Punk as an Early Warning System
Why Deviation Makes Us More Resilient
Punk is usually reduced to its appearance. Too loud, too wild, too uncomfortable. But punk doesn't describe a hairstyle - it describes a social function: Punk makes tensions visible that would otherwise be ignored.
Outsiders Aren't an Accident - They're the Warning System
In my last text about resilience, I wrote about identified patients and so-called black sheep: people who stand out, develop symptoms, or step out of line - and thereby often unintentionally point to deeper systemic problems.
The longer I work with these concepts, the clearer it becomes: Punk fulfills the same role. Not as a subculture, but as an outsider position - a place in the system where adaptation no longer works. And precisely because of that, development becomes possible.
Punks mark friction points. This is where tension in the system shows itself.
Perfect Adaptation Makes Fragile Systems
Resilience emerges from flexibility. People who are never allowed to deviate gradually lose contact with their inner needs - and often with their bodies too. This becomes especially visible where functioning is more important than feeling.
Punk embodies a radical form of deviation: against unjust structures, against rigid body norms, against social role expectations.
What initially counts as "too loud," "too extreme," or "unprofessional" often becomes socially acceptable later - in a diluted form. Much of what we take for granted today - individual clothing choices, non-conforming life paths, visible vulnerability - was first lived by people on the margins.
I clearly remember my time in a psychosomatic rehab clinic. In discharge reports, the same sentence appeared again and again: "Able to work, but no longer able to raise arms above shoulder height."
Neuropsychologically, this is striking. Movement beyond the body's midline supports circulation, affect regulation, and the experience of self-efficacy. Our nervous system needs this. But we've learned to make ourselves small - physically and emotionally.
If being "different" weren't so frowned upon, perhaps more people would dance to the music in their earbuds at red lights. Arms up, body in motion, visibly alive. The healthcare system would benefit from it. Not through expensive programs, but through the simple fact that people would be allowed to feel what their bodies need again.
If health were truly our highest priority, we'd spend much less time discussing how something looks - and much more attention on what actually regulates.
Punks Also Wear Masks - Just Different Ones
A widespread myth goes: Those who are rebellious are free from pressure to conform. My experience says otherwise.
The Sex Pistols, for example. Sid Vicious stood on stage as a bassist, even though he could barely play the instrument. Sometimes his bass wasn't even plugged in or was only minimally amplified. Lemmy Kilmister from Motörhead had previously tried to teach him the basics - with the sober conclusion: Musical talent wasn't the point here.
What worked was the role. The presence. The image.
This too is a mask - just a different one from that of the well-behaved employee. Masks serve a clear function: securing belonging. Evolutionarily, this makes sense. Those who secure belonging increase their chances of survival.
It becomes problematic when a mask is worn permanently - even though it no longer fits. And this applies not only to "well-adapted" people, but also to those who appear wild and free.
Punk as a Permission Space - A Personal Experience
Among musicians, there's a running gag that three chords are enough in punk. Punk isn't exactly known for musical complexity - expression often beats technical perfection. Although there's an art to making something convincing out of three chords. But that's another topic.
At some point, I developed a show and faced the challenge of engaging the audience after my predecessor's spectacular fire finale. Faster, higher, more spectacular would have been the obvious choice - and at the same time, I felt clearly: If I go this route, I'm blocking my own development space.
So I chose contrast. And with that, I confronted one of my greatest fears: singing in front of other people.
The punk narrative helped me. Expression, authenticity, no to perfection. It wasn't about singing beautifully. It was about singing at all. Like at home. In the shower.
Still, there was fear. Tightness in my throat. Doubt.
In that moment, I thought of one of my personal role models: Amyl and the Sniffers - and especially Amyl Taylor. Her stage presence. How I feel when I see and hear her. And an interview where she talked about how she channels her anger about injustice in the world into her performance.
I also thought about how much I, as a child, would have needed people who showed: You're allowed to sing off-key. You're allowed to be crooked. And in its own way, that's completely okay.
That's how I experienced my vocal debut on stage. And to this day, it feels like a rigid, suffocating mask finally shattered in that moment.
Not because the fear suddenly disappeared. But because the punk attitude allowed me to be visibly imperfect.
The Crucial Question: Does the Mask Still Help?
This text isn't a plea for unfiltered authenticity. Not every mask is bad. Not every form of adaptation is a betrayal of the self.
Some roles protect us. Some secure income, relationships, or social stability. Always telling your boss exactly what you think can be expensive - and not every rebellion is wise.
Still, it's worth pausing regularly and honestly asking:
Does this role still protect me? Has it become too tight? Or am I holding onto it out of habit, fear, or image concerns?
Punk or not: "Better to stand out before you fall down." (A quote from Die Fantastischen Vier - not punk by genre, but very clear in attitude)
It's not about self-presentation. It's about self-contact. Before we lose ourselves, we're allowed to explore who else we might be.
Or more concretely - as a gentle invitation to self-reflection: Where are you currently wearing a mask? What was it once helpful for - and do you still need it today?
And finally, a life motto from RuPaul - once punk, now glam icon: "If they don't pay your bills, pay them no mind."
This piece is part of my ongoing exploration of outsider positions, systemic friction points, and the question: What happens when adaptation stops working – and why that's often where real development begins.

