FORMER AUSTRALIAN COMIC of the Year turned bestselling author Marty Wilson takes a shrewd look at our instinctive reaction to change and why we shouldnโt let our fears stop us from stepping outside the cave.
CHARLES DARWIN, the father of the theory of evolution, said, โItโs not the strongest of the species who survive, not the most intelligent, but those who are the most adaptive to change.โ
Change is hard for all of us. Iโm a pharmacist turned copywriter turned stand-up comic turned wine writer turned author and speaker, and I still find change incredibly challenging.
Ironically, itโs evolution that has made change hard for us. Survival of the fittest has hardwired our brains to seek patterns and avoid change.
When something is familiar we feel relaxed and confident. When weโre trying something different, a part of our brain called the amygdalae, situated deep down in the basal ganglia โ one of the oldest parts of our brain โ stimulates a surge of adrenaline that gives us sweaty palms and a tight feeling in our abdomen.
We go into our favourite restaurant and think, โAh, nice.โ Then we find theyโve changed their whole menu. Our feelings change to โEeek, not nice.โ I come home to my wife of 10 years; I relax. But I come home to my wife and her new personal trainer, Sven, and tense up.
This is our body taking part in the classic โfight or flightโ response. We all know how this adrenaline feels. Some of us call it fear or nerves or butterflies; some call it knots in the stomach; sadly some of us call it โthat thing that stops me learning a language, starting a business, or phoning that special someone.โ
Itโs such a shame weโre all brought up to call this feeling something bad, because it doesnโt have to be. We only feel it at all because our physiology hasnโt caught up with civilised society. Emotionally and intellectually weโre not primitive any more, but we still have this Neanderthal part of our brain that sets off alarm bells if we move too far away from the cave.
Ten thousand years ago this was a great survival mechanism. Back then life was physically dangerous and people who explored were people who died.
However, these days itโs almost never life or death. We still get the same big hit of adrenaline but weโre just out of our comfort zone; fight or flight just isnโt appropriate any more. In a new business pitch itโs not considered good form to run away from your client screaming like your hairโs on fire, or lean over the desk and punch them in the face.
Because weโve grown up calling this adrenaline surge โfearโ, thatโs how we react to it. We all try to build a little bubble of sameness around ourselves to avoid it.
We choose new friends just like our old friends and new systems just like our old systems. We go into a pizza place, look at the menu and go, โHmm, Sicilian… Capricciosa looks nice… Ham and Pineapple, please.โ
Life is a short, precious gift. We canโt let that underdeveloped, Neanderthal part of our brain persuade us to spend our life safely tucked up inside our cave. To use a more Australian metaphor, donโt live between the flags. Sure, on the beach swim between the flags. But donโt live between the flags.
If happiness has a motto, itโs not โSame again, thanks.โ If a life well-lived has a soundtrack, itโs not a nonstop block of Classic Rock. If success has a flavour, itโs not Ham and Pineapple.