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'Can people change?' The question may sound somewhat abstract and disinterested,
as if one were asking for a friend or for the universe, but it is likely to be a good
deal more personally – and painfully – motivated than that.
We ask, typically and acutely, when we're in a relationship with someone who is inflicting
a great deal of pain on us: someone who is refusing to open their hearts or can never
stop lying, someone who is aggressive or detached, someone who is harming themselves or managing
to devastate us. We ask too because the one immediately obvious response to frustration
isn't in this case open to us: we're not able to simply get up and go, we are too emotionally
or practically invested to give up, something roots us to the spot. And so, with the example
of one troublesome human in mind, we start to wonder outwards about human nature in general,
what it might be made of and how malleable it could turn out to be. One thing is likely
already to be evident to us: even if people can change, they certainly don't change
easily. Maybe they flare up every time we raise an issue and accuse us of being cruel
or dogmatic; maybe they break down late at night and admit they have a problem but by
morning, vehemently deny that there could ever be anything amiss. Maybe they say yes
they get it now, but then don't ever deploy understanding where it really matters. We
can at best conclude that by the time we've had to raise the question of change in our
minds, someone around us has managed not to change either very straightforwardly or very
gracefully. We might ask a prior question: is it even OK to want someone to change? The
implication from those who generate trouble for us is, most often, an indignant 'no'.
'Love me for who I am' is their mantra. But considered more imaginatively, only a
perfect human would ever deny that they might need to grow a little in order more richly
to deserve the love of another. For the rest of us, all moderately well-meaning and half-way
decent requests for change should be heard with goodwill and in certain cases acted upon
with immense seriousness. Those who bristle at the suggestion that they might need to
change are – paradoxically – giving off the clearest evidence that they may be in
grave need of inner evolution.
Why might change be so hard? It isn't as if the change-resistant person is merely unsure
what is amiss, and will manage to alter course once an issue is pointed out – as someone
might if their attention were drawn to a strand of spinach in their teeth. The refusal to
change is more tenacious and willed than this. A person's entire character may be structured
around an active aspiration not to know or feel particular things; the possibility of
insight will be aggressively warded off through drink, compulsive work routines, or offended
irritation with all those who attempt to spark it. In other words, the unchanging person
doesn't only lack knowledge, they are vigorously committed to not acquiring it. And they resist
it because they are fleeing from something extraordinarily painful in their past that
they were originally too weak or helpless to face – and still haven't found the
wherewithal to confront. One isn't so much dealing with an unchanging person as, first
and foremost, with a traumatised one. Part of the problem, when one is on the outside,
is realising what one is up against. The lack of change can seem so frustrating because
one can't apprehend why it should be so hard. Couldn't they simply move an inch
or two in the right direction? But if we considered, at that moment, the full scale of what this
person once faced, and the conditions in which their mind was formed (and certain of its
doors bolted shut), we might be more realistic and more compassionate. 'Couldn't they
just…' would not longer quite make sense. At the same time, very importantly, we might
not stick around as long as we often do. We should at this juncture perhaps ask ourselves
a question that may feel at once unfair and rather tough: given how clear the evidence
is of a lack of change in a certain person, and hence of a lack of realistic hope that
our needs are going to be met any time soon, why are we still here? Why are we trying to
open a door that can't open and returning to a recurring frustration and hoping for
a different result? What broken part of us can't leave a lack of fulfilment alone?
What bit of our story is being re-enacted in a drama of continuously dashed hopes?
And, if we are talking of change, might we one day change into characters who don't
sit around waiting without end for other people to change? Might we become better at sifting
through options and allowing through only those who can already meet the lion's share
of our needs? In addition, might we become better at deploying a dash of life-sustaining
ruthlessness in order to leave those who tirelessly rebuff us? We may need to rebuild our minds
in order – with time – to change into people who don't wonder for too long if,
and when, people might change.