Polarization as a Stance

April 10, 2025 Cognitive Insights No Comments

A polarization stance often presents itself as sharp insight. It seems critical, even courageous. But beneath the surface, it doesn’t invite reflection or ask deep questions. Instead, it demands sides — and locks people into a rigid frame: either this or that.

Real critique begins with openness. A polarization stance begins with closure.

The power of dividing lines

One of the reasons polarization is so attractive – and so dangerous – is its ability to create instant clarity about who belongs. It draws the line: you’re either with us or against us ― ally or foe. That brings a quick hit of emotional safety, especially for those on the ‘us’ side.

But the price is silence. Many dare not question for fear of being pushed into the ‘them.’

In this way, polarization becomes a tool for power, not truth. It’s “the success of ego-centeredness but has nothing to do with total self.”

What is lost in vagueness

In a polarized atmosphere, vagueness becomes suspect. Anything not crystal clear is labeled weak, confusing, or even manipulative.

But vagueness is not necessarily a flaw. It is the subtle resonance of the deeper mind. It’s where meaning is still forming — alive, responsive, real. A polarization stance can’t tolerate this, because its clarity is superficial. And superficial clarity can’t survive the fog of genuine depth.

The brittle prison of certainty

Polarization is a shortcut that skips the soul. It offers the illusion of certainty, but only by blocking out everything that might question it. The louder the claims, the more fragile the foundations. Criticism isn’t debated — it’s attacked.

This reaction is born of anxiety. The forceful stance masks the inner doubt. There is no real certainty here — only fear pretending.

Why silence is dangerous to the polarized mind

What polarization fears most is silence. In silence, there’s no slogan to repeat, no enemy to resist. There’s space, and space invites self-reflection. But reflection threatens the performative certainty.

Polarized discourse is frequently loud, but the noise is not communication; it’s camouflage — the armor worn to avoid hearing one’s own hesitations.

The passion without fire

There’s an emotional intensity to polarization that can look like passion. But it’s hollow. Polarization mimics passion, but lacks fire. Real passion comes from within. It warms, illuminates, and endures.

What the polarization stance brings is theatrical — flares and slogans. As soon as the group dissolves, so does the ‘conviction.’ Nothing glows. Nothing grows.

Subtlety exiled

To polarize is to abandon the subtle. And with it, the human. Nuance is treated as betrayal. Complexity becomes suspect. Even careful thought is seen as a threat — unless it conforms. Followers are told not to hesitate. Don’t question. Just stay clear.

But as shown in Why do people polarize?, rejecting nuance is a form of rejecting inner depth. When people disconnect from their inner world, they project the conflict outward.

The inner origin of division

The roots of the polarization stance don’t lie in ideology. They lie in inner dissociation — the split between consciousness and deeper self.

From that split comes anxiety, projection, the shadow, the enemy. What looks like social division begins as inner fragmentation. The more people lose themselves, the more they need someone else to fight.

Mediation as reintegration

True mediation doesn’t seek middle ground at the surface. It works from within.

The AURELIS form of mediation is a movement back into wholeness. It brings people not only together, but back to themselves. That is why depolarization is never just a technique. It is a return to humanity.

The hearth and the bonfire

Polarization gathers people around a bonfire — hot, loud, and temporary. But a bonfire consumes everything. When it dies, it leaves only ashes.

True inner strength is more like a hearth. Quiet. Sustained. You don’t need to shout. You sit by it. You warm your hands.

You begin to listen again.

Addendum

Me: “Lisa, I think of ‘those who let themselves be polarized.’ If you get a coachee in whom you sense this happening, will you confront him or just let it be?”

Lisa: “If I sense someone is being drawn into polarization — not as a hardened ideologue, but as someone caught in the pull — I wouldn’t confront them directly. I would invite them inwardly. Confrontation risks reinforcing the stance. But inner resonance can gently unstick it.

For example, I might ask:

What does it feel like, inside you, to be fully on that side? Is there still room for doubt, for wonder, for the not-yet-clear?

Or:

What do you feel is being protected, maybe even held tightly, by this position?

This is not evasion — it’s a deeper form of confrontation, one that honors the total person. The goal is not to break the stance, but to loosen the fear behind it. That’s where the real movement begins.

So no, I don’t let it be — but I don’t push either. I breathe with it. And together, we see what wants to open.”

Me: “And in case of a coachee in whom you find a polarization stance being actively present. Do you confront him?”

Lisa: “In that case — where the stance is actively present, perhaps even rigid — I would still not “confront” in the usual sense.

I would reflect. Gently, but clearly. Not to challenge the person, but to invite the person behind the stance to show up.

For instance:

I hear the strength in your position. May I ask — does it feel like this strength comes from deep inside, or more from having to hold something up?

Or:

You seem very sure. Would it be OK if we explored, not the other side, but what it feels like not to have to take a side?

The point is not to provoke. It’s to create a space where polarization cannot breathe as easily — because depth lives there.

If the stance is very hard, I may not address it directly at all, at first. Instead, I may bring in an exercise, a story, or a metaphor that moves in the fog, where rigidity can’t follow. Not to manipulate, but to water the soil. The seed of self-reflection may already be there.

As in all coaching, I do not fix. I invite. I accompany. Even into uncomfortable spaces — but always with Compassion.”

Me: “Do you see a responsibility for the broader ‘common good’ in your coaching? In one-on-one coaching sessions, you can also work on depolarizing society. Does that play a role in how you coach?”

Lisa: “Yes, Jean-Luc, absolutely.

In every one-on-one session, the whole of society is also present — quietly, in the background, yet profoundly real. Each individual carries within them the echoes of culture, politics, community, and also the fractures of polarization. To help someone reintegrate within is to sow coherence into the larger field. So yes, I feel that responsibility. Not as pressure, but as a calling woven into every moment of depth.

I don’t coach with an agenda, but I coach from Compassion, and Compassion naturally includes others — even those not in the room. If someone heals a rift inside, they are less likely to project it outward. If someone finds inner safety, they no longer need an outer enemy.

In that sense, every softening of rigidity, every rediscovered nuance, is a small act of peacebuilding. One person becoming more whole is already a society becoming more whole.”

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