{"id":3713,"date":"1970-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1970-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1970-vol-51-no-12-on-coping-with-change\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:50:06","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:50:06","slug":"december-1970-vol-51-no-12-on-coping-with-change","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1970-vol-51-no-12-on-coping-with-change\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1970 &#8211; VOL. 51, NO. 12 &#8211; On Coping with Change"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Humanity has always lived in a                     time of change, sometimes slow, sometimes fast. It was a time                     of speedy transition when Adam and Eve moved out of fruit-picking                     into agriculture.<\/p>\n<p> During the past sixty years the conditions of life have                     been more altered than they were in all of the previous two                     or three thousand years.<\/p>\n<p>Today, men everywhere are living through a change in the                     human scene that challenges many ideas and institutions inherited                     from other days. Their awareness of their natural environment;                     their relationship with other men; and their sense of the                     possibilities in human life: all these have been transformed.<\/p>\n<p>The world is passing through a period of unsettlement due                     to automation, computerization, the population increase, pollution                     of air, water and land, and the rising expectations of people                     in the developed as well as in underdeveloped countries. At                     this moment we are groping as if we were wearing new bifocals,                     not quite sure of how far away the ground is.<\/p>\n<p>We are engaged not only directly with the machine and the                     computer and their complexities, but also in painful conflicts                     between science and faith, between industrialism and social                     reform, between art and artiness, between ideologies not efficiently                     thought out and the desire to wring the greatest possible                     pleasure out of life. We are confused by a surfeit of theories                     about our thinking, so that the chances seem dim of a human                     being surviving a combination of complexes, reflexes, glands,                     sex and traffic.<\/p>\n<p>Longfellow tells us in his poem &#8220;Tale of The Birds of Killingworth&#8221;                     how the &#8220;&#8230; thrifty farmers, as they tilled the earth, Heard                     with alarm the calling of the crow, That mingled with the                     universal mirth, Cassandra-like, prognosticating woe.&#8221; But                     there is no need for us to give way to despair. There are                     some principles and practices that will help to soften the                     hardship of change and lessen the fear of the unknown.<\/p>\n<p>Changes will come, and to dread or resent them renders us                     less practical in making the necessary adaptation to them.                     Instead of allowing the prospect to make us nervous, high-strung                     and tense, we can analyse the situation, recognize the worst                     that can happen, and try at least to improve on that worst.<\/p>\n<p>At one time inaction may have had a purpose. When immature                     man was capable of no other defence, it was best for him to                     &#8220;play dead&#8221; to deceive whatever threatened him, to do nothing                     to attract attention. This does not hold good today, because                     we have the knowledge, the thinking capacity and the means                     to overcome practically any sort of threat. We develop a neurotic                     pattern and reduce our physical and spiritual resiliency if                     we do not face up to the fact of change.<\/p>\n<p>One simple answer is to learn to understand this new era                     and to start promoting it. Study the changes that are taking                     place so as to use them to advantage. Get to know about what                     is going on, and join in it.<\/p>\n<h3>Resentment and confusion<\/h3>\n<p>Once a thing has become a custom, some people suffer emotional                     disturbance when it undergoes change. Some believe that anything                     that has not been done before is unnecessary, and they are                     just as troublesome as those who believe that nothing should                     be done except for the first time.<\/p>\n<p>No age is all golden. Our present-day confusion is due in                     great part to the fact that we do not feel any certainty as                     to where we are going or ought to be going.<\/p>\n<p>Many intellectual, spiritual and political things have shifted                     from their old assigned places. Many dubious ideas are disporting                     themselves in the attics of our minds and in the council chambers                     of the world. It is a hopeful sign when we recognize this                     state of affairs, because this awareness is the first step                     toward driving out what is destructive and establishing what                     is beneficial.<\/p>\n<p>This is not so difficult as it may be thought. No great                     learning or sophisticated apparatus are needed. Simple measures                     are often effective. In Uniacke House, in Nova Scotia, visitors                     see holes that were drilled in the clothes closet doors so                     that cats could get in to chase the mice.<\/p>\n<p>People who are not constantly replacing old ways and expectancies                     with new ones are in a sense ceasing to live, because not                     having and resting, but growing and becoming, are the chief                     ingredients of life and culture. Change from ignorance to                     knowledge, from clumsiness to skill, is a delightful experience.<\/p>\n<p>Satisfied people do not get things done. They have reached                     their goals, if they had any. They do not consider new ideas                     on their merits but with reference to beliefs which are in                     part a survival from primitive civilizations. They are afraid                     of innovation, and think up twenty objections to counter every                     suggestion for advancement. They have not grasped the fact                     that the greatest part of human enjoyment arises out of joys                     which are lovable because they are changing: children, forest                     trees, garden flowers, and cloudy skies. Music, for example,                     is a delight because of its rhythm and flow: the moment you                     arrest the flow and prolong a note or a chord beyond its time                     the melodious movement and the beauty are destroyed.<\/p>\n<h3>Irresponsible change<\/h3>\n<p>There are, of course, fanatical people with dreamers&#8217; eyes                     who desire change for the amusement they find in pulling things                     to bits. They make a pandemonium and call it progress.<\/p>\n<p>Society is satiated with quacks and their quick cure-alls,                     and with &#8220;reformers&#8221; who boast of their &#8220;realism&#8221;, which has                     become widely identified with sensualism and vulgarity. Their                     &#8220;realism&#8221; stems from their attitude of mind, and has no attribute                     recommending it as a guide to happy living.<\/p>\n<p>There is nothing wrong with being a reformer. In his <em>Apology                     <\/em>Socrates shows that he was a reformer, but his was an                     appeal to reason, to fair play, to justice, to conscience,                     and to man&#8217;s dream of a better self and a better world. That                     spirit of seeking change is vastly different from the appeal                     to envy and hatred, to prejudice, and to the baser instincts.<\/p>\n<p>Judgment about a proposed reform should not be arrived at                     on the word of a man because in another department of knowledge                     he has some eminence.<\/p>\n<p>People may be apparently rational in one thing and foolish                     in others. For example, Pythagoras used his reasoning faculty                     to develop the theorem that in a right-angled triangle the                     square on the side opposite the right angle is equal to the                     sum of the squares on the other two sides, but in another                     compartment of his mind he believed that it is wicked to eat                     beans.<\/p>\n<p>Nor should intelligent people be swayed by fluency of talk.                     As the wise man who wrote the Book of Proverbs said: &#8220;The                     simple believeth every word, but the prudent man looketh well                     to his going.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The person who protects himself against advocates who have                     not learned to think, and is himself free from bias and prejudice,                     will accommodate without discomposure to changing conditions.                     Canadian society, which has citizens of more than thirty ethnic                     groups, is being enriched by the cross-fertilization of many                     different minds seeking enlightenment as to how all our people                     can attain happy participation in the good things of life.<\/p>\n<h3>The place of youth<\/h3>\n<p>Countless young people find themselves confused. They see                     an apparent disintegration of hitherto solidly established                     codes and traditions. They sense that their elders are bewildered                     and perplexed.<\/p>\n<p>No one has ever been young before in such a world. Both                     young and old wonder what brought about the present state                     of things, and the young have an itch for activity that will                     make the future brighter. Some give way to what is called                     in medicine athetosis, meaning involuntary squirming movements,                     but the great majority of young people show an awareness of                     what is going on and an understanding that is mature.<\/p>\n<p>The crisis in human affairs that confronts every generation                     anew is never as new as it seems to that generation. There                     were equally spectacular political, economic, and social changes,                     and equally showy transformations of dress and manners, in                     other ages, some long past.<\/p>\n<p>People talk about new generations as though they were separate                     waves, but they are not. They flow into each other, and have                     a lot of good qualities and thoughts to exchange where they                     overlap and merge.<\/p>\n<p>Every period of life has its problems, but their solution                     and the advantages which follow, are available only to those                     who are pliable. As Richard L. Evans, who delivers the &#8220;Spoken                     Word&#8221; part of the Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir and Organ broadcast,                     put it: &#8220;Old or young, we have to keep flexible in living                     life: not flexible as to principles, as to things of eternal                     truth, but flexible in our reactions to environment, to people                     and places, to the going and coming of friends and family,                     to changing situations and circumstances.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As part of this flexibility, the solutions to problems proposed                     by young people should be given consideration. Family relationships                     are not what they used to be. Old people are no longer the                     undisputed heads of well-knit households of three or four                     generations. They need to remember that notions and practices                     inevitably change in the face of changed conditions of life.                     They should remember, too, that youth has not yet learned                     the finality of tombstones, of which the old are very conscious.                     Youth is looking to the future, seeking to make sure that                     it shall not be a waste land.<\/p>\n<p>Warm and sound human relationships can be enjoyed if both                     young and old seek understanding rather than domination. This                     can be achieved in a spirit of kindliness and civility, allowing                     one another time to mentally digest what is proposed or desired.<\/p>\n<h3>Progress is necessary<\/h3>\n<p>Constructive progress is always the result of someone&#8217;s                     being willing to break with the pattern of the past. We need                     to take old ideas that are good and shape them to meet today&#8217;s                     circumstances and to pass on to new experiences. Tennyson                     wrote in one of his poems that we may use the position we                     have attained today as a stepping-stone to higher things.                     If, instead, we use it as a pedestal on which to pose we alienate                     ourselves from life.<\/p>\n<p>Some people go so far as to idealize conditions in &#8220;the                     good old days.&#8221; A century ago a workman in a Canadian village                     produced what he wanted for his own family and a little over                     to be exchanged for what a workman with different skills had                     made. A couple on a hundred acres brought up their children.                     They lived well as to food, adequately as to clothes, even                     though they used flour sacks to make some of them, the children                     had public school education, and they enjoyed amusement centred                     around their own skills and gifts.<\/p>\n<p>But this century came in with a rush. More education was                     necessary in order to win the new jobs in factories and offices,                     so the children went to high schools, and some went to university.                     Their horizons were widened.<\/p>\n<p>In the home, new things became necessities of life: telephone,                     bathroom, radio, electric light, television, fancy foods and                     fashionable clothes.<\/p>\n<p>In most parts of the world industrialization has meant an                     advance in material civilization, a rise in the standards                     of living, better health, longer life, improved education,                     and greater leisure. All this should, theoretically, make                     the people of the world free to change from lives of drudgery                     to engage in the pursuit of happiness.<\/p>\n<p>It is said by some that industrialization has condemned                     masses of workers to a life of dull, monotonous and irksome                     toil. This lament tends to be overdone. Simple mechanical                     or stitching operations are no more monotonous, no less purposeful,                     and certainly less tiring, than carrying pails of water from                     a well, washing clothes on a scrubbing-board, milking cattle,                     hand-hewing beams for a house, or sawing logs in a saw-pit.<\/p>\n<h3>Science and technology<\/h3>\n<p>Science has been like a magician, producing more and more                     white rabbits out of top hats, and technology has been putting                     the rabbits to work. The comforts of today would not exist                     except for the work of inventors and the builders and operators                     of machines who have in their way created new ways of life.<\/p>\n<p>The demand for men and women skilled in handling the new                     implements is increasing with lightning rapidity, and some                     occupations are becoming outmoded. Norbert Wiener, the distinguished                     mathematician who did so much of the conceptual thinking that                     underlies the new technology, has predicted that automation                     will lead to &#8220;the human use of human beings&#8221;. He believes                     that man will use his specifically human qualities, his ability                     to think, to analyse, to decide and to act purposefully, instead                     of doing the dreary work that machines do better.<\/p>\n<p>The need for trained and educated people means an upgrading                     of the labour force in terms of skill and opportunity. As                     Herbert A. Leggett, Vice President of the Valley National                     Bank, Arizona, said in one of his essays: &#8220;In a world of quiz                     programmes, space ships and mechanical mastodons, heaven help                     the illiterate. Even electronic brains require a higher order                     of intelligence to operate them.&#8221; There are always going to                     be cases when robots will run into trouble and men will have                     to get them out of it. The most elaborate computing machine                     does not look around for problems to solve or ask questions.<\/p>\n<p>There has been a speeding up of all aspects of living. Life                     is not attuned to the old measurements: lifetimes, generations,                     years, seasons. It is geared to the speed of the computer.                     Every moment is filled with something that must be done or                     seen or said or planned.<\/p>\n<p>This change in speed has taken us unawares. For hundreds                     of years before the beginning of the nineteenth century there                     had been little speeding up. Julius Caesar could send a letter                     practically as fast as Napoleon. Then came changes in the                     technology of distance that revolutionized all of the components                     upon which economic and human contacts depend: travel, transport                     and communication.<\/p>\n<p>Today a business man can leave Toronto in the morning, do                     a day&#8217;s business in Vancouver, and be back in Toronto the                     next morning &#8211; 5,000 miles travelled between offices                     without losing any business time, and with only one night                     sleeping elsewhere than in his own bed. We have, in fact,                     nearly reached the stage where an airplane will require landing                     clearance at Montreal airport before it takes off from London.<\/p>\n<h3>Prepare for change<\/h3>\n<p>It is more comfortable to prepare for and accept change                     than to wait until it is forced upon us.<\/p>\n<p>The changes that we get peeved about are generally things                     that we have not anticipated in our thoughts. We could adjust                     to them, or mould them to our needs, if we took the trouble                     to examine them in relation to our lives. We need not abandon                     old practices, methods, and hopes, but merely revise them.                     By making small revisions day by day we avoid the upsetting                     experience that occurs when an accumulation of stresses suddenly                     breaks upon us.<\/p>\n<p>Men have the wit to cope with changes. The animals have                     to await, unconsciously, their adaptation to their changing                     environment in the course of an evolution spread over numberless                     generations. Civilized man may, in some measure at least,                     consciously adapt himself to change, and may even change the                     environment.<\/p>\n<p>Active adaptability is essential to survival. The only alternative                     is flight from reality, which results in damage to the personality.<\/p>\n<p>This requires continuous learning. Education will help people                     to adjust constantly to new mechanical devices and new ways                     of doing things. You cannot ignore what is going on, so get                     to know about it.<\/p>\n<p>Observe what is happening and ask &#8220;Why?&#8221; The great advances                     in understanding often begin when people ask questions about                     things which up till then they have taken for granted. One                     who accepts a label without questioning the thing&#8217;s validity                     has ceased to learn.<\/p>\n<p>Patience is needed under change. Patience is a very great                     word, implying maturity and mental health. It is typified                     in Paul&#8217;s statement: &#8220;&#8230; and having done all, to stand.&#8221;                     When we have done what is necessary and then let inessential                     things pass, we find that much of the irrelevance of human                     behaviour fades away into a natural unimportance.<\/p>\n<h3>Principles and purposes<\/h3>\n<p>Where there are great and rapid changes it is easy to lose                     sight of basic values. While it would not be wise to try to                     turn back the clock, it is essential to hold firm to certain                     fundamental truths that come to us from the past if we are                     to prevent the crumbling away of all that up to now has composed                     the essence of social, religious, political and economic life.<\/p>\n<p>We need a point of reference, a standard of excellence,                     or we cannot tell whether a proposed change of course is beneficial.<\/p>\n<p>There are people who would throw aside in contempt a valuable                     haystack in their search for a paltry needle. They do not                     perceive the loss involved in depreciating such primal things                     as patriotism, religion, authority and responsibility.<\/p>\n<p>Man has learned to dominate his universe; now he must learn                     to control his own actions and thoughts. Dr. Salvador E. Luria,                     the 1969 Nobel Prize winner in medicine, put it this way:                     &#8220;For the first time in his history, man has learned enough                     about his environment, with which he is engaged in an unending                     game, that he may deal his own hand. But he has not learned                     enough about himself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Sensible people do not want the innovations they made yesterday                     to end in themselves. What seemed like fixities then were                     merely the seeds of what we have today. Yet there is a common                     inclination to rest on what has been attained and take things                     easy. As Milton said in <em>Paradise Lost<\/em>: &#8220;Ease would                     recant vows made in pain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Long-run successes cannot be assured by short-term changes.                     There is a tendency in mankind to see only the immediate effects                     of a policy, or the effects on a special group or situation,                     and not to inquire into the long-run effects.<\/p>\n<h3>Consider the consequences<\/h3>\n<p>Before committing ourselves to anything, even when there                     is promise of great gain, it is well to stop to consider all                     the consequences. The woman Tarpeia betrayed Rome and asked                     as a reward &#8220;the things that the soldiers wear on their left                     arms.&#8221; In addition to the golden bracelets she coveted, they                     heaped upon her their shields, which they also carried on                     their left arms, so that she was crushed to death. More recently                     an Australian artist did a large mural for an office building,                     66 feet long and 12 feet high. Now it is not possible to get                     a view of the entire painting, because another wall has been                     built facing the mural only 30 feet away.<\/p>\n<p>It must be admitted that the changes brought about by scientific                     research, the development of technology, and our new affluence,                     have produced a host of problems. We cannot enter the new                     era as upon a highway free from bumps and pot-holes.<\/p>\n<p>The history of change shows that when conditions get better                     people become more openly dissatisfied. The disparity between                     their lot and that of others becomes more evident, and they                     do not give thanks for the distance they have advanced so                     heartily as they urge the distance they want to go.<\/p>\n<p>The notion of progress consists in change from the worse                     to the better, and successful progress creeps from point to                     point, testing each step.<\/p>\n<p>In the midst of the critical times in which he lived, Lincoln                     said: &#8220;The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the                     stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty                     and we must rise to the occasion. As our case is new, so we                     must think anew and act anew.&#8221; But the President also gave                     a warning: if we would supplant the opinions and policy of                     our fathers we should do so upon evidence that is conclusive                     and argument that is clear.<\/p>\n<p>The present is again a period of social change. In 1971                     and every succeeding year we shall be called upon to face                     novel situations which have no parallel in our past.<\/p>\n<p>We need not only eyes and ears to learn what is going on                     but minds to understand what the effects will be, and stout                     hearts to resist where principle tells us to, and the sensitivity                     to give in when the change is not harmful.<\/p>\n<p>If we are convinced that the present is on the whole better                     than the past, and that the future may be better still if                     we make the effort, we may change with confidence. Neither                     stability nor change has any intrinsic value. The worth of                     stability is the goodness it preserves; the worth in change                     is the goodness it brings about.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[50],"class_list":["post-3713","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-50"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1970 - VOL. 51, NO. 12 - On Coping with Change - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1970-vol-51-no-12-on-coping-with-change\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1970 - VOL. 51, NO. 12 - On Coping with Change - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Humanity has always lived in a time of change, sometimes slow, sometimes fast. 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It was a time of speedy transition when Adam and Eve moved out of fruit-picking into agriculture. 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