ExNTER — Laboratory for the Mind in Motion
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The Golden Era
Around forty — sometimes closer to thirty-five, sometimes even by fifty — many people settle their mid-crisis. For some, if they are more or less psychologically healthy, this turbulent chapter closes within one to five years. This period arrives almost inevitably, as if scheduled. It comes to serve every single human within a certain window of life. The difference is not whether it comes, but how it is lived.
Some sync into an “early adjustment” or an “escape” — substances, distractions, identities, roles, numbing strategies of all kinds — and never truly resolve this phase, nor even become aware that it is happening. The crisis is muted, postponed, pushed aside. But if that form of escape is interrupted — brutally or unexpectedly — all kinds of extremely painful, sometimes unbearable darkness can surface. Not because it is new, but because it was never metabolized.
Others face their inner challenges directly. They meet their neuroses — and yes, the closer one lives to mega social density, the higher the neuroses; a simple, observable fact. They encounter their multiple inner personas, often developed or birthed in moments where a single ego had to survive contradictory subjective situations. These parts were once adaptive. Now they need harmonization, self-calibration. Through this confrontation, people mature.
This is where character becomes visible. Not as a moral label, but as structure — the patterned way a person learned to cope, defend, desire, and belong. As Claudio Naranjo emphasized, neurosis is not an error outside the human condition; it is woven into character itself. Character is frozen adaptation. Neurosis is intelligence that has lost flexibility. Seeing this is not pathology — it is the beginning of freedom.
In a parallel way, George Gurdjieff pointed to something even more uncomfortable and more hopeful: conscious development does not happen in comfort. Wisdom is not born in isolation from life, but in the very middle of its turbulence. The friction, the density, the contradictions — this is the training ground. From there, one invests will, wish, and curiosity into learning the path to harmony, subjectively and independently, yet always within the collective field.
With maturation, something shifts. Psychologically, it feels like arriving at a golden time — not because life becomes easy, but because inner fragmentation decreases. Energy that was once spent on internal war becomes available for presence, creation, and transmission. One becomes ready to continue and express their genetic and existential makeup more consciously.
The world itself has objectively zero meaning. Meaning is entirely subjective — something we choose to invest in it, independently and collectively. And this is the quiet paradox of The Golden Era: by stabilizing myself, by integrating my own neuroses rather than escaping them, I inevitably affect the field around me. Harmony is not preached. It is contagious.
Irina Fain
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