Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
We Are Hard-Wired to Care and Connect
The good news: The changes we must make to avoid ultimate collapse are identical to the changes we must make to create the world of our common dream.
The story of purple America is part of a yet larger human story. For all the cultural differences reflected in our richly varied customs, languages, religions, and political ideologies, psychologically healthy humans share a number of core values and aspirations. Although we may differ in our idea of the "how," we want healthy, happy children, loving families, and a caring community with a beautiful, healthy natural environment. We want a world of cooperation, justice, and peace, and a say in the decisions that affect our lives. The shared values of purple America manifest this shared human dream. It is the true American dream undistorted by corporate media, advertisers, and political demagogues-the dream we must now actualize if there is to be a human future.
For the past 5,000 years, we humans have devoted much creative energy to perfecting our capacity for greed and violence-a practice that has been enormously costly for our children, families, communities, and nature. Now, on the verge of environmental and social collapse, we face an imperative to bring the world of our dreams into being by cultivating our long-suppressed, even denied, capacity for sharing and compassion.
Despite the constant mantra that "There is no alternative" to greed and competition, daily experience and a growing body of scientific evidence support the thesis that we humans are born to connect, learn, and serve and that it is indeed within our means to:
- Create family-friendly communities in which we get our satisfaction from caring relationships rather than material consumption;
- Achieve the ideal, which traces back to Aristotle, of creating democratic middle-class societies without extremes of wealth and poverty; and
- Form a global community of nations committed to restoring the health of the planet and sharing Earth's bounty to the long-term benefit of all (see YES! Summer 2008: A Just Foreign Policy).
The first step toward achieving the world we want is to acknowledge that there is an alternative to our current human course. We humans are not hopelessly divided and doomed to self-destruct by a genetic predisposition toward greed and violence.
Culture, the system of customary beliefs, values, and perceptions that encodes our shared learning, gives humans an extraordinary capacity to choose our destiny. It does not assure that we will use this capacity wisely, but it does give us the means to change course by conscious collective choice.
The Story in Our Head
The primary barrier to achieving our common dream is in fact a story that endlessly loops in our heads telling us that a world of peace and sharing is contrary to our nature-a naïve fantasy forever beyond reach. There are many variations, but this is the essence:
It is our human nature to be competitive, individualistic, and materialistic. Our well-being depends on strong leaders with the will to use police and military powers to protect us from one another, and on the competitive forces of a free, unregulated market to channel our individual greed to constructive ends. The competition for survival and dominance-violent and destructive as it may be-is the driving force of evolution. It has been the key to human success since the beginning of time, assures that the most worthy rise to leadership, and ultimately works to the benefit of everyone.
I call this our Empire story because it affirms the system of dominator hierarchy that has held sway for 5,000 years (see YES! Summer 2006: 5,000 Years of Empire). Underlying the economic and scientific versions of this story is a religious story which promises that enduring violence and injustice in this life will be rewarded with eternal peace, harmony, and bliss in the afterlife.
To reinforce the Empire myth, corporate media bombard us with reports of greed and violence, and celebrate as cultural heroes materially successful, but morally challenged politicians and corporate CEOs who exhibit a callous disregard for the human and environmental consequences of their actions.
Never mind the story's moral contradictions and its conflict with our own experience with caring and trustworthy friends, family, and strangers. It serves to keep us confused, uncertain, and dependent on establishment-sanctioned moral authorities to tell us what is right and true. It also supports policies and institutions that actively undermine development of the caring, sharing relationships essential to responsible citizenship in a functioning democratic society. Fortunately, there is a more positive story that can put us on the road to recovery. It is supported by recent scientific findings, our daily experience, and the ageless teachings of the great religious prophets.
Wired to Connect
Scientists who use advanced imaging technology to study brain function report that the human brain is wired to reward caring, cooperation, and service. According to this research, merely thinking about another person experiencing harm triggers the same reaction in our brain as when a mother sees distress in her baby's face. Conversely, the act of helping another triggers the brain's pleasure center and benefits our health by boosting our immune system, reducing our heart rate, and preparing us to approach and soothe. Positive emotions like compassion produce similar benefits. By contrast, negative emotions suppress our immune system, increase heart rate, and prepare us to fight or flee.
These findings are consistent with the pleasure most of us experience from being a member of an effective team or extending an uncompensated helping hand to another human. It is entirely logical. If our brains were not wired for life in community, our species would have expired long ago. We have an instinctual desire to protect the group, including its weakest and most vulnerable members-its children. Behavior contrary to this positive norm is an indicator of serious social and psychological dysfunction.
Happiness Is a Caring Community
These neurological findings are corroborated by social science findings that, beyond the minimum level of income essential to meet basic needs, membership in a cooperative, caring community is a far better predictor of happiness and emotional health than the size of one's paycheck or bank account. Perhaps the most impressive evidence of this comes from studies conducted by University of Illinois professor Ed Diener, and others, comparing the life-satisfaction scores of groups of people of radically different financial means. Four groups with almost identical scores on a seven-point scale were clustered at the top.
Consistent with the Empire story that material consumption is the key to happiness, those on Forbes magazine's list of richest Americans had an average score of 5.8. They were in a statistical tie, however, with three groups known for their modest lifestyles and strength of community: the Pennsylvania Amish (5.8) who favor horses over cars and tractors; the Inuit of Northern Greenland (5.9), an indigenous hunting and fishing people; and the Masai (5.7), a traditional herding people in East Africa who live without electricity or running water in huts fashioned from dried cow dung. Apparently, it takes a very great deal of money to produce the happiness that comes with being a member of a caring community with a strong sense of place. The evidence suggests we could all be a lot healthier and happier if we put less emphasis on making money and more on cultivating caring community.
The purple American desire to create a society of healthy children, families, communities, and natural systems is no fluke. It is an expression of our deepest and most positive human impulses, a sign that we may overall be a healthier and less divisive society than our dysfunctional politics suggest.
Beyond the minimum level of income essential to meet basic needs, membership in a cooperative, caring community is a far better predictor of happiness and emotional health than the size of one's paycheck or bank account.
Learning to be Human
If the properly functioning human brain is wired for caring, cooperation, and service, how do we account for the outrageous greed and violence that threaten our collective survival? Here we encounter our distinctive human capacity to suppress or facilitate the development of the higher order function of the human brain essential to responsible adult citizenship.
We humans have a complex three-part brain. The base is the "reptilian" brain that coordinates basic functions, such as breathing, hunting and eating, reproducing, protecting territory, and engaging the fight-or-flight response. These functions are essential to survival and an authentic part of our humanity, but they express the most primitive and least-evolved part of our brain, which advertisers and political demagogues have learned to manipulate by playing to our basest fears and desires.
Layered on top of the reptilian brain is the limbic or "mammalian" brain, the center of the emotional intelligence that gives mammals their distinctive capacity to experience emotion, read the emotional state of other mammals, bond socially, care for their children, and form cooperative communities.
The third and, in humans, largest layer is the neocortical brain, the center of our capacity for cognitive reasoning, symbolic thought, awareness, and self-aware volition. This layer distinguishes our species from other mammals. Its full, beneficial function depends, however, on the complementary functions of our reptilian and mammalian brains.
Most of the development of the limbic and neocortical brains essential to actualizing the capacities that make us most distinctively human occurs after birth and depends on lifelong learning acquired through our interactions with family, community, and nature. Developmental psychologists describe the healthy pathway to a fully formed human consciousness as a progression from the self-centered, undifferentiated magical consciousness of the newborn to the fully mature, inclusive, and multidimensional spiritual consciousness of the wise elder.
Realizing the fullness of our humanity depends on the balanced development of the empathetic limbic and cognitive neocortical brains to establish their primacy over the primitive unsocialized instincts of the reptilian brain. Tragically, most modern societies neglect or even suppress this development.
A depersonalized economic system with no attachment to place disrupts the bonds of community and family and makes it nearly impossible for parents to provide their children with the nurturing attention essential to the healthy development of their limbic brains. Educational systems that focus on rote learning organized by fragmented disciplines fail to develop our potential for critical holistic thinking. Leaving social learning to peer groups lacking the benefit of adult mentors limits development of a mature, morally grounded social intelligence. We are conducting an unintended evolutionary experiment in producing a line of highly intelligent but emotionally challenged reptiles wielding technologies capable of disrupting or even terminating the entire evolutionary enterprise.
The Power of Conversation
Getting out of our current mess begins with a conversation to change the shared cultural story about our essential nature. The women's movement offers an instructive lesson.
In little more than a decade, a few courageous women changed the cultural story that the key to a woman's happiness is to find the right man, marry him, and devote her life to his service. As Cecile Andrews, author of Circles of Simplicity, relates, the transition to a new gender story began with discussion circles in which women came together in their living rooms to share their stories. Until then, a woman whose experience failed to conform to the prevailing story assumed that the problem was a deficiency in herself. As women shared their own stories each realized that the flaw was in the story. Millions of women were soon spreading a new gender story that has unleashed the feminine as a powerful force for global transformation.
The voluntary simplicity movement organizes similar opportunities for people to share their stories about what makes them truly happy. The fallacy of the story that material consumption is the path to happiness is quickly exposed and replaced with the fact that we truly come alive as we reduce material consumption and gain control of our time to nurture the relationships that bring true happiness.
We must now begin a similar process to affirm that those of us who choose to cooperate rather than compete are not fighting human nature. We are, instead, developing the part of our humanity that gives us the best chance, not merely for survival, but for happiness.
The process of changing the powerful stories that limit our lives begins with conversation in our living room, library, church, mosque, or synagogue. By speaking and listening to each other, we begin to discover the true potentials of our human nature and our common vision of the world. It is not a new conversation. Isolated groups of humans have engaged in it for millennia. What is new is the fact that the communications technologies now in place create the possibility of ending the isolation and melding our local conversations into a global one that can break the self-replicating spiral of competitive violence of 5000 years of Empire.
As this conversation brings a critical mass of people to the realization that the Empire story is both false and devastatingly destructive, we can turn as a species from perfecting our capacity for exclusionary competition to perfecting our capacity for inclusionary cooperation. We can create a cultural story that says competition and polarization, whether the red-blue political divide or the rich-poor economic one, is not the inevitable result of being human. It is the result of suppressing the healthiest part of our humanity.
There are no trade-offs here. The institutional and cultural transformation required to avert environmental and social collapse is the same as the transformation required to nurture the development of the empathetic limbic brain, unleash the creative potentials of the human consciousness, and create the world we want. It is an extraordinary convergence between our reptilian interest in survival, our mammalian interest in bonding, and our human interest in cultivating the potentials of our self-reflective consciousness.



39 Comments so far
Show AllWonderful article. So many truths here. My favorite analogy is to think of human civilization as mirroring an individual human. We start out thinking the world revolves us. We grow up a little to realize there are others, but that we personally are still the most important (either through a "personal god", through nationalism, etc.). And finally, hopefully, we grow into adults and realize we're all the same and all part of the same family.
In these terms, I'd guess human civilization as a whole is about the equivalent of a 12 year old. (I would have said 16 or 18, pre-adult, but the USA at age 9 drags the total down.)
I beg to differ, but the _M.A.R.S _ R.U.L.E.S_ folks are still ( psychic energetically ) stuck in the sandbox of the terrible twos, likely with really stinky diapers, horrendous rashes, not having been breast feed, no chance to imprint with their family, and colic too.
[________ That's MINE _______]
[_____ Everything's MINE _____ ]
Namaste
Coincidentally (perhaps) from the home page of today's TheFreeDictionary: (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/)
"Share and Share Alike
"Researchers studying sharing behaviors in children have concluded that a sense of fairness and equality may be somewhat hardwired in people. While experts have long debated the roles of nature and nurture in the development of generosity and selfishness, the results of this new study seem to indicate that it is a combination of the two. When children were presented with small sweets and jelly beans and given two options for dividing them with another child, seven- and eight-year-olds consistently showed a concern for fairly dividing the candy. In contrast, the younger study participants were nearly always motivated by self-interest."
So it's not quite the terrible twos, but still a case of arrested development.
You're correct,
__ I just needed a way to keep them in diapers
Namaste
I wonder how much Korten collects from his books? I love it when people advocate against the values of consumption while at the same time benefiting from it.
Raptor.....grow up!!!
Purple America is a wonderful concept and the one America was founded on mostly. The description of how culture works to achieve this is very good and I hope we are on the way back to throwing off the assaults on our culture and accomplishing at least most of the dreams form our history.
The formation of a socialist or Marxist/Leninst society will not happen in America. The utopian idea expressed in that part of the article is beyond any prrtion of humanity at this point or in the far future I'd guess. Nor do I think its neccessary to accomplish a Purple America. And a Purple America is what I would like to see before I'm gone.
Pax
I needed a dose of Korten's positivism today. I think he's one of the best thinkers of our times in part because he rightly challenges the belief structure that ensure ongoing struggles with the age-old "wrongs."
It's interesting, too, that unlike the Christian polarity premise of good versus evil, the Ancient Greeks saw our world under the auspices of three brothers/forces. I liken this trio to Freud's breakthrough concept of how psychology works, via 3 planes of consciousness: conscious, unconscious and subconscious (or ego, super-ego and id). These also mirror the three-fold analysis put forth by Wilhelm Reich, wherein he saw the natural self, the layer above it fostered by control-oriented (authoritarian-style) socieities, and the uppermost layer a battle between the two former levels of awareness.
Here Korten also puts forth a view of human behavior divided among 3 levels of consciousness. Often when creative thinkers agree independently on similar concepts, we can find Truth rooted there.
I see value in all of these analyses, and yet also find great insight drawn from the mystical understanding of the 7 chakras that animate human behavior and sentience. Similarly, the astrological explanation for our different motives and drives and how these forces can ultimately harmonize goes back to the great circle, the most perfect of all forms in nature, and one that is ubiquitous.
AND... the symbol for Hermes (the being who transported the "knowledge of the gods to the mortals on earth") is the TRIANGLE within the CIRCLE. It's a powerful symbol that offers insights on numerous planes, including that of basic geometry.
A while back, i read a really interesting article about how maternal stress affects the developing fetus.
According to this study, if a mother is nutritionally, physically and/or emotionally overstressed during pregnancy,
the resources available to the fetus are necessarily allocated to survival. (The reptilian hindbrain). It is only when
the mother is adequately nourished AND feels physically and emotionally secure that there are enough resources
available to the fetus to allow adequate development of the neocortex and result in the delivery of an emotionally
connected child.
Just think, historically, how often have a significant percentage of pregnant women been in a nutritionally, physically
and emotionally stable and secure environment ? And how often are they able to consistently provide such an environment for their young children ? Pretty rare, at least until the last fifty years or so, and then only in the 'developed' world.
I think the article was in YES magazine about three years ago, will try to find it, very interesting.
Here is what a guy like Korten will never get while disseminating his eco la la message ad nausea.
"The Trouble With Our State"
By Daniel Berrigan
The trouble with our state
was not civil disobedience
which in any case was hesitant and rare.
Civil disobedience was rare as kidney stone
No, rarer; it was disappearing like immigrant's disease.
You've heard of a war on cancer?
There is no war like the plague of media
There is no war like routine
There is no war like 3 square meals
There is no war like a prevailing wind.
It flows softly; whispers
don't rock the boat!
The sails obey, the ship of state rolls on.
The trouble with our state
--we learned only afterward
when the dead resembled the living who resembled the dead
and civil virtue shone like paint on tin
and tin citizens and tin soldiers marched to the common whip
--our trouble
the trouble with our state
with our state of soul
our state of siege--
was
Civil
Obedience.
Or this one by W D Earhart
To Those Who Have Gone Home Tired
After the streets fall silent
After the bruises and the tear-gassed eyes are healed
After the concensus has returned
After the memories of Kent and My Lai and Hiroshima
lose their power
and their connections with each other
and the sweaters labeled Made in Taiwan
After the last American dies in Canada
and the last Korean in prison
and the last Indian at Pine Ridge
After the last whale is emptied from the sea
and the last leopard emptied from its skin
and the last drop of blood refined by Exxon
After the last iron door clangs shut
behind the last conscience
and the last loaf of bread is hammered into bullets
and the bullets
scattered among the hungry
What answers will you find
What armor will protect you
when your children ask you
Why?
Copyright © 1977 by W. D. Ehrhart
Rootless, Samisdat, 1977
With respect to all.
by Lambert-Potter, sung by Coven)
Listen, children, to a story
That was written long ago,
'Bout a kingdom on a mountain
And the valley-folk below.
On the mountain was a treasure
Buried deep beneath the stone,
And the valley-people swore
They'd have it for their very own.
Go ahead and hate your neighbor,
Go ahead and cheat a friend.
Do it in the name of Heaven,
You can justify it in the end.
There won't be any trumpets blowing
Come the judgement day,
On the bloody morning after....
One tin soldier rides away.
So the people of the valley
Sent a message up the hill,
Asking for the buried treasure,
Tons of gold for which they'd kill.
Came an answer from the kingdom,
"With our brothers we will share
All the secrets of our mountain,
All the riches buried there."
Go ahead and hate your neighbor,
Go ahead and cheat a friend.
Do it in the name of Heaven,
You can justify it in the end.
There won't be any trumpets blowing
Come the judgement day,
On the bloody morning after....
One tin soldier rides away.
Now the valley cried with anger,
"Mount your horses! Draw your sword!"
And they killed the mountain-people,
So they won their just reward.
Now they stood beside the treasure,
On the mountain, dark and red.
Turned the stone and looked beneath it...
"Peace on Earth" was all it said.
Go ahead and hate your neighbor,
Go ahead and cheat a friend.
Do it in the name of Heaven,
You can justify it in the end.
There won't be any trumpets blowing
Come the judgement day,
On the bloody morning after....
One tin soldier rides away.
Go ahead and hate your neighbor,
Go ahead and cheat a friend.
Do it in the name of Heaven,
You can justify it in the end.
There won't be any trumpets blowing
Come the judgement day,
On the bloody morning after....
One tin soldier rides away.
cooperation and mutual respect are the foundation of civilised society. it is only the ruling-class mutants and their lackies who are out of it on this issue.
¿ Perhaps you're also one of those who've surrendered too much power those who would be KINGS ?
I seriously doubt that the centuries long standing endificial reality has been promulgated solely by the powerfully rich, as one natural tendency that we must EACH fight against ( as pointed out in the article ), is to NOT align our own life purposes with those supportive of egregiously unchecked greed, cruelty, torture, terrorism of the powerless, and economic slavery of hemisphere's at a time.
Yes of course all but the rich ( and their co-conspirators ) feel the iron clad boot upon their necks -- BUT that hardly precludes that many of the dispossessed harbor the very same "relative" goals ( and practices ) of the elites -- and propagate their own circles of suffering to those below them.
It is through seeking humankind connection and supporting OUR mutual and common dreams ( even to those who appoint themselves as our masters ), that we break down the barriers to egalitarian thinking which then breeds the similar actions needed to heal the chasm of grief and hatred used to control us ( and think less of those in common bondage with us ).
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man’s need but not for man’s greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
This is fabulous wisdom, empowering insight, and profoundly moving recipe book for action.
I would go so far to say that adding this type of understanding continuously reinforced -- in our early school year --would solve the world's problems in less than a generation. If every hour of TV had 1 minute of this encouragement, we might see changes occur even faster.
Of course, the phrase over "my dead body comes to mind" … … … as jacka$$ sewer main stream media ( aka Corporape America's mouthpiece ) will 'not go silently into the night'.
So it is up to each of us to "RAGE AGAINST THE DYING OF THE LIGHT", and so 'to be the change we wish to see in the world'
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man’s need but not for man’s greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
I agree with the author that human beings are essentially decent and willing to share. It's just that we've been letting a few very powerful bad seeds set the tone for the rest of us.
enliven (in one of his many guises :) )says...
"I beg to differ, but the _M.A.R.S _ R.U.L.E.S_ folks are still ( psychic energetically ) stuck in the sandbox of the terrible twos, likely with really stinky diapers, horrendous rashes, not having been breast feed, no chance to imprint with their family, and colic too."
But is it that, or are they just malformed or willfully lacking compassion and morals? I said this before in another article some time ago here on CD(under another name which I have since abandoned) that I have never known a child to be as cruel as a warmonger ala Bush or Cheney. These people aren't naive and underdeveloped. They aren't just having tantrums. Their rampages are calculated, designed to benefit themselves. Infants don't commit crimes, let alone ones as spectacular as The Iraq War, Hurricane Katrina, 9/11, and the 2000 Election Caper. Only intelligent men of means with plans and no scruples can do so.
If you sat a 2 year old American WASP next to his Arab counterpart, would one attack the other?
You caught me, parleying potty humor to diminish the outlandishness of outrageous PONEROLOGY ( science of evil ).
Of course the worse of the worse are cardboard skin puppet facsimiles of real people -- in fact that's how one can discover them. Outright clinical psychopaths are estimated to be about ~ 5% of society, while their nastiest charismatic habits condone and bred conversion of borderline personalities to fawn all over them and do their bidding, to gain power and to profit. Such as it is, these two groups can then then easily reach near to ~ 10% -- and control of society is enabled.
You ask about " just malformed or willfully lacking compassion and morals? "
No it's much worse than that, as they have no shame, no conscience at all, and are actually very creative and have an allure that reminds many of serial killers. Not all psychopaths are serial killers, but the reverse is always true. These people have regressed so deeply from society, to essentially reach a point of almost being a different species -- so much so that there is no remedy -- other than locking the worse of them, up for life.
Namaste
P.S.
This science was nearly lost on several occasions, as it was "inspired" by a larger number of very observant scientists-- who only one barely survived to tell us -- of the innermost ticking of the minds of Stalin and Hitler, and all of the thousands of wanna be sycophants and pseudo-psychopaths that 'ran the show'.
¿ How do you get a job like that ?
Thanks enliven. :) You taught me a new word.
de nada.
I aim to please,
__ as the original meaning of __ "T O __ S I N" __
__ was simply to miss the mark
__ ( as in archery aiming for the center, … )
Namaste
good solid basics are changed for nothing and no seed.
Perhaps the basics have not been realized at all, bad seeds find root in bad soil.
I'm not sure what you mean …
Are you talking about changing diapers ?
Namaste
well as they say, 'change is hard, lets start with your diaper' :)
RE: If you sat a 2 year old American WASP next to his Arab counterpart, would one attack the other?
You will need to ask the American daycare worker. My guess is that it would be a squabble over a toy. Then again the difference between men and boys are the cost of their toys. Wars are all about who gets to play with the toys - and who doesn't.
RE - One Tin Soldier (part two)
After the one tin soldier rides away, he talks to his spouse about the fact that he was lied to about the reasons for going to war and did not like what he and others were expected to do in Iraq. He goes to Canada rather than be sent back to Iraq. After a few years, Canada kicks him out and the American government sentences the One Tin Soldier to 18 months in jail. Think of it - 18 months for caring.
Generally, I think that people are wired to care and then I read something like this:
US Admits Detaining 7 Year Old Child for 5 Years
http://mostlywater.org/us_admits_detaining_7_year_old_child_for_5_years
b arrow the
B arrow the
b bracket [b]the[/b]
B bracket [B]the[/B]
P SHAW: Thank you for sharing that study.
ENLIVEN: I appreciate your using the MARS RULES framing of issues... I mean when we view our pre-selected presidential candidates, PEACE is out of the question, entirely missing from the equation, the debate, foreign policy... many remember Nick Turse's (always excellent) article elaborating on all the auxiliary industries now associated with the Pentagon. It's a cliche to say that WAR is what the primary US product has become, or that the US is the unrivaled arms merchant to the world. So much for the prior stigma of being the world's policeman. Would a policeman pass up the latest weapons to current or future adversaries? The only industry this "strategy" favors is the military industrial complex, for in seeing dangers everywhere, it convinces the American public that DEFENSE is important, the only way to guarantee security.
Right action is the best defense in the world. Yes, history shows that some peaceful people were taken over by more martial tribes; however, it's also true that he who lives by the sword (makes policy of violence, or force first) dies by the sword. In America I'd say the most evident death is that of souls... and this probably explains why so many are obese or depressed, addicted or alcoholic. FEW can live with themselves. And when the individual cannot manage their own persona, they are perfect bait for an authoriarian in the form of president, church leader, "Jim Jones," or whatever form the externalization of personal accountability takes. VERY dangerous when a whole society loses its compass and is thus easily seduced by callow "leaders."
Again, KORTEN is a masterful thinker, and I applaud his capacity to see a way out of the current political/cultural/social morass...
...but for the people that see it the only way out is to stop seeing it.
Who wants you to see this trap and why?
Who wants you to be stopped here at this and why?
Masterful yes, but to who and why?
Perhaps the most powerful and controlling forces in our world don’t even have the lowest level desire like the inherited functions of the id behind them. Though these forces have huge impacts on our culture life style security and the health of our global commons they are non-entities who make alliances with other non-entities to only perpetuate their bottom lines namely profit. Though these organizations are peopled with
sentient beings they somehow manage to rationalize their actions even though in the long run these actions are likely against their own interests as well as the organizations that they represent.
A world wide epiphany of ‘a better world is possible’ would be nice though. Perhaps these caring communities could be a result of a world wide financial meltdown especially if we can remember that the cooperation model likely trumps the ‘war of all against all’ concept.
I suppose that competitiveness and conspicuous consumption may also go hand in hand with the mating ritual. As a young Amish fellow you could betray your pacifism get a military signing bonus and buy a muscle car ...alternatively you could pimp up your buggy! Either way you likely will need a plastic action hero.
My Next Plastic Action Hero (PAH)
‘Say Harley what’s that bobbin on your dash?
a super hero your kids tried to trash?’
‘Why no Sam’ It’s my top gun plastic action hero
you know the one we thought was fightin evil doers
like he was a mission accomplished kind of guy..
Turns out he was lying from the get go
and has us mired in a lose lose war
even worser than the jungle one before
now don’t that blow?
You see I guess I was pretty messed up
when I honored him with dash board mount
cause I used to think as long as I had my PAH
bobbin on my hummin SUV
I wouldn’t have to fear no oil wars
I wouldn’t have to fear no star wars
I wouldn’t have to fear no over come the evil one wars
when I had my ‘bring em on hero’ bobbin on my SUV
‘But Harley..Why you still got him up there?’
Well you see I got him there to remind me
who I got to thank for the $200 fill ups
and for totally tanking....
“Ya like what”?
‘like the Katrina rescue’
‘His total performance has been FUBAR’
‘You say your PAH is totally FUBAR?’
Well who you going to replace him with then?’
‘I think is going to have to be that black guy’
‘Are you crazy? Who ever heard of a black plastic action hero?’
Sam aren’t you into sports?
‘Sure but don’t you need to have a bit of intellect?’
‘No Sam just get that mammalian bonding thing going.
‘Harley are you coming on to me?’
First of all, thank you YES Magazine for printing intelligent thoughtful articles. It is different from most of what is out there on the newsstand, obviously. (I don't even know who most of the articles are about, and so care even less whether they broke up or had a baby.)
I too believe that most people are decent and just imagine different paths to achieve a better world. We could not have survived as a species without well-developed abilities for cooperation and division of labor.
But some sociopathic individuals are truly without empathy. Why do we let them get into positions of power?
Some social systems such as the caste system, colonialism, slavery or extreme class divisions exhibit massive institutionalized narcissism and indifference to the humanity of others. How do these systems take hold?
These are sincere questions. We could start by looking at little familiar things like High School elections. How can we change the way these things are done to promote and honor the good guys, those who truly provide service for others rather than the most manipulative self-promoters and beauty queens?
Joe
"But some sociopathic individuals are truly without empathy"
This is in your mind. This is your story.
When will you change it?
I do not understand your comment. But there are studies that show a few individuals' brains never produce chemicals associated with empathy. I think it could be a natural variation. I am just saying we should not reward narcissistic behavior but be wary of it and control it.
Joe
"To reinforce the Empire myth, corporate media bombard us with reports of greed and violence, and celebrate as cultural heroes materially successful, but morally challenged politicians and corporate CEOs who exhibit a callous disregard for the human and environmental consequences of their actions.
Never mind the story's moral contradictions and its conflict with our own experience with caring and trustworthy friends, family, and strangers. It serves to keep us confused, uncertain, and dependent on establishment-sanctioned moral authorities to tell us what is right and true."
*************************
That's it! That's exactly what's wrong with corporately sponsered commercial broadcasting. Especially "if it bleeds it leads" news broadcasting and virtuyaqlly all the "reality" shows.
**************************
"Getting out of our current mess begins with a conversation to change the shared cultural story about our essential nature. The women's movement offers an instructive lesson.
In little more than a decade, a few courageous women changed the cultural story that the key to a woman's happiness is to find the right man, marry him, and devote her life to his service.
As Cecile Andrews, author of Circles of Simplicity, relates, the transition to a new gender story began with discussion circles in which women came together in their living rooms to share their stories.
Until then, a woman whose experience failed to conform to the prevailing story assumed that the problem was a deficiency in herself. As women shared their own stories each realized that the flaw was in the story."
*********************
When we disconnect from corporately-sponsered commerical media and reconnect with each other this whole house of cards collapses--as it should. This coming February all existing TV's become obsolete--do yourself and the country a favor and do not get a converter box or an HD model. Instead, clean up the house and have a few friends over for neighborly talk.
Poet
but you are the ones with the empire myth, wholly of your creation, how long will you sustain it for?
Leea, As I pointed out above, the first step is to disconnect from commercial media and reconnect with other human beings instead of contrived messages. If we don't start tellihg our own stories to one another, others will make up stories for us--which is just another way of saying what Korten does above.
Are yo just spamming everyone's comments in order to see your name or what?
Poet
Yes tell our own story I agree, and I was not just trying to span and see my name.
It's just that the story that is promulgated amongst the progressives is oddly at war with their theme of peace, compassion and change. It is very disagreeable to me.
The story is about a big bad empire that must be destroyed and recognized for it's evil and nefarious ways.
I mean goodness this is not an original story at all, it's the story in the bible about Satan and Armageddon and all that old stuff that is still so powerful in our minds today.
Very old psychic myth, probably originating from our lower ego awakenings.
To change back or just change into a primary connecting and caring expression of humanity, describing the people around you as evil mercenaries seems at great odds with that actually being your state of being.
I'm sure our story can be original and fitting to what we wish to be, don't you?
Kindness, patience and good meeting facilitation skills (among many other skills) can lead us into a society of community democracy.
Mr. Korten tells us that, "The transition to a new gender story began with discussion circles in which women came together in their living rooms to share their stories," citing Cecile Andrews, author of Circles of Simplicity. Very good, we need to tell each other our stories to help each other escape from the paradigm of competition, domination and death into that of human cooperation. But we have to realize that even more important than the stories and paradigms is the simple act of TALKING and LISTENING to each other in a circle. The medium of our communication is more important than the message, as Marshall McLuhan would say.
We enter our culture by being trained into a series of habits, and we can train ourselves and each other into a new culture of cooperation. We can learn and teach the spiritual techniques which calm our inner panic, so that we are not inwardly compelled to dominate in meetings, or to outdo our neighbors with a bigger SUV. We can turn off the TV so that we can regain our vanishing social skills. We can study the art and science of group interaction. Hardest of all, we can learn to deal with opposition (from our friends) in a non-antagonistic way. (Even on the internet!)
Will learning cooperation be enough to move us from the dominator society into Riane Eisler's partnership society? No it won't. The corporate state won't give up without a fight, and their resources are enormous and sophisticated. But only if we learn the arts of solidarity can we even begin the first two stages of our struggle, which are 1) to unite the forces of cooperation and peace, and 2) to win over the majority of people, Mr. Korten's "Purple America," who are both dominated and brainwashed. Why should they come over to our side if we can't get along with each other without bickering? We have a lot to learn, and we have to start now. When the old model falls into chaos, things will get worse unless we are very well organized.
Kindness, patience and good meeting facilitation skills (among many other skills) can lead us into a society of community democracy.
Mr. Korten tells us that, "The transition to a new gender story began with discussion circles in which women came together in their living rooms to share their stories," citing Cecile Andrews, author of Circles of Simplicity. Very good, we need to tell each other our stories to help each other escape from the paradigm of competition, domination and death into that of human cooperation. But we have to realize that even more important than the stories and paradigms is the simple act of TALKING and LISTENING to each other in a circle. The medium of our communication is more important than the message, as Marshall McLuhan would say.
We enter our culture by being trained into a series of habits, and we can train ourselves and each other into a new culture of cooperation. We can learn and teach the spiritual techniques which calm our inner panic, so that we are not inwardly compelled to dominate in meetings, or to outdo our neighbors with a bigger SUV. We can turn off the TV so that we can regain our vanishing social skills. We can study the art and science of group interaction. Hardest of all, we can learn to deal with opposition (from our friends) in a non-antagonistic way. (Even on the internet!)
Will learning cooperation be enough to move us from the dominator society into Riane Eisler's partnership society? No it won't. The corporate state won't give up without a fight, and their resources are enormous and sophisticated. But only if we learn the arts of solidarity can we even begin the first two stages of our struggle, which are 1) to unite the forces of cooperation and peace, and 2) to win over the majority of people, Mr. Korten's "Purple America," who are both dominated and brainwashed. Why should they come over to our side if we can't get along with each other without bickering? We have a lot to learn, and we have to start now. When the old model falls into chaos, things will get worse unless we are very well organized.
...but the corporation is not the one with this story, you are.
will you listen to your own story, and change it?
You seem to have only one idea - that people tell stories about their lives that reflect subjective experience and create subjective experience. Sometimes this can help, for instance to change one's self-image from that of a helpless victim to a person who has some strength and worth.
But you apply this somewhat helpful or meritorious theory without any knowledge, maturity or sensitivity. These comments out of touch and arrogant. How can you tell people who you do not know that their stories are merely fabrications that can be changed? How can you reflexively deny the validity of their statements? If you have a disagreement with what someone says, how about some detailed rebuttal, not just vague, blanket invalidation of the person's way of dealing with ideas?
I hope you don't behave like this outside the blogosphere. It is a destructive pattern in a family, for instance. This happens all them time to women, children and others who try to tell stories that make others uncomfortable.
Joe
They tell the story to tell us the false story to tell us the real story, one wonders why they need to tell the story at all?
If you believe in peace, but wage war to prove peace is peace, why couldn't you just let peace tell the story instead?
There is something that is so simply flawed in this neo-liberalism, and the truth is standing naked for us all to finally see.
Who can see that the real creators of the story are not the bad guys in this scenario, but the good guys, claiming they must see bad first, before they can see good.
Care and connect is fine except when you are under attack by a rampaging capitalist beast. It's time to cage the beast, people.