Today, your social media feed is likely full of Martin Luther King Jr. quotes posted by people who would have hated him in 1963.
We love the “I Have a Dream” speech because it sounds like a lullaby. It makes us feel warm. We ignore the “Letter from Birmingham Jail” because it reads like an indictment. It makes us feel exposed.
We have turned Dr. King into a mascot for peace, stripping him of his radical edge. We forget that he wasn’t just a preacher; he was a disrupter.
He was a man with a spine in a world of jellyfish. And as he learned, having a spine can be costly.
The Jellyfish Default
In biology, a jellyfish is a successful creature because it requires zero energy to navigate. It has no structure. It survives by going exactly where the water pushes it. If the current shifts left, it goes left. It never argues with the ocean.
Most of us are social jellyfish.
We nod in meetings when we disagree because we don’t want to disrupt the vibe. We laugh at jokes that aren’t funny. We stay silent when we see bullying because we fear social isolation.
This isn’t just a character flaw; it is biological wiring.
Our brains are wired to prioritize safety over truth. When you go against the group, your amygdala screams that you are in danger. Conformity is the path of least resistance. It is the jellyfish setting.
He did it anyway, famously stating, “There comes a time when silence is betrayal.”
He wasn’t talking about betraying the cause. He was talking about betraying yourself.
Every time you act like a jellyfish, every time you stay silent to stay safe, you dissolve a little bit of your own character. You maximize your safety, but you sacrifice your solidity. You become easier to get along with, but impossible to rely on.
The One Degree Shift
You are not going to become Martin Luther King Jr. overnight. The metabolic cost of that kind of courage is too high for a cold start.
But you can stop floating.
Courage is a muscle, not a personality trait. You build it with reps.
Find one place this week where you are drifting.
Is it the coworker everyone gossips about? The Drift: Join in. The Spine: Change the subject.
Is it the project you know is doomed? The Drift: Keep working on it to avoid conflict. The Spine: Raise your hand and ask the hard question.
Be a Vertebrate
The world has enough people drifting with the tide. We are drowning in people who go wherever the current takes them.
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