Finding the Strength to Listen
1965 was a frenzied year in the already frenzied and chaotic career of The Beatles. In a very short period of time they went from a tight, punkish underground movement to the largest public stage music had ever seen.
The “Fabs” gave up their leather and donned coordinated business-boy outfits, breaking every record the industry currently held—including holding the top five slots of the Billboard Hot 100 at the same time, a record that has never been broken. At Shea Stadium they performed the largest concert by any musical act, ushering in arena rock.
Their fame, and the demands it made upon them, saw their career moving more quickly than technology and social norms could follow. Their concert equipment was drowned out by the cheering, screaming (and pissing) fans.
By 1965 John Lennon had written two books, and the band had already starred in two hit films, A Hard Day’s Night and its follow-up Help.
Though they were the most scrutinized and documented group in history, did anyone—including themselves—stop to think how frightening this might have been beneath the offhand quips and cheerful faces? As the group’s lead guitarist George Harrison later said, the fans “gave their money, and they gave their screams. But the Beatles gave their nervous systems.”
Lennon later said that the song “Help!” was, in fact, a cry for help.
Over so much of his outsized career Lennon wrote songs that spoke to essential human experience. Help! marked the point where simple love songs became deeper and more personal. And by becoming more personal, his songs became universal.
What this story reveals is how touching in with ourselves makes us more relatable to others—and how all of us, at some point, feel overwhelmed and need to ask for help.
“When I was younger, so much younger than today, I never needed anybody’s help in any way.”
The lyric traces a journey into adulthood, one that begins to surrender obvious defenses and says, simply: help me if you can.
I’m writing this because aspects of my life are reaching critical mass, and yet I keep soldiering on, somehow believing that survival is the same as thriving. But a part of me feels squeezed inside, buried and unseen.
I need help.
But who from?
When my life becomes overwhelming I’m often at a loss for how to find the end of a thread that might unwind the chaos. Where do I begin? I need to do this, but I can’t until I’ve done that—and I certainly can’t do that until I’ve done the other thing.
Do you know that one?
My coaching brain, which seems to remain as sharp as ever, would say: find the simplest place to start. Avoid trying to leap beyond the present moment.
In order to swim we need to stop splashing in panic. But we also need to avoid the other extreme—simply giving up and waiting for someone to rescue us. There is a middle way: trusting that the first stroke will be followed by the next.
I have always been a terrible swimmer.
Whenever I tried to join friends and swim across what seemed, to them, a very easy distance, I would somehow reach the middle and realize there was nothing beneath me to touch.
And I would panic.
In every case someone came to help me. And in every case I felt embarrassed and ashamed.
Growing up in a very male-oriented environment it wasn’t just embarrassing to fail like that—it was deeply uncomfortable to have to relax into the arms of another man.
Once panting on the shore I felt alone, incapable, overwhelmed.
What I needed then—and what I still need now—is the bravery to accept help. The willingness to let go of preconceptions about what “real adults” should be capable of.
As I’ve grown older, success in certain areas of my life has been delightful, exhilarating, even admirable. But often that success has come at the expense of hearing the inner voice crying out for help.
The stronger I’ve appeared in some ways, the less those cries were heard.
Years ago I sketched the bones of a play called Cold Winter. Its protagonist, Susan, comes home for the holidays to visit her family. She has been successful in college and seems poised for success in her career. As the oldest child she is admired and looked up to. Her family demands much from her because of her potential. Her friends envy her.
And yet, despite being loved and admired, she has no one who truly understands her.
I never finished the play because I didn’t know what it was that Susan wanted people to understand.
But now I’m drawn back to her with a different awareness.
Of course she didn’t understand either.
What is it we want when we feel broken or overwhelmed? If we ask for help, whom do we ask? And what kind of help would actually help?
I have people in my life who would fix me if I asked. But we don’t really want to be fixed, do we? We don’t trust anyone to fix us who hasn’t first held space and listened.
I understand this as a coach, as a teacher, and hopefully as a friend. I try to be open, accepting, and available to the people I care about.
But I have not created a world where I allow people to reach back to me.
My career—such as it is—rests partly on the idea that I am the adult, the grown-up, the one who has his merde together.
But the truth is, I do not.
Very near the surface is something that needs to be heard and seen and touched and loved and accepted.
Perhaps the many tasks I imagine must be completed before clarity and peace can arrive actually begin with a simpler step: admitting that I am lost and do not know how to move forward. Just as I didn’t know how my play would move forward. But maybe I simply wasn’t listening.
I didn’t know how my play developed, but I always knew how it ended. I could see it clearly on stage.
Susan sits beneath a single spotlight while the lights of the world around her slowly draw in until she is alone under that beam as snowflakes begin to fall, visible only as they pass through the light.
One of the themes of the play was that, despite the holiday season, there had been no snow—and that absence had broken her heart.
Just before this moment we learn that Susan has taken a handful of sleeping pills.
And now we simply watch.
She sits alone under the light as the snow begins to fall.

Nations are not fixed. Political movements are not fixed. Generations are not fixed. Every “how it is” is already unraveling into what it isn’t. Each new wave of voters arrives with a different nervous system, different media diet, different mythology. What continues isn’t permanence. It’s momentum.
And this rings the alarm of our defenses. The protective systems in our mind resist it. They tighten the walls. They reinforce the story. They tell you that outside the box is chaos, threat, annihilation. But maybe it’s freedom. Maybe it’s the annihilation of an older purpose. And like every form of life since there was life, maybe old purposes give way to new life.
That image sent me down a cat rabbit hole. Large, ferocious animals squeezing boxes that could not possibly hold them, yet they somehow get inside and find peace. What became obvious is that support and safety was never structural. It was pure feeling. Even when the box fails, the animal still experiences safety in the feeling of enclosure.
Alternately, I’ve seen those accomplished in meditation who met their deaths as a new beginning, or a next stage. They have experienced their own ego deaths any times – each time they stepped from their box. From outside the box, they could see impermanence, they understood the box game and knowing there was nothing to hold on to, when the time came they were in acceptance.
Buddhist teaching suggests that death removes the box entirely, and rebirth is shaped by the boxes we inhabited. Whether or not one accepts that cosmology, it is undeniably true psychologically. We are continuously rehearsing our confinement.
When I’m passionate about something I hate the idea of letting go. It’s mine, damn it, even if it’s hurting me. But that’s me. Everyone has their own style of attachment. And attachment will always lead to struggle because we’re trying to hold something still in a universe that is always moving. Reality is stretching and expanding, dissolving and moving away from us, as we desperately cling and grab to anything we can. Oh what joy when we find that bone to gnaw!
Once I’m engaged in a struggle, I seem to have to prove something to somebody. I’m going to save this relationship, or I’m going to tell this person off though I never do and just toss about in my bed all night. At some point, I’m just struggling for the struggle. I’m attached to the energy. Attachment brings suffering—I’ve done the research—and it’s a pretty universal human experience. When we grab hold of something we deem important, we don’t want to let it go. Our ego latches on, and whatever grand justification we started with, the war becomes all about us.
altogether. We keep going because after all the investment, letting go feels frightening. Being right and refusing to listen can feel like strength, like clarity—but it isn’t clarity at all. It’s ego blindness. The part of us that needs to prove a point takes over. Our view becomes so narrow, so refined, so focused on our objective that it feels like certainty.
Letting go in spirit means releasing our attachment to how the struggle makes us feel—powerful, victimized, justified. Letting go in the mind is harder. We don’t just “stop thinking.” We replay arguments in bed at night. The way out is through love and kindness, drawing the attention out of the body. Until we let go of attachment to feeling bad or feeling victorious, we keep planting seeds of suffering.

Buddhist iconography illustrates the point. Manjushri, the Bodhisattva of wisdom, carries a sword. This sword of wisdom cuts through confusion, bullshit, and disinformation. The Bodhisattva of compassion, Avalokiteshvara, is sometimes depicted with a thousand arms that represent the many possible actions compassion my take when in the service of wisdom. Tantric icons are depicted flaming, as they burn up the prejudice and ill-will their compassion is liberated as active, and passionate. Compassion is not a static philosophy. It adapts. Compassion responds. Compassion does what works. If we come from wisdom, seeing clearly beyond our self-interest, what needs to be done becomes apparent.
What we are witnessing now—politically, industrially, militarily—has very little to do with care. Our political systems are not designed for anyone’s well-being. Most are designed to accumulate power. Power is a commodity. The planet, and the life that lives on it, are transactional bartering chips. It always has been. Very recently, Stephen Miller, the White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security, spoke openly about how all the world respects power. Only power. He said nothing about compassion, wisdom, even knowledge. Nothing about communication. Nothing about safeguarding the health, safety, or dignity of the people he claims to represent. Fascists never do. They always tell people to tighten their belts ahead of a glorious future.
And we need balance too. Rage that destroys our health and clarity helps no one. Turning off the news sometimes is necessary. Creating boundaries is necessary. But if we are committed to compassion, we cannot turn away. We have to look directly at violence—even when it’s standing right in front of us, aiming straight at our face. Or shoots us in the face.