It was only after his death, from a ms called “Marking,” that the world learned of the deeply private faith that underlay Dag Hammarskjold’s life of public service. In aphoristic reflections he described his “negotiations with God and myself.”
9/18/61 Dag Hammarskjold, Sec Gen of the UN, died in the Congo when his plane crashed (shot down?). The rare global leader who combined public service with a sense of religious vocation: "Do not seek death. Death will find you. But seek the road which makes death a fulfillment."
3
5
1
51
“I don’t know Who—or what—put the question...I don’t even remember answering. But at some moment I did answer Yes to Someone—or Something—and from that hour I was certain that existence is meaningful and that, therefore, my life, in self-surrender, had a goal...
1
5
1
27
“I came to Realize that the Way leads to a triumph which is a catastrophe and to a catastrophe which is a triumph, that the price for committing one’s life would be reproach...After that, the word “courage” lost its meaning, since nothing could be taken from me.”
1
3
23
We're at the stage of triumph which is a catastrophe.
2
6
Replying to @yourauntemma
The best summary I’ve seen of what you call positive disintegration.

Sep 18, 2019 · 3:30 PM UTC

3
2
3
Replying to @RobertEllsberg
Not surprisingly, Dag Hammarskjold is one of the best exemplars of growth through positive disintegration, and his "Markings" are a vivid document of it.
1
Replying to @RobertEllsberg
Greta Thunberg's inner transformation from a hopelessly depressed, withdrawn child to an activist for global change is also an excellent example of what the process of positive disintegration is about.
1