Unity and the Power of Love

Essay Oneness

Unity and the Power of Love

Unity holds the essential vision that we are one living, interconnected ecosystem—a living Earth that supports and nourishes all of its inhabitants. If we acknowledge and honor this simple reality, we can begin to participate in the vital work of healing our fractured and divisive world and embrace a consciousness of oneness that is our human heritage. This is the opportunity that is being offered to us, even as its dark twin is constellating the dynamics of nationalism, tribalism, isolationism, and all the other regressive forces that express ‘me’ rather than ‘we.’

Oneness is not a metaphysical idea but something essential and ordinary. It is in every breath, in the wing-beat of every butterfly, in every piece of garbage left on city streets. This oneness is life—life no longer experienced solely through the fragmented vision of the ego, through the distortions of our culture, but known within the heart, felt in the soul. This oneness is the heartbeat of life. It is for each of us to live and celebrate this oneness, to participate in its beauty and wonder. And through our awareness, and actions born of this awareness, we can help to reconnect our world with its original nature.

There are many ways to experience and participate in this living oneness. But if I have learned anything after half a century of spiritual practice, it is the power of love. Love comes in so many forms and expressions. There are the simple acts of loving kindness towards friends and family, members of our community, or strangers. Love reaches across boundaries, expressing what is most essential and human: what unites rather than divides. “Small things with great love,” are more potent and powerful than we realize, because they reconnect us with the spiritual roots of life and its transformative and healing energies. Because life is an expression of love, each act of love is a participation and gift to the whole.

Cooking a meal with love and care, listening to another’s troubles with an open heart, touching your lover’s body with tenderness, or going deep in prayer until you merge in love’s infinite ocean—in all these acts, we live the love that unites us. And through our loving, we nourish life in unseen ways.

And at this time of ecological crisis, as we are tearing apart the fragile web of life, there is a vital need for us to love the Earth, to bring her into our hearts and prayers. We have a spiritual as well as a physical responsibility for ‘our common home,’ and she is calling out to us, crying for our help and healing. In the words of Thich Nhat Hanh:

Real change will only happen when we fall in love with our planet. Only love can show us how to live in harmony with nature and with each other and save us from the devastating effects of environmental destruction and climate change.

We need to reawaken to the power of love in the world. It is our love for the Earth that will heal what we have desecrated, that will guide us through this wasteland and help us to bring light back into our darkening world. Love links us all together in the most mysterious ways, and love can guide our hearts and hands. The central note of love is oneness. Love speaks the language of oneness, of unity rather than separation.

Love can open us to our deep participation in the life of the whole; it can teach us once again how to listen to life, feel life’s heartbeat, sense its soul. It can open us to the sacred within all of creation and can reconnect us with our primal knowing that the Divine is present in everything—in every breath, every stone, every animate and inanimate thing. In the oneness of love, everything is included, and everything is sacred.

And from there, we can begin to respond. We cannot return to the simplicity of an indigenous lifestyle, but when we let love guide us we can become more aware of the oneness of life and recognize that how we are and what we do at an individual level affects the global environment, both outer and inner. We can learn how to live in a more sustainable way, according to a deeper understanding of sustainability that rests on an acknowledgment of the sacred within creation. We can live more simply, saying no to unnecessary material things in our outer lives. We can also work inwardly to heal the spiritual imbalance in the world. Our individual conscious awareness of the sacred within creation reconnects the split between spirit and matter within our own soul, and also—because we are so much more a part of the spiritual body of the Earth than we realize—within the soul of the world.

Love is the most powerful force in the universe. Love draws us back to love, love uncovers love, love makes us whole, and love takes us Home. In the depths of the soul we are loved by God. This is the deepest secret of being human, the bond of love that is at the core of our being and belongs to all that exists. And the more we live this love, the more we give ourself to this mystery that is both human and divine, the more fully we participate in life as it really is, in its wonder and moment by moment revelation.

Love and care—care for each other, care for the Earth—are the simplest and most valuable human qualities. And love belongs to oneness. We know this in our human relationships, how love draws us closer, and in its most intimate moments we can experience physical union with another. It can also awaken us to the awareness that we are one human family, even as our rulers become more authoritarian, our politics more divisive. And on the deepest level, love can reconnect us with our essential unity with all of life, with the Earth herself.

The Earth is a living oneness born from love, being remade by love each instant. And we can be part of its spiritual transformation, its awakening. The Earth is waiting and needing our participation. It has been wounded by our greed and exploitation, and by our forgetfulness of its sacred nature. It needs us to remember and reconnect, to live the oneness that is our true nature. And love is the simplest key to this oneness, this remembrance. Love is the most ordinary, simplest, and most direct way to uncover what is real—the innermost secrets of life. It is at the root of all that exists, as well as in every bud breaking open at springtime, every fruit ripening in fall.

Love will remind us that we are a part of life—that we belong to each other and to this living, suffering planet. Love will reconnect us to the sacred ways known to our ancestors, as well as awaken us to new ways to be with each other and the Earth. We just need to say, “Yes,” to this mystery within our own hearts, to open to the link of love that unites us all, that is woven into the web of life. And then we will uncover the love affair that is life itself and hear the song of unity as it comes alive in our hearts and the heart of the world.

About Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee

Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee is Sufi teacher and author. He has authored a recent podcast, Stories for a Living Future.

The focus of his writing and teaching is on spiritual responsibility in our present time of transition, spiritual ecology and an awakening global consciousness of oneness. His many books include Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth and Including the Earth in Our Prayers: A Global Dimension to Spiritual Practice.

 

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The Galileo Project

Article Worldview

The Galileo Project

Our world view is not simply the way we look at the world. It reaches inward to constitute our innermost being, and outward to constitute the world. It mirrors but also reinforces and even forges the structure, armouring, and possibilities of our interior life. It deeply configures our psychic world. No less potentially, our world view—our beliefs and theories, our maps, our metaphors, our myths, our interpretive assumptions—constellate our outer reality, shaping and working the world’s malleable potentials in a thousand ways of subtly reciprocal interaction. World views create worlds. – Richard Tarnas

I am very astonished that the scientific picture of the real world around me is very deficient. It gives us a lot of factual information, puts all of our experience in a magnificently consistent order, but it is ghastly silent about all and sundry that is really near to our heart that really matters to us. It cannot tell us a word about red and blue, bitter and sweet, physical pain and physical delight; it knows nothing of beautiful and ugly, good or bad, God and eternity. Science sometimes pretends to answer questions in these domains but the answers are very often so silly that we are not inclined to take them seriously. – Erwin Schrödinger

The time has come to realise that an interpretation of the universe – even a positivist one – remains unsatisfying unless it covers the interior of things as well as the exterior; mind as well as matter. The true physics is that which will, one day, achieve the inclusion of man in his wholeness in a coherent picture of the world. – Pierre Teilhard de Chardin


Giuseppe Bertini. Galileo Galilei showing the Doge of Venice how to use the telescope. 1858.
*Missing Caption

In a letter to Kepler, Galileo wrote: “Here at Padua is the principal professor of philosophy, whom I have repeatedly and urgently requested to look at the moon and the planets through my glass, which he pertinaciously refuses to do.”

When he looked through his telescope, Galileo affirmed that Copernicus was right – we are not at the centre of a Cosmos that revolves around us, but instead, we are revolving around the Sun. Many in the Church and in Universities were reluctant to hear this because it opposed the established belief system and power structure.

This has striking parallels today. For example, many scientists are unwilling to look at the evidence for consciousness beyond the brain because they have an unshakeable belief that consciousness is generated in the brain. It is often the authority of science and the fear for their reputation that prevents them from expanding their worldview. The Church was worried that the infallibility of Scripture was at stake. Today, the infallibility of scientific materialism is at stake.

The world today is dominated by science and by its underlying assumptions, which are seldom articulated even though they generate not only a methodology but also a worldview or philosophy. While scientific methodology is a set of evolving rules socially negotiated among scientists, this scientific worldview is a quasi-religious set of assumptions about the world, an ideology generally known as ‘scientism.’ We fully support scientific methodology, but we are critical of scientism – those assumptions that underpin the current scientific worldview.

The emphasis is on a purely material interpretation of reality, and the direction of explanation is exclusively from material to immaterial or the visible to the invisible – hence the generally accepted proposition that the physical brain gives rise to consciousness. Importantly, science has been given an implied mandate by society to provide humanity with an ‘official’ story about the universe and ourselves, because it is believed that only science as it exists now can decide what is true and what is possible.

The current story is one of an accidental and random universe operating on the principle of natural selection and without any inherent meaning and purpose. It is important to realize that this mainstream narrative is not necessarily the truth but extrapolates partial findings into a future hope. This, we believe, has a demoralising effect on society and does not reflect our deepest insights into the nature of human life. It can only be maintained at the expense of ignoring a lot of other scientific evidence that cannot be integrated into this mainstream narrative.

This has far-reaching implications. When combined with its claim to offer the only legitimate knowledge and mode of knowing, science exerts an unbalanced influence in schools and universities and on society in general. Its core assumptions (considered to be “facts” by many scientists) influence us more than we might imagine.

This philosophical materialism with its associated concept of a purposeless universe and the inherent meaninglessness of life is correlated with economic materialism and an emphasis on consumerism and the exploitation of people and natural resources. This translates into the idea that consumption and economic growth are the route to happiness and well-being. Many leading thinkers are now questioning this association between consumption and well-being, with a renewed emphasis on quality of life rather than quantity of possessions, on being prioritised over having. Indeed, the ultimate human experience is one that unifies love, knowledge, and bliss.

Science and technology have given us much to be grateful for, and will continue to do so. That said, in its present form the scientistic world view derived from science is both limited and limiting. It is limited because much scientific work is based on a set of assumptions that have been superseded by science itself. And it is limiting because society has adopted these same assumptions based on the authority of science. In other words, an outmoded philosophy of science is holding back both science and society.

However, it is possible to imagine an extended kind of science – a science that is based on an expanded set of assumptions that go beyond the restrictions of the materialist worldview. This would be a science that does not have a dogmatically limited definition of physical reality and that is therefore open to investigating anomalies – such as aspects of consciousness and the ‘paranormal’ – that science is currently unable or unwilling to accommodate. In effect, it would be an ‘expanded science,’ because it would extend beyond a simplistic view of the physical and the material.

Within an expanded science, existing ‘hard’ science would still be valid in the contexts where it was generated. Many areas of research could still be profitably undertaken within existing materialist assumptions. But if science could be based on such an expanded set of assumptions, and if they came to form the dominant philosophy of science, then that would open up new avenues and new possibilities. In other words, expanding science and its scope would transform our worldview. And since it is our worldview that underpins virtually everything we think, say, and do, a new expanded science could lead to significant advances in all aspects of our lives, including our most important social institutions – such as education, health, law, and government.

It is for all these reasons that we have set up the Galileo Commission as a project of the Scientific and Medical Network. The Network has been working at the interface between science, spirituality, and consciousness since the 1970s and has an open membership dedicated to exploring and expanding our horizons in these fields. Our major annual conferences include Mystics and Scientists in April and Beyond the Brain coming up in November.

The remit of the Galileo Commission is to open public discourse and to finding ways to expand science so that it is no longer limited by an outmoded view of matter and physical reality, and so that it can accommodate and explore important human experiences and questions that science, in its present form, is unable to accommodate. These include:

  • Consciousness ‘beyond the brain,’ such as telepathy, precognition, and near-death experiences
  • Altered states of consciousness, such as the ability to perceive non-physical (“spiritual”) aspects of the world and human beings
  • The possibility of inherent purpose in the universe

The first stage of the Commission’s work is to produce a report to be launched in the autumn of 2018 that will draw on the great variety of work that has already been done and will make practical recommendations on a way forward which will provide a comprehensive list of resources. Beyond the report, we envisage two main strands of work: a training for scientists who wish to know what expanded science is, why it is needed, and how to do it in practice; and second, demonstrations of expanded science in action.

We anticipate that expanding science will involve some new basic assumptions (an expanded ontology), additional ways of knowing and new rules of evidence (an expanded epistemology), as well as new methodologies that will flow from these.

We also wish to make clear that this is not a project that tries to promote any existing belief system – such as Intelligent Design – or an anti-evolutionist agenda, religious creeds, or esoteric systems. We do this in the very spirit of science: as an open and open-ended inquiry that refuses to be limited by any set of assumptions – conscious or unconscious – that have been invariably brandished by scions of scientific progress like Roger and Francis Bacon as “idols” that prevent progress. We wish to expose those idols not in order to replace them by others, but by extending inquiry into yet unknown realms.

Flowers in the Night Sky

These images of comets are from the mid-sixteenth century Augsburger Wunderzeichenbuch, Book of Miracles with 167 pages of gouache and watercolor images, some heightened with gold and each inscribed below with a description of the extraordinary event depicted. (The Public Domain Review)

About David Lorimer

David Lorimer, MA, PGCE, FRSA is a writer, lecturer, and editor who is Programme Director of the Scientific and Medical Network. He is also President of Wrekin Trust and Chief Consultant of Character Education Scotland.  He is also a former President of the Swedenborg Society and Vice-President of the International Association for Near-Death Studies (UK). Originally a merchant banker then a teacher of philosophy and modern languages at Winchester College, he is the author and editor of over a dozen books, most recently The Protein Crunch (with Jason Drew) and A New Renaissance (edited with Oliver Robinson).

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The Selling of the Soul

Essay Book

The Selling of the Soul

In older cultures, the soul was considered the lighthouse beacon that helped guide one through the waters of life. Unfortunately, Western culture has lost sight of that light and replaced it with rational thinking, celebrity, success and a belief that almost anything can be fixed with enough thought, research, data and money. Curriculum of the Soul is a reminder of our internal navigation system that far surpasses anything technology has to offer. The book begins with a description of the tools each of us have been given in order to cope with the complexity of being alive. “The Selling of the Soul” is a chapter from the section that discusses ways to recognize, confront, and learn from our suffering.

“To sell your soul is the easiest thing in the world. That’s what everybody does every hour of his life. If I asked you to keep your soul—would you understand why that’s much harder?” – Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead

Why?

American blues artist Robert Leroy Johnson

The story goes that the Mississippi blues guitarist/singer Robert Johnson sold his soul to the Devil at the crossroads for his great gifts as a musician. Variations on this theme can be found throughout the world of art from Goethe’s Faust to Stravinsky’s “L’Histoire du Soldat.” These tales imply that we possess nothing more valuable than our soul, yet it can be sold or traded like a commodity for whatever the ego desires.

The selling of the soul is usually, but not always, a conscious decisionoften without understanding the full repercussions. American fantasy author Richelle Mead wrote, “Most mortals sell their souls for five reasons: sex, money, power, revenge, and love. In that order.” These five reasons all fall within the terrain of desire. When the ego wants to party, desire knows no boundaries. Stories such as Faust use the selling of the soul as a vehicle for discovering how valuable having a soul really is.

At the Galleria Shopping Mall

Just past the bin of pastel baby socks and underwear,
there are some 49-dollar Chinese-made TVs;

one of them singing news about a far-off war,
one comparing the breast size of an actress from Hollywood

to the breast size of an actress from Bollywood.
And here is my niece Lucinda,

who is nine and a true daughter of Texas,
who has developed the flounce of a pedigreed blonde

and declares that her favorite sport is shopping.
Today is the day she embarks upon her journey,

swinging a credit card like a scythe
through the meadows of golden merchandise.

Today is the day she stops looking at faces,
and starts assessing the labels of purses;

So let it begin. Let her be dipped in the dazzling bounty
and raised and wrung out again and again.

And let us watch.
As the gods in olden stories

turned mortals into laurel trees and crows

to teach them some kind of lesson,

so we were turned into Americans
to learn something about loneliness.

—Tony Hoagland

Addictive shopping, as described in the poem, is one way we sell our souls whether we are conscious of it or not. The poem ends with the view that the shadow side of American abundance is the loneliness that has been created by losing connection with others. The cycle of loneliness and consuming is self-perpetuating. When you are lonely, you consume; when consuming, you become lonely.

How?

Addictions are an indication of where we still long to be loved. What the selling of the soul has in common with trouble and craving is the instant gratification that the ego thrives on. That gratification has no interest in the long-haul lessons that feed the soul. Isn’t this what all advertising is about, manipulation through the knowledge that we are vulnerable to instant gratification? Advertising may be one the great examples of how our culture has sold its soul in exchange for the material abundance that capitalism has to offer.

Advertisement

I’m a tranquilizer.
I’m effective at home.
I work in the office.
I can take exams
on the witness stand.
I mend broken cups with care.
All you have to do is take me,
let me melt beneath your tongue,
just gulp me
with a glass of water.

I know how to handle misfortune,
how to take bad news.
I can minimize injustice,
lighten up God’s absence,
or pick the widow’s veil that suits your face.
What are you waiting for—
have faith in my chemical compassion.

You’re still a young man / woman.
It’s not too late to learn how to unwind.
Who said
you have to take it on the chin?

Let me have your abyss.
I’ll cushion it with sleep.
You’ll thank me for giving you
four paws to fall on.

Sell me your soul.
There are no other takers.

There is no other devil anymore.
—Wislava Symborska (translated by Stanislaw Baranczak and Clare Cavanagh)

 

Eugène Delacroix. Mephistopheles Appears Before Faust

“We make deals with the devil every day, metaphorically” (Daniel Waters, Generation Dead). In the sense of the last line in the poem above, the Devil is in the use of drugs to soften the harshness of reality. It is the ego looking for help from outside, whereas it could look within; then only can it be in conversation with the voice of the soul. And at the end of the conversation, the soul always has the last word. Why? Unlike the ego and the body, the soul has a vested interest in eternity. The paradox is that the ego wants to taste eternity through the body full well knowing that the body is temporal. That longing for a taste of eternity is why we sell our souls.

British author Charlotte Brontë wrote in Jane Eyre:

“I can live alone, if self-respect, and circumstances require me so to do. I need not sell my soul to buy bliss. I have an inward treasure born with me, which can keep me alive if all extraneous delights should be withheld, or offered only at a price I cannot afford to give.”

Brontë’s knowledge of an “inward treasure born with me” is the source of her sense of self. That sense is an indication of her ability to love herself. The latter develops good boundaries and is exactly the antidote to selling one’s soul.

Here’s an excerpt from Wendell Berry’s poem Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front that describes how participating in a capitalist culture is a formula for selling the soul by design.

Love the quick profit, the annual raise,
vacation with pay. Want more
of everything ready-made. Be afraid
to know your neighbors and to die.
And you will have a window in your head.
Not even your future will be a mystery
anymore. Your mind will be punched in a card
and shut away in a little drawer.
When they want you to buy something
they will call you. When they want you
to die for profit they will let you know.

The metaphorical selling of the soul is essentially conforming to a familial, communal, tribal, or cultural viewpoint that is not in line with who you really are. Suffering shows up upon the realization that these viewpoints don’t necessarily nurture your soul. Or through a quiet nagging feeling that life is not being fully lived. Conforming to others’ reality offers great opportunities to sell your soul. “All the men in my family have become doctors.” “Everyone watches television.” “I have to work 9 to 5 to make a living.” The mind can rationalize anything.

Passivity is the ego becoming overwhelmed and succumbing to external events and situations. Or deliberately conforming without asking why or if you are abandoning yourself. Unfortunately, that is the wrong direction. It also seems to be the way of the world. What we once thought was the well-lit and traveled road to success, approval, and validation (the selling of the soul) turns out to be the same path to the dark night of the soul.

 

 

Curriculum of the Soul was given a Gold honor by Nautilus Book Awards in the personal growth category and an honorary award for the best self-published book in 2017. For more information and how to obtain a copy, go to curriculumofthesoul.com.

About Rick Haltermann

Rick Haltermann is an author, musician, photographer, and director of the Association of Noetic Practitioners, a modality that uses self-forgiveness as a means to restore well-being. Currently living in northern New Mexico, he spends as much time outdoors as possible. Visit rickhaltermann.com for more.

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Unlearning Together

Keynote Transformation

Unlearning Together

Movement, perception, thinking, effortless achievement and healing are inherent to life—they happen by themselves. When we observe children learning to walk or speak, ecosystems regenerating themselves, or animals self-organizing, we notice there’s a masterful way of functioning that’s fundamentally different from our dominant culture. Encaged in a reality bubble of fear and separation, as Westerners in particular, we’ve culturally barred ourselves from life. True unlearning is the process of bidding farewell to such detrimental cultural programming, fostering imagination and awe in relation to life, discernment and empathy in relation to our world, and community and Eros in relation to one another. 

The Two Worlds

Life is a true miracle—the great unknown master that never ceases to touch and move through us. We know the gift of grace when it suddenly, often unexpectedly, takes hold of us, be it through an unusual encounter, a near-death experience, a psychedelic drug, an enlightening vision, the deep perception of another being’s soul or intuitively knowing how to escape a dangerous situation unhurt. No matter how the magic occurs, we bear witness to the way that everything seems to happen by itself, in a kind of perfection that’s often beyond rational explanation. We feel the presence of a dynamic, creative, intimate current that’s both within us and that connects us with everything else. We find ourselves changed, unified in a world of full contact, resonance, and communication.

After witnessing the walls of everyday reality crack, when we glimpse a completely different ‘reality,’ we can either suppress our experience or begin to deeply question: What is real? What isn’t? After all, who can answer?

This essay is for those who no longer want to suppress the experience of what is most essential. Such moments are more than just personal happiness, they’re revelations of another reality which we’ve forgotten—the déjà vu of a world order entirely free of fear—that we encounter as much more real and familiar to us than most of what we believe about ourselves.

Reconnecting with this reality is no longer just an arbitrary individual question, but a political one, decisive for our very survival. Our collective alienation from the living world has become so extreme that it has provoked multiple and converging existential crises that won’t be overcome if we don’t address their common root. Understanding the depth of our disconnection, unlearning its mechanisms and consciously embracing life again have become conditions for humanity’s decent survival. It’s a journey we must walk together, for it is our entire civilization that needs a different foundation.

As psychoanalyst and futurist Dieter Duhm puts it, “There is the world that we create and there is the world that has created us. These two worlds must come together. This is the goal of our journey.”

A Collective Firewall of Separation

Our dominant culture has been based on the denial of the world that has created us. This is our central disease. Reminiscent of Plato’s cave allegory, in which the people in the cave believe that all that exists are the moving shadows on the wall, today’s capitalist culture is based on a mental and spiritual firewall—a kind of imaginal control program that society and its institutions propagate and that we all, more or less, internalize in our socialization. Operating as a transpersonal energetic entity or ‘field,’ this firewall blocks out all information and experiences that don’t correspond to the dualistic, materialistic, mechanistic worldview that it reinforces, thereby making it difficult for us to consciously experience the living world, both in nature and within ourselves. Its method of hardwiring us into a mindset of separation and fear often prevents us from entering into genuine connection with life and so discovering our true agency in the world.

This is why, today, we can feel limited to an isolated and separated ‘self,’ which hinders us from experiencing our interconnectedness with other beings. Believing we can rely solely on our own personal capacities to achieve anything, we are constantly stressed, circling around ourselves, competing and fighting with others. Spellbound by this deception, we are convinced there is never enough and thus always primed for fight.

Through upbringing, schooling, mass media, dogmatic science and dogmatic religion, our dominant culture fosters this delusion of consciousness by muting our creative source through fear from early on. When children openly express their joy of life through freely loving impulses, playful sensuality, boundless curiosity and movement, they’re one with life. Yet when adults, as happens often, respond to this with rigidity, punishment, or even violence, children suffer trauma because they’re unable to understand why something that feels so natural and beautiful is ‘bad.’ In this, their consciousness is divorced from the direct sensation and truth of their bodies. Separated from the life within them, they also become unable to connect with the life outside themselves. Once children’s free, innate expression of their life energies has been stifled, they begin to copy the psychological and social patterns they observe in the adults around them so they can cope with the helplessness they experience. This is how society confines us to the prison of the isolated self from early on, consolidated by programs of duty, the pressure to perform, and a guilty conscience.

Unlearning begins by recognizing that it’s the collective thought forms (or mind-viruses) we subconsciously or unknowingly follow which cause the state of separation and fear we personally experience. Unlearning these programs is inevitable—if we don’t do it voluntarily, life will deconstruct them by force. It’s happening already in the dramatic and increasing collapse of societies, ecosystems, and our long-sustained certainties. We’ve entered the era that the Hopis predicted in their prophecies of the “great purification,” the unstoppable entropy of not only our external political, economic, and ecological systems, but, above all, the unexamined assumptions underlying those systems. The question is: Will we desperately try to hold onto what we know (i.e., defend our ‘cave’ against those telling us about the sun) or will we learn to surrender to the current of transformation?

Three Stages of Unlearning

To reconnect with life, we need nothing less than a holistic system change in the entire way we live. The more consciously we understand and make this change, the more the process of entropy will find a healing direction. As I see it, there are three essential interconnected stages of unlearning:

1) A Revolution of Consciousness

Embracing life begins with a revolution of consciousness. Pioneering this, quantum physics suggests that there is no such thing as an objective reality existing independently from our observation. Even if you’ve heard this statement already, it will shake your organism if you actually take a moment to let it sink in. The observer and the observed are inseparably intertwined in the emergence of what we experience as reality.

A key part of Gnostic teaching and practice, before the rise of dogmatic religion in the classical era, was the awakening of epinoia—the divine creative imagination. Gnostics, pagan mystics and intellectuals believed that when we activate our imagination, we’re not just fantasizing but actually partaking in the creative process of the universe’s emergence. They believed that imagination isn’t a merely human affair, but the action of the universe as it dreams up reality. This understanding is held by many traditions, most powerfully, perhaps, by Australia’s Indigenous people who affirm that everything emerges from dreamtime.

Aboriginal painting at Jabiru Dreaming, Kakadu NP, Australia | Wikimedia Commons

It’s as if, through humanity’s reflective consciousness and imagination, the unknown subject that has given rise to all that is becomes able to reflect upon and further propagate itself. A divine blessing and a deadly curse, our imagination cannot but create reality. Whenever we observe, think and imagine, we create. This isn’t something to take lightly, but an enormous responsibility.

By believing in an objective reality that exists independently of our imagination, we obscure the fact that it’s precisely this imagination of the supposed separation between self and world, mind and matter, God and humanity, and so on that creates the corresponding experience. Actually, our imagination isn’t dead but operates in the shadows without us noticing.

In the moment that we begin to realize to what extent our unexamined assumptions about reality, nature, humanity, ourselves and others shape our experience of reality and contribute to the state of the world, we stop living thoughtlessly. Our true imagination begins to awaken with urgency, glimpsing the infinite planes beyond all ‘fixed’ realities, supposed laws, and inevitabilities. We discover a world outside our projections.

We begin to wonder: Who are we? Why are we here? What is life? What is light, the sun, water? We find ourselves standing in awe of the sheer wonder of existence. How come all this exists? How come there is anything at all?

When our imagination embraces life, when our thinking awakens to the wonders of existence, when we are no longer satisfied with the answers that we are given but follow our true questions, an ever-accelerating process of creative evolution and renewal begins.

2) Empathic Connection to All Life

We’re all bound up in the same inescapable worldwide conflict—the war of globalized capitalism against life. Confronting this insidious conspiracy that’s colonizing, exploiting, torturing, and killing living beings around the world, there can be no neutrality, as this would mean siding with the system of destruction. It’s as if we face a collective test: Will you, humanity, continue to let destruction prevail, or do you love Life so much that you will stand up for it, no matter what?

Our loss of participation in the world equals our loss of conscious connection to the life force within us and our loss of empathy for other beings around us. According to Einstein, we break out of the prison of our isolated existence “by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.” True compassion transcends the apparent separation between self and other. This is why thoughts, words and actions driven by compassion bring about healing for others and ourselves.

One of the brightest examples I know of people taking a wholehearted stand for life in the face of devastation is the peace community of San José de Apartadó in northern Colombia. In March 1997, after suffering expulsions and massacres in the Colombian war, 1,350 displaced farmers came together to protect themselves, establishing a Peace Community of nonviolent resistance. In response, the armed groups killed more than 200 of their members, including most of their leaders. Almost all the victims died at the hands of the paramilitary and national armed forces, many working in the service of multinational corporations. Despite the horrors they have faced, the members of this community continue working together bound by a commitment to nonviolence and reconciliation. Eduar Lanchero, one of their late leaders, explained what holds the community together:

The armed groups aren’t the only ones who kill. It’s the logic behind the whole system. The way people live generates this kind of death. This is why we decided to live in a way that our life generates life. One basic condition, which kept us alive, was to not play the game of fear, which was imposed upon us by the murders of the armed forces. We have made our choice. We chose life. Life corrects us and guides us.

In both political affairs and our most intimate personal questions we face this choice. So long as we’re unaware of the interference in our world we’re bound to be victims of the conflicts and diseases we’re facing—politically and personally. To stand up for life fully and free ourselves, we must learn to distinguish between life and its antithesis.

3) Relearning Community

Marx famously said, “social being determines consciousness.” In other words, the kind of societal ecosystem of which we’re a part and the way we relate to each other determines what we think and therefore, what we become.

Though we can unlearn individually to some degree, true unlearning happens or stalls together, as we are relational interdependent beings. For the past few thousand years, collective culture followed the principle of harsh power and this led to the illusion of liberation through individual escape from the collective. Yet, true liberation—not just in political, but also spiritual, psychological and social terms—is a matter of creating a new collective culture, one which no longer suppresses life but welcomes and cooperates with it.

True unlearning always means relearning community. Community isn’t a particular lifestyle but a universal form of existence. We are community beings by our very nature. Only through a history of brutal destruction has humanity lost its primordial communitarian way of life. In a post-capitalist world, I believe humanity will return to live in community.

Imagine an increasing number of transformational centers around the world where people research and create a different kind of ‘social being.’ Such places are where they come together with the collective intention to transform patterns of separation and fear in all relations and areas of life, building communities unified by unbreakable solidarity and trust. The more they discover the foundations for a human culture compatible with the laws of Life and follow it, the less they are subject to the laws of the dominant culture.

As more and more people become involved, a new collective energy field would arise from those places, which ultimately could serve as base for a new planetary culture. In a nutshell, this is the basic idea for global transformation underlying the Healing Biotopes Plan that’s been in theoretical and practical experimentation in the Tamera project in Portugal for 40 years.

The Tamera Project

Intro video of Tamera – Peace Research & Education Center, produced by Tamera media, 2018

Excerpts from “Tamera – Taste of a New Culture,” produced by Moritz ‘Daywalker’, Ortmann 2017

Trust is the crucial factor in creating such transformative centers, as trust is the primordial healing power which reconnects us to each other and the world. To develop trust, we need ways of living together in which we can dare to drop our masks and freely express what we genuinely think, feel and love. Whenever we can do this fully, we experience liberation and allow others to “see” us.  When truth is allowed, trust emerges naturally—to be seen is to be loved.

That’s easily said but actually requires an unshakable decision for solidarity, because the path of trust-building leads us right through the wounds of history. There’s no way around it. Our wounding is most painful in the realms that also hold the deepest promise for insight and delight—especially sexuality, love and partnership. Throughout millennia of patriarchal suppression, a demonic spell was cast on humanity: You must not express the erotic truth of your body freely, nor find fulfillment in love, nor meet the divine in sexuality. We must lift the spell, by creating a culture that will honor sexuality and love as sacred life forces again and allow people to express them freely and trustfully.

Whenever that becomes possible, we develop a fundamentally different relation to our bodies. We no longer see them as obstacles or prisons to be transcended, but organs of perception and knowledge that sensually connect us with each other and all of Earthly existence. A body free of fear is a direct expression and mirror of life itself—it can neither lie nor submit to being occupied by oppressive or violent forces, neither politically nor spiritually.

To arrive at the point where we can live freely from a source of authentic creativity, discovering ourselves and our relation to other beings in trust, we need to dismantle the fallacious thought forms and programs that have been instilled in us throughout the past few thousand years. The three stages of unlearning I have described here are all focused toward the same system change: an unconditional embracing of life, in all its beauty and chaos. Once the living world truly becomes part of the social fabric of humanity, we will find ourselves in a different world where we can finally obtain lasting solutions to the crises that currently threaten the continued survival of the entire family of Life.

About Martin Winiecki

Martin Winiecki is a co-worker at the Tamera Peace Research & Education Center in Portugal, networker, writer, and activist. Born in Dresden, Germany in 1990, he’s been politically engaged since his early youth.

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The Deschooling Dialogues: Grief, Collapse, and Mysticism

Conversation Sacred Activism

The Deschooling Dialogues: Grief, Collapse, and Mysticism

This is an edited transcript of a conversation that took place on April 24, 2018 as part of the inaugural quarterly issue of Kosmos Journal. The theme of the first edition is Unlearning Together. As such, it felt appropriate to have a quartet dialogue of unlearning, focused on a complex of issues associated with the inevitable transition to post-capitalism; namely, the issues of grief, collapse and the mystical impulse of transcendence that can provide deep healing in such troubled times. One of the key questions is how we  come together to explore the edge of our practice as seekers, as activists, and as advocates for a more just and loving world.

This conversation was facilitated by Alnoor Ladha (AL) as part of an interview series titled, The Deschooling Dialogues: Wisdom from the Front Lines of the Battle Against the Colonized Mind. Rhonda Fabian (RF) is the editor of Kosmos Journal; Martin Winiecki (MW) is the global partnerships coordinator of Tamera, a peace research center in southern Portugal; and Martin Kirk is the co-founder and director of strategy at TheRules, a global network of activists, writers, researchers, coders and others focused on addressing the root causes of inequality, poverty, and climate change.

AL: Thank you for bringing us together Rhonda, and for the critical work you do with Kosmos Journal. Given that this edition’s theme is unlearning together, ‘deschooling’ is the perfect place to start. And especially around grief, because in the Western dualistic mindset that we all have been socialized in, we have a tendency to seek pleasure and avoid pain.

In fact, our moral philosophy, the dominant moral philosophy of utilitarianism and the economic philosophy of neoclassical economics is highly dependent on this premise. Part of the unlearning we’re doing is to re-contextualize and re-understand the role of grief as a mystery unto itself– not as something to avoid or to understand, but to go within and to transmute, to evolving through and with.

Grief is the chrysalis chamber in many ways and it’s necessary in some ways for the redemption for our action. On some level, we can say, “Well, this grief is not ours. It’s for the collective whole.” Yes, that’s true, and in some sense, in a meaningful sense, we are the collective whole. By working with the shadow and light aspects of grief, we are taking responsibility for the emotions that come with the actions we have undertaken as a civilization. Whether it’s collective grief or individual grief or community grief, perhaps it is not something to be avoided, but is actually part of refining our character. So, let’s start there.

‘Fly’

MK: One thing that is challenging that I’m trying to process is that we’re not talking about the grief over a death. We’re not talking about a period of grief. At some level, being alive on this planet as this great unfolding happens is to be living in grief in a permanent sense. Because of the amount of destruction and death that is not only happening but is so very visible if you choose to look. It turns grief into a permanent type of practice. You can’t open up a newspaper without there being some event that in any normal time would be a profound story. But in this day and age, where we are so obsessed with the immediate and the dramatic and the daily political soap opera of things, we see these stories passing every single day with a normality, perhaps even with banality. Whether it’s the destruction of Arctic ice, or the extinction of pollinator species or whether it’s the concentration of ocean plastics or the increasing level human violence in immeasurable ways or whether it’s just the sense of insanity that pervades our political structures and systems right now.

It all speaks to a process of death that is underway and is going to be unfolding throughout our lifetimes at some level. It is also married to a birth, a rebirth. At least that’s the hope—with death comes rebirth. However, it seems that death is far more evident than the rebirth in many ways right now. So the question for me is, how do I work with the concept of grief in a way that doesn’t focus on its end point?

I don’t know that trying to process it away is realistic or sensible or wise. I feel I’m not very skilled at this. I feel I am having to unlearn everything I was taught. It’s a struggle. I have no answers. I’m trying to work with my emotions. I’m trying to connect with them. I’m trying to let them be. And trying to not be attached to the outcome that will inevitably pass. It is the big ‘unending.’

RF: Thank you Martin. I think what you describe is the ongoing daily practice. I’m very fortunate to live in the woods and spend a lot of time sitting with the trees and it occurs to me often that, as wars rage, the trees grow slowly.

My teacher, Thich Nhat Hanh says that a tree doesn’t run around trying to save the world. A tree only has one job, and that’s to be a tree. And when trees stop acting like trees, we’re all in trouble. I wish that I could be more like that sometimes, because when you think about it, trees filter toxins out of the atmosphere simply by their presence. They convert sunlight into food energy without discrimination. And through their mycelium and their roots, they connect to the wider web of life. And, in that same way, I feel that I have to be a good tree. To try to convert some of the toxic substances in my energy field, some of the suffering, into compassion, and to offer the ‘food’ of my presence for the benefit of all Life.

Now, all of that and a dollar doesn’t buy you very much if you’re a victim of sexual slavery, or being tortured in a Syrian prison, or your children are starving. And yet, what helps me is to remember that we are bigger than this human experience. That we’re all connected to the same Source. And we return to Source, the Code of Creation. So, in touching peace I add peace to the whole. Without that peace my activism in ineffective.

MK: I know that I should be sitting in my practice deeper. But I find that there’s an element of this grief that part of me is going slightly mad with. And it’s, and one of the symptoms of that madness is that it disconnects me from my spiritual practice.

The thought-form of Wetiko [an Algonquin word that roughly translates to cannibalism] in some sense is grief itself; it has an innate desire for grief. It has a pernicious desire within it to keep me separated from the practices that will allow me to process grief well. Maybe there’s some sense of guilt that we should suffer. After all, we are part of a civilization that has created so much suffering everywhere. Why should we be free of it? Part of me wants to suffer when it sees the suffering. Part of me doesn’t want to be freed from it. Part of me wants to go mad. Because it feels like going mad is an appropriate response, almost as if it is through the madness that one can truly see.

‘Rendering Recollecting’

I think at one level I’m accepting this and I don’t beat myself up for it. No human beings have ever lived through a time like this, we have never been able to see such global suffering with such precision and clarity. We are constantly exposed to global horrors on an enormous scale. We see, in real time, the bombs dropping, children being gassed. It happens in our living rooms, in a way the wounds are still fresh and always open.

On one level we are aware of and sense the scale of this terror of global capitalism. Our human brains grew up living in small communities in a contained geographical area with a certain set of influences and inputs. So of course, we are overwhelmed. And on some levels, it is impossible to process. If you try to think about ideas like human extinction, civilizational collapse, all of these vast forces, it’s impossible that a single human mind can process it well. We’ve certainly not been taught how to. I certainly haven’t been.

MW:  I would like to follow on this line. There is no doubt that we are in the midst of unprecedented moment where there is no return to old certainties. Part of this pain that we are facing in the world is a pathway toward transformation. Or will we perish in the horror of the onslaught that we are facing? The decision of how we navigate these two avenues profoundly depends on the way we actually respond to that grief that we are facing, that we are receiving, that we are feeling at this moment.

I would like to tell of an experience that for me was actually really significant in dealing with grief. I was visiting a peace village in Colombia called San José de Apartadó, which is a community of farmers who took a stand to remain outside the battle between the FARC and the Colombian paramilitary.

As part of a service commemorating the very painful history of the community, a priest- a liberation theologist- spoke for three hours telling stories of one massacre after the other. After only five minutes I realized my normal self will either collapse or I will just do the usual thing, which is to close my heart and go off somewhere else. At that moment, I made a spiritual oath to stay there in my practice with an open heart and to listen to all the stories and the details. At some point I realized I entered into what I would call a sacred space, a form of transcendence where I felt that if I am able to really bear witness fully, I could remain in a state that is beyond my normal emotional self. And I felt as if, through my heart, I was truly perceiving. I could access a deep empathic state. It was also causing tears. I felt as if there is the collective heart of humanity that wants to awaken. It felt like an incredibly pain-soothing power that wants to operate through us to the extent that we come to the point of pure empathy that lies in receiving this grief.

When I look at our global system structurally, what is keeping our current culture alive is the closed heart of the Western world which keeps us in this illusion that we are separate from each other, that we are egoic Babels that are not interconnected and not interdependent. But there is a ground of existence which is completely interdependent, an eternal realm of existence which in a way we can never lose.

AL: Thank you for sharing this. Yes, it is this state of transcendence that our current crisis can lead us to. There is this idea that is prevalent in spiritual discourse and New Age circles, which is the idea that if you’re feeling pain, you are not healthy. You are not grounded. You are not in your center. But how can we amputate our shadow or even our ego? Actually, by holding reality, our subjective reality, in its full light and its full darkness we can consciously choose how we synthesize the shadow and amalgamate the light.

I have two short anecdotes. My uncle is a Sufi scholar. He would tell us these stories when we were kids about our ancestors and about what their role was in society in ancient Arabia. That they would go into town squares in congregation and pray with a collective intention of healing. They would pray and create sacred geometry and architectures of golden light and hold the energetic force field of these places. They believed they averted war and catastrophe and death and domestic abuse and all of these types things. But they would never claim credit because they didn’t believe in linearity or in cause and effect. They just knew that this was their purpose and needed no other reward except the very act of doing it.

And then, recently, I was listening to Stephen Jenkinson speak. He’s the author of Die Wise and he runs the Orphan Wisdom School. He was speaking to a largely Western audience and suggested, “You’re all looking for purpose. But this very idea of purpose is egoic.” He went on to talk about Indigenous cultures in which there was a cycle of completion. For many Indigenous communities, there’s clear purpose. One is to take care of the land on which they lived, of which they were a part of. The second is to honor the ancestors. The question one asks within these frames is: what kind of ancestor will I be? What kind of steward or caretaker of this land will I be? And because your ancestors were buried on that land, the dual purpose was actually a single purpose. They are the same thing.

This cycle of completion really helps one to understand their purpose. And because you had a relationship with your ancestors, you had a relationship with death itself. You didn’t fear being forgotten. But in our orphaned, Western culture, we fear death because we fear being forgotten. We know that we ourselves are abdicating our responsibility of being stewards of the land and honoring our ancestors.

MK: I agree that part the fear of death is the fear of being forgotten and the fear of being irrelevant and the fear of never having been. One of the things that makes it hard for me sometimes to connect with spiritual practice is that it has to be recreated for me because I didn’t pick it up from my ancestors. I don’t have the language. I don’t have the metaphors, the mythology.

The religious imagery I was brought up with was Protestant UK. And that doesn’t speak to me, the Judeo-Christian tradition doesn’t speak to me. That’s why I cast around to re-create and re-remember truths from many traditions. Without the tethers of things like land, ancestry, access to traditional wisdom, one can feel surrounded by the pain and the suffering. We have to re-access the muscle memory.

RF: I feel your words. I don’t really have ancestral family memory. I don’t know who my father was. I left home very young, at 16, and lived on the streets of New York. And my family, for a time, became the people I met and lived with on the streets. And yet, I know that my ancestors were also present, with me in this circle right now. And yours are too.

It’s absolutely miraculous that our ancestors are right here with us. Look back say 50, 100 generations. They too endured great hardships, struggles, grief. For anyone alive today, your ancestors had to be skillful, smart and lucky for you to exist at all. And we know also that trauma is passed down through the generations in numerous ways. So we are drops of light in a very long evolutionary stream of light. I have to believe that together we are flowing toward an even greater light.

I call on my ancestors. I don’t know them by name, I don’t know what part of the world they’re from. But I ask them to help align my purpose with our highest collective purpose.

MW: Human culture is embedded in a bigger movement of life which doesn’t end at death. We are therefore not confined to this threatening border of death. I want to acknowledge this- it’s very beautiful and inspiring.

I also think that it is very much connected to the idea of tribal culture. Connection with Life requires a cultural container or a framework that actually cultivates community. Not only with the souls of my grandparents and all the generations that came before, but with all the beings that surround us, all that is fundamental to our existence.

Purpose is not just something that is a part of some separated human mind. There is a purpose that is part of life which is evolution pushing forward on its path. When we are no longer driven by the compensation for the loss that we suffered, when we don’t need to invest in personal careers but can actually ground in this sense of community with life, then our purpose is an expression of the purpose of the whole.

However, this embedment needs a foundation where people actually feel this interconnectedness on a daily basis. Right, it’s not just an esoteric buzzword and something that brings book sales for self-help gurus. It needs to be a societal reality,;otherwise, it is just another religious comfort.

AL: Indeed. Even these ideas of ancestry- in some ways, we frame tribal as strictly positive- but there’s also the shadow side where we believe our ancestors are simply the people in our blood lineage. That may be too linear of a definition. If you look at Ancient Egyptian cosmology for example, there was a school of esoteric thought that believes we have star ancestry. We have these star nations that are connected to our higher missions in some way. And they negotiate with our physical DNA line in order to achieve our life objectives.

I’m not suggesting I believe that or not. But it doesn’t have to be DNA ancestry in a traditional sense, but rather to access the notion that we may be a part of something bigger than us, as Martin [Winiecki] described, this affinity to the community of Life. Of course, a part of the world’s endowment is our collective endowment. Including all ancestry, including all life that is extinct or living.

To then go back to physical DNA, I don’t think we fully know what our relationship with our ancestors truly is. Through all the work the scientific community has done on the Human Genome Project, we only understand the workings of about 7% of DNA. The other 93% of DNA that we don’t understand, scientists call junk DNA.

MW: Like Dark Matter.

AL: Yes, it’s the Other. The Unknown. And what they’re finding now is that this DNA has an electromagnetic pulse to it. A very strong electromagnetic current. So in some ways it could be that our ancestors are living through us in this electromagnetic form.

‘In the Center of Tender’

In some ways we’re all in the business of redemption, you know? I know many Westerners, who feel the sense of being orphaned by the migration from Europe to North America wherever. They say, “I actually hate my ancestors. My ancestors were colonialists. They were imperialists. They were slave-traders.” But this is still a connection with your ancestry. And there’s a bravery in facing that as well. To recognize that the agency of our forebears in creating the reality of late-stage capitalism could be the entry point to redemption.

This leads another inquiry: how has the linearity of scientific materialism and scientism and rationalism and binary thought limited us in our ability to transcend the grief of capitalism? How could the impending collapse of capitalism be separate from the scientific method or the Industrial Revolution or Wetiko or any other historical precedent that led to this moment?

MK:  First, I’d like to go back to the ancestors and that sense of time, because there’s a linearity in that logic too. They came before me, I will become one, time moves in a certain linear-stages. I take your point about ancestry not just being about direct DNA lineage. But for most people, it is an access point into a bigger concept. So, you have that easier access point.

The ground of being accessed is the emergent reality, the Source, as Rhonda said. That, to me, is a more accessible construct. And when I think about purpose, when I think about things like that, I ultimately come back to the idea that purpose is your connection to that Source of being, which I think of as Love, the force of creation itself. This line of thought helps me access concepts like death, rebirth, and even capitalism.

Capitalism, in all its gross and violent imperfections, is also a process. As such, capitalism may be its own salvation. This is a sort of Sufi thought. It is a part of the universe becoming self-aware. We are so conscious of its shadow right now because it is so obvious. However, its shadow is what takes us through transcendence. It is the power that gets us beyond it. So, it has its own perfection built into it. It is both perfect and violently imperfect at the same time.

RF: I love that we’re touching on the underlying code. When I think of that Code of Creation unwinding through all that underlies Life – the structure of atoms and solar systems- I recognize that we’re fractal manifestations of that code. And I think that somewhere along the way the scientific models made a crucial error about that code—that the basis of the code is competition, that we evolve through a neo-Darwinian selfish gene, by competition. If we can now look deeply at the code through the lens of cooperation rather than competition, things can and will go in a different direction for humanity.

MW: Indeed Rhonda. We are starting to understand what kind of current we are part of. It is very profound that we are still figuring out what it actually is. It’s important to look at the aspect of shadow and grief in this context. If I say I hate my ancestors, then I am actually saying at the same time that I allow the shadow of that story which I don’t want to face, to govern me from that part of myself which I don’t consciously integrate.

If I not only think of ancestors, but of the concept of reincarnation, then I also have to face the possibility that perhaps I was a conqueror. I was a colonialist. There is no way of stepping outside of this until we come to this point of seeing the underlying deep longing for love, which was misguided in a system that was directed against love, against the truth of our bodies, of our souls. A system which turned love, time and again, generation after generation, into hatred.

In some ways, we cannot have a humane transformation if we don’t find another relationship to love, break this eternally repeating cycle of being born, having this longing for love, being disappointed, and then living through resentment and revenge.

MK: That’s a really interesting thought. The idea that we’re all just living out—at least in the Western world—a revenge script. We just feel our expectations have been thwarted around love. I can certainly see that playing out in my life, but if you extrapolate out to the macro, you can see there is indeed revenge. There is anger. There is one-upmanship.

As Rhonda says, it’s the competitive instinct given free rein. And all the energy and all the power pumped into it. We’ve all had our expectations thwarted. We should have been given better. It is, in a sense, kicking against reality.

A conversation that is not had anywhere nearly enough is the recognition of the incredible effort and energy required to keep capitalism alive. If you wanted to put it in financial terms, there are billions of dollars a year just spent on advertising around the world. That’s a number that you can almost say is the degree of propaganda and desire invention required to push against human nature. That is the degree to which it is pushing a rock against our ground of being, against that instinct of love.

We see this with social media and the rise of the communications infrastructures. Everything about it keeps you out of deep thought. That’s the whole point of it. And I think that’s where we are. Our baser desires are primed. They’re getting all the energy, all the validation. Therefore, we can’t access the antidote which is that connection to Source. Which is that deeper spiritual silent voice of conscience that you find in silence. That you find in Nature. That you find in your spiritual practice. Capitalism is designed to de-spiritualize. In that sense it is the opiate of the masses.

Capitalism describes our collective purpose through the prime directive of producing more capital as the number one thing it has to do. This just means, “Focus on something that isn’t love. Focus on something that is purely a human construct that communicates best with your ego, not with your spirit.” Money and ego are in beautiful dialogue with each other. They are of the same nature and they feed each other. This is the depth of the age of delusion, as Buddhist thought describes it. That’s how the trick is cast. It keeps us in our shallow mind, not our deep mind.

RF: As activists, when we try to solely use our shallow mind to solve problems, we’re doomed. We get caught up in those very constructs and we think that technology and rationalism will save us. Just as we think that we’re the good guys and the other person is the bad guy. As long as we address these problems as ‘us versus them,’ we’re doomed. However, when we act from our hearts, we recognize that all beings are my ancestors, all beings are part of my identity. I’m the colonized and I’m the colonizer. I’m the one who is raped and the rapist. When I truly see that, I can begin to understand that toxic energy and how to transform it. Without that sense of wholeness and interbeing with all the energies that are contributing to the problems, I can’t begin to be a part of the solution. My anger just generates more aggression.

AL: In some ways, this is the heart of unlearning together. And in many ways, it is a re-membering. When we define ourselves in opposition to the Other, to Babylon, the Spectacle—whatever the monster may be—we then re-enter dualistic thought, a sense of superiority, and the reification of the ego.

I notice when I say that we are “entering the era of re-membering” or “we are moving from an age of independence to interdependence,” people respond with, “do you want us to return to hunter-gatherer living?” I go back to this Hakim Bey line in his essay series, “Immediatism,” where he says “We don’t want to go back to the Paleolithic, we want to be of the Paleolithic.” We want to access the vast storehouses of psychic power we have forgotten we possessed.

MK: Indeed. This is technology. I feel my practice now is to hold and not turn away from the full horror, while not being transfixed by it, like a deer in headlights. It’s a process of continual renewal inside and continual reconnection to conversations like this. I’m reminded of a quote from this British economist David Fleming. He said “Before you do anything important, consult a conversation.”

RF: I want to express gratitude for the three of you, for the work that you do. We each have our spaces to hold. Some of us can go to the front lines and get arrested and put in jail for our activism. For some, it is ours to witness, to stand and witness the horror. For others, it’s to build community and alternative realities. We all have our work to do.

MW: Yes, I’ve been reminded that unlearning happens by becoming aware of the mind-viruses that keep us hostage. As we are challenged to become aware of the programming that we are driven by, there is such a deep challenge at the moment to understand the depth of the expectation of catastrophe, and come to a place where we can confront reality and know that we are also shaping it. I can say the edge of my practice is really how can I look into the world, not suppressing what happens, and still see beyond the pain, to see the possibility of healing.

AL: Yes, we must become aware of the thought-forms, the mind-viruses, the memetic structures that hold us to that old way of being. And I am reminded of this Vedic line which is, “Our work should never exceed our practice.” And part of our practice is actually this. It is conversation. It is this communalism. It is this sharing. And that is one way to deprogram ourselves from the mythology of a dying system.

Thank you to the three of you for this conversation and your work in the world. And thanks to Rhonda for initiating this conversation. In love and solidarity.

About the Images:

Kelcey Loomer is a mixed-media artist.

“I think of my paintings as abstract maps, where the marks of time and emotion leave traces on the surface. My work focuses on the act of looking inward to feel a connection to the mysteries of life—how the connections to our ancestors, our own past, and to the present moment are all intertwined. My paintings have a unique depth to them that is akin to being in a room where the wallpaper is peeling, revealing hints of color and style from the past inhabitant. They are emotional landscapes that look inward for a sense of place…”

Find Kelcey’s blog here: http://kloomer.blogspot.com/ and her Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/seedandsky/

About Alnoor Ladha

Alnoor’s work focuses on the intersection of political organizing, systems thinking, structural change and narrative work. He was the co-founder and Executive Director of The Rules, a global network of activists, organizers, designers, coders, researchers, writers and others focused on changing the rules that create inequality, poverty and climate change. TR started in 2012 as a time-bound project and an experiment in temporary organizational design, exploring new ways of how to work, play, and make trouble together.

Alnoor comes from a Sufi lineage and writes about the crossroads of politics and spirituality in troubled times. His work has been published in Al Jazeera, The Guardian, Truthout, Fast Company, Kosmos Journal, New Internationalist, and the Huffington Post among others. He is the Council Chair of Culture Hack Labs, a co-operatively run advisory for social movements and progressive organizations. He is also the co-director of Transition Resource Circle and the co-author of Post Capitalist Philanthropy: The healing of wealth in the time of collapse.

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About Martin Kirk

Martin Kirk is Co-founder and Director of Strategy for /The Rules, a global collective of writers, thinkers, coders, farmers, artists and activists of all types dedicated to challenging the root causes of global poverty and inequality. Prior to /The Rules Martin was the Head of Campaigns at Oxfam UK, and Head of Global Advocacy for Save the Children. He has written extensively on issues of poverty, inequality and climate change, including co-authoring Finding Frames: New Ways to Engage the UK Public in Global Poverty to help bring insights from psychology, neuroscience, systems theory and other academic disciplines to bear on issues of public understanding of complex global challenges.

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About Martin Winiecki

Martin Winiecki is a co-worker at the Tamera Peace Research & Education Center in Portugal, networker, writer, and activist. Born in Dresden, Germany in 1990, he’s been politically engaged since his early youth.

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About Rhonda Fabian

Rhonda Fabian is Editor of Kosmos Quarterly. She is an ordained member in the Order of Interbeing, an international Buddhist community founded by her teacher, Thích Nhất Hạnh. Rhonda is also a founding partner of Immediacy Learning, an educational media company that has impacted millions of learners worldwide.

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Being Human

Poem

Being Human

I wonder if the sun debates dawn
some mornings
not wanting to rise
out of bed
from under the down-feather horizon

if the sky grows tired
of being everywhere at once
adapting to the mood
swings of the weather

if clouds drift off
trying to hold themselves together
make deals with gravity
to loiter a little longer

I wonder if rain is scared
of falling
if it has trouble
letting go

if snow flakes get sick
of being perfect all the time
each one
trying to be one-of-a-kind

I wonder if stars wish
upon themselves before they die
if they need to teach their young
how to shine

I wonder if shadows long
to just-for-once feel the sun
if they get lost in the shuffle
not knowing where they’re from

I wonder if sunrise
and sunset
respect each other
even though they’ve never met

if volcanoes get stressed
if storms have regrets
if compost believes in life
after death

I wonder if breath ever thinks of suicide
if the wind just wants to sit
still sometimes
and watch the world pass by

if smoke was born
knowing how to rise
if rainbows get shy back stage
not sure if their colors match right

I wonder if lightning sets an alarm clock
to know when to crack
if rivers ever stop
and think of turning back

if streams meet the wrong sea
and their whole lives run off-track
I wonder if the snow
wants to be black

if the soil thinks she’s too dark
if butterflies want to cover up their marks
if rocks are self-conscious of their weight
if mountains are insecure of their strength

I wonder if waves get discouraged
crawling up the sand
only to be pulled back again
to where they began

if land feels stepped upon
if sand feels insignificant
if trees need to question their lovers
to know where they stand

if branches waver at the crossroads
unsure of which way to grow
if the leaves understand they’re replaceable
and still dance when the wind blows

I wonder
where the moon goes
when she is in hiding
I want to find her there

and watch the ocean
spin from a distance
listen to her
stir in her sleep

effort give way to existence

-Naima Penniman

from Ammunition (EP) by Climbing PoeTree

Creativity is the antidote for violence and destruction. Art is our most human expression, our voice to communicate our stories, to challenge injustice and the misrepresentations of mainstream media, to expose harsh realities and engender even more powerful hope, a force to bring diverse peoples together, a tool to rebuild our communities, and a weapon to win this struggle for universal liberation.
– Alixa + Naima

Listen to the audio recording of Being Human.

About Climbing PoeTree

Over the last 15 years, Climbing PoeTree has inspired thousands through their award-winning multimedia performances, soul-stirring spoken, conscious hip hop, world music, visionary artistry, sustainable touring, and community organizing. Co-creators Alixa Garcia and Naima Penniman have independently organized more than 30 national and international tours, taking their work from South Africa to Cuba, the Scotland to Mexico, England to India, and throughout the U.S. including 11,000 miles toured on a bus converted to run on recycled vegetable oil.

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