contri-
win the Nobel
Prize,
about coming to terms with
Dream and
he frankly admitted: "Well,
it,
but clear recognition of
anything (in research) worth doing
the prize
if
is
his
to terms with his
it,
still
I
don't
certainly.
know So
is
not around the
corner?"
Despite his justified pride in himself as not "in the
first
many
rank."
To
past accomplishments, he regarded a
man
of his aspirations, this was
a bitter blow.
I
think
at the
I
can place myself
moment
as being, well,
fairly accurately
in the scientific
toward the top of the second
spectrum
class.
There
The
—
are the real luminaries at the top
then there's the
how
regardless of
rest of us, arrayed in various rings
would stand
class, I
Life of John Barnes, Biologist
fairly well,
And
they got there.
below. In the second
think, in terms of reputation in
I
271
my own
field.
think the status level at the
I
know, good, the way
moment
I'd like to think of
it is.
my mind
know,
a very
it's
.
.
.
He
away" very
if
often
he reduced
much
but obviously something's
as well as
everybody
else's.
don't
I
his
pessimism about his prospects
as a
was in excellent health and participated actively in several
Though he
sports.
You
that's probably
a very tough business.
it's
Concern about aging increased researcher.
deserves.
it
And
hard to see that happening at the moment. So,
a little
it's
about what
brilliant.
differently,
it
going to have to happen to change
And
just
is
but not
solid, well-recognized
his
felt fatigued,
he thought "much of
work pressures and got more
afraid of a decline in his
it
exercise.
mental powers and
would go
But he was
creativity:
"One
does atrophy," and "I haven't had a really good idea in years." At times he is
eager to begin work on a big problem in the
new
area, to feel creative
and
may be
too
experience again the excitement of discovery. But he fears late for
him:
The the
it
only problem that interests or not topple
field,
to begin at the
it,
but, well
fundamental
level.
otherwise well-understood system
is
me
is
the one which
—shake
its
is
foundations.
To work out one more to
me
just
going to topple
We
really
have
on some But, I mean,
detail
not interesting.
But going right along parallel with that feeling is also the feeling that: Jesus, you know, you're getting on and It's characteristic of the field, as we all know, it's not historically well documented, but by the time you're 40 you've blown it. the decision about what to do is an agonizing one because it's a most of
also impossible to do, for
it's
.
.
.
.
us.
.
.
little late. If
you make a mistake now,
in the lab and,
you know, use up
a few
as though you can run back months of your time. If you decide
it isn't
large it means cranking out a tremendous machine, some people, to get the job going and the lab set up, and it takes a long time. If you're going to do it, and you make a mistake, you've lost not a few months but a few years. And that's too long. to
do anything, by and
to get
money,
to hire
So you have to choose around
now
something is
and, uh,
wisely.
how
that's a little
Well, goddamnit, there's a
are
more
you going
to
intelligent than
generally that you do not. So
it's
make
lot of
smart
fellas
sure that you choose
what they do? And the answer
a very agonizing problem.
And
since the
coming along are very good, and have got a little more time to worry about it than you do, there's the tendency to think that, well, maybe this lab work really isn't so important, you know. Maybe we can make our contribution in some other area. young
fellows
"
THE SEASONS OF A
272
We
MAN S
:
LIFE
might say that John Barnes was
image of himself
recently,"
he
hands
That
to.
One was
up the
aware of several
the sense of omnipotence. "Until very
said, "I really felt that is
in the process of giving
He had become
the youthful hero.
as
about himself.
illusions
:
could do anything
I
slowly going now,
But
think.
I
this
would put
I
my
was a very strong
component of the whole thing. Another trait about which he felt great shame and embarrassment was the wish for kudos— for great recognition and acclaim
What I
I
could do
keep thinking
my own
and why don't we the answer
where
here's
me, which
There
is
like to
just
my
head
institution is
is
do
get off in a corner where
is
Now why
see.
impression
isn't that totally satisfying
Well,
in that direction?
that the answer
is
is
I
don't
know what
very unpleasant.
And
simply can't get away from the thing that really does trouble
I
an intense desire
Now
for kudos.
are various levels within that.
important
there
but
is,
would
I
work, and just
By
all
that
means being recognized.
odds the most intense and most
one's professional colleagues; most, of course, are not at the
where you work. The only way
to carry out research
which
highly significant, the larger the
in
which you maintain kudos
significant in quality and,
is
amount the more the kudos
if
it
is
You much
obviously.
have a team that is producing the maximum amount, which is always more than you can do with your own hands. It's a big organization. So you sit behind a desk and you don't do anything, really, you become a research administrator, willy nilly.
.
.
.
You
realize
very quickly, even with
graduate students, that there's a thing that counts. Sure, thing accomplished, but for I
it
from your
suppose. But
why
does
it
count?
peers, scientifically. ... it
I
It
the
getting some-
it's
counts because you get kudos
realized this as a graduate student,
didn't really take the kind of grip that
it
has at the
moment.
He would like to overcome this
Why if
be
"first"
What difference does it make? It must be something missing from one's inner be supported by having the adulatory comments of the
do you want kudos anyway?
doesn't. It seems to
man
childish wish to
you need to
me
there
external world in whatever form they come.
Barnes's relationships with students and colleagues provide a beautiful
example of
a
man
more
longer accept a
mentor himself
in the
is
middle of
a generational transition.
senior person as mentor.
attractive,
but he
is
The
just starting to
idea of
move
He
can no
becoming
a
in that direc-
The issue of mentoring came up in his response to a picture in the Thematic Apperception Test showing a young man and a middle-aged man. Barnes told a story about two actual scientists: the youthful Perutz tion.
working with
his
mentor,
Sir
Lawrence Bragg. In the
story,
they are talking
.
The
:
.
Life of
John Barnes, Biologist
about a problem Bragg "gave" to Perutz, for which the protege
Nobel Prize some twenty
.
273
won
the
and the interviewer
years later. Later, Barnes
had the following exchange: djl: In i960, you were Perutz, right? (Barnes bursts into laughter.) b:
And now we're Bragg (laughing) Which one are you now?
djl: b:
My
ideas are
still
confident about that as
Maybe
djl: b:
anybody
else's.
I'm
middle
in the
to put myself there.
I
is
somewhere
still
in the
middle
an accurate description.
really
the sense of thinking and doing myself.
to put myself in the
Bragg situation. Not that he doesn't have a
still,
we're not of that advanced scientific age.
have no one
in the
Perutz category.
It's
The
hard to have
I
have nobody that I'm fostering as an individual,
I
think, "Boy, this
is
the greatest guy to
it
much
Incredible! I'm just not used to that at
all.
When
ings.
I
must
say.
est
older.
That,
younger, because
me
very recently that
men
[chuckles].
me, and
This has ramifications in
that's all
come
as
one's deal-
During
I
think,
is
dictated by
my
he was a year or
early experience as the
young-
in the family.
his early forties the social value of his
of his life have
work and the meaning
assumed increasing importance for him. In his twenties
and
Barnes had enjoyed work "at the expense of other responsibilities,"
and had taken
for granted that his
Transition he
The
really
always tended to think, until very recently, that the other fellow's
member
thirties
I
pike."
ideas were probably better than mine, because in general
two
lot left,
the students think about
talking to younger faculty, they are not including I
?
member complex"
has only become evident to
a shock,
.
kind of a situation.
within our department I'm looked on as one of the older
something of
.
don't
It's difficult
other thing,
this
come down the
In this connection, he referred to his "youngest
I'm amused that
.
I
have a feeling that there's something
left professionally, in
but
life
not quite as
just
used to be (laughter)
you're the guy in between,
Somewhere
know how
I
better than
came
work had
social value.
During the Mid-
to question this.
questioning was stimulated partly by social changes occurring in
the late 1960s, changes that echoed Barnes's self-devaluation.
One was
own
inner depression and
the dethroning of the scientist as culture hero.
Science and technology were no longer hailed as instruments of progress,
but attacked research, the
as
agents of destruction and dehumanization. Instead of
new movements demanded
social
change and greater
"rele-
vance" in the university. At the same time, the Nixon administration was sharply curtailing funds for basic research and graduate education. For
:
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
274
LIFE
on what he held most
Barnes, these were direct attacks
could not help but agree with the
The new element must admit very
much
clearly
is
isn't that
gram."
.
public.
I
As
.
and today
"in,"
—which
I
Yet I'm
think
The
I
tenor of the public
what
care or pretzels or
now
it
me
think the real shocker to
also inclined to
on with the
research, let's get
tremendous, we got to the moon, .
a very disturbing one,
is
"out."
goddamned
—health
a definite change.
much
very
it's
hell with this
something"
delivery of
been injected
that's
Yet he
that in the early sixties research in molecular biology was
is
"The
is:
Which
—
sacred.
critics:
let's
they want.
is
was:
close
"My God,
up the
pro-
be sympathetic with the feelings of the
maybe we do have more than we need. had
a liberal in the late 1960s, Barnes
difficulty finding public goals
movements worth joining, and this coincided with his personal sense of futility. While his' own commitment to science was in question, he couldn't see his way to a new role, either as a teacher or an worth pursuing or
He felt guilty applying for research
administrator. guess
I
social
have a hang-up on
I
any significance
There
is
The
that.
funds
only problem
population control, in which
any other single problem which makes the
isn't
can see that's of
I
have no expertise at
I
all.
slightest bit of differ-
ence. If you don't solve the population problem, you can forget the rest
of
it.
At
44, in his
more
optimistic moods, he was attracted by various hu-
manitarian causes and social programs, perhaps most strongly by efforts to rebuild the inner
luxurious
no
life
cities.
He
was appalled
and the squalid housing
at the contrast
in the city nearby.
between
his
own
However, he had
special expertise in this field.
Probably in this day and age
it's
almost impossible to consider making
a positive contribution. So the other
something which
is
way
clearly not negative.
tions like the Peace Corps, say the answer at the
.
to look at .
which seems to be so
moment
is
it is,
you want to do
I'm very intrigued by organiza-
.
totally altruistic.
very mixed. I'm not at
all
I
would
convinced that
in that way. Sometimes you may help people most by hitting them over the head with a brick at least a figurative one. It's
you can help people
—
very hard to
know how
to
be
altruistic.
help people in the standard way
.
.
we thought
.
It's
very clear that you don't
in the past
about helping them.
Barnes had found no basis at 44 on which to make new ultimate despair is that life may have no meaning at all:
life
choices.
The
The
thing that's distressing to
goal that
I
consider worthwhile.
me I
at the
moment
have to couch
it
is
the absence of a
in the
framework of
The
John Barnes, Biologist
Life of
But
science, because that's the only thing I'm really trained to do.
the problem
is
perfectly general.
worth having at the moment.
me much more
worries
.
.
don't in
I .
This
all
think
honesty see a goal that's
what
is
I
275
me
really shakes
up. It
than what the hell I'm going to do in the next
year or two in detail. Usually people say, well, you know, the preservation of the
cerned,
human
Why?
race.
that's all there
if
to
is
That's not a useful goal as far as I'm con-
it.
Barnes often asked himself whether
it
was
really necessary to
have a
His brother-in-law had retired early and enjoyed himself, but this did
goal.
not seem satisfactory:
There are two things
—being
enjoy
I
of these are just personal enjoyments.
contributes a
mean,
month my resign
damn
what?
so
thing to anybody
don't know,
I
wife and
and go
off
it's
in a lab and being on a boat. Both But neither one of them necessarily else.
Now
tough to
come into
I
About twice a
decide we're going to toss in the sponge. We'll just
I
It certainly sticks
you away from everything and you don't have anymore. But
Even the wish
that's all right; it.
on the boat. The youngster's old enough,
problem. That's marvelous.
to anything
maybe
really see
it
isn't
so that's
no
your head in the sand, gets to bother
about contributing
enough.
for symbolic immortality,
for leaving a legacy, has
question:
But the leaving behind thing is intimately related to the question of I think it makes a damn whether anybody leaves anything behind or not. That's a value judgment on society. If it really isn't worth saving, whether
then whether you leave something behind or not
really doesn't
make any
difference.
John Barnes's pessimism despair.
and
in
before.
The
at
44 expressed yet another aspect of mid-life
dark side of life— death and destructiveness,
himself— came home to him
He wanted
in a
who
to be the hero
evil in
the world
more immediate way than ever gains immortality by saving the
world; and at the same time he wanted to destroy the world or run away
and
let it
destroy
had doubts that
Along with
itself.
society
is
his strong
worth saving:
"My
humanitarian concerns, he
feelings
about humanity are
unprintable." It
was apparent from Barnes's description of
his dreams, of his prob-
lems in dealing with anger, of his attitude toward the interviewing (he
once half-jokingly reproached the interviewer for having "singularly failed" to redefine
and solve
his
were beginning to mean a
problems )
,
much more
change going on more generally
that in this phase of his to him. This reflected
life feelings
and
intensified
in the course of his Mid-life Transition.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
276
Barnes had always presented himself as a rational, tough-minded person, somewhat removed from others and rather unaware of his own feelings. Now he was becoming much more interested in understanding others and
when people
himself. Just a few years earlier, he was astonished
told
him
how angry he had gotten at a meeting; now he began admitting to his wife how angry he got at meetings. The change was also evident in his relationship with his father. Until his early forties, this relationship had been rather distant. He was not able to say much about his father's death when it occurred, but his grief and anger were indirectly expressed in the themes of death, violence and aban-
donment
described in his dreams. At the end, he reminisced about his
father for the
much he
first
time, said
how
'Very fond" he had been of
him
regretted that his father never permitted
him and how know him.
truly to
Gradually, John Barnes was losing the illusion of immortality. His
growing sense of mortality was expressed the Thematic Apperception Test. buried in her arms: ''She
It
trauma— there really isn't any future!" When we talked with John Barnes
He
tion was ending.
was
woman
was of a
still
greatly clarified his problems
this
a picture in
with her face is
part of the
again at age 46, his Mid-life Transi-
some
struggling with
of the contradictions in
and had not found any one thing to replace
his life
sitting
"Maybe
distraught/' he said.
is
comment on
in his
his
and had begun to define
Dream. But he had a life structure for
middle adulthood. His family his mother's
life
was continuing along the
death soon after his
lines established earlier.
father's, John's
generation of the family was complete. He, into their
new home by the
down
He was
at
Satisfied
46 and began a large project in his new research
elected to the National
The most
Ann and Henry had moved
which gave them much pleasure.
department chairman had been accomplished, he
that his mission as
stepped
sea,
With
entry into the oldest
Academy
field.
of Science.
change between 44 and 46 was his greatly decreased concern for advancement and recognition, and his ability to gain intrinsic satisfaction
sidering
recently a
home
effort,
striking
from work and
how to made a
loan to a Black university
in the suburbs.
but
it
social contribution.
He and
his wife
were con-
They had employee, enabling him to buy
use their wealth in a socially constructive way.
clearly
Barnes belittled this
meant
problems for the recipient
a great deal to
as a
mere "conscience-salving"
him.
in this relationship
He
was sensitive to the
and concerned about mem-
bers of the man's family in an individualized way.
A
second change was the waning tyranny of the
Dream and
a lessened
compulsion "to do the right thing," in favor of greater inner autonomy.
The
"And
so I'm
whether
he
it's
coming around
to the point of view that
it
really isn't so
277
much
administration or straight research or teaching or whatever,"
'The burning
said.
Life of John Barnes, Biologist
issue
is
that the collection of things you
seem worthwhile, from your own point of view." At 50 Barnes had shaped a relatively satisfactory middle adulthood. His marriage and family
life
life
do should
structure for
continued to go well. His
wife had found a satisfactory balance between involvement in family, part-
time professional work and the ecology movement. His relationship with son gave him great satisfaction.
his nine-year-old
duties as
head of
a large laboratory,
manships and other leadership positions involved in the creative
new
research projects
He had
administrative
but resisted pressures to take chairin the university.
He
and discovered with
was actively
relief that his
powers were undiminished. His lab was sought out by a stream of
graduate students and postdoctoral fellows, and he greatly enjoyed his
mentor
relationships with several talented
He had
young people.
given up the image of himself as a youthful hero going out to
save the world, but had not yielded to the threatening specter of the
man.
dried-up, dying old
He
accepted himself as a middle-aged
man
of
considerable achievement, experience and integrity— and of serious short-
comings.
He
content to
felt privileged to
make
a
modest
citizen, scientist, teacher
sense of well-being.
be able to do work he enjoys, and he was social
contribution
as
parent,
and mentor to the younger generation.
concerned
He had
a
m A man early say,
Entering
Middle Adulthood
in the Mid-life Transition as long as
is
adulthood and
initiating
he
is
involved in terminating
middle adulthood— as long
as
he
within the great divide that separates and connects the two
so to
is,
eras.
At
around 45 (plus or minus two years), the developmental tasks change. He can no longer give so much energy to reappraising the past and reintegrating the polarities.
hood.
The main
It is
tasks
time to begin a new period, Entering Middle Adult-
now
are to
make
meaning and commitment, and build Entering the Adult transition
and
is
World
life
structure for the start of a
satisfactory provisional choices during the Mid-life
Transition and by 45 are ready to
new
around them. Like
a life structure
in the twenties, this period follows a cross-era
devoted to forming a
new era. Some men make create a
crucial choices, give these choices
structure.
commit themselves
to these choices
These men form an integrated structure
and
early in
Entering Middle Adulthood and use the remainder of this period to enrich their lives within this
framework (see Ralph Ochs and Richard Taylor,
is most work of the Mid-life Transition
below). This sequence
choices that a ally
man made
during the early
likely to
serves
occur
when
the developmental
mainly to reaffirm and enhance the
in a previous period, or that
he made provision-
forties.
For example, Richard Taylor decided
at
40 to make novel writing his
primary occupation. This was an important but provisional choice.
If it
had not worked, he would have been faced at 42 or 45 with the dreadful task of giving it up and forming another occupation. Fortunately, it did work, and by 45 the occupation of novelist had become a pillar for his emerging life structure. Similarly, at 40 he married the woman he had loved for several years; they hoped for a good and durable marriage but did not yet
know what
this crucial
but provisional choice,
established in his
they could build together. Over the next few years like that of occupation,
became
firmly
life.
In most cases, a
man
is
not able to form a stable structure at the
start
Entering Middle Adulthood
of Entering
Middle Adulthood. For various
him
does not feel right to they will help sustain
and build
a
new
it.
or does not
reasons, the life
work well enough
he has
279 at
45
for others so that
Although he wants to make major commitments
structure,
not easy to do
it is
He may
so.
need most of the
period of Entering Middle Adulthood to establish the choices on which a
new
life
structure can be built.
Many new steps must be taken, and their A man may separate from his wife,
widely.
exact nature and phasing vary quit his job, terminate a
sig-
move away from
his
mentor or
nificant relationship with a friend,
lover,
present neighborhood or region, break out of his whole early adult world.
These
are, as
were, negative choices.
it
he may succeed
in
improving
his life,
They
which
create a space within
may
but he
tempo-
find himself
rarily—and unhappily— suspended within this space until he can go on to
make some
The
and
positive choices
start
the restructuring.
rebuilding process, too, requires
many
steps.
He must do some him— and often
exploring to determine what options the world holds for there seem to be none.
He
has to
make and
Some do not work; he has to overcome He may enter a series of casual or
choices.
go on to others.
test
various preliminary
his
disappointment and
serious love relationships
before finding one that provides a mutually satisfactory basis for enduring choice;
may
he may find that the answer
find
no answer.
settling for
graphical
one that
He may suits
is
no such relationship
at
all;
or he
try several jobs, or several occupations, before
him well— or
moves before finding
He may make
poorly.
a place that
he
several geo-
him
likes or that offers
a
tolerable niche.
In short, an integrated structure
Middle Adulthood, or not
at
all.
may emerge
A man
long as his predominant developmental task structure.
The
period ends
when
early or late in Entering
stays in this period, is
however, as
to create a satisfactory
new
the task changes and he enters a
transition.
men go
Let us look at some of the diverse ways in which ing Middle Adulthood. As I've mentioned, the in age
from 35 to 45 during the
initial
viewed a few years
later.
four
men
about Enter-
our study ranged years later
We
had minor contact result,
we have
we
did
chosen for more
Namson, Paulsen and Tracy) were
viewing with a few others. As a the
The
in
Two
interviewing.
follow-up interviews with most of them. intensive study (Barnes,
men
again inter-
after the regular inter-
additional information on
age 45, of fifteen men who were aged 42 to 45 at the outset. the basis of these lives, we have constructed a picture of the changes
lives, after
On
that occur in Entering
Middle Adulthood. Although
sketchy than those for the preceding periods,
it
this picture
is
more
does show some of the
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
280
common themes and age at which
it
individual variations during this period.
began was
The
45.5.
reached 47 without beginning this before 43 or after 48.
Taking each occupational group several
men
The
average
was 44, and none of the period. doubt that it can
earliest
We
in turn,
men start
shall describe the lives of
I
Entering Middle Adulthood.
in the period of
Workers The
workers, like the other occupational groups, exhibit a wide range of
and
variability in. the nature
satisfactoriness of the life structures they
form
Middle Adulthood.
in Entering
Perhaps the most stable, yet continually evolving
was that of Ralph
life
Ochs. At 45, he is still working in the plumbing department of the factory where, at 18, he started as an apprentice to his father. A man of great
and modest
integrity
early
aspirations,
he enriched
his life over the course of
adulthood by his active involvement in organizing and running a
union, becoming a shop steward, and, as he passed 40, having increasingly
mentorial relationships with other workers. His major investment
He
in his family.
He would
three adolescent children. eldest son
Ochs
is
recognizes that this
trolling.
He
like all three to
is
a source of tension
between them, and he
takes delight in the talents
an active
Larry Strode tary service in
he was a
is
and insight to be helpful but not overly con-
and
projects of his youngest daugh-
the brightest and most successful of the children.
at being
go to college. His
graduating from high school and has no interest in college.
trying with considerable tact
ter,
now
is
speaks with unusual perceptiveness and caring about his
He
enjoys and works
father.
left a
Black middle-class
World War
skilled worker,
II.
At
home
in the
South following
40, after fifteen years in the
same
shop steward and occasional foreman.
mili-
factory,
He
was
oppressed by the realization that he could advance no further in industry
and that
his life
was of
little
value.
During
his Mid-life Transition
(age
40 to 45 ) he started his own barber shop, continued at the factory, completed high school, explored the work world for alternative occupations, ,
and
tried desperately to
improve
his failing marriage.
he had long wanted a career that would more minds and
souls.
At
45, Strode
The
son of a minister,
directly benefit
began to build a new
life structure.
human
He
left
the factory and became a mental health worker at a local hospital, while
continuing to manage his barber shop.
He
separated from his wife, and
Entering Middle Adulthood
divorced her a few years a
new occupation and
marriage, with
him, he was
later.
family
During the
he
late forties
281
tried to develop
(including the children of his former
life
whom
he was strongly involved). At 49, when we last saw beginning to succeed in making a life different from that
just
of his early adulthood.
Perhaps the most devastating story
He moved
Southern Black worker.
that of
is
Luke Doby, an uneducated
north at 16, married at 18, became a
He
construction worker and raised a family of eleven children.
37th year as a season of funerals
At 38
die."
his spleen
further childbearing. decline.
He
When He
:
was removed and
him and
had surgery to prevent
own man. Doby was working as a
a precipitous
could find no way to become his
saw him
I first
at 41,
to leave construction work,
The
masculine and a source of pride. torial,
his wife
These events marked the beginning of
regarded this as the worst year of his
forced
recalls his
"Every time you look around, somebody
life.
janitor in a factory.
His medical condition had
which he symbolized
He
was "inside," feminine and demeaning.
this
as "outside,"
only jobs he could find were
jani-
was becoming
obsolete in the family, which his wife was managing largely with welfare funds.
At
Over the next
his request,
several years
he would drop by
victim of bizarre accidents.
robbed and dumped miles
A
office occasionally.
helped arrange for his brief hospitalization at 43,
I
was drinking heavily and afraid to go "on the
back.
my
street."
He
Once he was picked up in a car by some men, away with severe stab wounds in the chest and
he was struck by a motorcycle and
year later
when he
was the repeated
lost
an eye.
A
state
mental hospital admitted him several times, and released him without adequate discharge plans. Twice he was in rehabilitation programs that gave
but
brief on-the-job training
by
his wife.
When
I
saw him
left
him unemployable. At 46 he was divorced
last, at
47,
he was getting
of a permanently unemployed, disabled, isolated
stabilized in the life
man, barely connected to
(now aged 9 to 30) and having few ways to "pass the time." Luke Doby made a profound impression on me and remains a curiously important figure in my mind. He reminds me of a story by Poe his children
called
The
"The Man
of the
narrator observes a
Crowd"
man
that
I
read
more than
walking in the downtown crowd, with a man-
ner so mysterious that he decides to follow him. lessly
for hours.
anywhere; he
is
haunted by a past so painful that the story cannot be a present that has
some
all
but
The man wanders aimman is not going
In the end, Poe realizes that the
and he endures years,
thirty years ago.
that awaits
the next phase of his
life.
him
no meaning. He may is
death.
He
told,
live briefly or for
can find no way to begin
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
282
William Paulsen: Completing Early Adulthood and Entering Middle Adulthood For
the Mid-life Transition was troubled. As
Bill Paulsen, too,
Chapter
8,
he began
his Settling
built a life structure that
components
tral
White
first
his
The
years.
of his life during the thirties were his job at
and
in
period around the age of 32, and
remained stable for the next eight
in Florida, his family
For the
Down
we saw
cen-
Bowles &
new home.
time, Bill felt established in an occupation that provided
an opportunity for advancement. operator," which was his
He
euphemism
the routine tasks of processing data.
described himself as a "computer
for a job as a clerical
He
worker
who
did
was paid by the hour and earned
$75 a week. As data processing became more important to Bowles & White's operation, he assumed a more supervisory role. He taught new people
how
My
computers and supervised their work.
to operate
computer operators would often read
a procedure
experienced programmer and not understand what the tell
them. So the engineers would bring
and
say,
if
"Here,
would you read
Bill,
some
in
this? See
if
trying to
new procedures
of their
you can understand
those nuts that you got working for you can understand
what we can do
written by an
man was
to get the information across to
them."
it.
I
Let
I
it
with
And nobody would
my
computer people.
say a word,
I'd say,
no questions
and
went back and
suggested, "Let's reword this or put an extra step in this procedure."
would go over
it
me know Then
"Okay, any questions?"
at all. I'd say, "All right,
you
guys are on your own."
He
saw himself
between workers and managers, helping each
as a link
group understand the other. confessor."
Soon he aspired
processing section. scription of his
A
He to
was a "chaplain," mediator and "father
become the
supervisor of the entire data-
thread of self-deception ran through Paulsen's de-
He
life.
workers and managers.
exaggerated his talent for mediating between
Not wanting
to think of his job as clerical,
he was
overly optimistic about his chances for advancement. So, as he established
himself in the job, he was sowing the seeds of future problems.
Down
His family was a key element in the Settling
continued to
was
still
angrily
feel that
difficult for
he would be "completely
them
to talk openly,
and
lost"
all
life structure.
without Ruth.
He It
too easy to withdraw
from budding disputes. Whatever the problems, the marriage
He
difficulties as a part of
being
Beneath the appearance of an unchanging marriage, however,
their
remained valuable to him.
accepted the
married.
I
:
Entering Middle Adulthood
life
was
in fact
When
going through major modifications.
Ruth had become pregnant and given it
They were no longer a more Bill began to think more
life.
family.
and the kind of
in terms of the future
33,
up." Instead, they saw themselves as
home and
mature, stable and devoted to
was
birth to their only child. Pete's
birth radically altered the nature of their
young couple out "whooping
Bill
283
life
he wanted for the three of
them. Ruth expressed the meaning of Pete's birth
this
purpose to go on or something to build toward.
I
way: "It gave us a
think our lives were
never complete before he came."
Paulsen drew a happy portrait of himself as father to Pete.
He saw
himself as a kind, interested and companionable father to his son, as his
had been to him. But he acknowledged that
father
were mixed: "I can't
He
him."
and
marked by
his persisting boyishness.
a brother to Pete.
Pete, unfortunately,
He knows
get.
no
say
with him sometimes and
to
is
Ruth understood
spoiled.
me, but you can.
fight. Pete's
.
off,
.
." If I
to
be both a
to
anything he wants he should
He
him.
leave the
upset.
me, "Daddy can't
tells
two of them alone,
they'll
said
had always been important
own. During the
first
I'll
come
in
and
say,
something the wrong way.
mad
at
He
me." But within an hour,
one another.
important part of the Settling
Florida. It
I
stalked off into his room. He's
half hour, they're back loving
their
feels that
no
gone into his room and closed the door.
"What's happened?" "He got
An
He
his father cannot say
He wanted
this well
go out for an hour and come back and there's been some sort of a
fight. I
went
can't live without
I
exercised the responsibilities of fatherhood, but his relationship
to Pete was
father
live
his feelings for Pete
Down
structure was their
for the Paulsens to
home
in
have a place of
three years in Florida, they had a "small but
& White. "Sharemoved into the area and "it began to look like a pig sty." Along with many of their friends, Bill and Ruth decided to move. They beautiful place" while Bill established himself at Bowles
croppers" then
found
the house they wanted near Fort Lauderdale.
just
My wife and I often said when we came back would give us nothing but pleasure if there was a way to lift that house off its foundation and fly it up to New York or Connecticut and put it down on a piece of property. It was a beautiful, comfortable home. It
was a beautiful home.
here that
By age
He
it
35, Bill
had established
developed a strong love of
his family in the
fishing,
leisure-time activity. "I love to fish,"
learned this from fish until
my
midnight.
and
he
it
said.
didn't catch
one
they
all
six in
fish I'd still
wanted.
a very important
"I'm the type of
father— who could go out at
If I
home
became
man—
the morning and
be happy because
I
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
284
had
by myself or with a group of guys and
a chance to get out
and have
a little fun/' This
was a good time in
was doing better than before.
home and
family,
from the age
He had
and enjoyable
He had come
leisure activities.
thirty crisis. His greater self-confidence
Paulsen was
38, his
and
after a long family
a duodenal ulcer
and was hospitalized
realized that his mother's presence placed
and
their marriage. Six
to Virginia. Although
months was a
it
In his late
thirties,
of the
else
and that
whole department. Without
give the impression that
encouragement
The
family.
I
I
family then agreed to
"my
capabilities
were
far
would probably become supervisor
realizing
it,
was above everybody
for this view of himself,
would walk around and
I
else." After receiving
no
he began to wonder whether he
was capable of handling a supervisory position: inadequate, he had no experience in
he sent her back
he chose to support Ruth
Paulsen came to feel that
above those of anybody
of the tension,
an intolerable burden on Ruth
difficult decision,
demands of his mother and mother in a nursing home.
great de-
a source of
again. Finally, Bill
after his mother's arrival,
against the
place his
made
Her presence again became
and Ruth. Perhaps because
intense conflict between Bill
Ruth developed
were
mother.
mother joined them
trying.
way
a long
assertiveness
squabble. Although she lived in a nearby apartment, she
mands and was enormously
he
a gratifying occupation, a beautiful
reflected in another difficult encounter with his
When
just relax
his life. In every respect
his
qualifications
management and no
were
training to
be a
manager.
By
39, his
begun to
He
felt
sour.
dream of becoming
Bill
was
ready and eager for advancement.
well and earned the support to
a supervisor at
For more than a year
Bowles & White had
in a state of intense conflict.
He
thought he had performed
and affirmation of the company.
He wanted
own man
within the
be a more senior member, to become more
his
organization and to assume greater responsibility and authority.
On
the
other hand, he had doubts about his managerial abilities and education.
became clear that he was not going to be promoted. He had gone as he could at Bowles & White. Bill, Ruth and Pete were comfortably settled in Florida. He liked working for Bowles & White, but he wanted urgently to get promoted. What should he do? Should he settle for what he had or try to get what he wanted elsewhere? At 40, Bill and Ruth decided to move back north, largely on his initiaIt
far as
tive.
His reasons were complex. In our view, his sense of urgency reflected
the need to failed to get
become it.
his
own man. He knew what he wanted, but he had
Bowles & White did not affirm
Florida full of self-doubt, yet driven to try again.
his aspiring self.
He
left
Entering Middle Adulthood
While
285
make this decision at 39, Paulsen had developed chest become convinced that he had heart disease. Extensive
trying to
pains and had
medical investigation had indicated that his pain was muscular and caused
by
Though
his "nervousness."
older and as vulnerable to disease, disability
The move began
New
great tension
he
time, moreover, he thought of himself as being
first
down on
care of himself, cutting
he was aware
relieved,
& White and the
of the toll taken by his defeat at Bowles
was under. For the
had been
his anxiety
and death.
his drinking
good job
well. Paulsen got a
He
began to take
and trying to stop smoking. Bing
at the
Company
in
York, in the computer section of a plant that built aerospace simu-
He
lators.
at Bowles & White and, most important, his him and took an interest in him. When his another plant in Hampton, New York, he warmly
was paid more than
young engineer,
boss, a
boss was transferred to
liked
Pleased, he accepted the invitation even meant another move. In Hampton, he was "an administrator in charge of all their documentation for computer application," and procured the software for the computer operation. The computers were used with various aerospace simulators. During his first three months at Hampton, he was involved in developing the simulation for the Apollo invited Paulsen to join him.
though
it
spacecraft.
Paulsen then worked on the Lunar Excursion
He and
program.
his family spent eight
as a "technical administrator"
nedy
for the installation of a
He
time for him.
and valued
efforts
felt
project.
LEM
Module
in Texas,
He
for the space
where he worked
next went to
Cape Ken-
simulator. This was an exciting
he was doing a good
job; his boss appreciated his
his capabilities.
thought from
I
on the
second
months
all
appearances that
I
was going to be going someplace
up those aerospace installations. I was going someplace in the sense that I might go up to supervisor over a small group of people after
I
finished
or even a manager. This was almost intimated to
up
This was in
and
his boss
he had tion. It
had
me
by
a couple of people
there.
finally
and
the high point of Paulsen's work career.
felt his
done well enough,
looked
first
many ways
his job,
as
though
his
boss liked and supported him. at 42, to
gamble would pay
sought in Florida would at
was reassuring
be promoted to
that, for the first time,
last
be
off,
He
He
liked
believed
a supervisory posi-
and that the goal he
his at the
Bing Company.
It
he had a boss who was interested in
helping him.
His boss was then made managing director of a program to develop a simulator for the F-111 fighter plane.
He
asked Bill to join him. Bill
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
286
agreed. "I figured,, this
is it."
After a few months on the
knew he had made
ever, Bill
a mistake.
F-m
The program was
project,
how-
"going steadily
down, down, down." Instead of being promoted to supervisor, he was doing the same work as before. He became moody and argumentative.
The
whom
situation worsened. His boss, to
he had tied
his
own
future, left
the company. In serious corporate difficulty, Bing merged with the Western
Corporation. Shortly after this a Bill Paulsen. Bill's
number
gamble
at
of employees were laid
40— to
give
find a supervisory job in the
East— had
ing event of the Settling
Down
off.
up the good
failed at 42.
Among them
life in
was
Florida and
This was the culminat-
period and the start of the Mid-life
Transition.
The Settling Down period thus proved to be a time of sharp contrasts. With the move to Florida at 32, he had created a stable and satisfying life
He
structure.
established himself in a promising
He and Ruth had Then he to
hope
home
a
and
they loved. Fishing became a major avocation.
reached for more than he could obtain.
become
to
satisfying occupation.
It
was not unreasonable
a supervisor in his unit, a higher hourly job.
But super-
vising "the whole department," and moving up to a management position, was a huge leap. It is seldom made, especially in the late thirties. Bill sought
more
responsibility
and more pay. Bowles & White denied him both.
own man was paramount at 40. It led him to make substantial changes. The family gave up its home in Florida for an apartment in New York, something none of them wanted. The stability Bill's
need to become
his
of the previous eight years was replaced by instability
was a gamble based on that rested
all
Bill's
too uneasily on his capacity for self-deception. Bill
placed his work at the center of his
home and
and uncertainty.
leisure pursuits.
It
estimation of his capabilities— an estimation
life.
He
was
These aspects of
now
less attentive to his family,
his life structure, so centrally
important in Florida, were shifted to the periphery
as
he pursued
his occupa-
Dream. At age 42, the gamble lost, Paulsen was assailed with doubts, questionings and despair. This was the beginning of his Mid-life Transition, and it
tional
was truly
a
Company
time of
in Connecticut.
responsibility at tracts expired I felt,
lives in
Desperate, he finally found a job with the P-E
crisis.
all.
and
The
only job he could get had no supervisory
After seven months, the company's government con-
Bill
was
laid off.
"This can't go on." Fortunately a
my
apartment complex
—
understand you're looking for a job." long as the
money
is
there." So
—
man this Mr. Kippman who me one night and said, "I
got hold of I
he and
said, "Sure, I
sat
I'm always looking as
down and he wrote
a resume'
Entering Middle Adulthood
me
for
so
he could
The
company on me and
his
sell
back to the company we're
killed,
ruse was successful.
At
get
me
in. If this
287
ever gets
the two of us.
44, shortly before our interviews began,
Paulsen got a job at United Electronics, with an income of $11,000 a year.
The
had had experience
resume* gave the impression that he
and United Electronics hired him
control,
in quality
as a quality control engineer.
In his desperation, Bill misrepresented himself and took work beyond his
The company was new and struggling to establish itself. It had no quality control program when Bill started, and he was "running
competence.
around the plant
like a
madman." There was
considerable conflict between
workers and their bosses: "In time, the company will get
we
out. Until that time
just
peons, so to speak. Right
Once
have
now I'm
in the
management and
middle of that
again, Bill pictured himself as the
man
straightened
itself
to fight the battle of
in the
battle."
middle, making
peace between workers and managers. As in the past, he believed that his skills as a
him,
as
mediator would get him promoted. His boss was grooming
he thought, to be "manager of quality control."
Joe thinks I'm fabulous. I'd say that job,
but I'm afraid there
is
I
was the
logical choice for the
something that may keep
me
from
—my own
it
way I talk to people. I think I give the impression to some people that maybe I'm above them because of my position. If I do this, and I was told this once before, it's not my intention. personal makeup, the
Though he
still
dreamed of getting
management
a
position,
he could
think more seriously about his limitations. I'm quite sure that experience at
it
the working man's self to
I
can do
it,
but
in the last five years. class,
it's I
the subordinate
management's point of view.
I
a fact that
I
haven't had too
much
tend to think and administer from class, as
opposed to orienting my-
tend more to go toward the lower
people than I do toward the big ones. If you get put into that slot, you get more responsibility than you've had to cope with before. Naturally there will be some situations where I'll be completely lost, but I feel I've always got somebody to talk to, to get help from.
He was afraid that he wouldn't be able to perform, same time reassured himself that he could do the job. Increasingly, these reassurances seemed shallow and unconvincing, even to Bill. After two previous failures, he was scrambling to realize his Dream, only It
and
was an old theme.
at the
to find
it
more
elusive than ever.
His marriage, and family were bothering him, too. Ruth was able to talk
more .openly with our interviewer about their difficult time. She knew how much he wanted to build a better life for the three of them, and how
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
250
rough
it
LIFE
was. But she was beginning to feel that Bill would not be able to
work things
out.
The
turmoil of their entire
ways.
Maybe
into a really
life
from under. The
"It's a slow process getting out
was eroding the marriage. strain
is
showing
the both of us are afraid what the results would be
many we got
in if
good argument."
She described an evening when ,BiH was
and got into an argument.
They were
43.
visiting friends
got angry and stomped out of the house.
Bill
he walked out/' Ruth said, "I knew that would be the end of everything. But he came back ten minutes later. That's the closest we came to actually bringing everything out into the open." For Ruth, this incident demon"If
strated
how
close they
were to breaking up their marriage.
Another problem was "I don't like
so
bad we can
taste
low income and job
ment was
a
their
home. They missed the home
my
apartment living and neither does but we
it,
just can't see
instability forced
symbol of
their turmoil
them
and
wife.
in Florida:
We want a house
our way clear right now." His
to live in apartments.
rootlessness.
The
apart-
Ruth no longer looked
forward to going to work or coming home. She too fought feelings of
"At
despair.
this stage
to go through.
I
too disappointed Paulsen's
just accept
it.
guess that's something you have
I
if
they didn't work out."
problems increased during these two tumultuous 42nd and 44th birthdays. His physician examined his
health
between
years,
I
don't count on things anymore because perhaps I'd be
his
lungs and said that he had to stop smoking because "things don't look very
good down there." But, under the massive
he couldn't
stress,
stop.
After working just a few months, Bill was laid off at United Electronics
and again began the agonizing search one and took market
it
in 1970,
although
he
it
was
for a job.
sixty miles
lucky to find work at
felt
Four months
later,
he found
from home. Given the job
all. It
was a small plant and he
was the only worker in quality control. There was tension on the job and
commute was
the daily
time since the
arduous.
He
began drinking heavily
for the first
difficult years after his father's death.
Just before Bill's 45th birthday, a dramatic event occurred. It
major impact on the course of his I
this
was going to work on a Monday and burning sensation in the back of
I'd
never had anything like
get
me
it
had a
life:
before.
over to the hospital. She got
I
my I
me
woke up
at 5: 30.
I
sat
up and got
didn't think that was right.
head.
I
woke
my
wife up and told her to
there and they called in this neuro-
knew that They kept me
had had
surgeon. After a couple of angiograms they
I
hemorrhage, but they couldn't locate
in the hospital for
about a month, but I
was
home
for
still
it.
me home. on the livingroom rug and
couldn't find anything, so the doctor sent
about a week when
I
collapsed
a brain
Entering Middle Adulthood
went back into the hospital
They performed another angiogram. This
again.
He
time the doctor found out what the trouble was.
up the ruptured blood
to patch
June in the hospital.
until
The neurosurgeon
miracle today. I
had been
released
God
he thanked
when he
He
that
explained
he was able
He
why
to repair
me
to
it
said
From
it.
about two weeks after the beginning of April
couldn't do a darn thing.
I
November
at least
March
say I'm a walking
I
was very fortunate and that
I
did the job until the beginning of June
me it would be until me go back to work.
operated and was able
spent from the middle of
I
serious. That's
from the hospital.
told
letting
vessel.
was very
It
289
before he would think of
Paulsen faced a multitude of problems. Although he had hospitalization insurance, he
had to pay the $3,000 doctor's
bill
himself.
for social security insurance or a veteran's pension.
ployment compensation because he was
He
He
ineligible
couldn't get unem-
employed by
still
was
his
company.
His supervisor promised to hold his job until he could return in a few
months. But when he
he was ready to return,
finally told the firm that
him and had no opening. Bill applied for unemployment compensation, but it didn't start until Christmas Eve. He started looking for work, with no success. More than a year later, he was they said that they had replaced
still
He
unemployed. on
It's
as
though
my
was painfully blunt
nerves that
there's going to
I
in assessing his situation:
haven't got a position yet.
be anything
And
in the near future.
I
it
feel
doesn't look
I'm not sup-
my family the way I should be. I can't depend on my wife to work. Thank God she has been for the last year or so while I've been laid up like porting
this. If it
I
got rid of one car last year because the
going to be sitting for bit.
We've had damn thing was
wasn't for her the family would have just gone to hell.
a real rough time.
We've been
six
months
or more.
And
fortunate in being able to
there are expenses, quite a
manage
so far. It's
been very
Very, very tight. But at least we've been paying a good portion of our
tight.
debts and have been able to keep food on the table. I
feel that
I'm not contributing to the welfare of the family.
income except unemployment and just
do not
like
Connecticut better
it's
being on
as far as
it.
to
me
this
is
But the employment
I'm concerned
is
I
have no
not a source of income.
I
situation in the state of
quite pathetic. Instead of getting
getting worse. Although local newspapers have a lot of jobs, these
companies don't want to touch people
They won't are three things
take you I
can think
the degree, or I'm too old.
and enjoyed
like myself.
on and you can't get
full recovery,
of:
I
You
but
all
a reason as to
why. Well, there
don't have the background, tell
them you had
they see
is
I
don't have
cerebral hemorrhages
cerebral hemorrhage. Recovery
way to heck over here to the side, but they can't even see it. They don't want to take a chance. I don't know what the hell I'm going to do. is
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
29O
LIFE
I'm running into a big blank body.
realize that that's
I
these depressed moods.
and
This
way
exactly the
it's
By
money
that the
ties,
needs,
me
makes
it
my
foremost on
is
I'm useless, no good to any-
feel that
I
I
get that feeling.
I
don't talk to anybody.
I'm absolutely useless because be.
I
else
because
feel
can't support
almost
It's
up and the heck with anybody
just closed
wrong, but
I
wall.
wrong, but even so
my
get into
around. This
is
is
way they should
family the
can't provide the necessi-
I
not there and that we cannot get
is
feel like a
I
was a clam
I
can't find a decent job.
I
mind. The idea that
who
like
my
son what he
dope, like an asshole.
was almost 47 and had been on unemployment insurHe had been job hunting energetically but
this time, Bill
ance for more than a year.
He
without success. His chances of getting what he wanted were slim.
An
struggled to accept the idea of taking a lower-level job.
was taking place in
his feelings
about himself and
I'm living for the present now.
then life.
so
it
may be
that I'm going to
don't know.
I
and then
On
say this
don't like that.
I
or four years. self
I
not for
is
in a short time.
if
a
good job comes along
to stay with I
me and
though I'm a
his future.
willing,
want
the other hand,
feel as
one job to another
God
important shift
may work
go looking someplace
little
month
too old right
now
my
to go
This has happened in the past three
maybe two,
to a different area,
good Lord! His education
lot of other things. If
is
For the
shall
first
I
say,
no
now
is
life.
I'm
And my
The
only way
I
good position someplace
for that matter,
where
I
son, of
more important than
keep moving him around, his education
to locate a
company
or even a large it,
I
three times a year.
right
don't want that to happen.
I
thing like that
about
I
from
wife a nervous wreck by going from one job to another, by
moving
and
or
don't like that feeling because I'm not only upsetting my-
course,
suffer,
But
else.
but I'm fouling up the well-being and the harmony of family
making
my
for the rest of
it
there for a
is
a
going to
can work on some-
company,
in a small
can function with no lying
bluffing.
time, he talked of settling for a small job that he
knew he
could do, rather than overreaching himself. His major concern was not
advancing to a managerial position; that to settle for a
Dream was
good deal less— a job with a
stable
gone.
He
was ready
income that would give
his family a settled life.
Paulsen feared the consequences of unemployment. sitting at
home
about not providing for It
frightened
him
his family,
was aware that
He
felt guilty
but he also enjoyed being looked
after.
to think that he could settle into the life of an invalid,
and he was quick to
The
He
doing nothing had some appeal for him.
insist that "I can't
go
this route/'
period from age 42 to 47 had been a transitional time, as he
moved
Entering Middle Adulthood
from the
life
new
to a
structure of the Settling
He went
structure.
many
apartments in
He
and Ruth.
Down
through a
291
period through various changes
The
series of jobs.
family lived in
There were increasing tensions between Bill and he was an invalid for many months. He was
locales.
nearly died,
out of touch with his old friends and unable to make
new
He
ones.
felt
His feeling of desperation turned to despair.
rootless, lonely, defeated.
At the same time, important developments were taking place. Paulsen was making a critical re-evaluation of himself and his capabilities. In his job at United Electronics, he had begun to come to terms with the fact that he would never be a manager, that he had lost the bet he made at age 40. Giving up this aspiration carried with it the hope that he might be able to settle for
There future. It grips
more limited
is
goals
and seek other
satisfactions.
evidence that Bill Paulsen at 47 was planning for a modest
was
as
with the
if
his illness
had both forced and enabled him
reality of his life.
He seemed
ready to
make
his peace
the world, to live with fewer illusions and to provide a stable family.
He
come
to
to
with
life for. his
was starting the period of Entering Middle Adulthood.
Novelists At 39 Kevin Tyrone was earlier life, see
Chapter
a novelist
6.)
and
Although
(For his
a professor of English.
his novels
were
"difficult" for the
average reader and not commercially successful, the critics considered a writer of remarkable promise novelists of his generation.
ing One's
Own Man
tions of self
who might become one
Over the next
six years,
of the foremost
the struggles of Becom-
and the Mid-life Transition led him into new explora-
and world. Although he didn't complete
time, he wrote
him
some unsuccessful
a novel during this
plays, involved himself in the
world of
the theater, and participated in various educational projects. Several years
were devoted to terminating the intense relationship with his long-term mentor. His marriage, which had been a since his early twenties,
came more deeply
mid-life crisis in his early forties,
occupational options, and tiveness, femininity
At
45,
support for his creative writing
vital
into question.
new ways
to deal
During a severe
new relationships, new with his own aging, destruc-
he searched
for
and separateness.
Tyrone began to
establish a life structure for Entering
Middle
Adulthood. Returning to his novels, he started on a major work in four volumes, which he completed over the next several years. his
commitment
to the marriage, but
He
reaffirmed
on new terms and with a
clearer
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
292
understanding of
living,
and
and
professor.
a
limitations. After the peregrinations of
45 was in
life after
he was
of the thirties: novelist
meaning and
its
the early forties, his
LIFE
Yet there were
in the self that
many
respects continuous with that
husband and father engaged
same
in the
family,
still
a
significant changes in all aspects of
them.
in
Allen Perry, too, had been a "promising young novelist" (see Chapter 9). His
first
book, published
when he was
with both the general public and the
critics.
and family, created
a stable marriage
and published
as full-time novelist,
was an immediate success
which he could work more novels that strengthened
a space within
several
his reputation as a serious writer. Despite
when
25,
In the ensuing years he formed
some
difficulties in his mid-thirties,
he suffered a bitter parting from his most important mentor and
wrote a disappointing novel,
The culminating
life
went reasonably well
until his early forties.
when the and established him in
event of his early adulthood came at 41,
publication of a major novel brought great praise
the senior generation of American novelists. During the next several years,
more complicated and his literary efforts came to an imPerry started a tragic novel that would bring to more mature expres-
his marriage got
passe.
sion various themes from his earlier work. After achieving great success, the
hero of the novel was to suffer a grievous defeat, stemming from his tragic flaw. Perry struggled to write this issues in his
At
45,
own
he
as
he dealt with
felt
acutely the need to contain his inner conflicts and get
would not be
it
up on the
created. In his late forties, while not
partly-written novel,
he gave more time
activities— writing a play, writing for literary journals, self
more
life
structure for
and
his other serious interests did
meaningful occupation.
Many
period of five or ten or
more
to other
and involving him-
At 49 he was still trying to form Entering Middle Adulthood: his career
in public affairs.
lay fallow
parallel
life.
on with the novel, but entirely giving
book even
own
a satisfactory as
a
novelist
not comprise a sufficiently
novelists return to their trade after a fallow years,
but they return on a new basis and
new life structure. Others leave it for a new kind of writing new occupation altogether. This is one of the choices Allen Perry will in his Age Fifty Transition. within a
Richard Taylor, a Black novelist, went through these periods in a ent way. (His
Chapter
5.)
life
His
face
differ-
through the Age Thirty Transition was described in
thirties
took assorted jobs in
worked on
or a
his novels
were devoted largely to the battle for
fields
survival.
He
such as journalism and public relations, and
whenever he could make the time. His
first
few
novels received limited notice and sales. For almost the entire decade he
had
a serious
but on-again, off-again relationship with a special woman.
Entering Middle Adulthood
At
began
40, Taylor
and
structure
life
he decided to
a
momentous
risk
book, and
integrated
his loved
He and his wife it. He put all
spent a frugal year
country while he completed
of himself into this
publication at age 41 was the culminating event of his early
its
The initial response from critics and the public was The book was not a total failure, but it was far from being
adulthood.
mixed.
matic success he had anticipated.
The
ing to him.
woman,
everything in order to write the great Black American
novel that was burning within him. in a tropical
more
effort to create a
Dream. Marrying
realize his youthful
293
Its
year of sacrifice
at best
the dra-
limited success was bitterly disappoint-
and the
become
effort to
the special meanings this has for a Black
(with
all
ciety)
had seemingly come to nothing.
A man
man
his
in
own man
American
of less tenacity
so-
might have
quit altogether. During the Mid-life Transition, from roughly age 41 to
wounds and continue
During
45,
he
his
major novel came to be more widely read and appreciated, especially
tried to heal his
He
among Black
youth.
as a novelist,
and did other forms of writing
was earning his
time
For the
as well.
first
time he
living entirely as a serious writer.
Entering Middle Adulthood. started a family.
grown sons
this
wrote two minor novels in order to sustain himself
By 45 Richard Taylor had and
his efforts.
of his
He had
first
created the basis for a
He and
his wife
established
marriage.
Now a
had
new
life
and was
stabilized the marriage
good adult relationships with the
senior
member
of his writers' world,
he was assuming various leadership and mentoring functions with the younger generation of Black
am
While
a writer."
less
ative, responsible life in
Of
course,
he
writers.
He
could
say, for
the
first
time, "I
driven by ambition, he looked forward to a cre-
the future.
still felt
keenly the racism and social injustice of modern
and he had the burden of knowing how
he could do about mark his to make. He had major responsibilities as father to two generations of sons and daughters, as husband to a loving, autonomous wife, as son to aging parents, as brother society, it.
Though he was
a senior writer,
he
still
little
had
to less fortunate siblings, as writer to society, as middle-aged Black to his
people— and
man
as person to himself. His prospects were brighter than
ever before, but the challenges and difficulties were greater.
Paul Namson:
The Decade of the
Forties
For Paul Namson, the Mid-life Transition and Entering Middle Adulthood saw the culmination of the contradictions of his life, and in the end pointed toward a resolution of them. In Chapter 12 lution of his
life
through the Settling
Down
period.
we
described the evo-
At
his fortieth birth-
THE SEASONS OF A
294 day,
he had
just
MAN S
LIFE
withdrawn
Markers from
his novel
and defeated, gone to Cape Cod
feeling weary
his publisher and,
summer
for the
of 1966.
He wrote and prepared for a year of teaching at Brown. The
new
prospect of this
Namson. It was "a sort of conflattered. I knew Austin admired my
job pleased
my usefulness. I also felt He left for Brown with high hopes for a year of teaching and writing. He was eager to teach creative writing and felt he "had a few things to show the academy." He also planned to "take another look at firmation of
writing."
Markers."
These hopes proved to be
illusory.
course and, although he enjoyed
He
energies as writing."
He
Markers.
taught two sections of a writing
could not do both, and was not able to return to
new novel, Gallery, but made less progress than Brown got him away from the distractions of Manpresented him with a whole new problem. Offered an asso-
did begin a
he would have hattan, but
He
found that "teaching drew on the same
it,
it
liked.
ciate professorship at the
was clear that
end of the
year,
he decided to turn
it
.down. "It
could not write and teach at the same time."
I
Actually, Paul
and Sarah were tempted to remain they led there. For the
taken with the bucolic
life
integral part of family
life.
Brown. Both were
at
first
time Paul was an
was a new experience for him to eat
It
his
meals with Sarah and the kids, to have cookouts and play catch with
He and
Sheridan in the backyard.
Sarah found this "greater family close-
ness" appealing. She, particularly, clearly
wanted
to stay, but for Paul
it
was
not a viable solution.
He
New
returned to
tainty."
He
York
at 41
"meandering
in a spirit of uncer-
resumed the work on Currents. During
time he became
this
absorbed with a curious idea which became another of his "distractions":
he and Sarah should find an island and consider moving been "sort of an
island." If
Brown without the
advantages of
world and the "high family. After
he could find a
some
Sarah and
I
life,"
difficulties.
and would center
it
down
When we
flew
alone.
on an
island,
but also partly
as
could be
made by buying up
$1.7 million. After
more
trips
I
finally
much bought
for sale.
I
art
looked around, look-
What we
tracts of land.
a big tract of land.
prominent Boston family was
I
partly as this fantasy of a
an investment.
undeveloped and owned in very large
be out of the
in the Caribbean.
got there
—
Brown had
around writing and
his life
he found an island
there.
they would have the
He would
searching,
partly as a real estate investment
ing at
real one,
A
I
saw that a
section
owned by
found myself making an
dickering and a couple of
home
saw was old and
months and
killing
a very
offer for
a couple of
it.
Again the contradictions were operating. Trying to create an island for his
work and
his family,
Namson
got himself back into the investment
Entering Middle Adulthood
two
business. "It was a full-time distraction for
would take of
and
it,
as
much time
as
did."
it
He
new home
built a beautiful
years;
I
had no idea
it
purchased the property, sold part
into the ruins of an old sugar mill.
This required a great deal of his attention and a number of island.
295
This was time away from his writing, but
it
trips to
the
was a great success finan-
He made a large sum of money and gained a magnificent new "fanhome" in the process. He might be uncertain of his standing as a
cially.
tasy
but there could be no question
writer,
as to his business skills.
When Namson ture,
was 42 and in the midst of his belated real estate vena fortuitous event helped him to begin forging a new stance as a
The need
writer.
of direction
an island retreat disappeared
for
and purpose. As a
By
ing into the house.
result,
as
he gained a new sense
Paul and Sarah decided against mov-
whole venture seemed
43, the
a "slight regression"
to him. give
I
do
it
side.
am
—
my word
you
that
if
I
had
to
playing this strange neurotic
When
I
was
in the
writing, suddenly
The unexpected
it all
over again
I
never would
of investment business
investment business,
am
I
do
game
I
was writing.
And
on the while
I
dabbling in the investment business again.
event was this: In 1968 a
mammoth
publisher asked
They offered a fee he begin immediately. The idea of doing a
Paul to write a biography of Sheridan Fisher.
of $12,000
and required that
biography,
especially
one of Fisher, was very appealing to him.
new
writing a
The
focus.
well of "subjective fantasy"
It
would
seemed
dry.
give his
A
com-
missioned biography would enable him to publish a full-length book for the
first
time since
productive.
As
it
He would
Bridge
Game came
out in 1964.
He would
I
wanted
feel
exist as a writer.
turned out, "after two chapters of the biography
have trouble.
—a more
The
to
do Fisher's
sociological study.
I
life,
and they wanted
we began
to
Fisher's world
put the thing aside and returned to Cur-
rents."
He wrote a new section of Currents, consisting of two long "stories." They were immediately bought and published in a serious magazine. Namson was getting back into writing again. His new approach was to combine fiction with biography. By 43 he felt less restless and less isolated in his writing room, and he was getting more connected to the world of writers and publishers.
Meanwhile,
his father
was dying.
He had
a stroke
and became a com-
plete invalid early in 1969. Paul spent a great deal of time during that
winter and spring at his father's bedside.
ence of his father's dissolution and his
Namson was
also
made aware
He
own
suffered the painful experiaging.
of the fragile structure of his
immediate
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
296
family. His son, Sheridan, at 12,
went
to school
and was usually
and her son were
at
was
in his
in
almost total rebellion.
room
He
rarely
listening to rock music. Sarah
an impasse: both were yelling and screaming, slam-
ming doors and not communicating. Paul remained
at the
edge of
this
maelstrom.
Two
family battles were going on during the time of our interviews,
when Namson was
One was between
43.
Sarah and Sheridan, the other
between Sarah and Paul. As Paul became more intensely committed to his writing, the feeling of greater "family closeness" that
ized the
Brown
had
character-
year faded.
I'm generally impatient with her, and
would rather read than go out.
I
I'm not saying the idea of breaking out of the marriage has never occurred to
me, but
more complicated. Because, well, there are those times when company and all. I suppose they are not as frequent as
it is
guess I'm good
I
she'd like.
don't do anything to explain.
I
If,
getting almost no satisfaction, in relation to
is
become
colder, increasingly selfish
Sarah was being
left
and
out in the cold.
When
One
thing
what
I
know
didn't
I
I
fantasies.
than
I
Maybe
it
more
might miss,
isn't
became
I
have
Paul began writing more
felt
This
acutely lonely.
later on,
was a profound
intel-
know
really
that important to
isn't as large a factor in
my
I
don't
me
anymore. Oh,
life. I feel
I
more lonely
my
marriage. There is this feeling that somebody who would share a more with me. But anyhow, I haven't done anything about that.
did in the earlier years of
maybe somewhere out intellectual life
guess she thinks
don't think we've ever had that.
now. Romantic love
feel
have
It
I
I
for their old "high life."
added to the distance between them. Both
lectual relationship.
me
critical.
he refused to make room
actively at 43,
in relation to Sheridan, Sarah
there there's
increasingly important to Paul that Sarah take his writing
seriously. I
want
treated at least as respectfully as she used to treat
it
my
work at
Asch. I'm sure Sarah would never have thought of walking into a confer-
ence when
something
I
same respect
When we still
worked
like that.
as business.
first
wandering
for Asch to tell me, "There is an auction of china," or Very often she really does not treat this work with the
interviewed
him
in Dante's "dark
at 43,
wood."
he could
He
see
some
light
but was
was profoundly concerned
with issues of bodily death, symbolic immortality and legacy.
He
was
well along in forming an intellectual view of these issues, but the deeper
emotional currents continued to that:
roil.
He
often had the terrifying feeling
— Entering Middle Adulthood
.
.
just
.
You
has no structure.
life
are just
You
jelly.
something that oozes out under the door.
anxiety at night
—or
just thinking,
297
You
are nothing.
are
might have that kind of
I
you know, there
no
is
structure.
Preoccupied with the actuality of death, he had to consider the question of immortality:
The
only solace
can find
I
is
that
some
idea of immortality
is
my wife, my children, that nothing will be
He
was faced,
some a
few
is
One
at the
that
I
think any
of
A
approval will satisfy
There
is
satisfy
artist
is
myself
work of
I
must
feel that all
the value
and now
give
I
me what
I
write.
I
now
must honestly is
impossible for me, and yet
choice, like Sisyphus,
and
it is
worth the
Namson's growing seriousness was
He had
it
.
What
.
I
one must
not
satis-
like
me.
to
am
I
believe that the supreme
beyond me. So I
.
would
I
up
all
There
come from me.
not only
say, I
is
present him-
none
want anymore.
I
is
illusions.
In the end the approval must
literature of the very highest levels is
have no
me now?
when
something that
he can do
I
find there are
can't imagine ever being satisfied.
with "comfort."
when
to write
it
for effort
nobody who can
but
desire that his writing
name, and with the acceptance
in his
What good
day to be taken seriously as a writer, but
fied,
a few people
hard, very hard, to accept
same moment, with the
has recognition of one's limitations.
myth
on
off
not
uncertain but in any case not "supreme"?
is
In the end
is
And
last.
can come to any
I
left.
form an enduring, valuable legacy
self.
nearest
rubbing
friends. But, ah! It
of his limitations as a writer. of the writing
The
me
of
little bit
may
of these words
only written words, but the spoken word.
also say
I
am
I
work against
doing
from
it
effort.
reflected in his
changing concern
spent most of his energies during early adult-
hood in a search for financial rewards and material comforts. He tried to up the striving for money and power at 37, when he left Cyril Asch,
give
but
it
was not until
his early forties
that he began to reappraise the
meaning of comfort: I
don't seek comfort as
life in
lot has to still
as
I
did twenty years ago.
do now with the disillusionment about
seek comfort in material things, but
will be. I think it
love
much now
A
lot of
the past twenty years has to do with the dream of comfort.
I
just
where comfort
don't think that
would come from other people
is
my
And
a
lies. I
where comfort
in terms of
compassion,
and tenderness.
At 43, Namson returned to the Fisher biography on his own. At the same time, a serious art publisher commissioned him to write the biog-
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
298
raphy of another
By the time
artist.
of his 44th birthday, both of these
biographies were ready for publication. His novel Cunents, which he had
completed the year before, was not yet published. "I hope that the Fisher
book I
will bring
enough
think Currents
see
At 44
me, again, to get Currents published.
the best thing
is
my children
all
interest in
have ever written.
I
I
would
like to
into print/' t
was going better. The family was coming back
his writing
to-
more at peace. Sheridan was in school and doing well enough. Paul had begun to face the strains in his marriage and hoped he and Sarah could work things out together. The old relationship had come to an end. It seemed clear that whatever they came to in the future would have to be built around Paul's writing life. He gether again; the household was
the marriage could change because of Sarah's strengths; she was, Paul
felt felt,
to
"adaptable in a way that
It
is
doesn't,
scene.
not."
At the same time, he was ready
problems
for the
in the old relationship.
oversimplifying things to say that Sarah loves parties and Paul
and
of that.
all
like to leave earlier
went
am
I
assume more responsibility
The same with
after
it
mean,
I
a lot of people think that.
I
would
typically
than she does, but I've been very interested in the social houses. At
as she did.
We
some
level
I
must have wanted
it
too,
and
I
both wanted to go to the chic parties and the
interesting lofts.
He
how
could also acknowledge
critically
important
it
had been
for
him to be with Sarah I've given a lot
from Zelda, or all
to
and
also
put
it
been a bastard
more
at times.
What
Fitzgerald took
what she gave Fitzgerald, is not relationship Sarah and I had. So there
positively,
that different from the kind of
was that complexity and that kind of symbiotic relationship.
At
this point,
Paul had changed a good deal, Sarah
ing differences created
my
whole
life.
Sarah has been consistent, sistently
is
less
it
sent problems.
.
She
feels
By age new life
think.
fact
a
new degree
me when is,
What
I
of seriousness,
she married me, but
it
have made the other choice.
she
is
now and
has been con-
was when we got married. So undoubtedly that .
.
Now
she complains
she never sees me. But
now understood
a
I
The
me,
in of
necessary to me, or useful to me, or helpful to me, or a lot
of things, than
her.
Their grow-
new problems:
There's been a more radical change commitment. There was another side certainly wasn't
less.
—
no, she
I
I
go into
my
must not intrude when
study, I
am
45, the turmoil of the Mid-life Transition
structure beginning to emerge.
will pre-
don't spend enough time with
During
I
just insist. It
is
working.
was subsiding and
this period,
from age
Entering Middle Adulthood
40 to 45,
Namson had wrought
remarkable changes in his
299
and within
life
himself.
At the end
Down
of the Settling
made
almost certain that the bet he had at 37
The
had been
One
lost.
much
second, which meant so
"What
he was faced
kind of writing,
will contain flaws, in
and
myself and in
my
40,
it
seemed
Asch and Company
in leaving
to him, was of so little interest to the
publication.
its
new way with
in a
any, can
if
facilitate
he turned
novel had been published, with poor success.
publisher that he himself aborted tion began,
period, as
As the Mid-life Transi-
the most basic questions:
do well? Can
I
What
the writing?
I" build a life that
are the contradictions
world, that must be overcome
if
I
am
and
to have
a chance for a better life?"
At the
Namson
the Mid-life Transition,
start of
He
a moratorium.
tried to create a space in
provided himself with
which he could reappraise and
his life, develop a clearer sense of his possibilities
search for a
"high
new way. For
life" to
limitations,
the periphery and family to the center of his
In the island real estate venture,
was
it
business in order to say goodbye to
as
if
life structure.
he had to return
and of terminating more adequately
briefly to
In a similar vein, writing the biog-
it.
raphy of Sheridan Fisher was his way of saying farewell to the his relationship
art
world
with Fisher (while
The two
incorporating
more
him
from the more subjective work of novel writing. They
a respite
and
Brown, he moved business and the
a year, at
of Fisher into himself).
led to a creative integration of biography
and
biographies gave
fiction in his
also
subsequent
writing.
By age
Namson began
45,
—building a
first
structure for this season of the life cycle. Writing was,
component
at last, a central
"distractions"
him more
recognition from the world.
own
life,
in his life structure,
had been removed from
writing that satisfied
his
the period of Entering Middle Adulthood
for
both
his
fully
He had
it.
He
and most of the old
was developing a
a stronger sense of responsibility for
can take only a glimpse into his
life
new
46.
Two
beginning to
years later,
He
forties.
His
new way. who might
briefly in a
publishing firm, especially for writers
not otherwise "see their children into print."
when Paul was
just
during the late
former mentor, Austin Garrison, re-entered the story Garrison started a
of
achievements and his defeats. His family was
more securely established, though he and Sarah were work out a new basis for their marriage.
We
mode
and gave him the hope of greater
published Currents
Namson completed
his novel Gallery,
work growing out of his experiences at the Gordon Archi :\s. He had found in that world another "fussy room" which nourished hi: writ-
a long
THE SEASONS OF A
300
ing.
He
also
MAN S
LIFE
became intrigued with the life of Beatrice Gordon, a beneand began work on her biography. Like him,
factor of the institution,
she had led a multifaceted
with a productive career
combining a
life,
Her
as a painter.
life,
lively interest in business
too, provided
nourishment
for his writing.
As he entered middle adulthood, Paul Namson was coming to accept in himself and others. He was absorbed in the
and value the feminine biography of a
woman
with
whom
he
identified.
He
was, finally, drawing
more freely upon the artistic, creative side of himself and plagued him since boyhood. Then it had seemed be both
artistic
and manly.
Now
he knew that to be
that
had animated
that he could not
fully a
man he had
to utilize the feminine as well as the masculine aspects of himself. In this
and other ways, he was resolving the
great mid-life polarities
ing a genuinely productive season of his
and
enter-
life.
Biologists Each
biologist's life course
elite university,
was heavily shaped by
rank and scientific reputation. His
common
his career within
an
where he sought to advance up the ladder of academic life
course was also shaped by the
sequence of developmental periods and by
individual personality, ability individual variations
on
specific features of
and external circumstance. Again we
common
find
themes.
Almost from the start, Earl Northrop had a brilliant but flawed caHe became an assistant professor at 32, after doing some 'Very promising" research in a government agency. Over the next few years his rereer.
search was solid but not outstanding.
At
35
he was promoted to an
inter-
mediate rank largely on the grounds of his scholarly breadth, his success in teaching
an important course, and
his contributions to the administra-
At 40 came the crucial promotion: he was made professor with tenure, and thereby joined the senior ranks of his university and his scientific field. Again, however, the reward was blemished. tion of his department.
He had
continued to be an excellent teacher, and had written several
comprehensive reviews of the work in
his field,
but
it
was becoming
evi-
dent to him and others that he would probably never make a highly creative contribution
through his
own
research.
As he put
it:
became aware of the conflict in me, the strain of the intellectual ... I lack what is needed to be really original in some imaginative sense. It's an impediment to being in the very first rank. I
side.
.
.
.
Entering Middle Adulthood
During with what
coming
Mid-life Transition, Northrop started
his
meant
it
be
to
man
a senior, semi-distinguished
where the "second rank"
is
not good
He
terms
to
in a university
enough— and where most
senior faculty are in this painful condition.
301
of the
did better than most in
facing these issues without illusions or hypocritical self-justification.
When
him
interviewed
I
Northrop was
at 44,
tormenting reappraisal. His marriage, exciting.
The
at the height of his
work, was adequate but un-
like his
enough
marital difficulties were severe
to cause
him some
anguish, but not so bad that he would seriously consider therapy or divorce.
He
was a devoted father and family man.
An
intensely pacifistic,
nature-oriented, introverted person, he was deeply disturbed by our part in the
Vietnam war, the violence
He had no
environment.
many
students and acquaintances,
was gone."
He would
university,
but the few
life
and the pollution of the
felt utterly isolated at
no one would come
tired or got sick,
him from
of urban
close collaborators or friends and, despite his
to see
me— or
work: "If
have loved to be a professor in another offers
came from
lesser
I
re-
even notice that
I
first-rank
ones that his pride kept
considering.
In our follow-up interview at age 46, the period of active questioning
He
was over. For now he would stay put. his family
choices.
and work
The
years later
but there was
life,
was finding small ways to enrich
little
sense of reaffirmation in these
Northrop took a chairmanship
university— a further, but
still
Two
and open to change.
structure was very provisional at a
minor but growing English
tentative step toward building a satisfac-
tory life structure in middle adulthood.
Four of the ten
biologists left their current university during their
late thirties or early forties,
in response to offers that
went through work and of
change not merely
a
in job
his life as a whole. All of
the experience of
an
some because they were not continued, others attracted them elsewhere. Each of these men
exile,
and of
but in the character of his
them had
to
come
to terms with
liberation, attending their departure
from
elite university.
Five of the biologists remained at the same university into their ties
and attained senior
positions.
For some of them the success was
(The outcome as tainted as
for
it
for-
one was uncertain.)
was for Earl Northrop.
Others had a greater sense of personal satisfaction and accomplishment.
Every biologist
we
interviewed during his early
forties,
regardless of his
external success or failure, was going through a Mid-life Transition of
moderate or severe is
John Barnes,
crisis.
A
classic
whom we met
example of the successful
in the previous chapter.
man
in crisis
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
302
LIFE
Executives Like the biologists, the executives
live
within a highly institutionalized
world, and their sense of occupational progress
is strongly influenced by advancement through the organizational hierarchy. There are im-
their
portant similarities as well as differences in the stresses and the satisfactions available to
David
At
men
in these
work worlds.
was an engineer by education and
Jaffe
early
work experience.
he embarked upon a managerial
career. Although he worked hard main involvement was in family and community. At 38, ambitions heightened and he made a big effort for advancement to
31
to get ahead, his his
the position of purchasing manager. better it
home. This was
He
also decided to get a bigger
partly in response to the
was also the fulfillment of a Dream. His
growth of
home was
his family,
his castle,
and but
and hav-
home
of his own meant that he had arrived. Building a new main project during the time of Becoming One's Own Man. Through his engineering and contracting skills, and his patience, he
ing a lovely
home was
his
much more expensive home than he could have bought. The twin culminating events of early adulthood came at 41 the Jaffe family moved into their new home, and he received his promotion. The home was a complete success. It gave them a more comfortable life and
built a
:
more respected position in the community, where he was becoming a member. The promotion to purchasing manager was a total bust. The company had just been bought by a large corporation and purchasing policies were established from the top. He felt oppressed and humiliated. Despite the severe disappointment, he remained in this job for four years, a
senior
refusing several attractive job offers in other states.
men
in our study
who
few years in military across. If there
woman—he priority,
is
is it.
has lived his entire
service,
one of the few
with the exception of a
man—analogous
were family, religio-ethnic community and occupation.
most important
left it
satisfactions
behind
fit
He worked
end of the day and
his
45, Jaffe stayed put
and worked on
At 45 he found
his job unbear-
various issues of the Mid-life Transition. day, in a
at the
were elsewhere.
During the years from age 41 to
One
miles
fifty
to the traditional
central elements of his life structure, in order of
hard at his trade, but he
able.
is
within an area no more than
a traditional, tribal
The
life,
He
of desperation, this cautious, deliberate
—impulsively, without knowing what he would do next.
He
not consider a big geographical move, but luckily found a job ing manager at United Electronics, within
commuting
man
still
quit
would
as purchas-
distance from
Entering Middle Adulthood
»
home.
I
him soon after he started this job at 45, and The life structure he had begun at 45 was more
interviewed
first
again two years later.
secure and he was progressing well within questions.
He
was
in top
he knew about the
management,
as
instability of a "rapid
ership—and he counted on nothing. His
it,
but there were nagging
Number
Though he had hopes
ager for Production.
of
becoming
a vice president,
growth" company and familial nest
its
lead-
was emptying,
new phase
his
of life
offing.
Roger Mohn,
also
an engineer by education, has spent
within a single company. (For accounts of his
life
Man-
2 to the General
aging mother-in-law was a heavy responsibility, and a
was in the
303
see Chapters 10
and
13.)
Happily employed
as
his entire
life in earlier
head of the metals shop,
he was unexpectedly promoted into middle management time for Becoming One's
Own Man. The
ger were difficult but exciting.
work
periods,
at
37, just in
three years as purchasing mana-
At 40 the culminating event was
a
promo-
tion to head of manufacturing. This rapid advance in authority
and
come took him far beyond The promotion marked
Within
a year
Mohn
his youthful aspirations
and managerial
his entry into the Mid-life Transition.
had developed an
ulcer.
He
felt
isolated
and
in-
skills.
lonely.
He
and the friends who had meant so much to him; they were in another world that he had left behind and could no longer reach. A loving father and family man, he felt out of touch with his wife and children. At 42 he became ill with a cancer of uncertain prognosis. In the years from 42 to 44 he hit rock thought a good deal about
bottom.
He
his college years
was preoccupied with concerns about
the welfare of his family, and about giving his present and future were so bleak. His family this otherwise
When peers
own
death, about
some meaning when sustained him through
life
unbearable period.
he was
44, a
and gave him a
responsibility.
his
life
He
company
reorganization eliminated most of his
"lateral shift" to a position of equal salary
but
less
experienced the reorganization as a "blood bath," an
"absolute slaughter" of the others and a humiliating demotion for himself.
After several months, although he had offers from other companies,
he decided to than in a
The
stay put: "I feel
more secure
in the surroundings
I
know
new environment."
wish for security was only part of his reason for staying,
I
believe.
At a deeper level, Mohn was ready to begin Entering Middle Adulthood and had made the basic choices for the next life structure. He had given up all pretense of interest in the competitive rivalries of the corporate world and in further advancement up the executive ladder. His strongest feeling at this time
was relief—relief that he could remain in a well-pay-
304 ing, trol.
THE SEASONS OF A
MAN S
LIFE
relief that his cancer now seemed under conshadow of death than most of us, but he had life. He was content with the two central compofamily and his leisure interests. He was learning to
unchallenging job, and
He
lived
more
in the
reaffirmed his ties to
nents of his
his
life:
and loving daughters, who were teaching him the pleasures of hiking, fishing and nature. He was getting closer to his spend time with
wife,
new
and
at the
his loved
same time supporting her expansion from the home to community involvements. As he acquired greater
occupational and
skill in
the arts of intimacy and solitude, he was emerging into middle
adulthood with a
life
fuller
than ever before.
The third executive whose story we shall tell is James Tracy. In Chapter 11 we followed him through the Settling Down period. In the next chapter we learn about the unexpected changes wrought in the periods of the Mid-life Transition and Entering Middle Adulthood.
:
m
The
James Tracy
we saw how
In Chapter 11 first
wife, married Joan
relationship to his
By
Life of
and
first
(III)
Jim Tracy divorced
in his late thirties
his
started a second family while maintaining the
children. .This occurred in his
Down
Settling
he and Joan had a baby boy and were building a new home. But the problems of living with two families, and of giving his period.
new
41,
family a central place within a
new
life structure,
were
just begin-
ning.
The work
year from age 40 to 41 had been a
life.
When
he was
40, his
momentous one
Don Bond,
mentor,
in Tracy's
suddenly
left
Ajax.
Walter Johnson was promoted into Bond's position as group vice president, and Jim Tracy advanced to become general manager of the division. This was the promotion he had long desired, but
he
initially
held the
to prove himself in
new
it.
it
came
Johnson had never been
success. His relationship with
on a probationary
position
He went
as a
blemished
close.
Moreover,
basis,
and he had
through a year of watching, waiting and
doubting.
At
He
endorsed in the new position. additional fringe benefits. a blemished success.
He
dent—to be
to an end. Tracy was officially
was also given a fancier
title
and some
Yet once again he regarded the promotion
was
still
controlling hand. It was time,
yet his
came
41, the probationary period
he
as
under Johnson's questioning glance and felt,
for
in Johnson's position rather
him
to be a group vice presi-
than under him. Tracy was not
own man
They made me There are
a general
manager and
really a billion-dollar corporation. felt,
also a corporation vice president.
fifteen corporation vice presidents,
The
although they never told me, as
if
and the whole company
scope of the job didn't change. they threw
me
a
bone
to
keep
is
I
me
around.
Tracy was
at 41 a vice president earning
and responsible
more than $100,000
for a multimillion-dollar enterprise
a year
employing thousands.
:
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
306
But
promotion, which was the culminating event of his early
this last
adulthood, produced serious doubts about his occupational future and
touched
off his Mid-life Transition.
move— the kiss of now seemed dim. He stayed on
respects a lateral
tion
the beginning of a
crisis
The
apparent promotion was in
many
death. His chances for further promo-
but he
at Ajax,
felt
He
trapped.
period in his work, his family and his
life
was
at
generally.
His attitudes about the arms business began to change in the next
few
years.
He had
helped to perpetuate the view that weapons themselves
were not dangerous:
by changes
"It's
the person behind the gun that's the nut." But
about guns and the weapons business were being modified
his opinions
in society
and by
the war in Vietnam was at
by
his feelings that
his its
own
mid-life questioning. Dissent against
peak in 1969. His doubts were magnified
he had gone
he could
as far as
about his role
Tracy was depressed by the violence
in
work and
control over his
Black
leader.
strikers:
also identified its policies.
was
re-
our culture. His social con-
own
cerns were intensified by his awareness of his
omnipotent
He
at Ajax.
own life and his place in society. He was also confused when Black workers led a major strike against the company.
evaluating his
He no
life.
decline and limited
longer regarded himself as the
This was complicated by ambivalence toward the
he bravely led executives
across the picket lines,
For the
In one of our
first
time,
he himself
last interviews as
in
an underdog.
felt like
he turned
but he
humane
with the Blacks and wanted Ajax to be more
45,
Jim spoke about
his
personal philosophy:
have been honest, straightforward, and not underhanded.
I
has been a lot of luck in
there were people
it;
reason or another. But, with
all
this,
I
can honestly say that
I
said there
who guided me I
for
one
haven't
trampled on anybody and haven't gone against principles to cut corners. People get what they deserve.
If
you are decent
going to get treated decently in return. est
to people, ultimately you're
basic belief
is
that
if
you're hon-
and straightforward with your people, ultimately you get paid back.
You
don't have to be underhanded.
to get ahead. If I
My
guess that
is
You
don't have to be a sharp dealer
you are any good, ultimately you are going to go to heaven.
my basic philosophy.
Jim worked to live up to his high standards. Both personally and he seemed to have increasing success. But he was question-
professionally,
ing his entire
dream
life
and seeking a new way. This
is
illustrated
by a recurring
of the early forties
I'm flying in an airplane and flying very
for
some
reason,
low over a road with telephone
nobody
really
knows, we're
poles. I'm sitting there, afraid
The we're going to crash and the pilot
Tracy
felt
is
going to tear
we haven't
He's going over bridges and
Life of James Tracy (III)
307
wing or something.
off a
crashed, yet.
life was coming to an end. He didn't want He wanted to be less up in the air, more firmly rooted He was beginning to acknowledge that he could not retain
that his former
to live as before. to the ground.
control over every given situation in his
The
acute fear of losing control
earlier life structure.
life.
related to the dismantling of the
is
Giving up the aggressive, achieving stance raised the
question: "What's left of me?" Perhaps the "bitch goddess" success would turn away from him.
Every once in a while, is
going to
fall in.
through and what
This
I
what
long downhill slope be I
like.
Will
I
I
keep going
at 45. like,
end up
at
roof
I'm about halfway
because the
first
sometimes think about what
think one of these days the whole
in. I just can't
goddamn
the whole
scares
the second half going to be
is
has been pretty good, business-wise.
a year?
my God, me
just think,
sort of
is
half
will the
65 making $1 5,000 or $10,000 goddamn roof is going to fall
me
like this; that scares
a
little bit
every once in
a while.
Tracy talked about the at a university or
close to
possibility of early retirement at 55, teaching
occupying a top executive
toward the role of mentor-teacher in a I
want
a
company
where I'm
that
less
company power
early aspirations of
imposing organization.
would pay me the same amount of money, or of money, that I'm making now. I want to
amount
reasonably the same live
slot in a smaller
home. He was moving away from the
living
now and have
a job
anywhere within an hour's
drive.
company my whole business career. I think in a smaller company you've got more flexibility. I don't like to travel on business trips away from home. I detest it. I don't have any goal. Oh, sure, I'd like to I've
worked
for a big
my
succeed, take driving as
I
boss's place as a
used to be.
I
group vice president, but I'm not as hard
think I'm probably as effective as ever, but
have the energy or driving ambition to succeed that
have the great desire to be president of Ajax. Tracy's attitudes toward himself
He
could
now
had
also
I
I
used to have.
I
don't
I
don't
really don't.
changed by
recognize and value the softer and
more
his mid-forties.
caring aspects of
his personality. ,
I
think I'm not hard driving enough.
I
have a guilt complex about being
too easy on people, and not enough of a taskmaster. Instinctively, I'm soft
and compassionate toward people, for
me
is
to
sit
down
are doing wrong.
I
to a fault.
face to face with
The
hardest thing in the world
somebody and
tell
just find that terribly difficult to do.
them what they I
am
not a very
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
308
good
disciplinarian.
don't really believe in
I
things by reason, logic or example. lot easier.
I
had
your heart on your
he told me.
The
sleeve.
wish
I
said the only real
it.
I
try to get
were tougher;
people to do
life
problem you have
would be
get emotionally upset about people, that
I
a
you wear
is
is
what
not really very rough.
flaws in his second marriage also
was not able to function
pressure, Joan
was
am
I
who
a boss
I
became more
Under
evident.
helpmate and Jim It was
as the desired
alone to deal with an extremely painful series of events.
left
a rock-bottom time.
When
Jim was 42,
his
daughter Linda was in her
first
year of college.
After becoming pregnant, she married Alex, 23, an unskilled laborer in a garage. Later that year Jim's oldest son, Robbie, at a private prep school,
He
began experimenting with drugs. the faculty, afterward,
had
Robbie attempted
was out of town.
I
developed paranoid notions about
several severe outbursts
My
and was asked to
Not long
leave.
suicide:
former wife called Joan and
complete
said, like a
commit suicide. What should I do?" Joan said, "Take him to the hospital." They took him to the local hospital and the doctors took one look at him and zipped him up to Franklin State Hospital. By the but I time I got home, he was in Franklin. If I had just been home wasn't. That's what happened. His mother had him committed on a Thurs"Robbie
jerk,
tried to
.
day.
I
didn't
know about
Jim was furious
it
until
I
got
home on
and
at himself
being unavailable to help his son during a traumatic event.
Joan
in.
He and
He wanted
.
Friday.
at Victoria for involving Joan,
between wives one and two.
.
He
to keep Victoria out
felt
for
stuck
and bring
Joan drove to the hospital and visited Robbie in a locked
ward. Neither Joan nor
I
awful wards with bars I
marched
in,
had ever seen Franklin before. all
and we got locked into shook her up.
all
of
sit
in the parking lot with
it.
It really
He
was in one of those
over the place, with wild, far-out people. Joan and
all
When
a visiting
room
she went with
right in the
me
of the car doors locked,
middle of
subsequently, she'd
and
I'd visit
him.
Joan withdrew from the situation. Locking herself in the car tively
symbolized her alienation from his children.
It
made Jim
effec-
sharply
aware that he could not bring together two important elements in life:
Joan and the children from his
mined
his formerly idealized
Tracy got
his
first
marriage.
his
Her withdrawal under-
view of her.
son released from the hospital and into brief treatment
with a private psychiatrist.
The The
up the
"We're going
have a
to
madman
Robbie was then hospitalized
309
Robbie had very strong violent
private psychiatrist told us that
dencies. This sent Joan right
Life of James Tracy (III)
wall, thinking
about our two
what
in the house,
are
little
we going
The
at a private institution.
to
ten-
boys.
do?"
doctors
there disagreed with the private psychiatrist's evaluation, but thought that there wasn't
much
much hope
for further education in school.
of his time arranging for therapists
and
involved, but her experience with the psychiatrists
had badly frightened ing up Jim's
first
recommended
her.
The
Jim spent
Joan tried to get
tutors.
and the
state hospital
incident reactivated her guilt about break-
who
marriage. She began to see a private psychiatrist,
that she have
little
or nothing to do with Jim's family.
So Jim was forced to deal with the problems from his first marriage on own. Recognizing that he had not been involved enough in Robbie's
his
early
he
life,
tried to
compensate by reaching out to
son under ex-
his
tremely trying circumstances.
During
this
same
year, Jim's brother,
rough time. His wife ran tempts at reconciliation
off
with a
George, also went through a
much younger
married man. All
at-
George soon married a much younger
failed.
woman. The similar plights of the brothers pulled them together. Jim became aware that George had resented him during childhood: "I was always very fond of him, and at
all.
.
.
At
this
I
can
call
me
turned out he wasn't very fond of
There's a good feeling between us now.
.
want anything ther,
it
him, and vice
versa,
I
know
that
if
ever
I
with no questions asked."
time Tracy became more parental toward his mother and
And he
both in their seventies.
fa-
continued getting closer to Linda
and Robbie. Linda asked him to help her husband, Alex, get
a job.
He He
jumped
at the chance,
also got
Robbie summer jobs elsewhere. Giving became more important
and got
his son-in-law a
modest job
at Ajax.
in his forties.
Tracy
felt
he was cheating when he used company time and and that this might endanger his future at developed between work and fatherhood:
that
resources to help his family,
Ajax.
A
conflict
never once involved our personal time, like weekends or evenings, to
I've
straighten out something with Linda or Rob. I've stolen
time.
where It's
Ajax
He to
do the absolute
I I
me
in
mental anguish.
honestly don't know.
I
What
it's
if I
away from work
were doing
costing
me
in
my job right. my image at
feel guilty.
was also upset about taking time away from
work on problems
it
of outside activity, to the point
should be doing a hell of a lot more
costing I
minimum amount
in the first family.
his current family
Joan added to the
distress:
"She
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
310
LIFE
thinks she has married a family rather than me. She feels that she has
withdrawn from her family and leads
totally
my kind of life."
Some Her
and now
of her former friends,
all
stemmed, however, from Joan's first marriage. name changed from Cor-
of their troubles
now
son, Kevin;
ten years old, wanted his
make fun
coran to Tracy so the other children would not
he could
more
feel
alcoholic, withdrawn, graying
man
living in their
home
former
fan-
about Joan's return."
tasizing
mean, without
I
and
Jim and Joan began adopbattle with Corcoran, "a some-
a part of his current family.
tion proceedings. This led to a long legal
what
of him,
a doubt,
Joan can't stand Corcoran.
He
uses Kevin as
the only connecting link he's got between the two of them, and he isn't
about to give
it
up.
The
only time he
shot. He'll call Friday night all
calls is
from a bar and
when
he's about three-quarters
start talking to
Corcoran's
calls
He
frailties.
He
also
it
a ghost
made him more
also spent
more time with Kevin and
He
Tommy
some of the time, but
I
Still, ily.
all
all
to
get rejuvenated once a
stand up in front of 50 kids and just have
I
every word. For an hour and a half every month,
get
than he had with
even became a scoutmaster:
a pain in the neck
month when kids at
problems and
sensitive to Joan's
was learning to accept her limitations.
his first children.
It's
who took out her anger and frustration who would not depart. While the conflict
drained Joan,
on Jim. Corcoran was enraged Jim,
I
her and she gets
upset.
grow up
right,
my God,
it's
worth
it.
if
them hang on my
you're helping these
Just looking at those faces,
charged up again.
there was continuing conflict between his job and his
When
they
first
ture their family.
married, he wanted Joan to stay at
But the
felt
home and
nur-
newlywed had within a
attractive, 28-year-old
few years retreated into a cocoon. She
new fam-
that he should give less time
work and more to her and the family:
to his
Joan doesn't understand that there are certain things that
my She
job that
I
don't necessarily want to do, which take
just gets a little depressed,
great
outward scene, she
the idea and then lives. I life
guess she
is
it's all
just
and doesn't
me
have to do in
me away
from home.
talk as she usually does. It's
no
withdraws for a while until she gets used to
right. It isn't
dependent on
seems to orbit around
I
accepted as a normal course of our
me and
likes
me
to a greater degree
to
be there, but her whole
than
it
should.
The
The
made Jim more aware
conflict
restriction. It also
evoked
his
Life of James Tracy (III)
311
dependency and
of Joan's
self-
concern about her growth as a person.
wanted to get her out of the "hausfrau"
role
He
and into the world, and he
supported her psychotherapy.
Tracy began doing things her way,
He
restricting his life to please her.
down invitations to be with other men and gave up activities meant much to him. He sold his boat, built a swimming pool,
turned
that
worked
in the garden
and
up
fixed
time around Joan and the family. his vision
and
his existence.
and "stable"
ful"
He
their house.
To
dissolved by these experiences. his forty-first
tween
and forty-fourth
families,
own
tried, in his
centered his leisure
way, to have as 'peace-
But the
a family life as possible.
Jim's initial illusions about Joan
He
please Joan, he chose to restrict
costs
were
great.
and the new marriage were
largely
The "two families" crisis peaked between when he worked on the tensions be-
year,
and between family and work.
He became more
suppor-
Joan and his children, and more giving and intimate with others.
tive of
The
first
years of his Mid-life Transition,
marked by severe problems and chaos. The were characterized by greater
reflectiveness,
from age 41 to
44,
were
from 44 to 46, integration and planning. By later years,
46, Tracy had decided to leave the world of the large corporation.
was putting
He
his family in the center of his life.
was learning to deal with the complex
and
to understand Joan's strengths
and
The
limitations.
ing interest in antiques, and she opened a shop in
He
crisis
issues facing
both
He
was abating. his families,
They shared a growdowntown Hartford.
was giving up the Dream of becoming a top corporation executive.
Entering Middle Adulthood The
period of Entering Middle Adulthood led to major changes for
Tracy.
We
have few
details,
but the main outlines of
his
new
life
are
clear.
When
he was
a drier climate.
The
46, Joan developed allergies
corporation offered
refused.
He had
him
his resignation to Ajax.
jobs in other parts of the country, but
to begin afresh.
he
They decided to move to Colorado. came out in a discussion of his
Jim's feelings about his time at Ajax legacy.
and her doctor suggested
Within three weeks, he submitted
THE SEASONS. OF A
312
think
I
or that to do.
I
am
LIFE
S
pretty well cast for
what
I'm proud
regrets.
achieved. ...
An
ambition
I
I
got where
difference
between the two
seem
I
— I
I
am
good
a pretty
think the same thing. I
immediate family. ...
I
I
father,
don't
will just
be missed by no one but
I
my
You
think
much
ambition.
them.
I
.
.
.
am
do your work
open and
pretty
pretty well, particu-
Tommy
Well, Joan, Kevin and
husband and provider.
know what Robbie all
I
think Linda
will think. If
upset about
it,
I
popped
family.
Managers
my
other than
be erased from the Ajax blackboard.
I
will
and don't
are replaceable
matter unless they are the driving force for the company.
Tracy was pleasantly surprised by the reactions to received
don't
I
there really isn't
communicate
generally
anybody getting
can't see
—
in terms of getting people to
those that have worked for me.
tomorrow,
really
don't feel cheated
am, and achieved what
satisfied that
I
to be able to instill loyalty in
straightforward with people.
will think
I
in the marines or business
it is
for you.
off
I
should have been able
always had in the marines was to be a general.
mean, I'm running a big business and
of your job whether
will
I
think I've been phenomenally lucky in a lot of respects.
I
larly to
have done.
I
haven't been able to do something that
I
have any
I
MAN
warm
He
his departure.
messages of support and affection, which were pleasing but
difficult to accept. Initially, his
parents were upset with the move, but soon his mother
wrote and said she understood. His brother supported the decision. Linda
and her husband were now
living with their three children in Tennessee,
where Alex was a successful Ajax salesman. Robbie was "a
would graduate from high school shortly off drugs,
lot better"
and
He
was
at the age of twenty.
involved in photography, had a girlfriend and was "as normal
as 50 percent of the
people around." In sum, his family was in pretty
good shape and supported
his
new move.
In leaving Ajax, Tracy was not only giving up his leader-executive role in the
weapons
archies.
rado,
industry, but also
moving permanently out
of
huge
Although he did not know exactly what he would do
he eagerly anticipated the change.
He
hier-
in Colo-
considered working in a small
hardware business of his own, running an antique shop with Joan, teaching, or acting as consultant to corporations.
The move
to
Tracy experienced
Colorado was a move into middle adulthood. At 47, less despair and generated more options. He had the
sense that he could find his
Colorado,
it
own way and
was apparent that he would
live
with
it.
relate to his
Whatever he did work and family
in
in a
new manner. In 1973, we received a letter from Jim Tracy. He was now general manager of an appliance distribution business in Denver:
The Colorado
much
is
great!
The
better physically,
thing to do.
The
family loves
is
still
has to prove
it
itself
a very fast-growing area,
is
was certainly the right out, but
and
if
I
this
doesn't work out, conceivably there will be other things to do.
He now had more time to talk.
313
particularly the children. Joan
and from that standpoint,
business end
ably optimistic. This
it,
Life of James Tracy (III)
am
reason-
connection
\3
Conclusions
m |
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
We began
this investigation by asking: What do we mean by the human and what are the seasons within it? Is there such a thing as adult development? Can we identify a sequence of developmental periods life cycle,
in adult life
Our
comparable to those
study has provided
some
childhood and adolescence?
in
answers are of necessity tentative. Further research
extend our present understanding, but
The
answers to these questions.
initial
is
we now have
needed to
and
test
on which to
a basis
proceed.
We
The
eras provide a view of the individual
from a distance. Each era ing,
some
identify four overlapping eras in the life cycle, each lasting
twenty-five years.
which has
distinguished by
is
biological, psychological
the skeletal structure of the
life cycle.
and
its
life as
seen
overall character of
The
social aspects.
liv-
form
eras
Once we have understood the natotal life cycle, we can examine
ture of an era from the perspective of the
more
specific processes
The developmental They
fall
within,
and
and events
as
periods give a
they unfold within
more
detailed
it.
and interpretive view.
are shaped by, the succession of eras.
means by which the developmental work of an they provide the linkage between the
eras.
perhaps the crucial turning points in the
The
life
era
is
They
are the
carried out,
cycle. In the Early
Adult
Transition, the Mid-life Transition and the Late Adult Transition, a creates a basis for living in the era just getting under way.
tional periods are the sources of
and periods
is
a
means
its
quence of alternating periods.
A
The
course.
life
is
the concept
structure evolves through a se-
relatively stable, structure-building period
The major develmake crucial choices,
followed by a transitional, structure-changing period.
opmental
perspective
and the process
foundation of our theory of developmental periods
of the individual life structure.
is
The combined
of exploring r.he total life
of development at specific times in
The
These
man
transi-
renewal— or of stagnation— that shape
the character of the developmental sequence. of eras
and
cross-era transitions are
tasks of a structure-building period are to
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
318
to create a structure around them, to enrich the structure one's goals within
it.
These periods ordinarily
and pursue
last six to eight years.
In
a transitional period the major tasks are to reappraise the existing structure, explore
new
and world, and work toward choices
possibilities in self
that provide a basis for a
new
structure. In the course of a transitional
man may choose to involve himself in new persons and places, or he may retain his marriage, job and social network but establish different relationships and live out different aspects of the self. The transiperiod a
tional periods generally last four or five years.
Eras and Periods in the life Cycle
When we
began
this
work, nothing in the literature of psychology and
social science suggested that
we would
and
find a sequence of eras
peri-
ods unfolding in orderly progression. That idea was not the starting point for our research. Quite the contrary. It detail the intricate design
unique order.
in its patterning, that
The
was only
we
•
this
traced in
each one
lives,
could begin to grasp the underlying
idea of individual life structure
emerged from our
see the shape of a man's total life at a given time,
how
we had
after
and course of many individual
efforts to
and to understand
shape evolved over the years.
age linkages. One of our greatest
ability in the age at
prediction
we made
surprises
was the
relatively
which every period begins and ends.
in advance,
It
low
vari-
was not a
nor a predisposition in our thinking. This
finding violates the long-held and cherished idea that individual adults
develop at very different paces. those
who
cal aging, psychological
variability in
traditional idea has a basis in fact:
larly, specific
maturity or occupational career, find considerable
the ages at which particular changes occur. There seem to
be no regular periods ones,
The
study development in terms of a single aspect, such as biologi-
in the
development of these single
aspects. Simi-
events such as marriage, starting a family, death of loved
and retirement may occur
at very different ages.
look at development in terms of the evolution of
life
Only when we do the
structure
periods follow an age-linked sequence.
For every period we can give a at
typical age of onset. This
which the period most frequently began among the
There
is
a range of
This range
two or three
may seem
years
on
very small to those
men
is
the age
in our study.
either side of the average age.
who
expected no order at
all,
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
but
enough to have great
it is
table for adult
ment.
It
development
starting the Mid-life Transition, another
ing One's
Own Man. The
of developmental
and
We find
simple criterion
One man
in.
is
at 39
at the height of
still
The timing
work done within
social conditions of a
sequence.
man is
as a
is
Becom-
developmental periods are age-linked, but they
are not a simple derivative of age.
•
variability in the time-
than that for child develop-
means that we cannot use chronological age
of the developmental period a particular
logical
The
significance.
slightly higher
is
319
it,
of a period,
and the kind
vary with the biological, psycho-
man's
life.
that the periods occur in a fixed sequence.
As long
man continues to develop, he will traverse the periods in the order He cannot go from period three to five without going through four. For a man in period three, the path to further development must cross four and five— there are no shortcuts or alternative routes. He can
as a
given.
navigate a period in myriad ways, but he cannot avoid
he
if
is
period,
to find
some
satisfaction
and create a
it.
In the present,
basis for life in the next
he must deal with the current developmental
tasks.
Developmental impairments and defeats from the past may prevent
man from
a
beginning a
in a state of decline.
new
He
is
period and working on
its tasks.
He
Developmental blocking of
stuck.
is
then
this
kind
can occur in adulthood, as in childhood, as a result of overwhelming biological, psychological or social insult.
Thus, a large percentage of
men
in
some groups may have such difficulty with the tasks of the Mid-life Transition and Entering Middle Adulthood that they cannot create the basis for even a moderately satisfactory life in
•
middle
age.
hierarchical stages and sequential periods. Some theories describe
developmental stages that follow an ascending or hierarchical order: a person advances from one level to the next, each stage representing a higher capability.
The
stage theories of
Lawrence Kohlberg, Jean Piaget and Jane
Loevinger are of this kind, and they have contributed to our understanding of
human development. Other
theories, such as Erikson's
hierarchical.
One
period
is
its
is
ours, posit a sequence that
is
useful. Spring
summer
Winter
is
is
not
not intrinsically a better
better than spring.
essential part in the unfolding of the life cycle,
a prescribed course.
is
not higher or better than the preceding ones.
Again, the imagery of the seasons season than winter, nor
and
a fallow, quiet time in
growth comes to an end and the
possibility of
Each season
plays
and the sequence follows which the previous
new growth
is
created. It
the ultimate transitional period. Unless the creative work of winter
is
is
done
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
320
and the seeds take
when
soming,
blossoms
root,
LIFE
nothing further can grow. Spring
is
a time of blos-
The
the fruits of the winter's labor begin to be realized.
not appear unless the seeds have been nourished, and the
will
blossoms in turn make way for the blooming,
grown
fully
flowers.
So too with our developmental periods. The Early Adult Transition provides the cross-era shift into early adulthood.
Age Thirty
ing the Adult World, the
man
a
to build a
adult
first
life
The
next three periods— Enter-
Transition, Settling
modify
structure, to
Down— permit
and then
it,
to create
another through which he attains the culmination of early adulthood. At
about forty he enters the Mid-life Transition. early adult era
and plant the seeds
for
Now
he must terminate the
middle adulthood, when he
structure.
The
tasks of
upon
ones and represents a later phase in the cycle. There
earlier
are losses as well as gains in the shift
•
evaluation.
man
how
a
met
his
A
has fared during a given period.
in a structure-building
In extreme cases,
we can
man was
in a transitional period
his life cases,
we
is
We
How satisfactory is period? How well has he and create
must ask how well he has life structure he forms managed, in a transitional
the
a basis for the future?
man
readily say that a
clearly
era to the next.
needed when we consider
is
tasks.
period, to reappraise the past
That man,
from every period or
more judgmental approach
developmental
or poorly. This
has done especially well
unable to reappraise and modify his
and now cannot create an adequate new
after a painful transition, has
life
structure.
formed a new structure
in
which
and others. In most more mixed and evaluation difficult. What
exciting, productive, valuable to himself
however, the picture
are evaluating
is
is
not simply
how
well a person has succeeded in carry-
ing out a specific chore or in adapting to a single, concrete situation. asking:
life
one period are not better or more advanced than
those of another, except in the general sense that each period builds
the work of the
go
will
through a similar sequence of building, modifying and rebuilding the
How
well has he
met
his basic life tasks?
What
We are
has he done with
his life?
These questions take the strange territory.
We are
tering the quality of superficially.
Very
scientist,
the clinician and the educator into
legitimately interested in understanding
life,
little is
but we need great wisdom
known about
lest
we
and
fos-
evaluate too
the tasks of adult development and
the problems of building and modifying a
life.
We
must
learn
how
to
explore this territory in greater depth, with greater regard for the powerful
shaping forces in the individual and in society. to attempt individual tions.
But our work
make premature
and
We
institutional innovation,
will lack intrinsic value
need to examine
and
to seek
and public
new
credibility
lives,
direcif
we
evaluations and promote easy but ineffective methods.
Tasks and
•
Possibilities of
We
overlapping and connecting periods.
period in
its
own
to the evolution of the
however, each period period
when
right, to indicate
Adult Development
have tried to identify each it
The
"interpenetrated" with the others.
is
that a period begins, runs
its
by another period that has
contributes
course. In the actual process of development,
life
predominant, but the others are present in
is
how
occurs and
it
321
its
it.
It is
current
not the case
independent course, and ends, to be followed
own
totally separate character.
The
successive
periods are not like links in a chain, each tied to the others but intrinsically
independent of them.
The life cycle is an organic whole and each period contains all the The developing individual is like a long-distance traveler: from time
others.
to time
he changes
vehicles, fellow passengers
the past does not simply disappear.
He
and baggage of
now engaged
is
all
kinds, but
not only with his
current locale but with the various worlds he has lived in and the worlds
he
is
moving toward. The past and future
The
are in the present.
coexistence and interpenetration of periods
by that master of
own) biography, Marcel
(his
beautifully captured
is
Proust, in
Remembrance
of Things Past:
For
man
is
a creature without
coming, in a few seconds,
many
walls of the time through
which he has
though in a basin the surface bring
him
into the range
The paradox
now
level of
of
is
who
has the faculty of be-
and who, surrounded by the within them but as
lived, floats
which
constantly changing, so as to
is
one epoch, now of another.
Proust identifies here
any fixed age" and yet
Only
any fixed age,
years younger,
is
that
man
is
"a creature without
governed by time and by the "epochs" in his
life.
we understand the profound significance of the epochs in our he did, can we understand the ways in which one is, at a single
after
lives, as
time, a child, a youth, a middle-aged ageless.
As we
and an
gain a greater sense of our
elderly person.
own
can begin to exist at multiple ages. In the process, ourselves; rather,
we become more
tasks of this period.
But he
early.
The
when
those periods
also does
we
we do not fragment
chiefly
on the developmental
some work on the
become primary
in later periods
tasks of preceding periods are not
come
are never
integrated and whole.
During the current period, a man works periods. Tasks that will
We
biographies, however,
tasks of other
may be
completed and
to an end. If they are
activated cast aside
worked out reasonably
well at the appropriate time, they continue to support further development in
subsequent periods. Gains of the past form the ground on which current
developmental
efforts are built.
Conversely,
if
previous periods produce
enduring conflicts and limitations, a man's development in the current
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
322
may be
period
LIFE
seriously hindered or, in the extreme case, prevented alto-
gether.
Entry into a new period often reactivates the unresolved problems
and
These problems form
deficits of previous periods.
the past" that makes of past conflicts
shadowed.
examine
and hurts may weigh
When
first
the
a person
life structure, tasks
may be examined
The
from
carryover
so heavily that present tasks are over-
having serious
is
Continuing problems from then
a "baggage
harder to deal with current tasks.
it
difficulties, it is
important to
and concerns of the ongoing period.
earlier periods
of childhood
we can
within this context, and
and adulthood
see
how
they are
hampering the current developmental work.
•
universality of the eras and periods. This conception of the is
Does
it
based largely on a study of
cycle
it
be said
men
hold for American
have relevance in other is:
we
None
in the
contemporary United
generally at this
societies
don't know.
men and
moment in history? Does The first thing to
historical epochs?
of the insights
and generalizations offered
here are fully demonstrated truths. Each of them
My previous
requires further testing.
taught
me
to
be very cautious
the history of social science
a hypothesis that
is
work on "culture and personality" has
in positing universal features of
is
life
States.
human
life;
cluttered with disproved claims regarding
such universals. But, with these caveats,
we
energetically offer the following hypothesis:
This sequence of eras and periods
human
exists in all societies,
periods are grounded in the nature of
and
throughout the
human evolution. The eras and man as a biological, psychological
species, at the present stage in
and
social organism,
extending over
many
species. Individuals
in the nature of society as a
generations.
They
complex enterprise
represent the
go through the periods in
life
cycle of the
infinitely varied ways,
but
the periods themselves are universal. These eras and periods have governed
human development
for the past five or ten
beginning of more complex, stable
thousand years— since the
societies.
In positing a combined biological, psychological and social basis for this
developmental sequence, we are saying that none of these bases in itself.
No
evidence
now
exists that
is
sufficient
the eras and periods stem simply from
an unfolding of a biological, genetic program in the individual.
Nor do
they follow directly from a timetable established universally by social
insti-
tutions or cultures. If this developmental sequence does hold to
some
degree for the species,
its
origins
must be found
in the interaction of all
these influences as they operate during a particular phase in man's evolution.
Erikson has
come
to a similar view of the life cycle
on the
basis of
Tasks and
Possibilities of
his clinical, anthropological, historical
stage of Identity vs. Identity
period
we
Aloneness
vs.
He documents
this
Freud, Hitler, George Bernard
vs.
Stagnation, starts around forty and characvs.
Despair
the ego stage of late
is
view in his biographies of Luther, Gandhi,
Shaw and William James— men whose
Jung's conception of adult development rests
and
culmination during the
lives
centuries and continents.*
span several
viduals
His ego
Adult Transition. His stage of Intimacy
middle adulthood, while Integrity
adulthood.
its
inquiries.
323
the early twenties and runs through early adulthood.
starts in
His next stage, Generativity terizes
and biographical
Confusion reaches
identify as the Early
Adult Development
upon
of mythologies, religious systems, dreams
his analysis of indi-
and customs
in
numer-
ous cultures and times. Others, such as Joseph Campbell and Mircea Eliade,
have extended the anthropological basis of Jung's
dence of a mid-life
crisis in
the lives of 300
ideas. Jaques
artists in
many
found
evi-
countries over
the last 500 years. Ortega y Gasset, taking a broad historical-philosophical
human
view of
life
over the last 2500 years, has identified a sequence of
generations in society and in the individual
life cycle.
This sequence cor-
responds well to the eras and periods described here (see Chapter 2). In *
A
word about the
may be
similarities
and differences between our periods and Erikson's
We
regard adult development as the evolution of the life structure; our developmental periods are successive phases in the process of building, modifying and rebuilding that structure. Erikson's mode of analysis, too, is concerned with the stages
useful.
interconnectedness of
self
and world.
He
regards development, however, as a series of
stages in ego development.
Each
of Erikson's eight stages
self in relation to
the external world.
is
governed by a
The
issue
is
crucial,
problematic issue for the
stated as a polarity or contradiction be-
tween opposites. The developmental tasks of each stage derive from the central polarity. Thus, in the stage of Generativity-Stagnation the tasks include arriving at a "favorable balance" of generativity over stagnation; coming to terms with the actualities of stagnation and death; drawing more fully upon one's internal resources for generative purposes; accepting with less ambivalence one's responsibilities and obligations toward society in general and the next generation of adults in particular; acquiring the virtue of "caring" in new ways for individuals and institutions. Erikson's ego stages have to do with the self as it is engaged with the world, but their primary focus is within the person. Each stage is defined in terms of attributes of a person: the capacity for commitment, the virtue of caring, the sense of trust. These personal qualities connect the self to the sociocultural world, and Erikson more than any other investigator has depicted the subtle but vast influence of the sociocultural world upon ego development. His biographical studies of Luther and Gandhi are unmatched in their sensitive portrayal of the ways in which historical, cultural and institutional forces enter into the shape and substance of an individual life. Our approach makes use or Erikson's, but it shifts the focus somewhat. The concept of life structure is centered more directly on the boundary between self and world. find a It gives equal consideration to self and world as aspects of the lived life. larger number of developmental periods, and we trace the developmental process in somewhat more detail. Still, there are many areas of convergence. Our view of the self includes Erikson's concept of the ego. Our view of the sociocultural world as an aspect of life structure is consistent with his way of thinking about society. His ego stages of adulthood fit well within the timetable of our eras and periods. Our view builds on and adds to his, and is not antithetical to it. •
We
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
324
The Coming
LIFE
Simone de Beauvoir documents the
oi Age,
middle to late adulthood, and the nature of
life in
around the world. David Gutmann, studying the
transition
from
old age, in societies
men
fantasies of
in several
contrasting societies, has obtained findings consistent with ours.
In exploring the question of universality, data on the
Jife
cycle in earlier cultures.
would help
it
We
do have
we had more
if
available,
however,
some 2500 years (see the table on page 325). These documents reflect the wisdom of the ancient Hebrew, Chinese and Greek civilizations. The Talmud contains a section called "The Sayings three documents going back
of the Fathers'' (Pirke
Aboth), which outlines the "ages of man." Con-
China about 500 b.c.e., identifies six steps in the life Greek poet and lawmaker in the 7th century b.c.e., divided
fucius, writing in cycle. Solon, a
the
life
cycle into ten stages, each lasting seven years.
These sources
differ
widely in cultural context and religion. Yet, despite
the diversity of imagery and content, the three views of the basically similar to each other ately, all of
them
refer only to males; the neglect of the
has a long history. )
If
we
life
cycle are
and to the one presented here. (Unfortunfemale
life
cycle
place the timetable of our eras and periods over
each of the ancient accounts, like a template, they show a remarkably close fit.
a.
The
pre-adult era occupies roughly the
b. Early
an
a
It
contains
formative period of some 15 years (like our "novice phase") in
initial
which
15 to 20 years.
first
adulthood extends from 15 or 20 until about 40.
young man enters the adult world,
gets married
and pursues an
occupation. Only at 30 does he attain full strength (Talmud, Solon) and
upon the ground" (Confucius). From 30
"plant his feet firm
to 40 a
man
has his greatest strength and energy, but he has not yet attained his most
mature
capabilities. Early
as a preparation for the c.
adulthood
next
Middle adulthood
stage
was
(
56-63
)
,
"is
he
able,
thus a time of flowering, as well
era.
lasts
Solon, "the tongue and the
is
from roughly 40 to
mind ...
are
now
60.
From
but never so nimble in speech and in wit
in the days of his prime."
According to the Talmud, 40
"understanding" and 50 for "giving counsel." Confucius in idiom:
"At
40,
I
42 to 56, says
at their best." In the next
no longer suffered from
is
differs
perplexities,"
as
he
the age for
only slightly
and "At
50, I
knew what were the biddings of heaven" (although it was not until 60 that he heard them with docile ear! ) All agree, then, that the years from about .
40 to 60 permit the greatest actualization of one's capabilities and virtues
and the greatest contribution
to society, despite
some
decline in youthful
strength and energy. d.
For
all
three sources, late adulthood starts at around 60. Solon regards
;
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
old age as a period of decline
:
at 70,
man
"has
come
325
to the time to depart
on the ebb-tide of Death." The Talmud and Confucius offer a more developmental view of this era. According to the Talmud, the full wisdom and dignity of being an elder start at 60.
into a
new
heaven— that
relation to
At is,
this age, says
to
life
source of personal values, to the self— and through spiritual ality,
Confucius,
I
enter
and death, to the ultimate it
gain a
new kind
freedom transcending the old antitheses between desire and mor-
between society and
self.
The Talmud adds a final phase, which corresponds to our late adulthood. At 80, a man attains a new strength (Gevurah) of advanced
late
e.
After 90, he lives on the far edge of the boundary between
One may of
life
age.
and death.
also note, in addition to the ancient concepts of the "ages
man," the curious but suggestive outline presented
man
of
in 1851
by the Ger-
philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer in Parerga and Paralipomena:
Shoit Philosophical Essays (published in English translation by the Clar-
endon
Press in 1974)
natural duration of
.
He
agrees with the
human
life" (barring
Upanishad of the Veda that "the accidents or illness)
is
100 years,
and then (slightly tongue-in-cheek) identifies a sequence of decades with appropriate planetary influences.
man
is
now
At
30, for
example, "Mars reigns, and a
impetuous, strong, bold and warlike." At 50 "Jupiter holds
sway." Finally, "Uranus comes and then, as they say,
"The Sayings 5 years is
of the Fathers" (from the
we go
to heaven.
Talmud)
the age for reading (Scripture);
10 forMisnah (the laws); 13 for the
Commandments
(Bar Mitzvah, moral responsibility);
forGemara (Talmudic discussions; 18 forHupa (wedding canopy);
15
abstract reasoning);
20 for seeking a livelihood (pursuing an occupation); 30 for attaining
full
strength ("Koah");
40 for understanding; 50 for giving counsel;
60 for becoming an elder (wisdom,, old age) 70 for white
hair;
80 for Gevurah (new, special strength of age);
90 for being bent under the weight of the years; 100 for being as
if
already dead
and passed away from the world.
." .
.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
326
Confucius
The Master said, At At At At At At
30,
I
40,
I
50,
I
15
my
had planted
my heart upon
set
I
feet firm
no longer suffered from
learning.
upon the ground.
perplexities.
60,
I
knew what were the biddings heard them with docile ear.
70,
I
could follow the dictates of
I
desired
of heaven.
my own
heart; for
what
no longer overstepped the boundaries of
right.
Solon
0-7
A boy at first
is
the man; unripe; then he casts his teeth;
milk-teeth befitting the child he sheds in his seventh year.
7-14 Then to
his seven years
signs of approaching
14-21
Still,
God adding another seven,
manhood show
in the
bud.
in the third of the sevens his limbs are growing; his chin
touched with a
down, the bloom of the cheek gone.
fleecy
21-28 Now, in the fourth of the sevens ripen to greatest completeness the powers of the man, and his worth becomes plain to see.
28-35 1° the
fifth
bethinks
35-42
Now
he bethinks him that
him
42-56 Seven times seven, and
him
eight; the
for fourteen years together are Still in
in
63-70
is
he
speech and in wit
Who has
An
the ninth
able, as
the season for courting,
and continue
his line.
virtue,
to profitless deeds;
tongue and the mind
now
at their best.
but never so nimble
he was
to the tenth has attained,
come
is
mind, ever open to
in the sixth his
broadens, and never inspires
56-63
this
that sons will preserve
to the time to depart
in the days of his prime.
and has
lived to
complete
it,
on the ebb-tide of Death.
Evolutionary Perspective
In a more speculative vein, the perspective of
human
I
want
to place this view of the life cycle in
evolution. In 1932, the biologist
G.
P. Bidder
published an evocative article in which he attempted to explain biological
senescence— that
is,
the normal process of bodily decline. Senescence
is
some organisms
as
an inexorable sequence
leading to death. However, senescence occurs in
all
the land vertebrates, in-
not built into the
cluding man.
Why,
life
cycle of
asks Bidder,
is
this?
Tasks and
The key
factor, in his opinion,
Possibilities of
that the
is
Adult Development
members
327
of every species of
land vertebrate must reach and maintain a standard body size which
optimal for mobility and survival. First,
The growth sequence
the organism goes through a process of positive growth until
an optimal
A
size.
the optimal size
is
mechanism
regulating
it
reaches
needed to limit growth when
is
reached. This regulator produces a phase of non-growth
and then
that maintains the optimal state for a while,
negative growth for which death is
is
proceeds as follows.
is
a
a phase of increasing
normal outcome. Bidder's reasoning
this:
Adequate
efficiency could
be obtained only by the evolution of some
mechanism to stop natural growth so soon mechanism may be called the regulator. .
have suggested that senescence
I
the regulator after growth
is
is
stopped.
concerns the welfare of the species.
.
as specific size
is
reached. This
.
the result of the continued action of
The
Man
is
regulator does efficiently
that
all
within 2 cm. of the same height
between 18 and 60; he gently rises 2 cm. between 20 and 27, and 1 cm. by 40 or thereabouts.
still
more
gently loses If
by
primitive
37,
when
man
at
1
8 begat a son, the species
his son could
hunt
had no more need of him
for food for the grandchildren. Therefore,
the dwindling of cartilage, muscle and nerve
cell,
which we
call
senescence,
did not affect the survival of the species; the checking of growth had secured that by ensuring a perfect physique between
20 and 40.
Effects of continued negative growth after 37 were of indifference to the race;
man
probably no
ever reached 60 years old untiJ language attained such
importance in the equipment of the species that long experience became
man who
valuable in a
could neither fight nor hunt.
This negative growth
is
not the manifestation of a weakness inherent in
protoplasm or characteristic of nucleated
cells;
it
is
the unimportant by-
product of a regulating mechanism necessary to the survival of swiftly mov-
mechanism evolved by selection and survival as have been mammalian limbs, and with similar perfection.
ing land animals, a
evolved the jointing of
Though
his
main purpose
is
to identify the biological
mechanism
of
senescence, Bidder here almost incidentally describes universal phases in
the
human
life
cycle
of evolution. His call
pre-adulthood.
and suggests how they have been affected
first
It
in the course
phase, positive growth, corresponds to the era
extends from birth to about 20,
when
we
the individual
attains full biological growth. Bidder's second phase, corresponding to early
adulthood,
lasts
roughly from 20 to 40. During this time the individual's
capacity for adaptation
and mastery
is
at
its
height and he makes his
primary contribution to the survival of the species. His third phase, from
40 to 60,
is
like
our middle adulthood: the effects of the regulator begin
to produce a slight biological decline but there
is
also a possibility for
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
328
greater psychological
development and
social contribution
under
facilitating
social conditions. In the fourth phase, from 60 on, increasing senescence
culminates in death.
For our present purposes, Bidder
human
the
life cycle. First,
he draws
middle adulthood, with age 40
he maintains
as
is
making two important points about
a clear distinction
that, until very recently in
experience of middle adulthood.
between
early
and
an approximate turning point. Second,
human
By age 40
evolution, there was
primitive
little
man had completed
main reproductive, parental and occupational contributions to the tribe. With the decline of his social usefulness and adaptive capacities, his
his
chances for survival beyond 40 were quite small. It was only with the recent emergence of language and more complex cultural forms that the tribe
much value on sustaining individual life after 40. The current evidence supports Bidder's viewpoint. The human
placed
species
has existed for at least half a million years and perhaps more than three
man
million years. Until five or ten thousand years ago
unsettled
gathering food.
led a precarious,
small societies that lived primarily by hunting, fishing and
life in
The
character of
human
life
was transformed by the devel-
opment of agriculture, the formation of more stable societies, the invention of more effective technologies, and the emergence of writing and other means of transmitting culture from one generation to the next. In
hunting-gathering
primitive
societies,
only
the
half
population
reached age 20, and not more than 10 percent survived beyond 40.
The
high
mortality rate in early adulthood was not due to earlier senescence, since
70 to 80 years has probably been man's normal
life
many thousands
span for
of years. It was caused by the ravages of illness, accident, warfare
inadequate food supply. Life after
beyond— has been a
moment in By
eras of
a significant part of man's collective experience for but
man had
little
biological or tribal reason to continue living
that age the children were grown, the best years of productive
labor ended, the contribution to the tribe fulfilled. lete.
The
tribe
needed only a small cluster of
men
By 40 in
a
A large
man was
obso-
middle adulthood to
wisdom in positions of leadership and number would have strained the tribe's resources.
contribute their ripening bility.
and
middle adulthood and
our history.
Primitive after 40.
40— the
responsi-
United Nations data on the age composition of contemporary nations offers interesting
and is
comparisons. In Pakistan, where
living conditions
over 40.
The
among
figures are
human
fertility is
high
the worst, only 17 percent of the population
even lower in Ethiopia and Bangladesh. At the
other extreme, 35 percent of the Japanese are over 40 years old, 36 percent in the U.S. A., and 42 percent in West Germany. Current predictions are
Tasks and
Possibilities of
Adult Development
that the percentages Will rise in the industrialized countries over the
329
coming
decades.
The
modern
rapidly lengthening life span in
society has stimulated
widespread concern with the era of late adulthood. seek ways of improving the quality of
Much
the economic burdens involved.
problem of equal or greater
life
are beginning to
and
of
managing
attention has been given to a
less
significance:
We
for the elderly,
What
about the rapidly growing
percentage of the population in middle adulthood? Unless the quality of life in this
generation
dous
and
strain
is
improved, the middle-aged will be under tremen-
society will continue to
be short of creative leadership. More
elaborate social structures have been developed in every aspect of societyagriculture, industry, art,
government,
religion, education, health care, science,
even recreation. Occupational roles have become more specialized.
need more people who can contribute
wisdom
sources of traditional
leaders,
as
as well as vision
and imagination. Modern
society requires a vital, developing contingent in
The It
required work of middle adulthood
is
involves greater responsibility, perspective
must be able
this era
to care for younger
We
managers, mentors,
middle age.
different
from that of youth.
and judgment.
and older
A
person in
adults, to exercise au-
thority creatively, to transcend the youthful extremes of shallow conformity
and impulsive
rebelliousness.
The moderate
mid-life decrease in biological
must be counterbalanced by an increased psychosocial capacity. In countless intellectual, emotional, moral, esthetic, managerial and reparative capacity
ways, the middle-aged must help in maintaining and developing the culture. It is
not that modern society has created middle adulthood as an
era.
The capability for living productively beyond 40 has been part of the human potential from the start. But only recently has society become better able to ensure that
its
members
now doing
it.
Society
is
The more
difficult
problem
half of
is
live
out their
full life span, rather
to foster psychological well-being
the conditions for a satisfying, productive vary somewhat, but the problem
is
life in
of powerful technology
and provide
middle adulthood. Nations
universal. Its basic roots are in
evolution rather than in the nature of a particular society.
opment
than just
better at keeping people healthy after 40.
and of cumbersome
The
human
rapid devel-
institutional structures
has created a need for greater numbers of productive middle-aged individuals.
But the need has
middle adulthood and our
The
far outstripped
our cumulative understanding of
ability to foster life in
it.
large-scale extension of the average life
one of the great achievements
in
human
expectancy beyond 40
evolution. It
is
is
a step in the
"ascent of man." But the termination of early adulthood continues to be
MAN
THE SEASONS OF A
330
LIFE
S
frightening and painful. This
recent acquisition in reflects
human
is
partly because middle adulthood
the ancient experience of the
40. It
is still
hood.
The
vitality,
is
such a
Our profound anxiety at passing 40 species: we still fear that life ends at to move from early to middle adult-
evolution.
profoundly threatening
threat is based on the equating of youth with strength and and of age— even middle age— with weakness, vulnerability and
death.
A
few thousand years
not enough to learn what to do with middle
is
adulthood and with the institutions that shape feeling our
way
in the dark.
hood, the tribe I
am
new
losing
season
As
make the
I
offers little instruction,
shift
is
is
coming, that
life will
me?
are the options that await
get
I
course. early to
We
I
may
gain.
I
out and that
I
may soon
myself or others. But
I
still
What
know
that a
be crucially changed. But what
many
explicit
messages and vague
vibrations about mortality, loss, restriction; feelings that time die or,
are
middle adult-
support or cultural wisdom.
much more evident than what
my
its
from
worse, have a
life
is
running
without meaning for
get few positive images of the middle-aged
hero-
ine lover, friend or mentor, the person of dignity, wisdom, authority, creativeness.
Where
Odysseus on
his mid-life journey?
is
the contemporary parallel to Abraham,
The Developmental Work and Middle Adulthood My purpose here
is
a sure path to salvation, joy
illuminate the dark a
little
of heroic adulthood or to offer
and optimal development.
and give a
or
of Early
new myth
not to add a
Buddha
It
is,
rather, to
clearer view of the terrain.
the nature of development in early and middle adulthood?
What
What
is
kinds of
developmental work must be done?
The conception to
examine the
of eras provides a contour
terrain of early
map,
developmental tasks that must be met. Within identified three sets of tasks.
of
them
as
it
were, within which
and middle adulthood and to specify the
The
this
framework, we have
three sets are closely interrelated, and
are essential to an understanding of adulthood.
I
shall review
all
them
briefly.
Building and Modifying the Life Structure
One
set of tasks has to
evolution of the
do with the developmental periods and the
life structure. I
have given special emphasis to the periods
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
331
because, within the broader patterning of the eras, they provide the pri-
mary source
and sequential progression. In
of order
major tasks are to build a
life
structure
a stable period the
and enhance one's
life
within
it.
In a transitional period one must terminate the existing structure, explore possibilities (in self
and make the
The
new
choices that provide the basis for a
initial
cross-era transitions require
initiate its
and world) out of which new choices can be formed one to terminate the outgoing
structure.
era
and to
the next. In addition, every period has distinctive tasks that reflect
specific place in the life cycle.
Working on
A
second
Components
Single
do with forming and modifying single
set of tasks has to
components of the
of the Life Structure
We
life structure.
have identified several components,
such as occupation, family and mentoring relationships, which are often of central importance in a man's
man
make
to
is
work on these time
this
life.
Developmental work
tasks contributes to the stability of adult
work changes from period
is
required
if
a
component. The continuing
a place in his life for a given
life.
At the same
and contributes to the evolu-
to period
As I have said, psychologists and social scientists component without placing it in the context of the Our understanding of changes within a single component
tion of the life structure.
often focus on a single life structure.
will, I believe,
be increased when we examine
spective. Let
me
through a single
Of
the
life, five
•
series of age-linked periods;
component
are
much more
many components
seemed of
special
and
from a developmental
that
the more concrete changes within a
may have
aspects of the self
early
initial structure in
his task
sufficiently,
and
he
finds
its
is
which to
it
is
modify or
tion
it
prescribes.
is
now
less
efforts,
The Dream may
many
it
Even when
He
then has
he has attained the Dream it
does not provide the
may continue
diverse aspects of living. years.
fulfill it.
in the general direc-
tyrannized by ambition,
cerned with the intrinsic value of his
lived
some measure fulfilled. In give up the Dream. He may
in
worthwhile (even though
But he
has to
and to determine which other
excessive hold
magical qualities he had hoped for), he
man
adulthood a
which the Dream can be
will try to live out. If it
and timing.
great significance in a man's
recognize that he will not be able even partially to to free himself from
per-
structure evolves
importance in our study.
attain goals through
middle adulthood
life
variable in their sequence
forming and modifying a dream. In
form a Dream, create an out,
it
emphasize again: the individual
more con-
and more able to enjoy
die stillborn or
continues to play a part,
its
may
flourish for
meaning and place
THE SEASONS OF A
332
MAN S
LIFE
in his life necessarily evolve over the his
•
own
sequence of periods. Each
forming and modifying an occupation. The process
occupation
is
never brief or simple.
of forming an
33.
Some men
stay in a single
many
occupation during this time, but the majority make a few or if
finds
occupies the entire novice phase of
It
from roughly age 17 to
early adulthood,
Even
man
balance of stability and change.
a
man
changes.
continues within one broadly defined occupation (such as
plumber, novelist or manager), he will go through many qualitative changes in work place, status, identity, meaning and In the early tries
to define a
with the
thirties,
member
ladder, as a junior
He
strivings.
mode
starts
of work.
Down
the Settling
work enterprise and ladder that
mination of his youthful
period,
him
will carry
he
to the cul-
on the bottom rung of the
By about
of his adult world.
and the end
40,
Own Man period, he has advanced as far as he ladder. A vital task of the Mid-life Transition is to
Becoming One's
of the
can up the early adult
make
start of
a place for himself in the
"senior" within that world.
Men
middle adult generation and become enormously
differ
how
sonal importance of their early adult ladder, in
meaning
their ultimate success-failure has for
in the nature far
and
per-
they climb, in the
them, and
in the
new work
they undertake in middle adulthood.
•
love-marri age-family. Several tasks are included here, but they are so
interrelated that
it
seems best to consider them together.
seeks in a love relationship,
to form, are continuing issues in adult relationships with
ing,
life. If
he
is
sexuality
and
affection. If
If
he
man
is
able
he
is
of sexual freedom to
form an endur-
mutually valued marriage, he must become capable of
commitment.
a
to have intimate love
women, he must achieve some degree
and some integration of
What
and what kinds of love relationships he
fidelity
and
to join his wife in creating a stable family life that
is
serves the needs of parents as well as children,
he must become ready to
accept familial responsibilities and to derive the satisfactions offered by
marriage and fatherhood.
No
one can be
far
advanced in these tasks at the
hood. During the novice phase, a to living, husbanding
man
and fathering
is
as
much an
start of early adult-
apprentice with regard
as in other aspects of life.
often characterized by impersonal pleasure seeking,
His loving
macho power
is
seeking
or inhibition of passion and sensuality. If he seeks a serious relationship
with a woman, his ideal friend
and helper
is
woman" who will be his lover, Dream. Yet he may marry a woman who
the "special
in search of the
does not appreciate and support his Dream, and in time they will have to
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development deal with the consequences of this greatly in his heroic struggles
and
have to be modified over time
will
directions. If she has a
Dream
Sometimes
refusal.
their relationship
is
his
idyllic at
both of them change
as
333
wife helps
the
start. It
in different
other than that of becoming a wife and
mother, the two of them will have to create an evolving
life
structure that
can encompass their joint family and their separate occupations. There are endless variations in the patterning of familial relationships vicissitudes over time. All that
and
In early adulthood most
ment
certain
is
and
their
that the patterning will change
continuing developmental work in the successive periods.
will require
though the
is
men
give
in family life
is
work
two
relative balance of the
a higher priority than family,
quite variable.
is
A
man's engage-
often limited by his anxiety regarding the feminine
For example, he may sharply separate the maternal and paternal
in himself.
functions, leaving the former to his wife. His heavy involvement in outside
and
activities,
his
avoidance of
many
sometimes obscure the strength of
caring-feeling functions
man's investment
a
Fatherhood was tremendously important study.
They were
home,
in his family.
most of the men
in our
when things went well at home, and they expeand guilt when family life was too limited or full of
Often, a man's sense of family and attachment to the children
conflict.
were strong enough to keep him is
at
gratified
rienced great anxiety
Tracy
for
when
but one of
many
an otherwise stultifying marriage. Jim
in
He
examples.
also exemplifies a
quently occurs in the late thirties and early
change that
fre-
he modulated
his
involvement in work and gave the family a more central place in his
life
structure.
forties:
The developmental work of the Mid-life Transition contributes Through it, a man gets more in touch with the feminine
to this process. in himself
and
others.
He becomes more
father to his youthful offspring
outside the
•
and
nating relationships with mentors
Young men
differ
sustaining these relationships. ability of
mentor
is
is
Initiating,
modifying and termi-
an important yet
difficult task of early
widely in their capability for evoking and
There are
mentoring opportunities
A good
need to expand
home.
forming mentoring relationships.
adulthood.
interested in being a mentorial
in supporting his wife's
also great variations in the avail-
in different social worlds.
an admixture of good father and good friend. (A bad
mentor, of which there are many, combines the worst features of father friend.) A "good enough" mentor is a transitional figure who invites and welcomes a young man into the adult world. He serves as guide, teacher and sponsor. He represents skill, knowledge, virtue, accomplish-
and
ment—the
superior qualities a
young man hopes someday to
acquire.
He
)
3
MAN S
THE SEASONS OF A
34
LIFE
gives his blessing to the novice
and
Dream. And
his
yet,
with
riority, he conveys the promise that in time they will be peers.
all this
The
supe-
protege
has the hope that soon he will be able to join or even surpass his mentor in the
A
work they both value. mentor can be of great
way
find his
and gain
new
practical help to a
But
skills.
young man
good mentor
a
is
as
he seeks to
helpful in a
more
developmental sense. This relationship enables the recipient to
basic,
identify with a person
him
enables
encouragement
who
exemplifies
form an internal
to
in his struggles.
figure
He
many who
of the qualities
he
seeks. It
admiration and
offers love,
acquires a sense of belonging to the
He
generation of promising young men.
reaps the varied benefits to be
gained from a serious, mutual, non-sexual loving relationship with a some-
what older man or woman. (There are other elements, which bring various advantages and disadvantages, when the relationship is sexual and when the mentor
Like
all
is
much
older, or the
same
age.
mentor relationship
love relationships, the course of a
smooth and
its
ending
is
developmental functions, but they have negative aspects plenty of
room
for exploitation, undercutting, envy,
on the part of the mentor, and
pressive control
clinging admiration, self-denying gratitude
the part of the recipient.
is
rarely
often painful. Such relationships have favorable
It is
There
as well.
is
smothering and op-
for greedy
demanding,
and arrogant ingratitude on
not always clear
who
is
doing what for
whom.
After the relationship has been terminated, both parties are susceptible to
the most intense feelings of admiration and contempt, appreciation and resentment,
grief, rage, bitterness
and relief— just
wake
as in the
of any
significant love relationship.
Many adults
give
and receive very
little
mentoring. Despite the frequent
emphasis on teamwork and loyalty in business organizations, mentoring relationships are
managers.
more the exception than the
Our system
of higher education,
fostering the intellectual
mentoring that
is
tional institutions
rule for
though
officially
committed to
and personal development of students, provides
generally limited in quantity
and poor
in quality.
and work organizations can do much more to
development of students and young adult workers. also
both workers and
To do
this,
Educa-
assist
the
they will
have to support the development of teachers, managers and other
workers in the generations over age 30. Until middle adulthood
time of
life,
most
of those
who
are in
it
will
is
a better
be unable to contribute the
mentoring urgently needed by younger generations.
Many
middle-aged
men
never experience the satisfactions and tribulations of mentorhood.
This
is
ment
a waste of talent, a loss to the individuals involved,
to constructive social change.
and an impedi-
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
•
335
forming mutual friendships. In our interviews, friendship was largely its absence. As a tentative generalization we would say that
noticeable by
close friendship with a
men. This
is
man
is
rarely experienced
by American
not something that can be adequately determined by a ques-
tionnaire or mass survey. is
woman
or
often blurred.
The
between friend and acquaintance
distinction
A man may
have a wide
network
social
in
which he has
many men and perhaps a few most men do not have an intimate male
amicable, "friendly" relationships with
women. In
general, however,
boyhood or youth. Many
friend of the kind that they recall fondly from
men
have had casual dating relationships with women, and perhaps a few
complex love-sex
relationships,
non-sexual friendship with a ship
so rare,
is
but most
woman.
We
and what consequences
men
have not had an intimate,
need to understand why friend-
this deprivation has for adult life.
Becoming More Individuated The
third
and
final set of tasks
has to do with adult individuation. These
Young/Old, Destruction/Creation,
involve the basic polarities of
tasks
Masculine/Feminine and Attachment/Separateness. In riods, a
man
new place
ate to his
These regarded
transitional
pe-
has the task of reintegrating each polarity in a form appropri-
polarities
them
in the life cycle.
have been of interest chiefly to psychologists,
as aspects of the personality. In
who have
our opinion they must be
considered from the conjoint perspective of person and society, for they
within both. Each polarity exists within the
exist as divisions
worked on by the self over time. fied by society in the course of
It also exists
is
polarity.
An American
its
history.
man's sense of what
it
self
within society and
is
and
modi-
Consider the Young/Old
means
to be
young or old
is
shaped by cultural symbols and images, by the schools and occupations, by
and meanings of Medicare, retirement, social security, Florida condominiums, death and dying— and by the movies, television, rock music, the
realities
professional sports
Old
and
mod
polarity in the self
life styles. It is
when
between young and old and makes
When men
more
is
done to
will enter early
polarities
so frightening to be other than young.
it
foster
development
adulthood with a
it is
integration can be achieved by the
in pre-adulthood,
young
relatively better integration of the
and a greater readiness to engage
these and other tasks. Nonetheless,
Some
hard to integrate the Young/
the external world draws such a hard line
in
developmental work on
unlikely that
more than
a limited
end of the Early Adult Transition.
degree of splitting and one-sidedness seems to be a built-in, normal
feature of the self
and the
life
structure in early adulthood.
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
336
man
Thus, a
and
in his twenties
thirties
is
normally
full of
youthful
He is tilted, as it were, toward the Young pole of Young/Old polarity. He has a strong need to accentuate his arche-
energies and
the
typally
aspirations.
Young
qualities
Old
his archetypally
and
a corresponding
qualities. It
is
need to minimize or repress
developmentally appropriate for him to
maintain the unconscious wish and assumption that he
He needs— and
can
have— more time
and begins coming to terms with
own mortality own eventual death and the actual or The Mid-life Transition is a develop-
mentally given period for working on this process. create a legacy,
indeed immortal.
his
eventual death of his loved ones.
more mentorial,
is
before he confronts his
and have the other
from integrating the Young/Old polarity
in a
He
can then become
satisfactions that
way appropriate
for
stem
middle
adulthood.
So too
for the other polarities.
Although the Masculine/Feminine im-
much less marked than it usually is in our highly genderman in early adulthood must give some priority to the mas-
balance can be split society, a
culine. His adult identity fully utilize the qualities sible in
is
colored by images of manliness, and he cannot
he regards
as feminine.
Greater integration
is
pos-
middle adulthood: he now has greater internal freedom to enjoy
the feminine in himself and others; and, in a "good enough" society, he is
given greater external freedom as well.
A young man cannot be expected to polarity.
He may
integrate the Destruction/Creation
have a good deal of knowledge and personal experience
regarding certain kinds of destruction, such as war, crime, poverty or natural disasters.
But
as a
youth he
tive forces in self, society
is
not ready to experience fully the destruc-
and nature, and to give them
meaning. In middle adulthood he may achieve a
a
more profound
fuller integration of the
Destruction/Creation polarity and become creative in ways not possible earlier.
In early adulthood, the powerful forces of attachment to the external
world are reflected in a man's search for involvement, mastery, control, and
The Attachment/Separateness balance middle adulthood. He can now strengthen the forces of
material and emotional income.
normally
shifts in
separateness. self,
He
can develop a stronger sense of
while maintaining his
ties
and
self
and a centering
in the
responsibilities in the world.
Fostering Adult Development Clearly, a great deal
adulthood.
Where
development
in
development has been severely hampered
in
must be done
a person's
to support individual
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
the past, or
must be
is
being thwarted in the present,
new
therapeutic approaches
normal develop-
created, approaches that take account of the
mental processes involved
as well as the
more
337
neurotic, pathological aspects.
Individual and group counseling and educational efforts can help troubled individuals place their specific problems within a broader, developmental perspective.
But such approaches, though problem.
If
we
helpful,
have to modify the
do not go to the heart of the
development on a wider
are to support adult
social institutions that
shape our
lives.
scale,
we
will
Industry and
other work organizations, government, higher education, religion and fam-
must take account
ily—all of these
and developmental
ferent eras
of the changing needs of adults in dif-
periods.
What
is
helpful in one era
may
not be in another. In early adulthood, a
man
financial
demands, modify
grate his
life as
an adult.
The Age
At the end of the
many
of his relationships, goals
the
marriage and family, meet heavy
Thirty Transition
frequently a time of
life
Settling
Down
begins, he
crucial consequences for his entire future.
a crisis relating to
they find their
inte-
when his life is getting more settled, and values come into, question. In the early
Age Thirty Transition ends and
Some men have
is
and world, and
twenties, just
must make choices that have thirties;
start a
his ties to the pre-adult self
crisis.
thirties, as
faced with tremendous burdens as he
is
attempts to form an occupation,
Becoming One's
structure intolerable just
Own Man when
in the late
they are reach-
ing the culmination of early adulthood. .
The
stressful
twenties and thirties are perhaps the most abundant and the most
decades in the
life cycle.
Given the tremendously
difficult tasks of
man must deal with, this Still, much can be done to
adaptation and development a young
era cannot
be made easy or simple to
reduce the
excessive stress If a
and to
man's early
traverse.
work on the developmental tasks. adulthood is dominated by poverty, recurrent unemfacilitate
ployment and the lack of a reasonably
satisfactory niche in society, his
adult development will be undermined. His energies will go to simple survival rather than the pursuit of a
ture that has value for himself
and
Dream
fragmented, polluted, crime-ridden world, features of collective life
or the creation of a
others. If
he
how
from becoming part of
life struc-
lives in a disorganized,
can he keep the worst his individual develop-
ment? But
it is
Even when a pleasant
not simply a matter of gross poverty and social disorganization. a man's circumstances are
more comfortable— when he
lives in
neighborhood and has a secure job or profession— many aspects
of work, family
and community
life
combine
to produce heavy external
pressure and inner conflicts. Starting a family and embarking
upon an
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE
338
when
occupational career, adult status
is still
For
much
large
income
at
is
and consequences of
wife. If the extent seriously,
one's
lowest point and one's
its
marginal, imposes terrible burdens on both husband and this
could be done to alleviate the
numbers
of
problem were taken more
stress.
men, the conditions of work
government agencies,
in corporations, small companies, local or federal
schools, churches, hospitals— institutional structures of
recent historical development. tions that
profit ing.
We are
still
learning
work productively, humanely and
development
and
of their employees
making have had top
As we move
adulthood
in early
and inimical to development. Most people work
are oppressive, alienating
in
clients.
all
how
kinds. This
a
ways that support the adult
The aims
and
of productivity
priority in the industrial age that
into an age in
is
to create organiza-
is
now
pass-
which production and power might be
less
we have a chance to reorder our priorities. It remains whether we shall give higher priority to enhancing the meaning
overriding concerns, to
be seen
of
work and
work organizations that
to creating
foster
development
as
well as productive efficiency.
At a more specific, personal level, we can try to improve the quantity and quality of mentoring in the work world. Most young men receive little mentoring, and good mentor relationships are rare indeed. Poor mentoring in early
adulthood
is
the equivalent of poor parenting in childhood: without
adequate mentoring a young man's entry into the adult world
is
greatly
hampered. Some degree of emotional support, guidance and sponsorship is
needed to smooth the way and make the journey worthwhile.
When
the work world
highly subordinated, and
ine"— a man polarity.
The
will
find
is
hypermasculine— when
many it
qualities in
men
women
are absent or
are devaluated as "femin-
harder to integrate the Masculine/Feminine
women in the work world is an impormen from their one-sided masculinity and feminine. Men need women as colleagues, bosses
freer participation of
tant step toward the liberation of their anxiety
about the
and mentors. These live
relationships enable
out more aspects of the
self,
them
to
form richer
identities, to
and to reduce the burdens created by
the excessive masculinization of work. Changes of this kind will also free
women from
the constraints imposed by the excessive feminization of par-
enting and by the discrimination that restricts their participation in most of our institutions.
Further institutional changes are needed to permit better living and
development
in
middle adulthood. Our institutions now are geared mainly
to early adulthood.
Whatever
even more faulty for society
and
men
in
their limitations for
young men, they are
middle age. For example, the family in our
in all others since the origin of the species
is
above
all
an
insti-
Tasks and Possibilities of Adult Development
tution for
young
The
adults.
family
is
and personal immortality.
of tradition
which youthful parents tablish their
own
most of us
for
a powerful
The
symbol
a social arrangement through
It is
strive to rear their pre-adult offspring
place in the world.
339
and to
es-
functions of the family change
drastically as the offspring begin to leave the nest
and the parents enter
middle adulthood.
We are just beginning to ask of the family in the lives of
the fundamental questions about the role
its
middle-aged members.
The
relationships
of parents to their adult offspring (and to the succeeding generations) have
middle and
a continuing importance in
hood,
if
the family
late
adulthood. In middle adult-
man and woman must
intact, a
is
relationships with each other, with their offspring their parents
new
What
and perhaps grandparents.
the family, and what should be living conditions of
are the proper functions of
and guiding
structure
its
middle adulthood?
restructure their
and grandchildren, with
What
values,
under the
kinds of supports are
needed so that the middle-aged can better manage their developmental
and cope with the
tasks
when
a person has
Similarly,
strains of family life?
more than one
most occupations
When we
spective of early adulthood. usually focus
are defined
The problem
no
family, or
compounded
is
middle
family, in the
it
and of
Much
less
work
thought, and certainly
public discussion, have been given to the meaning of work in
these years.
What new
we
requires dur-
ing the initial five or ten or twenty years. But the nature of a man's
less
per-
discuss or study an occupation,
on the process of entry and the kinds of work
changes appreciably in middle adulthood.
much
years.
and understood from the
How
should jobs and careers evolve during middle adulthood?
kinds of work are desirable from the viewpoint of the individual
society?
What
can be done to provide for greater learning and
re-
juvenation within the same occupation, for shifting to a "second career," or for early retirement
and change to new forms of work
in
middle adult-
hood?
As we move intd the epoch of "postindustrial" society, major changes will be required in every aspect of social life. We must increase the possibilities for creative
work and
generated and sustained in
mentor
relationships
play.
all
New
archetypal
Dreams
will
have to be
segments of the population. Participation in
must become
a
more widespread and valued
part of
adult living. There are important political and economic aspects to this,
but no existing
political
Issues such as these are beginning to
only been scratched. There to look
more
deeply.
The
is
all
of
viewpoint offers clear answers.
be discussed, but the surface has
strong individual and institutional reluctance
questions are new.
run counter to traditional ways of thinking.
They evoke It
is
great anxiety
and
hard to explore their
full
THE SEASONS OF A
34O
MAN S
LIFE
The paradox
complexity, let alone find rational answers.
devote ourselves to the search for
new
we
and that
are as yet
nof up
to the task
"muddling through" before
These problems
differences in culture
and
species during
its
of
To
different
present stage of
on the universal themes are produced by
institutions, as well as in individual heredity
Humankind
tasks of the present eras
human
more
be made.
are certainly not limited to our society.
evolution. Countless variations
is still
how
learning
to
and
meet the developmental
and periods, and thereby to improve the value of too
much
life
over
will
be managed well by most persons
its
will take generations
significant advances can
degrees, they hold for the entire
circumstances.
it
we must we know that
that
is
solutions even though
entire course. It
is
in
to expect that
middle adulthood
any society within the forseeable
future. I
am
not saying that the
basic nature
life
and timing of the
but fundamental change of
cycle in
eras will
this
kind
present form
its
is
immutable. The
no doubt be modified
is
in the future,
evolutionary. It requires hundreds
of generations, not merely a few decades or centuries. In the longer run,
our further progress in fostering adult development
human society and human evolution.
formation of
epoch in
That chapter
in history
personality,
is still
far off.
to understand the nature of the current structive
change within
be written. Despite the is
to get
it.
If
on with the work.
part of a trans-
and thus contribute to a new
For now, we have
life
we cannot do
difficulty of the
may be
cycle so,
and
to
all
we can do
work toward con-
the next chapter
may
never
problem, our only reasonable choice
a otes
page xi
PREFACE
Ray C. WaJker
As part of
his
a senior thesis at Yale University
work on the project, Walker completed Medical School: "Individuation and the
Mid-Life Decade in Men," Yale University School of Medicine, April 1970. xiii
xiii
WiJIy Brandjt Barbara L. Kellerman, "Willy Brandt: Portrait of the Leader as Young Politician," doctoral dissertation, Department of Political Science, Yale University, 1975. development oi women Wendy A. Stewart,
"The Formation of the Early Adult Life Structure in Women," doctoral dissertation in clinical psychology, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1976. CHAPTER
4
1
In academic psychology social sciences, see
Karl
For examples of important
Mannheim's seminal
essay,
early
work
in the
"The Problem
of
published in 1928, reprinted in his Essays on the Sociology oi KnowJedge (Oxford University Press, 1952), pp. 276-320, Generations,"
first
and Arnold van Gennep, The Rites of Passage (University of Chicago, i960 [original, 1908]),. Our conception of "transition" owes much to van Gennep's view of "passage." Recent summaries of the social science literature are in the following source works: Leonard D. Cain, "Life Course and Social Structure," in R. E. L. Faris, ed., Handbook of Modern Sociology (Rand McNally, 1964); Orville G. Brim, Jr., and Stanton Wheeler, Socialization After Childhood (Wiley, 1966); Orville G. Brim, Jr., "Theories of the Male Mid-life Crisis," The Counseling Psychologist, 6 (1976), 2-9; Glen H. Elder, "Age Differentiation and the Life Course," in Annual Review oi Sociology, Vol. I (Annual Reviews, 1975); and Matilda W. Riley, et aJ., Aging and Society, 3 vols. (Russell Sage, 1968 and 1972) (in Vol. Ill, see especially John Clausen's chapter, "The Life Course of Individuals"). Within academic psychology the earliest relevant research on adult development was that of Charlotte Buhler and her associates. See Charlotte Buhler, "The Curve of Life as Studied in Biographies," Journal oi Applied Psychology, 19 (1955), 405-9; Charlotte Buhler, "The Course of Human Life as a Psychological Problem," Human Development,
.
344
.
.
Notes
and Charlotte Buhler and Fred Massarik,
11 (1968), 184-200;
Course oi
Human
eds.,
The
Life (Springer, 1968). See also the account by Buhler's
collaborator, Else Frenkel: "Studies in Biographical Psychology/' Character
and
Personality, 5 (1936), 1-34. of the first systematic efforts in academic psychology to create a
One
combined
biological, psychological
and
social
view of development was
W. White. See Lives in (Dryden Press, 1952) and The Enterprise oi Living (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1972) A broad and representative collection of studies, most of them done prior to i960, has been assembled by Bernice L. Neugarten in Middle Age and Aging: A Reader in Social Psychology (University of Chicago, made by my
old friend and colleague Robert
Progress
1968). Jung's thinking about adult development and indi-
Jung used the term
viduation evolved over single article or
book
in
many
years, starting in his forties.
which he gave
There
is
no
a succinct statement of his views
this topic. The following works are relevant: Man and His Symbols (Doubleday, 1964); Memories, Dreams, Reflections (Pantheon, 1963); and The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, Collected Works,
on
Vol. IX, Part
1
(2nd ed.) (Bollingen, 1968). See
also Joseph
Campbell,
The
Portable Jung (Viking, 1971 ) Erikson is primarily Erikson's view of the ed.,
following:
life
cycle
is
described in the
Childhood and Society (Norton, 1950) and "Identity and the
Life Cycle," PsychoJogica J Issues,
This tradition includes
Death (Free
1 (1959), 1-171. Ernest Becker's last two books were
The Denial
1973) and Escape from Evil (Macmillan, 1976). Although Becker does not deal primarily with the life cycle and the problem of adult development, his ideas about adulthood lend themselves to a developmental approach. of
Press,
The investigator whose work most closely resembles ours is Roger L. Gould. He independently arrived at a similar sequence of periods in adult development. His findings are based chiefly on his clinical experience with groups and with couples, and his emphasis is primarily on personality development. See his article "The Phases of Adult Life: A Study in Developmental Psychology," American Journal oi Psychiatry, 129 (1972), 521-31. A fuller account is given in his book, tentatively titled Transiormations (Simon
&
Schuster, 1978, in press)
Another important study paralleling ours is George E. Vaillant's Adaptation to Liie (Little, Brown, 1977). This study deals primarily with the quality of a man's overall adjustment in adulthood, in a sample of Harvard men. Adjustment is shown to be heavily influenced by personality mechanisms of defense and coping. Although his main emphasis is on personality and adjustment, rather than on adult development, Vaillant gives evidence of significant change from about age 20 to 50. Robert Lifton has in the past taken an Eriksonian approach in the broad field of "psychohistory." In his most recent book, however, Lifton begins to articulate his own view of adult development, drawing on various sources. See The Liie oi the Seli: Toward a New Psychology (Simon & Schuster, 1976).
.
.
Notes
345
Theodore Lidz has written a comprehensive textbook on the life attempting to combine evidence from psychoanalysis and the social sciences: The Person: His Development Throughout the Liie Cycle
cycle,
(Basic Books, 1968). ." long whiJe From the musical Knickerbocker Holiday by Maxwell Anderson and Kurt Weill (Anderson House, 1938), pp. 55." From Dylan Thomas, Collected Poems (New 56. "Do not go gentle
7
"It's a Jong,
8
Directions, 1957) occupational or famiJiaJ career
.
.
.
.
Some illustrative work on stages in famdevelopment and occupational development: Jesse Bernard. The Future of Marriage (World, 1972); Michael P. Fogarty, Rhona Rapoport and Robert N. Rapoport, Sex, Career and FamiJy (Allen & Unwin, 1971 ); Marjorie Fiske Lowenthal, Magda Thurnher and David Chiriboga, Four Stages of Life: A Comparative Study oi Women and Men Facing Transitions (Jossey-Bass, 1975); Cyril Sofer, Men in Mid Career: A Study of British Managers and Technical Specialists (Cambridge University Press, 1970); Harold Wilensky, "Life Cycle, Work Situation and Participation in Formal Associations," in R. Kleemeier, cd., Aging and Leisure (Oxford University Press, 1961); Donald E. Super, Career Development: SelfConcept Theory (College Entrance Examination Board, Research Monograph No. 4, 1963). option too restricted My earlier research on career development includes the following collaborative studies: Myron R. Sharaf and Daniel J. Levinson, "The Quest for Omnipotence in Professional Training: The Case of the Psychiatric Resident," Psychiatry, 27 (1964), 135-49; Richard C. Hodgson, Daniel J. Levinson and Abraham Zaleznik, The Executive Role Constellation: An Analysis of Personality and Role Relations in Management (Harvard Business School 1965); Daniel }. Levinson and Eugene B. Gallagher, Patienthood in the Mental Hospital: Role, Personality and Social Structure (Houghton Mifflin, 1964); Daniel }. Levinson and Gerald ily
8
L. Klerman,
"The
Clinician-Executive:
Some Problematic
Issues for the
Mental Health Organizations," Psychiatry, 30 (1967), 3-15; Gerald L. Klerman and Daniel J. Levinson, "Becoming the Director: Promotion as a Phase in Personal-Professional Development," Psychiatry, 32 (1969), 411-27. A first step Wendy A. Stewart, "The Formation of the Early Adult Psychiatrist in
9
Life Structure in
11
Women,"
doctoral dissertation in clinical psychology,
Teachers College, Columbia University, 1976. the writer's world Many persons helped us gain a fuller understanding of the writer's world. I would like especially to thank Bernard Malamud
and Toni Morrison, with whom I discussed many aspects of the work and career, with rich examples from their own and others'
chapter 22
writer's lives.
2
Biologists often
The
use of age 30 as a reference point for deriving age is discussed by Robert R. Kohn in Principles
curves of biological decline of 25
Mammalian Aging
professional athlete
(Prentice Hall, 1971 ) account of the subsequent careers of professional
An
.
346
Notes baseball players
is
Made (Putnam, 26
Great
1972).
"Death and the Mid-Life
Elliott Jaques,
artists
tional Journal of Psychoanalysis,
Jaques,
Work,
Summer (New American Robinson ended his baseball and politics: I Never Had It
given by Roger Kahn: Boys of
Library, 197-3). In his late thirties Jackie career and entered the world of business
Creativity
28
Press, 1970). Spanish philosophci
28
1958). ego stages
Crisis," Interna-
46 (1965), 502-14, reprinted
and Social
Justice
Jose Ortega y Gasset,
in Elliott
(International Universities
Man
and
Crisis
(Norton,
Erik H. Erikson, Childhood and Society (Norton, 1950) and "Identity and the Life Cycle," Psychological Issues, 1 (1959), 1-171. In these and other writings, Erikson is somewhat elusive about the age linkages of the adult stages.
The
ages
I
give are,
I
believe, con-
For example, in his major biography dealing with middle adulthood, Gandhi's Truth, he identifies Generativity vs. Stagnation as the issue worked on in the forties and fifties. autobiography The quote is from page 1 of The Autobiography oi Bertrand RusselJ, Vol. II, 1914-1944 (Little, Brown, 1968). C. G. Jung Jung's theory of mid-life individuation is not systematically described in any single work. One has to get a feeling for it from various sources. See page 344, note beginning Jung used the term. Jung was the first Among the early depth psychologists, Rank too placed great emphasis on separation and individuation in adulthood. See the volume Will Therapy and Truth and Reality (Knopf, 1945), containing several papers going back to 1926. facilitating environments Donald W. Winnicott has developed the idea of the "facilitating environment" for child development. See The Maturational Processes and the Facilitating Environment: Studies in the Theory of Emotional Development (Hogarth, 1965). The same basic idea needs to be applied to the facilitation of adult development. Examples abound A spirited defense of creativity in later life is given by the German poet Gottfried Benn in his article "Artists and Old Age," Partisan Review, 22 (Summer 1955), 297-319. Ernest Jones Jones's three-volume biography is entitled The Life and Works of Sigmund Freud (Basic Books, 1953, 1955, 1957) Jate Jate adulthood Research on the biological potential for increasing the average life span well beyond the eighties is reviewed by Albert Rosen feld in Proiongevity (Knopf, 1976). Roscnfeld and most of the research biologists have little to say, however, about the psychological and social sistent with his general usage.
31
33
33
36
37
37 38
aspects of old age.
chapter 47
The
3
the water The excerpt is from page 39 of an essay by Arthur Miller: "The Shadow of the Gods," Harper's Magazine, August fish is in
1958, pp. 35-43.
47
"Oedipus" 43-
This excerpt
is
from the same essay by Arthur Miller, page
.
Notes
59
Jean-Paul Sartre
Sartre's
concept of the "project"
book Existential Psychoanalysis (Philosophical
is
347
discussed in his
Library, 1953; paperback:
Regnery, 1962).
chapter 72
5
The average age of onset For each subject we determined the age at which every period began and ended. In some cases the determinations were made by the staff member writing the biography, and then discussed and modified in our staff meeting. The final determination thus represented a staff consensus. This procedure was commonly followed in the early stages, when we were working out our conception of the periods. The age ratings made later in the study were usually done jointly by two persons the one writing the biography and myself. At this point we can say that two experienced researchers will ordinarily come within a year of each other in estimating the age at which a period begins or ends in a given case. have not yet fully codified the criteria by which these determinations should be made. Such codification is an important next
—
We
step.
We tive
have ratings for every period on
findings
are of
interest
in
all
our subjects. These quantita-
establishing
a
preliminary picture of
important to emphasize that they, like other quantitative data in our study, are suggestive rather than conclusive. Much work remains to be done by way of measuring more rigorously, clarifying the theoretical issues, studying other populations, the timetable of the periods, but
it is
—
sorting out the
many
factors
involved
—before
firm generalizations
on
age linkages can be made.
chapter 6 book The
91
"In Dreams Begin Responsibilities" Appeared World Is a Wedding (New Directions, 1948)
92
early childhood Winnicott's ideas about "transitional phenomena" in childhood are discussed in Playing and ReaJity (Basic Books, 1971). See also his earlier book, The MaturationaJ Processes and the Facilitating Environment: Studies in the Theory of Emotional Development (Hogarth Press,
98
1965). experience
my own
One of my important mentors as a graduate student was Else Frenkel-Brunswik. Many years later indeed, just as I was beginning this study of adult development I was invited to give a brief account of her life and work. This account contains, in muted form, my personal appreciation of her as psychologist, teacher and friend. See "Else Frenkel-Brunswik," International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences (Macmillan and Free Press, 1968), V, 559-62. young novelist The critic Harold Bloom maintains that young poets usually have such a symbolic figure, a great writer from the past whom they struggle to emulate and supersede. See his book The Anxiety of Influence (Oxford University Press, 1973). The internalization The psychoanalyst Hans Loewald, in one of the
—
100
101
in Schwartz's
—
348
Notes few papers on the ways in which psychoanalytic treatment contributes to adult development (and not solely to the resolution of pre-adult conflicts),
proposes that the patient's internalization of the psychoanalyst
"On
aspect of this process. See his article Psychoanalysis,"
Internationa]
Journal
oi
is
a
major
the Therapeutic Action of Psychoanalysis,
41
(i960),
16-33.
CHAPTER 10 155
dying This process of decline in middle adulthood has been described by Stanley Rosenberg and Michael Farrell: "Changes in Life Course at
A Pattern of Psychosocial Decline," presentation at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, August 26, 1975 (available from authors, Dartmouth University Medical School). Midlife:
CHAPTER 13 196
Eiikson
Erikson's theory of Generativity vs. Stagnation
"Identity and the Life /Cycle," Psychological Issues,
His
fullest biographical
example of
this stage
is
is
presented in
(1959), 1-171. Gandhi's Truth (Norton, 1
1969).
196
See Elliott Jaques, "Death and the Mid-Life Crisis,"
destructiveness
Internationa] Journal oi Psychoanalysis, 46 in Elliott Jaques, versities Press,
196 196
Goya
Work,
Creativity
and Social
(1965), 502-14, reprinted Justice ( International Uni-
1970).
Martha Wolfenstein, "Goya's Dining Room," Psychoanalytic
Quarterly, 35 (1966), f> u inteiioiity
1, 47-83. Bernice L. Neugarten,
"A Developmental View
Personality," in James E. Birren, ed., Relations of
of Adult
Development and
Aging (Charles C. Thomas, 1965).
chapter 14 211
Puer
For Jungian theory regarding Puer and Senex, see Carl G. Jung, and His Symbols (Doubleday, 1964); Marie-Louise von Franz, The Problem of the Puer Aeternas (Spring, 1970); James Hillman, "Puer and Senex," Eranos Jahibuch, 36 (Zurich, 1968), 301-59; and James Hillman, "On Senex Consciousness," Spring; Annual oi Archetypal Psychology and
Man
212
Jungian Thought, 1970. youthful qualities In an archetypal sense, the
by energy and tion
is
drive, the
Old by
structure
and
found, in a highly sophisticated form,
biology, psychology
and
social
fundamental properties of
all
science.
Young is characterized The same distincin modern theories of
stability.
Energy and structure are two
living systems
—
cell,
biological organism,
and society. Every living system must have some form of energy, and it must have a structure through which its energy is contained and directed. Structure without energy is an inert form incapable of action or change. Energy without structure is individual person,
social
institution
Notes chaos.
A
349
system needs both in order to perform various functions and to
evolve over time.
At the
start of a
developmental process, an organism' has abundant
energy and potential but a relatively limited structure. repertory
is
narrow,
its
Its
behavioral
adaptive capabilities restricted, and a great deal
of energy is used for its internal development. In the course of development, the structure grows and differentiates into more numerous components capable of specific functions. The components are in turn integrated within a more complex structure. The structure gains more stability, functions for a while at its maximal level and gradually declines, ultimately to dissolve or to be transformed into a new structure. Thus, during the early phases of development a system has maximal energy and an incipient, vulnerable structure. During the middle phases the system attains its optimal balance of energy and structure. In the final phases there is a decline in energy and an increasingly brittle structure, which finally breaks under external stress or runs out of internal resources. This process is repeated during every developmental period and over the cycle as a whole.
life
215
215
hero as a middle-aged man." In his novel Chimera (Random House, 1972), John Barth offers various portrayals of the youthful hero entering middle age. wish for immortality The importance of the wish for immortality, and the struggle to come to terms with one's own mortality, have been discussed from various psychological and philosophical viewpoints. In Freu".
.
.
dian theory the wish for omnipotence and the assumption of one's
own
immortality are posited as part of the child's basic psychological function-
Although Freud did not deal systematically with the kinds of change he did take note of the persistence into adulthood of these childhood qualities. See, for example, his Religion: The Future oi an Illusion (Norton, 1975). Jungian theory deals with these qualities in part through the concept of the "Puer" (see page 348, note beginning Puer). These are discussed, from a combined psychological-philosophical point of view, by the great Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno in The Tragic Sense of Life (Dover, 1954; first English translation. 1921). The anthropologist Ernest Becker has made a notable attempt at synthesis of anthropological and depth psychological views of the wish for immortality in his book Denial of Death (Free Press, 1973). This has been a theme in the writings of Robert Lifton; his most recent formulation is given in The Life of the Self: Toward a New Psychology (Simon & Schuster, 1976). Elliott Jaques draws upon the ideas of Freud and Melanie Klein in his essay "Death and the Mid-Life Crisis," Internationa] Journal of Psychoanalysis, 46 (1965), 502-14. Although these authors use diverse theoretical approaches, there is a growing convergence in our understanding of the immortality-mortality conflict as an issue in adult development. in her middle forties The quote by Hellman is from page 226 of the biography by Richard Moody, Lillian Hellman: Playwright (Bobbs-Merrill, ing.
that occur in the course of adult development,
217
1972).
.
.
.
.
35°
Notes
218
"... he dares to live" The full title of the Roethke poem is "The Dying Man: In Memoriam: W. B. Yeats," in Words for the Wind (Indiana University Press, 1961
218
"No
), p.
longer in Lethean"
190.
poem "Vacillation" is reprinted in M. Poems and Two Plays of WiJJiam ButJer Yeats
Yeats's
L. Rosenthal, ed., Selected
(Collier Books, 1966), p. 134.
CHAPTER 15 225 225
The quote from Paradise Lost is in Book IV, line 73. The concept of the "tragic sense" is developed by Miguel de Unamuno in his book The Tragic Sense of Life (Dover, 1954) For a discussion of tragedy in literature, see Richard B. Sewall, The Vision
Jdhn Milton
"tragic sense oi life"
226
of Tragedy (Yale University Press, 1959) Shakespeare's discussion of King Lear
228
all artists
232
Journal of Psychoanalysis, 46 (1965), 502-14. authoritarian personality Theodor W. Adorno, Else Frenkel-Brunswik,
My is heavily indebted to Harold C. Goddard, The Meaning of Shakespeare (University of Chicago Press, 1951).
Daniel
233 239
J.
Elliott Jaques,
"Death and the Mid-Life
Crisis," International
Levinson and R. Nevitt Sanford, The Authoritarian Personality
(Harper, 1950; paperback editions by Wiley and Norton). James Watson, The Double Helix (Atheneum, 1968).
DNA
grow up and go out For a discussion of the role of mentoring in the career development of occupationally successful women, see Margaret Henning and Anne Jardim, Women and Management (Doubleday, 19T1)-
CHAPTER l6 John Barth, Chimera (Random House, 1972) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust (New Directions, 1941). Now that my ladder's gone" Appears on page 184 of M. L. Rosened., Selected Poems and Two Plays of William Butler Yeats (Collier
246
the key
247 249
Faust ".
.
.
thal,
Books, 1966).
249
separation
Jung's account of his separation from Freud
249
250
254
is
described in
Memories, Dreams, Reflections (Pantheon, 1963). See also Joseph Campbell's introduction to his selections from Jung's writings, The Portable Jung (Viking, 1971 ) reluctance to publish Jung's reference to his correspondence with Freud is contained in the introduction (pages xxx-xxxi) to William McGuire, ed., The Freud/ Jung Letters (Princeton University Press, Bollingen Series XCIV, 1974). The letter was written on April 9, 1959, when Jung was 84; the memory was still vivid! Reviewing Kazan's See James Baldwin's review of Elia Kazan's The Arrangement, in New York Review of Books, March 23, 1967, p. 17. Gandhi Erik H. Erikson, Gandhis Truth (Norton, 1969), pp. 314-21.
his autobiography,
.
Notes
257
351
decline Stanley Rosenberg and Michael Farrell, Course at Midlife: A Pattern of Psychosocial Decline," presentation at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, August 26, 1975 (available from authors, Dartmouth University Medical School )
husband's
severe
"Changes
in Life
chapter 20 319
human development
The work
of Kohlbcrg, Piaget
and Loevinger
is
described in the following sources: Lawrence Kohlbcrg, "Stage and Se-
The Cognitive-Developmental Approach to Socialization," in D. A. Goslin, ed., Handbook of Socialization Theory and Research (Rand McNally, 1969); Lawrence Kohlbcrg, "Continuities in Childhood and Adult Moral Development Revisited," in P. B. Baltes and K. W. Schaie, eds., Liie Span Developmental Psychology: Personality and Socialization (Academic Press, 1973); Jane Loevinger, Ego Development: Conceptions and Theories (Jossey-Bass, 1976); Jean Piaget, The Child and Reality: Problems oi Genetic Psychology (Penguin, 1976); Jean Piaget, Moral Judgement oi the Child (Free Press, 1932); and Jean Piaget and Barbel Inhelder, The Child's Conception of Space (Humanities, 1963). >f "For man is Marcel Proust, Remembrance oi Things Past (Random House, 1932). The quote is from Sweet Cheat Gone (translation by C. K.Scott Moncreiff). universals For a discussion of the problems of determining universals in personality across many cultures, see Alex Inkeles and Daniel J. Levinson, "National Character: The Study of Modal Personality and Sociocultural Systems," in G. Lindzey and E. Aronson, eds., Handbook oi quence:
321
322
Social Psychology (Addison-Wcsley, 1968).
323
A Jungian approach to the study of myths is reCampbell, The Masks oi God 4 vols. (Viking, 1959— 68); Mircea Eliade, Patterns in Comparative Religion (Meridian, 1958); and Mircea Eliade, The Myth oi the Eternal Return (Harper & Row,
anthropological basis flected in Joseph
7
1965).
For Jung's own view of myth, see Carl G. Jung and K. Kerenyi, Essays on a Science oi Mythology (Princeton University Press, 1949)- See also the book by the American anthropologist Paul Radin (with commentaries by Jung and Kerenyi), The Trickster: A Study in American Indian Myth324
ology (Schocken, 1972 [rev. ed.]). societies around the world Simone de Beauvoir,
The Coming
oi
Age
(Putnam, 1972). 324
contrasting societies
David L. Gutmann,
Imperative," Commentary, the. Middle Years:
Developmental Issues
and the
-Parental
in
in
the Masculine Mid-Life
(1976), 41-59; and "Mayan Comparative TAT Study," Psychiatry, 29 (1966), 246-59. The Talmud Philip Blackman, ed., "The Sayings of the Fathers," Order Nezikin, Tractate Avoth, 21st Mishna (Judaica Press, 1963 [2nd rev.
Crisis," Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 9
Aging:
324
"Women
December 1973; "Individual Adaptation
ed.]).
A
352
Notes
324
The Analects of Confucius, translated and annotated by six steps Arthur Waley (Vintage Books, 1938), Book II, p. 88. Solon Solon's account of the life stages is quoted by A. L. Vischer in Old Age: Its Compensation and Rewards (Macmillan, 1947), p. 121. "Adequate efficiency" Bidder's original article is "Senescence," Biitish Medical Journal, 2 (1932), 5831. The article is quoted and discussed by Alex Comfort in Ageing: The Biology of Senescence (Routledge & Kegan
324 327
Paul, 1964).
328
hunting-gathering ering societies, see
339
For a review of data on the life span in hunting-gathS. Weiner, The Natural History oi Man (Universe
}.
Books, 1971). Issues such as these
John Schaar has written a brilliant, evocative paper Modern State," in Power and Community: Dissenting Essays in Political Science, Philip Green and Sanford Levinson, eds. [Vintage Books, 1970]) that deals with some of these questions. He ("Legitimacy in the
examines the evolving crisis in the legitimation of authority in all modern Although he does not deal explicitly with adult development, his analysis applies most directly to people in middle adulthood, who carry the main burdens of authority in families and in society. To be a wise authority, in Schaar's terms, one must have made considerable societies.
progress in resolving the issues of the Mid-life Transition.
Grateful acknowledgment
made
is
to the following for permission to reprint
previously published material:
James Baldwin: excerpt from James Baldwin's review of "The Arrangement" by Elia Kazan, The New York Review oi Books, Volume 8, March 23, 1967.
The British Medical Journal: excerpt from "Senescence" by The British Medical Journal, ii, 1932.
Bidder, published
in
Sons, Ltd., and New Directions: excerpt from "Do Not Go GenThat Good Night" by Dylan Thomas, Copyright 1952 by Dylan Thomas. By permission of New Directions and J. M. Dent Ltd., and the trustees for the Copyright of the late Dylan Thomas. J.
M. Dent &
tle
into
Doubleday & Company,
and Faber & Faber, Ltd.:
Inc.,
lines of poetry
from
"They Sing, They Sing," Copyright © 1956 by Theodore Roethke. From the book The Collected Poems of Theodore Roethke. By permission of the publishers.
International Creative
Management:
by Arthur Miller, published
The Shadows
excerpts from
in Harper's magazine,
of the
Gods
August 1958. Copyright
©
1958 by Arthur Miller. Little,
Brown and Company in association with the Atlantic Monthly Press: The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell, 1914-10,44, Volume II.
excerpt from
Macmillan Co.,
Inc.: excerpts
from The Collected Poems of WiJJiam Butier
Yeats: from "Vacillation," Copyright 1933 by
Macmillan Co.,
Inc.,
renewed
1961 by Bertha Georgie Yeats; and from "The Circus Animal's Desertion,"
Copyright 1940 by Georgie Yeats, renewed 1968 by Bertha Georgie Yeats, Michael Butler Yeats, and Anne Yeats. Richard Moody: excerpt from Lillian Hellman, Playwright by Richard Moody, Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc.,
©
1972.
Princeton University Press and Routledge
JafTe,
Volume
& Kegan
Paul: excerpt from C.
G.
1906-1950, edited by Gerhard Adler and Aniela translated by R. F. C. Hull. Bollingen Series XCV. Copyright 1971,
Jung: Letters,
1:
©
1973 by Princeton University
Random
House,
Inc.: excerpt
Proust, translated
The Richmond
Press, p. 19.
Reprinted by permission.
from Rememberance of Things Past by Marcel
by C. K. Scott Moncrieff.
Organization: lyrics appearing on page 7 from "September
Song" from the musical play Knickerbocker Holiday. Words by Maxwell Anderson, music by Kurt Weil. Copyright 1938 and renewed 1966 by Hampshire House Publishing Corp. and DeSylva, Brown, & Henderson, Inc., New York,
N. Y. Used by permission.
a ndex
The
notes (pages 343—52) should be consulted for additional reference to the work
of other investigators.
Abbott, Philip (pseud.), worker and
manager, 160
272-3; Mid-life Transition, 267-77;
Adler, Alfred, 5 adolescence, 21; leaving, in Early
novice phase, 261-4; professional
Adult Transition, 72-3; separation from parents in, 51, 73-5
Age
Fifty Transition, 62, 292
man, concepts of Confucius, Solon, and the Talmud, 324-6
ages of
age thirty
crisis,
50, 51, 53, 56,
71,90, 109-11, 196, 236, 320, 337; in biographies, 85, 120-5, 1 3 2 ~5> 175-80, 262, 264-5; change processes in, 85-6; choice
and
forming of occupation, 102-6;
crises
86-9, 95; described, 58-9, 84-9; marriage in, 77, 108, 143, 258; follows,
1
39
anima, 109 archetypes: Jung's conception, 33; 210-11; Young and Old, 211, 214,
215, 221
Attachment/ Separation
second marriage, 264-7, 20 9' Settling Down, 264-5; "y 0un g est member complex," 260, 266, 273 Beauvoir,
Simone
de, 324
Becker, Ernest, 5
Own Man
Becoming One's Settling
Down
)
(Late
60, 141, 150, 151,
,
201, 205-8, 245, 249, 291, 302, 303, 319, 320, 3 37; in biography, 16770; boyish self in, 146-7; described,
(pseud.), 67, 264-9,
in,
147-9
Berg, Carl (pseud.), novelist, 95 Bidder, G. P., 326-8
sition, 84, 87;
Age Thirty Tran-
choice and forming
of occupation, 102-3; college education, 75, 76; Dream, 93-4; Entering the Adult World, 81-3; En-
tering
276
256-8; mentor
144-9; marriage relationships in,
biologists, 64, 65;
Baldwin, James, 250-1
Ann
265-71, 276-7; scien-
discoveries, 262-3, 267-9;
polarity,
197-8,209,239-43,335-6
Barnes,
tific
154, 155, 157-60, 162-3, 165, 191,
in,
Down
career, 263,
Barth, John, 246
58
Age Thirty Transition,
Settling
Adult World, 262; first marriage, 261-4; ment °r relationship, 262,
Middle Adulthood, 300-1;
homo-
Barnes, Ellen (pseud.), 261-4
failure or decline,
Barnes, John (pseud.), biologist, 14, 103, 154, 201, 203, 220, 231, 233,
sexuality, 230; love relationships,
301;
Age Thirty
Transition, 262,
264-5; biography, 260-77; children, 262, 266; college education, 261-2; described, 67-8;
Dream, 261, 262,
265, 267, 270, 276; Entering the
1 5
5-6;
77, 82; marriage, 77, 82; Mid-life Transition, 203, 207; relationship
with parents, 74, 76-7; see also Barnes, John; Brenner, Steven;
Morgan, Barry; Northrop,
Earl;
Ruger, Kurt; Treloar, Arthur
358
Index
occupation, 103-5; definition
Blacks: novelists, 88-9, 292-3;
workers, 104-5,
1
54~5> 2 °4>
20 5>
280-1, 306 Brenner, Steven (pseud.), biologist,
164
Chekhov, Anton, 216 childhood, 18, 20-1; mother in child's play and fantasy, 92-3; separation and individuation in, 51, 74; tran-
phenomena
in,
92-3; see
also pre-adulthood
choices, 43-4, 52
Confucius on ages of man, 324-6
early adulthood, 18, 19, 21-3, 29, 241,
328; development of
D'Amico, Nick (pseud.), worker, 204 Darrow, Charlotte, 67 death: in Destruction/ Creation polar-
222-3; preoccupation with, in
transitions, 51; preparation for,
38-9; sense of mortality and wish for immortality, 213-18
depth psychology, 4, 5 Destruction/ Creation polarity, 197-8, 209, 222-8, 335-6 detribalization,
242
developmental periods, 40-1, 49-63; age linkages, 318-19; concept of, 40-1, 49-56, 317-18; descriptions of, in sequence, 56-62; evaluation, 320; overlapping
and connecting,
321-2; sequence, 319-20; transi-
structure
life
330-9; see also Entering the Adult World; novice phase in,
Early Adult Transition, 19, 20, 29, 40, 55, 58-9,90, 111, 144, 317, 320, 323, 335; in biographies, 116-17,
128-30, 261; college
ity,
modifying in
Mid-life Transition, 245-51, 255; in Settling Down, 140, 153, 157,
Campbell, Joseph, 323 Capote, Truman, 200
sitional
and
modifying, 245-51, 255, 331-2; in marriage, 109-10, 332-3; mentor in realization of, 98-9;
156
of,
91; described, 245-8; forming
tinuity
in,
75-6; con-
and discontinuity
in,
76-8;
crises in, 81; described,
57-8, 72-8; Dream in, 93, 97, 247; individuation in, 195-6; marriage in, 77, 106-8; military service in, 75; occupation in, 101, 103, 104
Early Settling ego, inflation
Down, 141-3
and
deflation,
247-8
ego stages, Erickson's theory, 29, 37, 196, 254, 322-3 Eliade, Mircea, 323
Entering the Adult World, 55, 56, 58-9, 71, 84, 90, 278, 320; in biographies, 117-20, 130-2, 175-7,
263; choices, 80, 104; creating stable structure, 79-80, 82-3; crises,
81, 82; described, 57-8, 78-84;
49-53; universality, 322-6 developmental tasks, 49, 51, 53-5; of early and middle adulthood, 330-40
Dream
Doby, Luke (pseud.), worker: Entering Middle Adulthood, 281; failure and decline in Settling Down,
79-81, 83, 101; satisfaction with
tions,
154-5,205
Dominant set's
generation, Ortega y Gas-
conception, 28-9, 214
Dream,
the,
91-7, 109, 111, 192, 220,
221, 241, 243, 337, 339; in biographies, 94-5, 115, 116, 120, 124, 172, 173, 175, 177, 182, 187, 261,
265, 267, 270, 276, 286, 287, 290, 293, 302; in choice and forming of
in,
93; exploration, 79-80,
82; love relationships, 82, 83; marriage, 77, 82, 83, 108;
occupation,
life structure, 83 Entering Middle Adulthood, 194,206,
245, 251, 259, 319; in biographies,
280-304, 311-13;
biologists, 300-1;
described, 278-304; executives,
302-4; novelists, 291-300; workers,
280-91 eras in life cycle, 18-39, 4°' 317—30;
see also developmental periods
Erikson, Erik H.,
5,
319; ego stages,
theory, 29, 37, 196, 254, 322-3
'
Index evolution and
life cycle,
executives, 64, 65;
326-30
Age Thirty Tran-
85-7, 96, 120-5; cn °i ce and forming of occupation, 102; college
sition,
education, 75; discontinuity in Early Adult Transition, 78; Dream, 95-6, 115, 116, 120, 134, 302; Entering the Adult World, 81, 83, 117-20;
Entering Middle Adulthood, 302-4; failure or decline, 155; marriage, 77; Mid-life Transition, 202-3, 207,
220, 302, 303; relationship with parents, 74, 76, 81; Settling Down, 125, 141-2, 155, 158, 170; see also
Gallagher, Mike; Heinz, Leo; Jaffe,
David;
Mohn,
Roger; Radovich,
Frank; Tracy, James
Ibsen, Henrik, 216
Identity
vs.
Identity Confusion (Erik-
son's ego stage), 29, 323 illusions: in
Dream, 246-8;
44-5; sep-
aration from, 75; ties to ethnic and religious traditions, 77; see also
parents
immortality, wish individual
and
individual
life
for,
society,
213-18 46-7
structure, see life struc-
ture
individuation, 195-7, 335—6; in child-
hood, 51; Jung's conception
of, 33,
196; in Mid-life Transition, 196-8,
209-44; see a k° polarities Initiation generation, Ortega y Gasset's
conception
of,
28-9, 214
Integrity vs. Despair (Erikson's ego
adulthood, 37
self
and world,
46-9 Intimacy
vs. Isolation
(Erikson's ego
stage), 29, 323
Jaffe,
Freud, Sigmund, 4-5, 323; disagreement with Jung, 4, 249; in late
David (pseud.), executive,
302-3 James, William, 323 Jaques, Elliott, 26, 196, 228, 323 Jones, Ernest, 37
friendship, 335
Gallagher,
Mid-
stage), 29, 37, 323
family: forming, 106-7, 110, 332-3, life structure,
in
Transition, 192-3, 256-7
life
Interpenetration of
338-9; in
359
Mike
(pseud.), executive,
Jung, Carl Gustav, 4-5, 109, 323; archetypes, conception of, 33,
210-11; disagreement with Freud,
Gandhi, Mahatma, 254, 323
4,
generations: conception of, 27; Erik-
tion,
249; on ego inflation and defla247-8; individuation, concep-
son's eight ego stages, 29, 37, 196,
tion of, 33, 196; second half of
254, 322-3; Ortega y Gasset's conception of, 28-9, 214, 323; sequence
4-5, 33; Young and Old archetypes, Puer and Senex, 211
of,
conception
life,
of,
27-30
Generativity
vs.
Stagnation (Erikson's
Kazan, Elia,
The Arrangement, 250-1
ego stage), 29, 196,254, 323 Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 247 Gutmann, David, 324
King, Martin Luther, 91
Heinz, Leo (pseud.), executive, 85-6,
late
205 Hellman,
Edward, 65 Kohlberg, Lawrence, 319 Klein,
adulthood, 18, 33-9; in Freud's
life,
Lillian,
The Autumn Gar-
den, 217
37 Late Adult Transition, 34, 35, 37, 62,
3*7 adulthood, 38-9, 329
Hitler Adolf, 323
late late
homosexuality, 2 30
legacy (of man's life),
Hughes, Howard, 216
Levinson, Maria, 67
218-22
Index
360
life cycle:
ages of
man, ancient con-
cepts, 324-6; concepts of, 4-7; eras
(stages) in, 18-39, 40, also
317-30
(see
developmental periods) in ;
of,
6-7; study, plan
of,
mentor
7-17 life
expectancy, changes
in,
327-30
span in contemporary nations, 328-9; of primitive man, 327-8
life
tions, 228-31 Masculine/ Feminine polarity, 197-8, 209, 228-39, 2 54> 2 5 8 335" 6 33 8 developmental gains in middle adulthood, 236-9 >
evolutionary perspective, 326-30;
meanings
masculine-feminine gender distinc-
:
life structure,
40-63; choices
components
in,
43-4;
44-6, 331-5; developmental periods, 40-1, 49-63, 317-18; individual, concept of, of,
41-6; modifying in Mid-life Tran193-5, 245-59; participation in, 43-4; self in, 42, 46-9, 53-4; sociocultural world in, 42, 46-7, sition,
53-4
relationships,
166, 333-4, 338; in
Own Man,
>
;
97-101, 123, Becoming One's
147-9; in biographies,
123, 166, 169, 171, 175-9, l8:2 ~3>
187, 262, 272-3, 305; cross-gender, 98;
and Dream, 98-9; and Mascu-
line/Feminine
polarity,
237-9;
Mid-life Transition, 251-4;
m
women
as mentors, 98 middle adulthood, 18, 19, 23-33; attachment and separateness, 241; careers and enterprises, 30-3; changes in biological and psycho-
Lifton, Robert, 5 Loevinger, Jane, 319
logical functioning, 24-7; crises,
love relationships, 332; in biographies,
31-2; developmental periods, 60-3;
1
m
59; culmination or turning point,
116, 118-20, 124-5, 166-7; Entering the Adult World, 82, 83;
forming
in Mid-life Transition, 258; in
conception
Settling
Down,
1
57; special
woman,
of, 33;
and
life
expect-
ancy, 328-30; sequence of generations,
109, 332 Luther, Martin, 323
structure in, 3 30-6, life, 37; Jung's
life
338-9; in Freud's
27-30
mid-life crisis, 159,
198-200
Mid-life Transition, 19, 21, 23, 25-7,
McCloud, Hank (pseud.), worker,
29, 30, 32-4, 37, 40, 50, 51, 56, 92,
163-5, 207 McKee, Braxton, 66
109, 278, 280, 291, 293, 299, 301,
marker events, 54-6, 61, 106
produces change in
marriage, 332-3; in
317, 319, 320;
Age Thirty Transi-
tion, 77, 108, 143, 258; average age .
at
first,
77; in
Becoming One's
Man, 256-8; breaking out
of, 1
Own 56-8;
and developmental
Dream
periods, 55, 77; in, 109-10, 332-3; in Early
Adult Transition, 77, 106-8; in Entering the Adult World, 77, 82, 83, 108; ethnic
and
religious traditions
77; forming of, 106-10; in life structure, 44-6; as marker event, in,
advancement which life
structure,
208-9; advancement within stable 201-4; in biographies, 267-77, 28 6, 306-11; breaking out: trying for new life structure, 205-6; described, 60-2, 191-208; as developmental crisis, 198-200; indi-
life structure,
viduation
in, 196-8, 209-44; ladder 248-9; mentoring and fathering, relationships with young adults,
in,
251-6; modifying the Dream, 24551, 255; modifying the life struc-
55-6, 106; modifying in Mid-life
ture,
Transition, 256-9; in novice phase,
marriage, 256-9; polarities in, 197-
77, 106-10; in Settling
143,156-8 Marx, Karl, 54
Down,
77,
193-5, 245-59; modifying
209-44; reappraising the past, 192-3; sequences in, 200-8; serious failure or decline within stable life 8,
;
Index structure, 204-5; Settling
Down
precedes, 139, 140, 147, 153, 154,
158-9, 163; tasks unstable
life
and 207-8
of, 191-2;
structure,
military service: in biographies, 116,
119-22, 128, 173, 261; in Early Adult Transition, 75
361
177, 182, 187, 202; Entering the Adult World, 81, 83, 175-7; Entering Middle Adulthood, 291-300; love relationships, 81; marriage, 77, 81, 174-5, 179-81; Masculine/Fem-
mentor
inine polarity, 231;
relation-
Milton, John, 225
l82 "3> 187; Mid-life Transition, 201-2, 207, 301; relationship with parents,
Minelli, Vincent (pseud.), worker,
74, 76-7, 81; Settling
Miller, Arthur,
47-8
204
Mohn, Roger
(pseud.), executive,
161-2, 207, 303-4 Morgan, Barry (pseud.), biologist, 103
Lady Ottoline, 32 mortality, sense of, 213-18 mother: in child's play and fantasy, Morrell,
92-3; child's separation from, 74; dependency on, 77; "good enough,"
ships, 148-9, 171, 175-9,
Down, 94, 104, 142, 148-9, 158, 180-8; see
also Berg, Carl; Namson, Paul; Osborn, Darryl; Perry, Allen; Taylor,
Richard; Tyrone, Kevin novice phase: in biography, 261-4;
developmental periods, 71-89; end 10-1 1 major tasks of, 90-1 1 1 marriage in, 77, 106-10; see also Age Thirty Transition; Early Adult
of, 1
;
Transition; Entering the Adult
92-3
World
Murray, Henry A., 14
Namson, Paul (pseud.),
novelist, 101,
occupation: in Age Thirty Transition,
142, 160, 206, 220, 232; adopted
102-6; breaking out
179-80; Age Thirty Transition, 175-80; biography, 171-88;
choice and forming
child,
business career, 175-6, 180, 182-4,
294-5; daughter, 181; described, 67;
Dream, 94-5, 172, 175, 177, 182, 187; drug use, 182-3; Entering the Adult World, 175-7; Entering Middle Adulthood, 293-300; father, 171-2, 174, 295; marriage, 174-5,
of,
of,
156-8; 101-6, 332;
Adult Transition, 101, 103, 104; in Entering the Adult World,
in Early
79-81, 83, 101; in life structure, 44-5; in middle adulthood, 339; in Settling Down, 151, 153-8, 160-5 Ochs, Ralph (pseud.), worker, 96, 204, 280
old age,
1 8;
approach
to,
34-5; late
Young and
179-81, 296, 298, 299; mentor relationships, 171, 175-9, 1 ^ 2 ~3* ^7;
late
adulthood, 38-9;
Old
archetypes, 211, 214, 215, 221;
Mid-life Transition, 293, 299; mother, 171-3; in navy, 173; Set-
see also
tling Down, 1 80-8 Namson, Sarah (pseud.),
Northrop, Earl (pseud.), biologist, 300-1
Age Thirty Transi87-9, 95; choice and forming
novelists, 64, 65;
of occupation, 102-4; college education, 75; crises in life, 81, 87-9; dis-
continuity in Early Adult Transition, 78;
polarity
The Iceman
Cometh, 216 67, 174-7,
179-81, 184, 294-6, 298, 299 Neugarten, Bernice, 196
tion,
Young/ Old
O'Neill, Eugene,
Dream, 94-5, 172, 175,
Ortega y Gasset, Jose, conception of generations, 28-9, 214, 323 Osborn, Darryl (pseud.), novelist, 207 parents: conflicts with, 74; influence in early adult life, 77-8; movement
away from, 76-7; separation young adults from, 51, 73-6; young adults living with, 74, 76 Paulsen, Ruth (pseud.), 66, 129-34, 282-4, 287-9 of sons
of
362
Index
Paulsen, William (pseud.), worker,
in
middle adulthood, 241-2; and
155, 205, 208, 232; Age Thirty Transition, 132-5; biography, 126-
Senex (Jungian archetype), 211
35; crises in family,
Settling
1
32-4; de-
Dream, 286, 287, 290; Early Adult Transition, 128-
scribed, 66-7;
30; educatioh, 128-9; Entering the Adult World, 1 30-2; Entering Middle Adulthood, 282-91; family as
society,
47-9
Down,
51, 53, 57, 84, 111,
139-65, 192, 200-8, 214, 245, 320, 337; advancement in, 140-2; advancement which produces change in life structure, 160-3; advance-
ment within
stable life structure,
models, 126-7; as a father, 283; illness, 285, 288-9, 2 9 2 marriage,
151-4; in biographies, 125, 170, 180-8, 125, 170, 180-8, 264-5,
129-31, 287^8; Mid-life Transition, 286; mother, 126, 129, 132-3, 284;
trying for
'
Settling
Down,
282, 283, 286, 291;
working
career,
129-31, 134, 282,
284-90
282, 283, 286, 291; breaking out:
in,
life structure, 1
56-60;
1 39-49; Dream
140, 153, 157, 164; Early, 141-3;
ladder
Age
new
described, 59-60,
in,
59-60, 141-3, 151, 153,
Thirty Transition
248-9; Late, see Becoming One's Own Man; marriage in, 77,
tering
143, 156-8; occupation in, 151,
Perry, Allen (pseud.), novelist:
tor
crisis, 87-8; EnMiddle Adulthood, 292; menrelationship, 148-9
:
Attachment/ Separateness,
197-8, 209, 239-43, 335- 6 De ' struction/ Creation, 197-8, 209, 222-8, 335-6; Masculine/ Fem;
inine, 197-8, 209,
54,
153-8, 160-5, 33 2 personal enter150-65, 200-1; serious failure or decline ;
prise in, 141-3; sequences,
Piaget, Jean, 319 Poe, Edgar Allan, 281 polarities
1
228-39, 2 54>
Young/Old, 1978,209-21,255, 258, 335-6 258, 335-6, 338;
within stable
life
structure,
1
54-6;
tasks in, 140-1; unstable life struc-
163-5
ture,
Shakespeare, William: King Lear,
226-7; The Tempest, 227 Shaw, George Bernard, 323; Pygmalion, 253
pre-adulthood, 19-21, 240-1, 335; leaving, see Early Adult Transition
social psychology,
Proust, Marcel, 321
special
Puer (Jungian archetype), 211
Stewart,
Radovich, Frank (pseud.), executive,
Strode, Larry (pseud.), worker, 204,
4 Solon on ages of man, 324, 326
woman, 109, 332 Wendy, 9
Strindberg, August, 216
95 Rank, Otto,
280-1 5
Reich, Wilhelm,
Talmud, ages
5
Roethke, Theodore, 218 Ruger, Curt (pseud.), biologist, 207 Russell, Alby (pseud.), worker, 96-7 Russell, Bertrand, 31—2,
233
Sartre, Jean-Paul, 59
Schopenhauer, Arthur, 325 Schwartz, Delmore, 91 second half of of >
life,
Jung's conception
4-5>33
self: in life structure,
of
man
in,
324-5
Taylor, Richard (pseud.), novelist:
42, 46-9, 53-4;
Age Thirty Transition crisis, 88-9; Entering Middle Adulthood, 278, 292-3 Thematic Apperception Test, 14, 272, 276 Thomas, Dylan, 7 Thomas, Floyd (pseud.), worker, 104-5 Tracy, James (pseud.), executive, 143, 159-60, 201, 203, 206, 208, 220,
Index
231; Age Thirty Transition, 120-5; Becoming One's Own Man, 167-70;
biography, 112-25, 166-70,305-13; children, 118, 305, 308-9, 312;
described, 65-6;
116-17; Entering the Adult World, 1 17-20; Entering Middle Adult-
1 8,
120, 12 5;
tionships; in marriage, 109-10;
culine/Feminine
Mas-
polarity, 197-8,
209, 228-39, 2 54> 2 5 8 >335- 6 > 33 8 mentors, 98; special woman, 109, »
as
Dream, 115, 116,
120, 124; Early Adult Transition,
hood, 311-13;
363
first
marriage, 117-
mentor
figures, 123,
work: in early adulthood, 22; in late adulthood, 35-7; in middle adult-
hood, 25-6, 30; see also occupation Age Thirty Transition, 84, 87, 97; choice and forming
workers, 64, 65;
166, 169, 305; Mid-life Transition, 306-11; military service, 116,
of occupation, 102, 104-5; college
119-22; mother, 112-14; second marriage, 167-9, 308-11; Settling Down, 125, 170; working career,
Dream, 96-7, 286, 287, 290; Early
122-4, 166, 168-70, 305-6, 312 Tracy, Joan (pseud.), 167-8, 305,
education, 75; crises in
81;
Adult Transition, 78, 97; Entering the Adult World, 81,83; Entering Middle Adulthood, 280-91; marriage, 77; Mid-life Transition,
203-5, 20 7> relationship with par-
308-13 Tracy, Victoria (pseud.), 116-20, 125,
166-8, 308 tragic sense of life,
ents, 74, 76; Settling 1
225-6
Treloar, Arthur (pseud.), biologist,
Down, 154-5,
58, 163-5; see a ^ so Abbott, Philip;
D'Amico, Nick; Doby, Luke; McCloud, Hank; Ochs, Ralph; Paulsen, William; Russell, Alby; Strode,
162-3 Tyrone, Kevin (pseud.), novelist, 103-4, 2 9 1-2
Larry
William Butler, 218, 249 Young and Old, archetypes, 211,214, 215,221 Young/ Old polarity, 197-8, 209-21, -
Yeats,
Watson, James, 233 Whitehead, Alfred North, 31-2 Winnicott, Donald W., 92-3, ill, 240 Wolfenstein, Martha, 196 women: adult peer relationships with
men, 106;
life,
liberated, 110; life cycles,
9; love relationships, see love rela-
255, 258, 335-6; legacy, 218-21; sense of mortality and wish for immortality,
213-18
Youth, Ortega y Gasset's generation, 28-9
A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHORS Daniel J. Levinson, the principal author of this book, is Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry of the Yale University School of Medicine, Director of Psychology of the Connecticut Mental Health Center and Director of the
Research Unit for Social Psychology and Psychiatry. Before coming
to Yale in 1966,
he taught
at
Case Western Reserve and Harvard. Levinson
co-author of several books, including
The
Authoritarian Personality and
is
The
Executive Role Constellation.
During the course of the research upon which
this book is based, the co-authors Man's Life were members of the faculty of the Yale Department of Psychiatry. Charlotte N. Darrow was Lecturer in Sociology. Edward B. Klein was Associate Professor of Psychology; he is now Professor of Psychology and Director of Graduate Training in Clinical Psychology at the University of Cincinnati. Maria H. Levinson was and continues to be Lecturer
of
The Seasons
in Psychology.
and conducts
of a
Braxton
his
own
McKee
is
Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry,
private psychiatric practice in
New
Haven.
"A work
of great value
.
.
.
Levinson [has] discovered and created
nothing less than a psychosocial theory of
human
life,
such empirically-based conceptual breakthrough since .One can live more intelligently, Erikson's a quarter-century ago. with greater awareness, for knowing what is in this book. More about any book can not be said." the
first
.
.
PETER M.NEWTON, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY,
IN
AMERICAN SCIENTIST
"BADLY NEEDED. REJOICE THE PUBLICATION 0FTHIS BOOK!" I
IN
VISITING DISTINGUISHED
THOMAS J. COTTLE, PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY, AMHERST COLLEGE
THE SEASONS OF A MAN'S LIFE This
is
the
first full
report
from the team
the patterns of adult development. in
Now,
that discovered
for the first time,
Levinson's actual findings are available to the public a complete, detailed, accurate, and highly readable book,
Ranking in significance with the original works of Kinsey and Erikson, it explores and explains the specific periods of personal development through which all human beings must pass-and which together form a common pattern underlying all
human
lives.
"A PIONEERING AND RADICAL THEORY OF ADULT DEVELOPMENT. AS IMPORTANT, AND FULLY AS EXTRAORDINARY, AS KINSEY'S WAS WITH SEXUAL BEHAVIOR AND MASTERS' AND JOHNSON'S WAS WITH SEXUAL PHYSIOLOGY." .
.
-CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Cover printed
in
USA