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PH's avatar

Love this. At 65 I finally started pushing past the limits I’d put on myself to conform to what I thought was acceptable - I finally realized that it wasn’t all acceptable to ME. Which explains the recent nose piercing and the tattoo I’m getting in a few weeks (my first), which will say, “ Unapologetically Me”. It’s about time.

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Melissa Sandfort's avatar

Psychopathy and Entrepreneurship

Nothing is all good or all bad. Not even psychopathy.

The good: I come from a family of entrepreneurs dating back to the turn of the last century on both sides of my family.

My great-great grandfather on my dad’s side sold real estate in New York City before World War I. My great-grandmother and great-grandfather on my mom’s side owned a bakery and then a cafe in Walnut Creek, Iowa, enabling them to put their son through college during the Great Depression.

My grandfather on my dad’s side built up and bankrupted a dairy empire called Garden State Farms. My mom owned a dress shop called “The Daisy.” She was also a realtor and self-employed aesthetician. My dad was a freelance food technology consultant, from Lithuania to China, ultimately dying in Columbia from the combination of COPD, undetected lung cancer (lifetime of smoking) and the high altitude.

In my family, doing what you want to do — pursuing your entrepreneurial non-conformist dreams — is the norm. From childhood, me, my brother and sister were encouraged and supported to listen to what we were interested in, and do that. Poetry? Reading? Art? No problem. I never lacked for books or specialized education for writing and poetry. My brother never lacked for art classes. He now owns a tile store in Charlottesville, Virginia —Sarisand Tile. He designs kitchens and bathrooms and uses tiles as his method of artistic expression. I’ve been an entrepreneur my entire adult life, first as a private tutor and now as an Internal Family Systems life coach and teacher.

The bad: I come from a family of profound mental illness. All my pathbreaking, non-confirming ancestors were profoundly personality disordered. I won’t go into the gnarly details here, but there’s a reason I’ve done over 7,000 hours of psychotherapy on myself as a result of the Mt. Everest of trauma they perpetrated. The very same inner freedom and capacity to go against social structures that enabled them to build businesses is the inner freedom and capacity they had to also destroy the children around them. It was a swinging door: no adhering to social rules publicly = business creation; no adhering to social rules privately = interpersonal destruction.

In an ideal world, our parents would encourage us to be rule-breakers and non-conformists without also embodying the very, very dark side of those qualities. I am living proof that the gift of having parents who support non-conformity is not what it looks like on the outside, and I wouldn’t be surprised if many people who were given the gift of non-conformist parents also experience the very extreme shadow side of that.

Some of us have to face the demons of parents who don’t encourage non-conformity. Some of us have to face the demons of parents who are non-conformists but alas, in a far too out-of-control way.

No matter what our challenge, the path of listening to our truths and our deepest callings, remains.

Here’s to living lives of fierce authenticity and embodying non-conformity in a way that’s generative and life-giving, not chaotic and destructive.

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