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HomeFeaturesThe nature of change: Growth through time and struggle

The nature of change: Growth through time and struggle



By Burnett Munthali

Human beings are not static creatures.

We evolve, we adapt, and we redefine ourselves as time moves forward.

Psychologists have long observed that one of the most significant patterns of transformation occurs across roughly ten-year spans.

Developmental theorists, such as Erik Erikson, described life as unfolding in stages, where every decade often presents new tasks, challenges, and turning points.

When we reflect after ten years, we frequently realize that we are no longer the same individuals we once were.



Our perspectives shift, our goals evolve, and our identities are reshaped by the experiences we encounter.

Research in personality psychology supports this, showing that traits like conscientiousness, openness, and emotional stability often change gradually over the decades.

This ten-year cycle of transformation highlights the natural rhythm of personal development, as time itself acts as a silent sculptor.

However, change does not always wait for the slow ticking of the calendar.

Sometimes, transformation comes abruptly, triggered by stress, hardship, or crisis.

Psychological studies on post-traumatic growth show that periods of intense stress can accelerate change in ways we never imagined.

In Malawi and across Africa, this reality is familiar.

A sudden job loss in a tough economy can push someone to reinvent themselves—perhaps shifting from formal employment to running a small-scale business, farming, or engaging in cross-border trade.

Similarly, a collapse of family support, such as through divorce or widowhood, may feel devastating but often forces people—especially women—to discover resilience, build independence, and raise children through sheer determination.

Health struggles are another powerful example.

From recovering after a malaria or tuberculosis scare, to surviving road accidents or the trauma of losing loved ones, many Africans find that such hardships radically shift their priorities, placing family, health, and faith above material success.

Even the stress of providing for extended families, paying school fees, or enduring price hikes for maize and fuel can reshape a person’s values and lifestyle choices in profound ways.

A single difficult experience can alter our mindset, break unhealthy patterns, and push us to rebuild ourselves from the ground up.

While stress is often viewed negatively, it can also act as a catalyst for reinvention.

It forces us to confront weaknesses, reevaluate priorities, and discover inner strengths that were previously hidden.

Neuroscientific research even suggests that stress, when managed constructively, can reshape brain pathways linked to resilience, problem-solving, and adaptability.

In many ways, stress compresses the growth of years into moments, leaving us profoundly changed in a shorter span of time.

This dual nature of change—gradual over decades, or sudden under pressure—reminds us that transformation is both inevitable and necessary.

Life continually calls us to adapt, whether through the quiet passage of time or the storms of hardship.

*Concluding Analysis*

Understanding the psychology of change allows us to approach it with both acceptance and strategy.

When we recognize that every decade brings predictable shifts, we can plan ahead, embrace growth, and prepare for transitions rather than fear them.

Similarly, when stress strikes, instead of seeing it only as suffering, we can also view it as an opportunity for what psychologists call “transformational resilience.”

The Malawian and African experience shows us this clearly.

From graduates creating livelihoods in the informal sector, to families bouncing back from drought and hunger, to individuals finding strength after personal losses, resilience is deeply woven into the fabric of everyday life.

Real-world examples remind us that even in our darkest seasons, growth is not only possible but often accelerated.

Ultimately, both time and stress are powerful teachers.

They remind us that no matter how fixed we may feel in one season of life, we are always capable of becoming something new in the next.

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