Daddy Debrief: Winning


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Beautifully said.
Love that David, thanks.
Dear david,
“Recent studies say that competition is not innate in humans as previously thought. Our nature is to be cooperative, or help each other. Even animals that prey on each other create networks where they peacefully coexist most of the time.”
This is true. In fact, there is a human motivational system for mastery, not competition. But, when you conflate the motivational systems of survival, territorialism, physiological regulation, and sexual pleasure, something perverse happens. The other, more profound human need system of affiliation becomes drowned out. And this is the consequence:
“I thought about how competition influences so much of our culture to the point where we perceive it to be in places it isn’t. We fall into the trap of comparing ourselves to people who seem to have it all together and then act as if someone is keeping a tally on how we measure up.”
Now that we have thoroughly fucked up the biosphere (our home), the motivation for affiliation/cooperation has become our highest priority. How that will play out in our lives will be most interesting. When I think back to my youth, competitive sports saved my life. But, I was also an exceptional athlete. The larger and greater truth is that growing up in an intensely competitive, hyper masculine, male-centric environment almost destroyed my life. For one thing, it caused me to live in isolation and distrust. And it undermined my capacity to be intimate.
As I healed, I found my competitive conditioning more and more painful. Utterly painful. And it was even more painful when others were competing with me. I can almost recall the moment when I no longer felt competitive in the unhealthy sense of being attached to dominating in some way. When I play a game or ball now, I don’t care to win; I care about having fun and being intimate in the process of play.
Our boys are so blessed to be growing up without the intense pressures of competitiveness. Yes, they do compete, but the feeling is radically different. It is clearly about mastery. And I know we foster that and create language around the need to be intimate and connected. It’s how we live, and that’s what makes the difference.
Thanks for this opportunity to sit with this again. Perhaps one day I’ll master it :)