Where the Feeling Gets Lost in Translation
Download MP3Before the goal, before the plan, before the whiteboard, there is a felt sense of something you are moving toward. It lives in your body. It resists easy explanation. And because it can't be tracked or defended in a meeting, you translate it into something more manageable — a number, a title, a deadline. That translation is where the trouble starts. Brian uses the lodge officer structure as a map
Before the goal, before the plan, before the whiteboard, there is a felt sense of something you are moving toward. It lives in your body. It resists easy explanation. And because it can't be tracked or defended in a meeting, you translate it into something more manageable — a number, a title, a deadline. That translation is where the trouble starts.
Brian uses the lodge officer structure as a map of this internal process. The Worshipful Master represents the raw wanting and direction. The Senior Deacon carries the translation work, moving that desire from a living experience into something the rest of your psychology can act on. The failure mode — detailed in Brian's forthcoming book A Mason's Work — is oversimplification: the felt complexity of what you want gets reduced to a soundbite, and the outcome you build toward was never equipped to deliver the experience you were actually after.
- The physiological reality of desire before it becomes a goal
- How the Senior Deacon function strips complexity from intent
- Why outcomes can't deliver feelings they were never designed to produce
- The Senior Deacon's failure mode as described in A Mason's Work
- The difference between a placeholder objective and a meaningful pursuit
The solution isn't better goal-setting. It's learning to hold onto the original signal through the translation process so what you build actually points somewhere real.
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Creators and Guests
Host
Brian Mattocks
Host and Founder of A Mason's Work - a podcast designed to help you use symbolism to grow. He's been working in the craft for over a decade and served as WM, trustee, and sat in every appointed chair in a lodge - at least once :D