The Walled Garden

How to Plan Your Life: Lecture 2 – The Walled Garden

Confronting Chaos Anywhere

“It doesn’t matter where you encounter chaos. It just matters that you do.”

  • Every point of entry into the unknown is equally valid.
  • King Arthur’s knights sought the Grail by entering the forest where it looked darkest to them personally.
  • Your darkness is your doorway.

Psychotherapy: Telling the Truth as Confrontation

  • Truth-telling is a form of confronting chaos.
  • Therapy = helping someone organize the past, present, and future through honest speech.
  • Telling painful stories repeatedly condenses them into useful markers — a tool for growth.

Chaos Is Always the Same Dragon

  • Any specific fear is a gateway to the same fundamental vulnerability.
  • Exposing yourself to a specific fear doesn’t just reduce fear — it builds courage.

“Braver means there’s more to you than you realized.”

Listening and Diagnosing: Let People Wander

  • Don’t jump to conclusions too quickly — let people talk until the real issue emerges.
  • Men often want to fix; women often sense threat without clear logic — both need patient space.

Self-Inquiry as Secular Prayer

  • Ask: “What’s really bothering me?” and be willing to hear the answer.
  • Truth often shows up as something uncomfortable: “Oh God, really? That?”

Exposure and Bravery

  • People with panic disorders aren’t scared of elevators — they’re scared of death and humiliation.
  • Helping someone approach small fears is helping them confront their own mortality and vulnerability.

“You’re not just less afraid — you’re more capable.”

Overprotectiveness Is Devouring

  • “Care” can be disguised control. E.g., “You don’t have to try today, dear.” → Disempowering.
  • Don’t steal people’s growth.

“Don’t do anything for someone they can do themselves.”

Revising the Past Through a New Vision

  • When you change your vision of the future, you also reinterpret the past.
  • Taking responsibility for patterns (like bullying) helps rewrite the narrative.

“The past is less fixed than you think.”

Confession and Correction

  • Confession = voluntarily facing your errors
  • Corrective truths are painful but necessary — they let a part of you die so something better can emerge.

Parenting, Discipline, and Social Success

  • Discipline = teaching kids how to behave so others want to include them.
  • Rules aren’t oppression. They’re enabling constraints — tools for higher games.

“Socialization isn’t suppression, it’s integration.”

Discipline Is Freedom

  • A good schedule should feel like an ideal day, not a prison.
  • Don’t impose a tyrannical calendar — plan the day you’d love to live.

Don’t Assume You Know Yourself

  • Treat yourself like someone you want to help — ask what you want, gently.
  • Honesty with yourself is risky — it makes you vulnerable.

“What you want can be used against you. But it can also be fulfilled.”

Past, Present, Future Are Intertwined

  • Clean your past → reduce stress reactivity in the present.
  • Unresolved memories = high alert system.

“Signal to yourself that you’re now large enough to confront it.”

Obstacles as Opportunities

  • Every fear you avoid expands in power.
  • Practice truth-telling even when terrifying — especially at work or in marriage.

“Are you more afraid of conflict, or 30 years of resentment?”

Walls and Boundaries

  • Medieval city (e.g. Carcassonne) = metaphor for the psyche.
  • You wall off chaos until the environment is manageable enough to master.
  • Walled garden = paradise — a small domain of structured opportunity.

Constraint Enables Play

  • Limitations create freedom.
  • Too many choices → paralysis.

“A bounded task invites participation.”

Institutions as Walls

  • Your life is protected by countless invisible structures.
  • Understand, appreciate, and be grateful for the systems that protect you.

Betrayal Destroys the Past

“If your partner betrays you, it doesn’t just destroy the present. It destroys the past.”

  • Trust is a wall. Once broken, everything floods in — chaos returns.
  • Dante placed betrayers in the deepest part of hell.

Making Progress: Wall Off a Tiny Task

  • Writing a book? Start with 15 minutes per day.
  • Even a sentence a day becomes a book.

“There’s no difference between breaking down a task and learning to love yourself.”

Fear Is Infinitely Divisible

  • Any fear, no matter how big, can be fractioned down until it’s tolerable.
  • Start where you won’t run.

“Stand at the edge. Look at the dragon. Stay. Then take a step forward.”

Relationships as Play

  • Ideal partner = beneficial adversary.
  • Push each other to the edge of growth — respectfully.

“If you’re both creative and honest, you don’t compromise — you find better solutions.”

Collaborative Empiricism

  • Try a small change → observe → refine.
  • Solve the micro-problems that repeat, e.g. dishes, bedtime, coming home.
  • If 90 minutes/week saves your marriage, that’s a bargain.

Moses and the Rock

  • Moses hit the rock with his staff (force) instead of asking (speech).
  • God denies him entry to the Promised Land.

“Force and manipulation won’t get you where you want to go. Only invitation will.”

Final Notes

  • Don’t start with what you can’t do — start with what you can.
  • If the task is too big, make the wall smaller.
  • From one smile at the store clerk to writing a book, all growth is the same pattern.

Ready for Lecture 3 when you are!

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