motivation

Beethoven, internal drive, and "something that calls us to life"


Did you know Beethoven was profoundly deaf and suffered for years, trying to discover what ailed him? This article about the cause of Beethoven's illness descirbes his frustration with the lack of answers. Does this journey and frustration feel similar to what you're experiencing?

Over the years, Beethoven consulted many doctors, trying treatment after treatment for his ailments and his deafness, but found no relief. At one point, he was using ointments and taking 75 medicines, many of which most likely contained lead.


In 1823, he wrote to an acquaintance, also deaf, about his own inability to hear, calling it a “grievous misfortune,” and noting: “doctors know little; one finally tires of them.”



He was even suicidal, but continued on, in order to express what was his gift to share:

When he was 32, Beethoven mourned that he could not hear a flute, or a shepherd singing, which, he wrote, “brought me almost to despair. A little more and I would have committed suicide — only Art held me back. Ah it seemed unthinkable to leave the world until I had brought forth all that I feel lies within me.”



I'm writing about his experience because when you have a chronic condition, it can feel like all you want is to return to 'normal' or get 'out of pain.'. But the drive towards purpose is bigger than that, and it is ultimately what carries you through. This choosing, this intention, is why I included this concept of making a choice in my book, When Things Stick: Untangling Your Body From Old Patterns. Being deliberate in how you move forward is the energy that moves you through. It's whole-hearted commitment to want more. If you just reach to fix a problem or correct an issue, you miss the larger opportunity to make changes that matter.

In the structure of his 9th Symphony, Beethoven expresses this full arc of experience:

The first movement is a depiction of despair, Beethoven wrote. The second movement, with its loud kettledrums, is an attempt to break through the despair. The third reveals a “tender” world where despair is set aside, Beethoven wrote. But setting aside despair was not enough, he concluded. Instead, “one must search for something that calls us to life.”

Deep brain function and daily life

What strategies do you take to get out of your own way? How can you finish that project that has been nagging you for months or years? What can you do to stay calm when faced with old triggers? Why can't you put into action ideas that are in your head?

Most people go to the mind to deal with themselves (meditation, mindfulness training) and some bring more body to the task with mind-body practices (yoga, tai chi, dance, somatic psychotherapies).

The Connectivity Project is an integration of several modalities I have worked with over the years. It's designed to get to your mind through the roots of your brain. Working on the deepest levels of brain coordination is an act of integrating the fastest functions in your brain. Balance, coordination, sound, and light processing are done at speeds beyond your cognitive control. When these systems are improved simultaneously, a synergistic improvement happens within yourself that may be hard to describe. But you feel it. It’s palpable and profound because it fine tunes the foundation you have grown used to. (content continues below video)

Big neurological shifts are experiences that are exhilarating and affect your whole being. Learning to walk on two feet, learning to ride a bike, feeling in the zone of the perfect tennis or golf swing, syncing up perfectly with your dance partner and the music. These are multi-system coordinative events that happen underneath the thinking mind. It feels like flow, it feels like action emerges out of you. It feels like you can get out of your own way.