Volume 68, Issue 3 | Page 23

acteristics. Self-esteem taken too far veers into narcissism, and you really don’t want to mess with vulnerable narcissism, a precarious situation indeed. GROWTH NEEDS Maslow’s overarching focus was on people who reached self-actualization; traditionally “successful” people who were also “loved, adored and admired.” He compiled survey responses describing people who had reached this level, building the Good Human Being (GHB) notebook. Maslow said: “I think of the self-actualizing man not as an ordinary man with something added, but rather as the ordinary man with nothing taken away.” Page 89 has a list of characteristics of self-actualizers: truth-seeking, acceptance, purpose, authenticity, freshness of appreciation, peak experiences, humanitarianism, good moral intuition, creative spirit and equanimity. For the first need on the sail, Exploration, stress-tolerance translates to improvement in all dimensions of well-being. The five sub-needs of exploration are Social Exploration, Adventure Seeking, Post-traumatic Growth, Openness to Experience, and Intellect. Adaptive social exploration involves curiosity about how other people operate, rather than a need to fill a void. Healthy adventure seeking looks for novel experiences, but not necessarily intense ones; thrill-seeking isn’t always healthy. The section on post-traumatic growth (PTG) does not disappoint: “growth and pain often coexist.” Use cognitive exploration, positive disintegration and psychological flexibility to find meaning in suffering, a la Viktor Frankl. 2. Easier said than done, but plenty of interventions have proven to aid the surprisingly common outcome of PTG. 3 Openness to experience and Intellect combine in a figure illustrating cognitive exploration, with the common outcome of creative thinking. Good news for fellow introverts capable of impressive feats of deep work: absorption counts as openness to experience. 4 Experiencing things as doubly real, losing track of time, getting immersed in art or nature, noting a breakdown between self and other: these are all healthy manifestations of flow. 5 Page 112 divides Intellect into curiosity/need to understand, and deprivation sensitivity/need to know. Based on new data (and foreseen by Maslow), curiosity represents the healthier habit. Rather than approaching new knowledge with an insecure compulsion to know, try to maintain an open, flexible curiosity. 6,7 Kaufman carefully delineates the next need, Love, from the security need of Connection. Instead of needing, higher love is admiring. Instead of striving for satiation, higher love grows boundlessly. In this realm, you love someone out of abundance, not scarcity. Kaufman introduces the “dark triad” here, which is roughly the opposite of love: grandiose narcissism, Machiavellianism (exploitation and deceit) and psychopathy. The dark triad correlates with chronotype, job performance, CEO status and many other outcomes. 8 Rather than lamenting how psychopathy sometimes pays off, Kaufman and some buddies invented the light triad (not even a Wikipedia page yet). The light triad consists of Kantianism (treating people as ends, not means), Humanism (valuing the dignity of each person), and faith in humanity (fundamental goodness of humans). Everyone of course has marks of the dark and light features, i.e. “the line separating good and evil passes … right through every human heart.” 9 People who attain this higher “B-love” galvanize agency and communion among fellow humans. Exercising their own agency, they see themselves as part of society, valuing communion. They “transcend the false dichotomy between in-group love and unconditional love.” Sections on healthy self-love, quiet ego and authenticity lay the paradoxical foundation for self-actualization: “the best way to transcend the ego is via having a strong identity.” In the third component of the sail, Purpose, we discover that special situation in which the “work-joy dichotomy disappears.” Fascinated by Ruth Benedict’s description of synergy, Maslow spoke of synergistic cultures, “holistically structured and functioning for mutual benefit of the individual and the larger society (Kaufman).” Put another way, one who strives for pure self-actualization automatically helps others, agency meets communion, “virtue pays (Maslow).” Selflessly seeking your purpose leads to happiness as an ironic epiphenomenon; chasing happiness directly is a Sisyphean quest. The Purpose chapter gives advice on organizing one’s overall life purpose. We learn of moral exemplars, famous men and women who were virtuous, consistent, brave, inspiring and humble. Beware though, heroes and villains do share a few qualities: toughness, bravery, risk-taking and rebelliousness. Crucially, they differ in that agency-communion interplay: villains are all agency, heroes value communion. Kaufman reviews data on grit, equanimity and range. He notes “zero correlation between having a diversity of interests and being inconsistent in your interests, but positive correlation between having diverse interests and persevering in the face of adversity.” Good news for the generalists out there! 10 TRANSCEND BOOK REVIEW With sturdy ships and fierce sails, we can now chase Transcendence. Heaven, so to speak, lies waiting for us through life, ready to step into for a time and to enjoy before we have to come back to our ordinary life of striving. And once we have been in it, we can remember it forever, and feed ourselves on this memory and be sustained in times of stress. - Abraham Maslow, Toward a Psychology of Being (1962) Kaufman and Maslow grapple with paradox and contradiction in the search for the true, the good and the beautiful (same things?). According to Maslow, self-actualizers frequently have “peak experiences,” moments of unity occurring on a spectrum: normal life → flow → mindfulness → gratitude → love → awe → inspiration → peak and mystical experiences. (continued on page 22) AUGUST 2020 21