I’ve been appreciating BrenĂ© Brown’s newest book (Strong Ground). She names some of the paradoxes that wise and courageous leaders learn to embrace.
I immediately resonated with the chapter on the importance of “negative capability.” It’s a concept she found in a letter from the poet John Keats (1795-1821). Keats praises this capacity that he perceives in great men like Shakespeare – “when a man is capable of being in uncertainties, mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.”
There are moments when abiding in love and truth is particularly painful. These are the moments of the in-between, when we have only partial insights or unsatisfactory options. We feel the pressure to make something happen and get away from the tension as soon as possible. It becomes almost unbearable to abide and wait for fuller truth and goodness and beauty to emerge.
To be human in a fallen world is to live in this tension. We are stretched by two seemingly incompatible truths. On one side is the harsh reality of impermanence. As much as we attempt to deny it, our earthly existence is fleeting. Nothing gold can stay. On the other side is the nonstop human tendency for meaning-making. We insatiably interpret what is happening and why – a task that our brains engage both consciously and unconsciously, even while we sleep! We don’t like waiting to receive the fuller truth. We both desire and need to belong securely and trustingly to something solid.
To put the paradox differently, our human hearts were not created for endings, and everything good in this world comes to an end. What can we do?
As BrenĂ© Brown puts it, “Negative capability is a difficult muscle to build. We’re wired to resolve tension and seek certainty. This capability requires the ability to reach inward toward stillness rather than out toward counterfeit facts and reason.”
“Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10). -from Spiritual Direction blog


