Ethical Adulthood: A Detroit Soundtrack | Dialogue (Part I) by Chicago
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In this episode, I look at Chicago’s Dialogue (Part I), a song from 1972 that still sounds painfully current.
Two voices. One country. One table.
One voice is alert, strained, and asking: How can you not see what is happening?
The other is calm, contained, and trying to get through the day without falling apart.
Dialogue is not just a political song. It is a song about the human nervous system under pressure. It is about the bargain we make with reality when the world feels like too much. Sometimes we pay attention because we cannot look away. Sometimes we check out because we still have to live our lives.
But “no business at all” has a cost.
Andrea explores the difference between healthy boundaries and moral avoidance, between protecting our peace and refusing to be changed by what we know. The real dialogue, she suggests, is not only between two people. It is inside each of us: the part that sees suffering and the part that wants relief from seeing it.
Ethical adulthood is not purity. It is integration.
Because caring is not the same thing as carrying everything.
But “no business at all” is a lie that slowly hollows us out.
Thanks for listening.
Andrea Fiondo
Kundalini Yoga in Detroit
Ethical Adulthood: A Detroit Soundtrack