Today I had a great chat with a friend on the difference between #Fluidity and #Congruency
For the past decade+ my goal has been #Congruency (also often called #Alignment), the idea that there should be no difference between who I am internally, what I do externally, and how I represent myself to others
This worked well for quite a long time, and led me great places, but the problems with #Congruency started to show more obviously recently.
Firstly, my internal sense of “rightness” wasn’t easily encapsulated in a single sense of consistent principles, it’s very fuzzy and context specific. And furthermore, what I can even define as “right” shifts as my #Ontology shifts.
Secondly, and in parallel, as the idea of #Self starts to appear less and less coherent to me, the whole base that the house is built on starts to collapse.
This had led me to begin a shift from #Congruency to #Fluidity. #Fluidity is NOT about behaving by an internally and externally consistent set of principles, rather it’s being able to find that sense of “Rightness”—the right way forward—in increasingly complex and nuanced situations.
This “rightness” in any given situation is influenced by the #Ontology’s that I’m operating under at any given time, and the #Ontologies are influenced by the sense of “rightness”.
But as I hone my ability to fluidly shift ontologies, and my ability to have enough awareness to be in touch with that sense of rightness, it becomes easier to find that sense of rightness/wrongness in a given situation. This is as close as I can come to describing what is sometimes called #SenseMaking.
Today I had a great chat with a friend on the difference between #Fluidity and #Congruency
For the past decade+ my goal has been #Congruency (also often called #Alignment), the idea that there should be no difference between who I am internally, what I do externally, and how I represent myself to others
This worked well for quite a long time, and led me great places, but the problems with #Congruency started to show more obviously recently.
Firstly, my internal sense of “rightness” wasn’t easily encapsulated in a single sense of consistent principles, it’s very fuzzy and context specific. And furthermore, what I can even define as “right” shifts as my #Ontology shifts.
Secondly, and in parallel, as the idea of #Self starts to appear less and less coherent to me, the whole base that the house is built on starts to collapse.
This had led me to begin a shift from #Congruency to #Fluidity. #Fluidity is NOT about behaving by an internally and externally consistent set of principles, rather it’s being able to find that sense of “Rightness”—the right way forward—in increasingly complex and nuanced situations.
This “rightness” in any given situation is influenced by the #Ontology’s that I’m operating under at any given time, and the #Ontologies are influenced by the sense of “rightness”.
But as I hone my ability to fluidly shift ontologies, and my ability to have enough awareness to be in touch with that sense of rightness, it becomes easier to find that sense of rightness/wrongness in a given situation. This is as close as I can come to describing what is sometimes called #SenseMaking.
Sorry for all the hashtags, this was originally written in Roam.
Is Roam as useful a medium for you to read in, as it is for you to write in?