Inquiry

What inquiries would you like to see explored by the Integral community?

If you could ask the rest of the community a single question, what would it be?

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The Sedona Method

I'm curious to get an intergral opinion on the Sedona Method. (www.sedona.com). I personally use the method, but was wondering how much of a psychological tool and can be considered as, apart from it's ability to help people recognize themselves as pure awareness. I just want to know if I'm wasting my time trying to use the process to clear up anxiety - when it may just be a tool that seems to be working because it pulls me out of my contractions by making me realize my absolute nature while not actually eliminating the 'relative' problem itself. Some insight would be very much appreciated.

neerav.

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A reply

Hi Something -

There are real experts in this community that can answer your inquiry far better than me, but one of the very cogent points made in the shadow section of the new Integral Life Practice book, which we released last Thursday to the public, is that this kind of awareness-oriented contemplative practice will never achieve the psychological clearing you're asking about because it doesn't get into the root emotional/cognitive/self developmental structure at work in our various pathologies.  So while a contemplative practice is critical, an actual practice like the 321 Shadow process, when applied diligently for even a moderate period of time, can have a profound impact on the self restructuring such that something like anxiety can dissipate (or perhaps uncover the deeper root issue).

Also, we are considering doing a review of the Sedona Method on IL.com for our members at some point in the future.

Best of luck with your effort,

Robb Smith

P.S. Though I wish I knew your real name because I feel like I'm addressing an avatar (and we believe it creates an essential part of the human intersubjective experience of IL), I also understand that doing so can feel uncomfortable (the internet has dehumanized interaction, something we'd not like to repeat).

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sedona method

Well, it is because I realize the psychological importance of the 3-2-1 process that I'm asking this question. I'm well aware of the shadows ability to hide itself. At the same time, people report some relatively huge break throughs using the method and seem to drop some very core believes. I've not personally had this experience on the core issue I was hoping the method would help me to resolve, so I was wondering just how far the method actually goes towards helping people on a psychological level. Also, I'm curious to know whether or not Hale Dwoskin, the facilitator of the method actually believes in 'The Secret' like he promotes on his website, or if he's trying to draw in the purple crowd, in order to get people to directly experience what he teaches, which is that we are all 'emptiness' and that when this is realized, our problems don't maintain their reality so firmly as they used to. Hale's teachings come from a very direct experience of the non-dual that he helps people to experience effortlessly and directly, too (almost like Big Mind - but even faster). I don't see how he could be coming from this awareness and still believe in the law of attraction....or would that relate to his center of gravity? I'd be interested to see what the institute has to say about the method.

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On the Secret

Hi  Somethingfamiliar

Remember that Turquoise comes out of green, and I think that is a fair assessment that "The Secret” has been a great vehicle to promote the Method.

Center of gravity great concept ... When applied to your self ... very tricky when we use it on others.

Ricardo Fuentes

 

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...

Actually, Yellow comes out of Green; after Yellow comes Turqoise. "The Secret's" philosophy, or rather, beliefs align most with purple, which is magical. Purple relates to that same period in a child's life when they see it raining outside and literally think that the sky is crying. This is because there is no seperation between the child's interior imagination, and the exterior world, as a result of further development. Piaget talks about this. What green does is open up the door for all those other memes to be equal in their ability to take perspective, and purple is revived with the recent New Age current which came in with the Boomers and is heavily laced with these magical ideas. The problem with "The Secret" is that it glorifys the 'ego' and then passes itself off as spirituality. Another problem is that it seems all nice when things are going well in your life - but how do you explain 'the law of attraction' to some one like your friend who has cancer, or someone who had to go through the Holocaust. Ken addresses the question: "how much do our thoughts actually influence our bodies in his book "Grace and Grit". Treya, his wife who has terminal cancer and eventually passes away as he relates in the book is nothing short of spiritual. In fact, the book is a very touching tale about how she handled her fight with such humaness and spiritual conviction. She tries everything in the course of her treatments, traveling all over the world for alternative treatments as well as conventional treatments too. She even includes things like 'Visualization' - one of the main strategies used to 'attract what you want' according to 'The Secret'. So, was she just doing it wrong? I think what the Sedona Method does is different. It makes you remove the barriers from getting what you want with ease. Plus, it also allows people to operate from a place where it doesn't matter either way whether they get their goal. That is probably the best place anybody could come from to acheive what they want. To be honest - I feel like Hale might just be appealing to the current trends in order to talk to the community of people he knows will be interested in this stuff, by using their own language. Hale even says that Lester talked to his students in a way that was 'relative'. 'Relative' meaning dualistic in the sense that people are used to speaking. So, he talked to them in their language until he got them to directly experience something completely non-dualsitc. See, how could Hale be interested in Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj, who wrote "I am that," or someone like Ramana Maharshi, who said something along the lines of, 'you thank God for the good things you get and not the bad'? These are two teachers who recognize that the universe is the way it is, and that to find peace we can drop the attachment and aversions that make up this experience of a 'mind'; not that the universe revolves around our desires and wishes to fulfill them if we just belief hard enough. The other thing is that Hale could be bringing his enlightened experience through the green value Meme mixed with a bit of purple. This is what happened when people were at blue and had great spiritual insights, but brought them through a mythological value-based structure. They took their non-dualistic experience through the relative value structure they were weighted at. So, I'm not sure where Hale is coming from, but I do think his teachings are important. But, I don't feel they can do as much as they claim to do, just like Big Mind won't clear up depression. It may distance you from identifying as the depression, but if it's biologically based that is your predicament unless some sort of psychological tool is used to re-integrate shadow or beliefs are eliminated at their core.

Here is a good article on The Secret: http://julianwalkeryoga.gaia.com/blog/2006/12/the_secret_spiritual_cinema

Also, a good video I watched on the difference between the 'emptiness' I feel the Sedona Method connects people to verses it's ability to manifest material reality is discussed on integral naked: http://in.integralinstitute.org/live/view_wilber.aspx

The video is called The Intention of Big Mind.

Hopefully I came across as being somewhat coherent.

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My very "biased input" on the Sedona Method.

Hi Rob and Something:

To begin with I state that I work for Sedona Training Associates the company that produce and market the Sedona Method.

 Second also I choose to say that the way this came to pass was a synchronicity. At 58 I decided to stop my career as IT and Operations for the telecommunications industry and move to Sedona to pursue my new career as a “teacher of consciousness” for the Hispanic community (long History). I was working in Home Depot (the only job I could get in Sedona) and after 6 months one day I was loading a material for a lady and got into a conversation … (long History) she happen to be Hale Dwoskin wife. I end up working again (as a stepping stone towards teaching) as the IT and Operations manager for The Sedona Method and I am in the process to become a Sedona Method Instructor.

 Now I am 61 (19 of August).  In Nov 2006 I started with Paul Freidman, Donna May Web and Frederick Dyck the Integral Sedona Group that today has 108 members and has now a “collective intelligence of its own” . I belong to the Leadership team.

 Having said that I like to quickly present what the Sedona Method can do in my opinion:

  1. It can be compared to the 3-2 1- process in that it helps to make object your emotions and helps you to uncover (by the process of repetition) deeper and deeper shadows. – if you can’t let go you are still attached and involved.
  2. It can be compared to the Big Mind process in that helps you to walk in to presence awareness.

What it can't do is spot structures and it is more a state and shadow tool. It is also very influenced by the Adviata teachings.

In the Method there are the five ways to approach the process of releasing and all lead to the same result: liberating your natural ability to let go of any unwanted emotion on the spot and allowing some of the suppressed energy in your subconscious to dissipate.

The Method is based on the premise that feelings are just feelings. They are not facts and they are not you, and you can let them go.

 The first way is by choosing to let go of the unwanted feeling. The second way is to welcome the feeling—to allow the emotion just to be. The third way is to dive into the core of the emotion. The fourth way is by holistically embracing both sides of any issue or belief. And the last way of releasing—called The 5th Way—helps you to discover the Beingness (Issness – Suchness – IAmness -- Presence) that you already are here and now.

Deciding to Drop It: We hold on to our feelings and forget that we are holding on to them. It’s even in our Language. When we feel angry or sad, we don’t usually say, “I feel angry,” or “I feel sad.” We say, “I am angry,” or “I am sad.” Without realizing it, we are misidentifying that we are the feeling. Often, we believe a feeling is holding on to us. This is not true… we are always in control and just don’t know it … You can choose to let it go.

 Welcoming or Allowing the Emotion: Just by allowing an emotion to be, rather than resisting it, even physical sensations of rapid breathing and shakiness would evaporate, and the mind could potentially become quiet.

 Diving into the Core of the Emotion: As you master the process of releasing, you will discover that even your deepest feelings are just on the surface. At the core you are empty, silent, and at peace—not in the pain and darkness that most of us would assume. In fact, even our most extreme feelings, upon introspection,  have only as much substance as a soap bubble.

 Holistic Releasing: Emotionally-based problems and feelings, are defined or held together by opposites. When you welcome both sides of any of these pairs, as opposed to clinging to one and resisting the other, you find that they both dissolve, leaving you with the empty space that allows for all experiencing.

 The Fifth Way of Releasing: It is a way into "Recognizing What You Are Not". Many times on retreats, when someone is looking to discover who he or she is or he or she is lost in “their” story—the false reference point of me— Hale asks, “In this moment, if you do not go into memory, can you actually find this ‘me’ that you are talking about?”

Hale says: I have yet to have anyone find a “me” in this moment. For most people, this brings their minds to a complete stop, and they are left resting as the Presence of Awareness that they have always been.

In love and service.

Ricardo Fuentes

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debate.

Ricardo. It's great that the method has worked for you.

I've used every program from the sedona website, including listening to almost every support call (including inner support calls) and have even personally talked to Hale. I have issues with Anxiety and Depression and after 4 years of trying to use the Method to clear up those issues, they have only gotten worse. Like Ken says - even some of the greatest spiritual teachers have dropped the body/mind, but still carry very strong psychological issues at lower structures of consciousness. Just because we can transcend the 'self', and in absolute terms recognize that we are Big Mind - doesn't mean that the 'self' we have to operate as every day is fixed. It simply means we don't identify with that 'self', whether it is damaged or not. Just like Hale says the body may be sick and the method won't solve the sickness, but instead eliminate the suffering, if some one's mind is sick, to consistantly in every moment go beyond the mind that is sick doesn't mean that the mind isn't still sick. Unfortunately I feel like Hale touches on some great truths, but than he also identifys with ideas like 'the law of attraction', or 'the secret' which leads me to question his own understanding of what the method is actually capabable of doing. I'm not saying it isn't capabable of doing great things. Maybe it just doesn't work for me.

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Sedona method

 Hi Robb

Philip here I have been using the Sedona Method for some time, and have had one to one coaching.I have found that it does uncover deep issues, which can then be released themselves. Also this releasing leads to cognitions which can the be incorporated into sensible thinking. I am no expert on the Sedona method i can only speak from my own perspective.

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Spiral Dynamics and Ken's Classifications

I just read Spiral Dynamics and I noticed that Ken talks about color classifications that are outside of it's realm.  For Example, he talks of teal and Amber.  Could you please explain how Ken's classifications differ from spiral dynamics?

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kolors.

When Ken talks about those other colors he is actually not refering to Spiral Dynamics but rather a more detailed line of development. Check out this diagram: http://syvak.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/44612365_a8a6ae0c7b_b.jpg. Hopefully this helps you.

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Sedona Method

 I too use the Sedona Method. I have a series of mental health issues and being able to release my anxiety is priceless at this time. I have OCD and am able to release on obsessive thinking as it arises. Neerav  can you let go trying to figure it out........     :  )

Philip

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Oh see dee

My point is that does your O.C.D. ever go away or is it simply trancended in the moment? Is the pattern actually eliminated when you release or just temporarily dropped (like in meditation). When you meditate in Big Mind there are no problems. But, when you come back into the 'world' your problems have not disappeared. Would you say that your O.C.D. has disappeared just because you've dropped your mind in the moment using the method? Don't you find when you have to engage your mind again that the O.C.D. crops back up? And, just because the method says that every thought you release will never come back again and that every feeling is a completely new feeling, does that eliminate the fact that after 3 years of releasing on anxiety (personally) that that even matters since the intensity of the problem has never really changed? Just some considerations.

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Oh See dee

Many of  the OCD patterns have weakened considerably along many lines. I can feel a vague rise and fall of the residual energy. I cannot say if they are away for good, things however are well improved, as I type !

As the patterns weaken I find it easier to talk with others about my OCD and even share some of the more (one time ) embarrassing aspects.I have done releasing on having and not having OCD during my coaching sessions.

It may well be that every thought you release never comes back,that doesn't take into consideration that the brain  is perfectly capable of generating its own wave of thoughts whether I like it or not or whether they are released or not.

I do have a concern that this would  happen. (This is something I have just found in the moment and I will release on later)

Might I suggest having some personal coaching if you feeling stuck. My friend is v experienced  and is ridiculously cheap it can be done by phone/skype.

my email is peace.ahisma@ntlworld.com

Philip

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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.

I aprecciate the offer. I'm done with the method in respects to anxiety for now, but I have been using Tom Stone's 'Pure Awareness' techniques: http://greatlifetechnologies.com/pureawarenesstechniques.shtml kind of similar in a sense. We'll see how that goes.

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Does it work?

The Sedona Method is a powerful technique for doing exactly what you said: pulling you out of your contractions and making you realize your absolute nature. It is a very direct method of teaching you that you have choice in every moment.

The question for me with any technique is "does it work?" and also "what specific results do I experience?" If you experience that the Sedona Method clears up your anxiety, then great! If not, then try something else!

I'm personally fond of a method called Core Transformation, created by Connirae Andreas, an author and developer of NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming). It is an incredibly powerful method of "shadow work" that works with a feeling, behavior, or reponse that you don't like about yourself, and gently but powerfully inquires into the positive purposes it has for you until you reach a "Core State" like oneness, being, OKness, etc. You then use that state to see how it transforms the outcomes and the original context in which you used to have the feeling or behavior you didn't like.

Instead of just releasing as with the Sedona Method, you find the release within the problem, and then use that state of release (or whatever it ends up being) to notice how it transforms the original problem.

I highly recommend that you check it out. You can learn Core Transformation from the very excellent book by Connirae called Core Transformation, or there is a DVD set from Real People Press, or you can attend a live training:

http://www.realpeoplepress.com/core-transformation-c-4.html

I work with this method almost exclusively with personal challenges now and with coaching clients.

If you have more questions, send me a personal message and we can chat more.

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3-2-1 process and the Sedona Method

 Hi,

Just giving my input here, hope it helps.

From the short time working with the Sedona Method (I got the audio course couple weeks ago) it seems that it doesn't work properly without the 3-2-1 process. Even though there is a lot of welcoming emotions, they are only welcomed as objects. You are encouraged to feel whatever sensations, feelings, thoughts or emotions arise in relationship to the particular issue being worked with, welcome them and let them go. There is no owning emotions (As in "My anger, my anxiety"), only welcoming and releasing - whether they are integrated/owned (1st person) or dissociated (3rd person) emotions. No "trancend and include". So, according to the 3-2-1 process, doing only this sort of disidentifying won't clear up the issue if it has gone into 3rd person dissociation and that's why it doesn't work for everyone (and could even make some issues worse).

But, I still think that the Sedona Method is a cool tool for looking and investigating for the things that keep you from abiding in the ever-present awareness, as long as you incorporate other complementary tools such as the 3-2-1 process and pure meditation. So, if you like the style of the Method, as I do, I wouldn't recommend ditching it altogether.

Best wishes,

Samu

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Re The Sedona Method

In my experience, the 3-2-1 process is a lot more powerful that Sedona, obviously, because it helps you to own elements of your personality (with almost 100% certainty too), and understand them. From that state, you can use Sedona to clear up anything else.

On the other hand, let's face it, the 3-2-1 process takes time. You have to, like, write out all that stuff, and think (who wants to do that?) So sometimes it's just more fun to let things go. I can lie on my bed, but a CD of Hale on, and in an hour I'm feeling totally free of the stress in the same way that the 3-2-1 process frees me. But it doesn't give a really clear understanding of the underlying, deeper elements affecting you. So when they come back in a week, I have to do Sedona again, and I never really know if I'm progressing.

So I think a good dose of both is the key. Do some Sedona to get yourself in a more open state of mind, then hit the 3-2-1 and explore what it is that you were projecting, and then go back to Sedona and clear up all the blemishes around that (how you've hurt people because of your projections, how you feel about the future now that you've let it go, and so forth).

 

Good luck,

Graeme

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The dark nights

I would like to see more material and reports about the dark nights of the senses, soul and the self; and not only those, but also the "dark nights" of vertical development (the transition periods between levels of ego development or center of gravity; more articulated).

So, how did you live through your dark night? Which one was it? How many dark nights did you have? For how long did you experience dark night? Could you please describe your experience? And what meaning have you brought to your experience afterwards? How did your perspective change after you moved to the bright side? How does shadow work correspond to living through the dark nights? Many questions, I know.

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Dark night of the soul

Well, I've written an entire book about my dark night of the soul (unpublished as of yet), and don't want to repeat all of that here, but I can try to briefly describe the experience. The dark night of the senses was this whole scattered thing of getting caught (post medical school) in scientism as religion, which just really didn't suit me, caused me a fair amount of suffering, and then I finally wised up with some help from Carolyn Myss.

The dark night of the soul on the other hand ripped me apart right down to my core. I  feel that it was driven in part by my deeply felt prayer to become a conduit for healing people. I wanted not to just be a doctor but to be a healer as well. The desire became so hot for me, it landed me right square in the crucible. I married my "soul mate" who was having problems psychiatrically within a year of our marriage (at least in part due to being a Viet Nam vet), and he became at times abusive, when he would enter one of the fragments of his personality. My father was severely ill from Alzheimer's, my mother had 3 surgeries for breast cancer, I had a malpractice suit filed against me, my pets were dying, my finances went down the tubes, and I began to significantly suffer from all the symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome with some of the fibromyalgia like pain thrown in for good measure. I'll ask you to just fill in the blanks in that story to fully create how deconstructed my small self became in the face of all this. By 1996, I was alone and actually did not know where my husband had disappeared to, my father was dead, my primary spiritual teacher was dead (and I was his physician for the last 4-5 months of his life), I had no income because I couldn't work, my mother was in deep mourning and unable to aid me. I had sold my office building and quit my medical practice, sold my motorcycle (yes that was quite significant), and barely could afford food, let alone figure out how to put together a house payment each month. Furthermore all I could do was lie on the sofa and --- well, just lie there. I did meditate a lot, but also cogitated, probably way too much. I had lie down to rest an hour after brushing my teeth, and on the days I had to walk grain and water out to my chickens, I would have to rest two hours afterward. Often I was so fatigued that I had energy either to sit up, or to breath, but not both. I couldn't even read -- I didn't have the energy to comprehend anything.

So -- that's the outer story. Then I had a dream. I was a pelt -- still living, but shredded to the point that I was unrecognizeable, tied to the saddle of my husband's horse, shreds of my tissue dragging on the ground behind the horse.  Fluids seeped from the shreds of my tissues. The horse was lame, and was purposely stepping on one strip of my shredded flesh, because it eased his hoof. And looking at the bleak landscape through which the horse trod, I noticed that everywhere my tissue fluids dripped, flowers and greenery came to bloom in the midst of desert.

That dream was a gift, because I could see that my pain was necessary to answer my burning desire. It's easier to walk through hot coals if you can see something cool on the other side. The rest of what I did was just hang on..... I prayed, and I meditated. I meditated a lot! Eventually I did a lot of shadow work (figured if I was taking a walk through hell, I might as well get the grand tour!). I also did simple things for my health, like freshly squeezed vegetable juice daily. I focused on a sense of a maternal, nurturing aspect of the Divine that was simply present, always present. And I thought about death. I also developed the simple practice of a joy journal. I would not let myself go to sleep at night until I had writtten down at least one thing that had given my joy during the day. It helped me change my focus. It had become way too easy to just say, "Well, there's another thing gone to hell. That's just my life now," and thus invite more hell. But mostly I just hung on.

I don't really know what one can do but just hang on. You aren't in charge of much of anything any more when you have been deconstructed to that degree.

Now, 12 years later, I have a nonprofit that I run, dedicated to educating people about health, and to holistic integrative medicine in its practical applications. I teach when I can get an audience. I'm working on a book tentatively titled Integrative Healthcare. I teach and dance Argentine Tango whenever I get a chance, and find that it has a deep spiritual element. It's a great left lower quadrant integrative life practice. I smile a lot. I do hands on healing. I follow that deep inner guidance wherever it takes me, off the edge of whatever flat world. So far it has worked. I'm living a life with heart. More heart than I ever dreamed possible. All just because I kept on hanging on.

I hope this helps. I truly do -- because these dark nights are just really something else!

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This helps!

Thanks a lot for such a detailed answer! How can I contact you (via email, perhaps?) to discuss your book? I think it might be a good thing to publish not only in English. Please leave your contact info.

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Thanks

Thank you for sharing your powerful story...speechless...

Yours,

--

Durwin Foster

durwinfoster@gmail.com

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Caroline Myss

Goto a public library and take out "Entering the Castle" by Caroline Myss... That's what I did, or buy it... 

Otherwise; here's another teacher that's really good with the heart centre, Isha:  www.isha.com  she has quite a few videos on YouTubes, etc..  it's all about diving into the fear and hanging on..   =)

There's only love on the other side... I'm still working through my shit...  =D

Kudos.

- Ju

--

juliusko.hubhub.org
'Where ONE person can change the world.."

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Caroline Myss is hot

Thank you very much for your advice! I haven't known about this book. 

Is there any other integrally informed material that directly touches the topic of dark nights?

As for Isha, I don't know anything about her teachings and practices, but she simply seems very beautiful to me. Her appearance and the play of energies definitely attracts many followers. ;) However she's probably very good at affecting the heart centre, indeed! I can feel that. You know her personally? Is she any way close to being integrally informed?

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All experiences used for the growth and development of the body, mind, and soul

The dark nights, or the shadow self, when I look back in retrospect, are forms that manifest as a path to uncover what IS,  and what isn't.   The dark nights are the dismantling of all that isn't, to be worn down to a purer state that allows one to percieve what IS.  

The dark nights affected all centers of my life, but mostly are pivotal points in which my ego was going through some sort of trancendental evolution.  It was necessary to drop the uncessary blockages being carried, but most of all to see with greater clarity, it gave way to birth a new perception with which to take in the same world. 

I would definately love to see more discussion and articles on this, for it is a crucial part of the process towards being an integral being.  We need to know that things are not always peachy when evolving, and that a lot of this chaos is caused by not knowing the progressive states of conciouness, and how we can inadvertly resist.

I would think of my dark nights when my daughter was teething.   It's an incredibly painful period of time for the child, along with some other side effects, like headaches, diarreah, and runny noses.   But it is an essential part of their life as well, for it is a tranforming stage that will enable them to be able to chew solid food.

When our soul is done with the current reality being experienced and asks for MORE, this can definately trigger a dark night.  It seems like our world is falling apart, and it is, but is falls away to make way for a new and better reality.

I have not had one, but three, so far.    Each one clears the gunk, and brings in a breath of fresh reality.  

--

SharonStar*

"Conquistada por la Verdad, y solo la Verdad"

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Money for enlightenment?

I'm interested in the justification for requiring money for life guidance. This question is tentative at this point. Below Ill will explore some thoughts that lead up to this question. When I get a better grasp of why I asking I'll probably pose a more formal inquiry. I also understand that perhaps alternative solutions for providing support for infrastructure in a capitalist economy have not been explored. This is not only directed and the Integral Institution either. This is been something that has been bothering me for years in regards to the requiring money to provide life guidance. This is my first attempt at asking out loud these questions to an institute that claims to provide.

When I ask money for "enlightenment" I think I am treading shaky grounds. I introduce a element of doubt into my motivation & integrity and a possibility of systematic corruption if my support comes through a organization.

The proliferation of self-help books, snake oil sales men, and false prophets throughout the ages are a indication of people's deep need or want of some sort of healing. The demand meets the supply. So when I come into a town hawking my tiger balms and snake venom to cure your deepest ails...only 4.95 a bottle...I expect to be met with wary eyes by some keen minded skeptics. They've seen this song and dance before. What am I to do though? I have a wagon to maintain, ingredients to buy, mouths to feed. I could give a way my product for free, and if they aren't a scam, rely on donations from my grateful, and now healed, patients. But what if they scam me? What if they take my healing and leave me starving?

These are good questions. I think that in providing physical healing they are pertinent. No "higher" mind state is advertised. So healing a thieves festering wounds provides no assurance that the thieve wont run off afterward. However this is bit different when I am offering "spiritual" advancement. I would hope that if my product is genuine that part of what came in the package would be a greater degree of accountability and responsibility. And in this accountability and responsibility would come a reciprocation of support to the structure that helped with the attainment of these levels. In other words receiving support would be a natural outcome of my product working.

I know its not necessarily about spiritual advancement but I think Wikipedia is a good example of a service that has provided such an indubitable good service to the community that it has never had to require fees and been able to easily maintain itself with donations from satisfied members.

Another thing that concerns me is the inherit classism that comes with asking for funds. The question comes up of whether It should be expected of me to be in a certain social/economic class, or for that matter, participate in capitalism in order to receive "spiritual" guidance? And if this is expected what, if any thing, does say of the guides?


There is a possibility that I am missing something obvious. Hence, the question. What is the justification?

There is possibility that you are missing something. Hence, the feedback and the question. What is the justification?

Thanks,
zaq moser

ps. When I quote above it is because I dont yet know the terminology used to translate out of my mind to wide or intergral audience and I dont want to accidetaly step on any toes or seem to be trying to hijack terminology already in use.

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Perspectives of Money & Issues -- Relating to States & Stages

Zaq's post "Money for Enlightenment" reminded me that most of us have some issues around money.  One question that arose within me is "I wonder, how does our perspective of money change as we move through stages and states?"  I'm thinking that as we do our practice -- whatever we do to become more awake, more present in life -- the space opens up to let us see more clearly what's real.  I've experienced this opening in many areas of my life, but money is a stubborn one for me.  My experiences with money have run the gambit from one extreme to another with many places in between. 

Genpo Roshi did an excellent teleworkshop on Marketing with James Roche.  I found it extremely helpful.  I've had such big issues around marketing (which is related to money).  I'm mentioning this in this post for two reasons:  (1) maybe that audio-file could be available on this site (or do one for Integral), and (2) maybe Integral could offer a teleworkshop with Genpo Roshi for those of us wanting to explore our money issues.

Lastly, and this is something I have not yet done but intend to, I'm thinking that using the Integral 1-2-3 Perspective Exercise might be very helpful in this area.

Deborah Saunders

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A few suggestions

Hi Zaq -

I am speaking about a related issue to 125 global business leaders at the upcoming Conscious Capitalism Conference, so let me reply briefly with a few suggestions on how to frame the question.  Let me use Integral Life as an example.  First, if you are a Premium Member of IL what you are paying for is the complex human-life infrastructure required to run this service. You're paying for rent, electricity, food, housing, diapers, daycare, education, and thousands of other products and services required to make the constellation of Integral Life and its employees be able to provide the service.  The by-products of this system you're paying for, if in fact they are enlightenment, growth or awareness, are the benefits of the system we've set up and they are what attract more people to join the integral community.  If over the long-run this system is sustainable, it means the system is providing something of value to enough people that we can sustain our own livelihood in this manner.  If not, then the market decides to shut this system down and we have to go find another system to work within.

In broad terms, capitalism is a metaphor for the mechanism of exchange of "value" between human beings ("value" being anything we value: time, energy, services, products, love, sex, food, entertainment, etc.).  Therefore the value that gets transacted between and among humans will correlate to how they differentially value the entire matrix of all available goods and services, and this will change by developmental level.  I believe that at any given time the prevailing altitude of capitalism is the weighted-average value calculus of all people across three primary lines of devleopment: ego, needs, and values. (Of course all lines impact the calculus, but I'm summarizing what I think are probably most influential in economic behavior.)  Let's pick on Integral Life again: because we are trying to be one of the world's first true integral companies, following the "kosmological imperative," we have constructed our capital structure very carefully so that we only are beholden to one "economic" imperative: not profit maximization, but span-depth maximization.  This is primarily a developmental difference between an orange economic holon and a turquoise economic holon.

Finally, I would suggest that you read Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody if you want to understand why Wikipedia works as a common good.

I hope this helps,

Robb

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Is money the voting system for values?

-- Zaq:    

I have given a lot of thougth to this issue and here is were I am at the present moment,
 
There is something profoundly wrong with the intention of stopping the flow of money. To me is a regressive idea. And this is coming from some one that at 7 years asked my grandfather: “Nono, why men invented money when there is love” I have since think a lot about it.

I have gone through a lot because of my lack of clarity regarding money: A mix of catholic education, Eastern “the world is an illusion” and my own sense of “green social justice”.

In any case I found this article by Ken very helpful:

www.kenwilber.com/Writings/PDF/RightBucks_GENERAL_b42000.pdf

Love Ricardo

 

 

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There is no "money".

In my research concerning matters you raise, I found the information in this documentary rather enlightening...

It is also FREE. Unless of course, you find  the facts presented to be taxing.

www.documentarywire.com/the-money-masters/

cheers,

jbhm

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You

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You're funny

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How about money for services and the enlightenment is free?

This is a great topic, Zaq, thanks for starting this discussion.

I consider enlightenment to be free and priceless--the best guidance from the best teacher or coach cannot necessarily make you enlightened. On the other hand, when someone provides a valuable product or service at a reasonable price, I generally don't have any objection to this occurring. For example, spiritual books are wonderful and I'm really glad I've had the opportunity to purchase and read them. I've also gone on donation-based Vipassana courses, and was glad I had the opportunity to attend them as well. Both models can work, and have their advantages and disadvantages.

The two problems I have with charging for spiritual services are 1) charging far too much and 2) problems of distributions of wealth.

#2 is a problem not only for spiritual services but also for basic needs such as food, water, sanitation, health care, and education. We currently exchange money for meeting these other needs, so I see no reason in theory why exchanging money for spiritual products and services should be ruled out categorically. However, that does not mean that our current economic system is structured optimally to meet the needs of all beings!

As far as charging too much for spiritual services goes, this is unfortunately quite common--but doesn't seem in my opinion to go away if you run your services or organization on a donation basis. If you've ever done development work for a non-profit, it's basically competitive sales work. There can be some psychological and social advantages to having spiritual organizations and individual practitioners be on a donation structure (e.g. clearer reporting as to where funds go), but it can also be messier (e.g. utilizing guilt and fear motivation strategies to encourage donations).

I personally feel queasy when I see someone advertising themselves as a psychic medium and charging $400-600 an hour (e.g. http://erinpavlina.com/book-reading.htm). Of course, most people who go bankrupt in the US do so not because of debt caused by visiting too many psychics, but because of medical debt. If anything, basic health care is a bigger issue to me than whether spiritual products and services should be free.

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Three perspectives on money and spirituality.

Dear Members:

  Here’s the punch line:  a true spiritual guidance counselor is a rare and valued commodity and should be treated as such: with respect and money, while maximizing depth and span for all, including the counselor.

  Ken Wilber’s book “Internal Psychology” discusses how various pathologies develop depending upon the person’s level of development.  Thus a true spiritual guidance counselor’s job is to discern not only what level of development the client is at and where the pathology lies, but also to refer the client for the appropriate treatment.  Both the former and the latter are high level decisions that will potentially make a lifetime impact on the client.  To do that accurately takes great skill.  Is this skill less rare and helpful to society than the ability to hit a baseball or run a talk show on the radio?

  In our culture, if we go see a Ph D or MD, we expect to pay a fee and it will probably be a pretty hefty one.  I think much of this is cultural, since we tend to give respect and money to people with those higher degrees.  However, while a truly spiritually enlightened person may not have those degrees, they may have spent literally decades and thousands of hours of work to get to this level.  Thus, they are a specialist in their own right and so paying a reasonable fee for their services is not unreasonable.  By reasonable, I mean one that also takes into consideration depth and span for all.  Doing this work is serious, hard, and worthwhile.  It deserves compensation at all levels.

  I also see the problem of people feeling guilty for charging for “enlightenment” oriented services as part of our Judeo-Christian-Islam background.  There is a strong cultural bias toward “service and poverty” as part of our spiritual tradition and so charging for spiritual services may seem somewhat obscene to both the charger and the person charged.  This is part of the Ascending path described well by Wilber in which filthy lucre is just part of something to be ignored.  For people who are serious about spiritual development and who follow only the Ascending path, charging money for their services creates significant cognitive dissonance.  I have seen many spiritually talented people berated into getting little if nothing for their rare and valuable services and then have the same people who berated them go and pay outrageous prices for used cars, dog food, houses, wine, etc. without a blink.  It’s our stupid, culture!

  Last, as a way of looking at this issue, let’s create our own “Financial Line of Development" and determine where we lie upon that line.  Are we Pre-conventional and “Yes, we deserve that money and screw you Jack!”, Conventional and “I don’t think spiritual people should charge for their services because our culture believes that spiritual things are not about money.”, or Post-Conventional and “In certain circumstances it is appropriate for spiritual people to charge significant amounts of money for their services and other times not, or not as much, while maximizing span and depth for all.”  What I’m really saying is: “It is all Ati” and hence, our issues around money probably are based upon cultural biases, while money itself is just part of the dance.

  I hope this is helpful and not too terribly pedantic.

  Good luck all,

MB

 

 

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Enlightening Dialogue About the Finances of Spirituality Services

Thanks to you Zaq, for a very good question which I had not found a good way to ask.  And, thanks to each of you Commentors for very good thoughts on this topic.  The question and the answers helped me think this through more thoroughly and I realize I do need to work on understanding my own reluctance to pay for good "spirituality service" when, if it helps me do the "dance" with more aplomb, it would be worth it.  How much I pay and for what particular spiritual service, I have still to work out.  Being an American consumer, there are heavy cultural influences on my buying psychology!

Most religions have some method of soliciting donations - some are overt and others take a much more hands-off asking approach.  I prefer the more hands-off approach wich allows me to decide how much I am to pay for the service.  However, if I were to pay more, would I get a better spiritual service?  Would it mean I would be more likely to become more enlightened?  And, as in the stock market, since there are no guarantees because there are too many factors that influence the initial conditions to be able to predict the outcome, what would it be worth to me?  It would seem that enlightenment should not be the goal, rather deeper and broader understanding of one's life and the skills to "manage" it all better.  For this I use the analogy of the North Star as a guide: one does not intend to reach the North Star; only to use it as a guide to arrive at one's destination.

Thanks for a great dialogue and stimulting questions on compensation for spitirual services!

Michael O

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Who would you vote for in the 2008 Presidential election, and why?

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Obama for President

I would definately vote for Obama.  Whether Green or Turquois, he's the closest to Integral Operation of the two.  Much more likely to think Integrally.  His language already from an intuitive SCT interpretation feels integral to me.  Obama all the way!

Good question.

--

Jesse

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Who would you vote for

 I will vote for neither Obama or John for president. I respectfully decline to have a horse in this race. I have watched too many elections not to know that whoever is elected will do some things that I feel are good for the country and for which I will stand and applaud and invariably take some actions that I will deplore for their duplicity and for which  I will write a letter expressing my thoughts. I will not, as so many have done now for eight years, entertain a visceral hatred (and the attendant stomach acid) toward either as I expect the actions of a politician from each and will thus will not be disappointed. In truth by voting for neither, I exclude neither. Should someone other that a Politician somehow make their way onto the ballot I can well imagine becoming so  activated as to wear a badge and wave a banner. I believe we really have not the slightest idea nor rational grounds upon which to base a decision as to who will be best qualified. The carefully crafted sound bites that we have seen regurgitated for two years now have been carefully designed to enliven and titillate their respective constituencies and have little or nothing to do with what they will actually accomplish. As I live in a State in which the winning candidate is a foregone conclusion my vote will have less than no effect on the commons. It's absence will however afford me a heightened sense of peace and objectivity.

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Playing "in the zone"

Athletes of all levels can have the peak experience known as "the zone," although it doesn't happen as frequently as they would like; at least not for extended periods of time. What does happen is that athletes will get in the zone and suddenly witness themselves performing at a dramatically higher level while experiencing a higher-order state of consciousness.  It's as if this altered state of consciousness descends upon them out of the blue and they immediately start performing at a much higher level.

What I am curious about is what the members of IL think about this peak experience called "the zone." If you have had peak experiences, how do you interpret them?
 
I've heard plenty of interpretations from the world it sports psychology and high-level competition, but I've not heard that many interpretations from the higher consciousness community where meditation and contemplative thought are common practices. What has been you experience with the zone? How do you interpret your own peak experiences?

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The Zone

Schalk - you are right when you suggest that the zone always gets tied up with performing at a higher level, but you are beautifully right on the money with your suggestion that the zone shows us that the ball does not need to go in the hole; nor does it have to go over the fence or into the net.  The zone really has nothing to do with the outcome of the sport one is playing or the instrument one is playing, but rather with the higher-order state of consciousness in which one is playing their sport or their instrument.  It just so happens that when you are playing your sport or your instrument while in this higher conscious state, you usually end up playing at a higher level than normal.  That seems to come with the territory.

You are also right about the 10,000 hours of practice time helping to prepare us for the zone experience.  Certainly, when you have honed your skills through hours of practice you are better prepared for a zone experience, but I have found that even beginning and intermediate level players are capable of "getting in the zone" in tennis, which goes along with the understanding that people of any developmental level can have nondual, flow experiences; it's just that they will interpret their peak experience from whatever their altitude.  I see this everyday on the tennis court as different players interpret their zone experience from different altitudes.  Some of them (not many) see the zone as a spiritual experience of significant value, while others see it as a means to a competitive end.  The best thing about the zone, however, is that no matter the altitude from which the interpretation is made, the fact that players perform better when they are in the zone keeps them coming back for more.

Thanks for your insights into the zone...

Scott

 

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zone

i believe that Michael Murphy attributed "zone" experiances to a highly focused state combined with a sense of relaxation, although it is entirely possible that off the top of my head i have mis-represented Mr.Murphy.

Looking back on my experiances in organized athletics, and my more recent experiances of performing music and cooking, i firmly agree with the research about the repetitions required for mastery. it is possible that the familar act( playing piano, cooking, golfing) yields a state that is highly conducive to the zone. Though it is entirely possible for tiger to miss a put in such a state, the odds of this happening seem unlikely since the process of golfing would most likely have helped induce the heightened state.(in such a state i believe that performance naturally is improved). When i am at work cooking on the line during a busy  lunch i find that the same items that i have been cooking for years can become an opurtunity for a "visitation" from the flow state, or the zone. in such a highly focused yet relaxed state, where i don't spend as much time thinking about what i am doing as much as being with what i am doing, it is unlikely that i will make many mistakes performing actions that i have been executing on a daily basis for several years .   yet it is  possible that i will, and this fact should be taken into consideration.

as far as finding a deeper meaning from the zone i think this would require a relatively high level of development.

my musicianship is far from a level of mastery, but on the rare occasion when i do stop thinking about my improvisation, it almost always yields a superior performance.

 

cheers!

 

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Being in the zone

This topic is really interesting. I don´t have any good answer at how I intepret states like this for now. But one thing is for sure. If you have a peak experience in the "zone" thats deep enough, ..-you want more of it!. And hopefully it will change your focus from being outcome orientated to becoming "processorientated".  Want you want now.. is not just merely achieving som outcome..you want to be in that state as fully as possible..with as much intimacy as possible, you want to be in the world.. -doing it fully and present and connected!

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Being in the zone

Martin...you are right about people wanting more of the zone experience once they have had it.  And I like what you said about being process orientated rather than outcome orientated.  The competitive culture of sports is such an outcome based culture that it is virtually impossible to get athletes to get out of the outcome and get into the process.  Getting in the zone is getting into the process and being as fully connected to what you are doing as you possibly can be. 

 Thanks for your thoughts...

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Experiencing the zone

I experience "the zone" as a heightened sense of awareness, competence, and creativity.   During these times I am able to think, work, or relate at a level which markedly surpasses my "usual" every day consciousness, which I jokingly refer to as my "tryingness". 

I find I consistently have these experiences more often under at least two sets of circumstances.  

One is when I am in my studio, fully engaged in bringing about a sculptural piece that addresses the human experience at large.  It involves tapping into the universal in some profound way, and capturing something of that in physical form. During that time I go beyond word or thought, to a place of direct experience.  It is not thought, but sensation that lets me be aware I am there.  In some way the fetters of individuality fall away as if shedding a great weight. 

The other way I experience flow is working as a therapist or as a teacher with a person or group of people who are fully intent, engaged and in need of relief from emotional pain.  This has happened for students in an art class, as well as with my mental health clients.  The venue does not seem to matter, but rather it is the experience of unity for and with other(s) in order to meet a greater need that triggers flow.  Not infrequently,  these people later approach me to tell me they had an unusual experience during the time we were working together.  I begin to suspect that people can be led into an experience of flow, even though they might not have experienced it on their own before that time.  They frequently say that during that time they experienced their own insights which are in some way freeing.  Sometimes they say something that had been troubling them "suddenly made sense".  It seems they experience their own flow at the same time I am experiencing it within my self. 

Whatever the circumstances, my experiences of flow have some things in common.  In essence, they contain an experience of the universal, a truly integral experience that transcends the individual, and the intellect.  This expanded experience seems always to leave people, as you stated, Martin, hungry for more.  Could it be that we escape our existential loneliness for a few minutes?  It seems we experience our authentic part (and partnership) in that greater place, All That Is, and however briefly, we are nourished.    

 

 

 

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The Zone is Flow, Flow is a kind of spiritual experience

There's a wonderful book by Mihály Csíkszentmihályi called Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience that covers this topic in great detail from a psychological research perspective:

from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_(psychology):

Csíkszentmihályi identifies the following as accompanying an experience of flow:

  1. Clear goals (expectations and rules are discernible and goals are attainable and align appropriately with one's skill set and abilities).

  2. Concentrating and focusing, a high degree of concentration on a limited field of attention (a person engaged in the activity will have the opportunity to focus and to delve deeply into it).

  3. A loss of the feeling of self-consciousness, the merging of action and awareness.

  4. Distorted sense of time, one's subjective experience of time is altered.

  5. Direct and immediate feedback (successes and failures in the course of the activity are apparent, so that behavior can be adjusted as needed).

  6. Balance between ability level and challenge (the activity is neither too easy nor too difficult).

  7. A sense of personal control over the situation or activity.

  8. The activity is intrinsically rewarding, so there is an effortlessness of action.

  9. People become absorbed in their activity, and focus of awareness is narrowed down to the activity itself, action awareness merging.[2]

Not all are needed for flow to be experienced.

 I consider Flow to be a kind of spiritual experience. It does generally involve high-performance at some activity, unlike other spiritual state experiences that may come over you all of a sudden, or emerge from doing a process like Core Transformation.

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The centaur

 Ken used to use a term for integrated body mind, the centaur.  It conjures a nice image of the upper faculties harmoniously fused with the lower.  Now, justbeing aware of the connection between the body and mind is not enough, because someone needs to be at the next level to fully master and integrate the new faculties developed by the previous.  Therefor, as a stage I would equate it with teal, but as a stage it would show up at any of the higher states.  Not sure of course, just tossin' some ideas out there.  

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What is Integral?

-- I'd like to explore the question: "What is Integral?" Is integral basically the same as Ken Wilber's AQAL map, or is it an emerging structure-stage of consciousness that can take many different forms and is in some sense still "to come"? Is it the capacity for advanced perspective taking, a basic committment to psycho-spiritual growth that transcends the true but partial perspectives of traditional claims to truth and meaning... Or is it the solution to the world's problems... in a dialectic that will one day run into its own limitations and contradictions... maybe Integral has no simple or fixed definition, because it's contours and patterns of thought and action are still being layed down... Or is the meaning of Integral simply the means of its enactment - i.e. something we do?

Cameron

 "Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)
 

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values-driven marketing

Since a couple of years I have been interested in finding ways to integrate more 'social, environmental, ethical values' into marketing strategies. I strongly believe in a more conscious way of doing marketing, in the integration of more 'soul' and more awareness into the field of marketing.

 

What do you understand by values-driven marketing ?

What type of role do you see for values-based brands in the future ?

Frans

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Effective marketing should be targeted to the values of your audience

Franstasmo,

In my humble opinion, integrating social, environmental, and ethical values into marketing strategies will only be effective with those individuals who are at the level of values that you are targeting.  I also think it only makes sense if those social, environmental, and ethical values have relevance to the products in which you are trying to market.  It needs to feel like a natural fit.  If your target market shares those values, and if the product you are marketing has a natural resonance with them, then I feel it could be an effective strategy.

The role of marketing is to influence people to do something, most often purchase something.  You are doing your products and the company or clients you work for a disservice if you do not do this in the most effective way possible, and that could mean you could be doing a diservice by relying on higher level values in your communications than where the audience you are trying to reach resides at.   

In marketing you need to communicate to people in a manner and at a level in which they will be compelled to engage with you.   The broader your target audience the lower level of communication is required for maximum penetration.  A lot of people refer to this as lowest common denominator marketing, and can be directly attributed to the "Sex Sells" mindset and tactics of many marketers.  You can disagree with it on principle, you can decide not to engage in it if it doesn't match the values of your company or product, but you can't argue that it isn't effective.

In my own marketing work, I work with products that do have relevance to people at various stages of values.  I have explained spiral dynamics to the individuals who work with me, and we try to engage in a practice that I call "Rainbow Messaging" when possible. What I mean by that us we try to create multi-tiered marketing communication that will appeal to multiple people at the centers of gravity where their decisions are made. 

PURPLE - Some decisions on products are made because they fulfill the most basic human needs.

RED - Some people will choose products out of the ego centric desires that they fulfill.  

BLUE - Some people will make purchasing decisions based on their feelings that it fulfills a rule or a role that they wish to embody or express with themselves.  Some people will choose products out of a mythic belief that the product will enable something for them, or be the "Magic Bullet" for their success or happiness.  

ORANGE - Some people base their product decisions on the product being the smart or rational choice.

GREEN - Some people will chose products because it's the right thing to do on a more world-centric level, or because of higher values expressed by owning or using the product.  

For my work, the bell curve of our target market tends to be with the Red-Orange levels of values, with Green also being significant.  And we try to message products in a way that has triggers for each of those values levels.   The fortunate thing for me is that the products we market are positive things that enable people to realize their dreams and be more creative.  I believe in what we're doing and I believe in the products we create.  If I didn't, I don't think that I could work in marketing, as I couldn't with integrity try to influence people to purchase something that I didn't believe in.

--

Despite all its shining, the sun has never said to the earth 'you owe me'

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Trans-value Marketing

It seems to me, effective integral marketing would identify the 'features' and 'benefits' of the good or service you're marketing and translate them across the respective levels of development.  From my perspective, the Geico Caveman series offers a pretty good example of this type of approach.  The genius of the campaign appears to rest in its simplicity, 'so easy a caveman man can do it!'

God knows our society doesn't really celebrate or embrace our cavemen to the extent we could . . .

--

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Questions for the iCommunity

How would you personally apply whatever you conceive of as second (or more if you dare) tier, or, post-conventional reasoning and ethics, to the following?  Answer as though you really have the chance to give some advice (people can pick and choose what works for them) (these questions are broad, so take just a piece if desired):

  a.  Presidential voting decisions, incl. activities of different time commitments beyond the vote.

  b. What each person might do (how to process this internally, and then, what possible actions) when they're depending on someone, whom they think is "operating out of shadow"?  (or, someone could break down this question into smaller ones)

  c. How you experience subtle consciousness and body, incl. questions and doubts (mine is always:  is this genuine?)

  d. "Higher" development = deeper and broader.  What does that mean to you?

  e.  What kinds of questions does this make YOU want to ask?

OK, so it wasn't one question, really. 

Happy to be here,

Joanne

 

 

 

 

 

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Subtle experience vs. Metaphysics of Subtle Body

Subtle consciousness and bodies are indeed genuine. I am willing to be personal testimony to that.

But I've found the word subtle to represent so many things, that I think a revision of terminology is required. Hopefully I will write on that in the future.

 

Subtle bodies and consciousness could be kundalini(chi) circulations, dreams, theta-states, aha experience, flow experience...you name it. (I stay away from all the astral projections stuff) That's why it's a trashcan and therefore an awful term for such a wide variety of experiences.

I have not personally stably experienced causal and nondual. Frankly, I sometimes doubt if THEY ARE real... (chuckle). But based on the track record Ken's had, I'd say causal body and the empty Supreme Witness are indeed plausible hypotheses. Hypotheses that we must explore with diligent practices to find out on our own.

However, there are sufficient EEG evidences for the causal and nondual experiences. Delta state in the deep dreamless sleep is analogous to the formless absorption in waking meditation. Overall, I think the particular consciousness are real. With regards to Causal body--I think it's useful tool to sometimes think of it more as a range from Very Subtle to Turiya(Witness), than as pure Abyss.

I am slightly suspicious of Ken's uses of Causal Body. I know what he means when he says it's the capacity to witness the pain in the body, such as when you weightlift, and not identify with the pain. But causal body remains to be a vague topic. For now, they should serve more as intellectual guides than absolute proof of 3rd person, exterior evidences have emerged, or your own interior, 1st person evidence should point to their reality. But in the Lower Left cultural sphere, it's best to state Subtle and Causal bodies are vague conceptual guides as to include people who have not experienced themselves.

 

But then, how do certain waking experiences fit in the Causal spectrum? Certain experiences could belong to the causal, depending on how you categorize them. The include: the shocking existential oddness, experiences of perfect  nowness and hereness, experiences of  objectification of body and thoughts, realization and holding on to of the Always and Already liberated nature of the true self... and etc.

 

 

 

A part of me remains to be a secular humanist, and I, like Wilber-V, have serious reservations about the METAPHYSICS surrounding subtle, and causal bodies. I do not have any sufficient evidences for me to believe that the trash-can name "subtle body" is somehow the repository for virtues and the causal body is the bank for wisdom. That they both separate from the gross body and transmigrate...

I will not say the all of it, but this particular metaphysics make certain amount of sense to me. After you experience about 100 lucid dreams, and it should be clear. But because there are no exterior evidence, I personally keep my finger crossed on this. :P

 

To sum it up, Subtle and Causal experiences are real. Metaphysics surrounding subtle and causal bodies should be kept off the table of truth-claim in the Lower-left quadrants. Because, though interior states are real, and there could be interior experiences that point to certain aspects of metaphysics as real, they could be falsely correlated with ontological reality in the right-hand quadrants. The truth-claims, however, should also be allowed to continue exist in Upper Left quadrants, and among Lower Left groups that have all experienced them in 1st person.

(I hope I have not made things more confusing. I am too lazy to edit what I write hehe. But as you can see, it's not a simple matter whether the collective name "subtle" and "causal" are real, because the names have names-whithin-names-whithin-names.)

Best,

Jim

--

To see a world in a grain of sand....

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Death, Dying, loss and Bereavement

While Integral theory works towards transcendental exploration, it completely overlooks the integral nature of bereavement, grief, and the dying process.  This is unfortunate, but it appears that we get lost in the theory of development without looking at the one thing, the common denominator, of all living organisms.  I am very curious about how the community experiences dying, death, grief and loss within the integral construct....

Namaste -

 Christina Zampitella, Psy.D.

 

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death, dying and Integral

Christina,

On reading your comment my first thought was that the perspectives offered in the book Grace and Grit may address aspects of the approach you seek. Next I recalled that Doshin Nelson (of www.integralzen.org) has done some fine work in the area of bereavement and the intersubjectivity of the process of dying. 

I myself look forward to the newly released book by Joan Halifax, Being with Dying, which draws on her fourty years in the field. Roshi Joan is certainly conversant with integral theory and I'm aware of at least some overlap between her sangha and this IL/II community.

I'd have to look back at the med and psych articles in The Journal of Integral Theory and Practice to be sure there's not more on this at hand, as I suspect there must be.

Kerry

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Great Death

Yes, I'd agree that 'Grace and Grit' is a wonderful book to read regarding this. Also, Big Mind, and the practice of Big Mind is a wonderful way to work with death - and to see it from the perspective of a dropped body/mind. I'm sure there are voices you could talk to you using the process too. All the voices arise with opposites, so if you got both the perspectives of 'grief' and 'acceptance' or 'Big Mind' versus 'the immortal self' I'm sure that would open up some space. Also, Genpo Roshi's new dvd: "The Path of the Human Being" is a great exploration of ourselves all the way up, even past 'Big Mind' to 'the Absolute' and back down through voices like 'Great Despair' and 'Great Death'.

Disc 3 goes through these voices which all seem to address when you're talking about:

Great Doubt

Great Fear

Great Despair

Complete Hopelessness

Gret Death

Great Rebirth

Great Liberation

The Absolute

Fallen from Grace

Choosing to be a Human Being

Great Joy

Great Appreciation.

Hopefully this helps.

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Death and Dying Experience as a Left Upper Quadrant, 2nd person process

  I'm not an expert here, so I may be interpreting some of Wilber's work incorrectly and if so, readers please let me know.  That said, in his book "Integral Psychology", he describes "Left Upper Quadrant, 1st person," as the "I mode of inner experience" and this is thus probably where what Christina is calling Transcendental Exploration would fall.

  However, Ken also describes a Left Upper Quadrant, 2nd person experience, which I would think covers the experience of Death and Dying, bereavement, etc.  In Wilber's book, he describes how if a person studies large numbers of people over time (e.g. an historical study), they find that there is an evolution in people's perspectives and their experiences.  In studying the evolutionary experience of people experiencing bereavement, death and dying, etc., Kubler-Ross found there were 5 stages: denial, anger, bargaining, grief/depression, and acceptance.  Thus, if I am interpreting Wilber's work correctly, this is where Integral Theory covers these sort of issues and how to deal with them.

  When I read Wilber's description of the Left Upper Quadrant, 2nd person experience, I had to read it several times to understand it, as it was pretty subtle, in my opinion.  I had problems getting my mind around the idea since if the Left Upper Quadrant is "inner subjective experience", then how does a person "objectively" study it?  He went into some detail of how Spiral Dynamics was developed using this research method and how that it was one of the really great modern discoveries of the West.  It was also something that the Eastern meditational methods did not use and thus created some of their problems.

  Anyway, I hope this was helpful and would like to hear comments from others about this.

Yours,

MB

 

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Integral Future Studies

  Integral transhumanism? To what degree do you think Ray Kurzweil's predictions could be true? What are the primary motivation for mainstream transhumanists? And how do integral transhumanists differ from them?

How do you differentiate a person who desires to transcend shackles of human limits because s/he hates the bodily confinement vs. someone who realizes the empty nauture of the true self and thus is not identified with the particular human form?

  I personally think cognitive line goes all the way up and all the way down without the necessary need to touch on spirituality. (depending how you define it of course) That's why, imho, in the far future, there will be secular humanists who go far beyond turquoise and not identify themselves as spiritual. (but they of course, are likely to be philosophical)

What is the major probability wave of Kurzweil? At times, he indeed seems philosophical. But at other times, he could be too techno-deterministic and only focus on right-hand quadrants.

 

What do you think? Ken and Ray Kurzweil?

 

 

--

To see a world in a grain of sand....

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Dealing with Shadow selves while working up states and stages

I would like to see more exploration between the activities of self-acceptance and state/stage development.  I find it tempting to ignore or further suppress shadow elements precisely because they pull me backward when I'm aiming to go foward.  Certainly Integral Life addresses the shadow, but it does not appear to address how to relate in the same day to moving backwards as well as forwards.  The experiences produce an almost natural conflict of interests.   At what point is it ok to say: time to focus on expansion .. or, time to focus on shadow?  Often it feels like the very nature of state development automatically represses shadow elements in order to facilitate the state movement.  State expansion might therefore be considered anti-shadow, yet it seems inappropriate to conclude that all shadow work must take place before any state work commences.

 

Therefore,  I would enjoy understanding more how one can appropriately deal with the natural regressions that occur when dealing with shadow selves while at the same time moving towards expanded awareness in state and stage development. 

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Dealing with shadow

In my experience, I can't really progress or expand, unless I deal with shadow elements as they emerge. The way I see it, the shadow means "stuff" which I don't know about myself - possibly repressed, or painful to look at, or just plain scary. Once I am aware of a shadow element, it is no longer part of the "shadow" and it becomes "integrated" into my conscious mind. This in itself liberates energy to expand and progress further, because it takes a lot of energy to keep things hidden in the psyche. In any case, we really don't have a choice but to open up and acknowledge the shadow whenever it presents itself (through discomfort, or resistance, or just a bad feeling). No matter what goals we set for ourselves towards growth and self-fulfillment, if we neglect the shadow, it will "kreep up" and sabotage our efforts. So I tend to see shadow work as an integral part of my practice and not as something that pulls me in an opposite direction, but rather something that needs to become part of my awareness so I can integrate it and evolve further. Nor do I have to go looking for it, it's there and I need only to pay attention. Also, it should be noted we repress good things about ourselves as well as bad things and both make up the shadow. -- Louise

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Shadow is normal!

Christopher,

To me, this is the vital, real time Erotic edge to ILP practice.  By erotic, I mean relating to this inquiry over time is a direct connection to Eros.  For me, this is the right question. 

If I had to answer the inquiry right now, I would say: You deal with the natural regressions by first realizing they're unavoidable, and then realizing that means you have to have a practice which contains them safely and allows them to unfold, even if it's at a pace that's 1/100th of the speed of a peer who figured out the issue in an hour.  Fifteen years ago.  If I had to guess at what's next for you, it would be finding a way to realize that thinking your focus can be on only one or the other at one time is wrong, doing them together (as separate, concurrent practices) is the way to both greater heights and greater depth of consciousness. 

To speak to your self-acceptance aspect of the inquiry, I've also found that going into altered states ahead of my baseline skill level did recalibrate my brain (daemon?) to expect that new high as normal, which leads to depression, lack of confidence, etc.  There's no going back, it's a Pandora's box situation.  Body work, chiropractic, acupuncture, weight lifting, meditation, a loving partner (but be prepared to see alterations to the original chemistry that got you together), think of these kind of things to translate this new desire downward into the body, and it'll help. 

Also, if you're aiming to go forward because you need to be a superhero, shadow is going to simply increase in complexity and severity until you finally get that to be human is to be broken.  

One of the things that helped me my thinking around self acceptance, because it's true, is simply using AQAL theory to realize how impossible it is to do it all.  Unless you're Tiger Woods, I guess, and I bet he can't knit.  

Another is understanding that states don't have time, because it's the subtle body, but getting there in the gross body must take time because time exists in the relative world.  I don't think the desiring part of the brain can tell the difference, once you get there once, it demands that you get there permanently.  Again, a consistent, relevant practice allows you to realize and trust that's you're doing what you need to get there, and it's not for you to choose when it happens.  

I think another cognitive framework key is to realize that honoring the shadow saves one from fascist amber distortions when one has success in breaking through blocks and excelling and getting closer to mastery.  It helps one stay grounded and connected and it's a huge compassion booster to understanding our fellow humans, because we're all working our shit, like it or not.  Since the higher levels require compassion itself as a prerequisite, one can finally reach the point (sometimes) of being grateful for shadow, because it's a royal clue to the Path.  

Other points semi random:

Repressing shadow does not work, but neither does always holding it in the foreground of one's awareness, doing that is a good way to approach any life circumstance in a narcissistic way.

We're still pretty ignorant about the brain so some elements of your shadow won't ever change much.  Sometimes you do rehab and sometimes you build wheelchair ramps.  Sorry.  

I think you're correct in saying that state work is anti-shadow. There is definitely an element of transcend and deny when one is attempting to move forward or move past blocks, and that is not a bad thing.  It's just that shadow will automatically be evoked when one does this.  There's nothing wrong with seeing how far one can leap ahead, in my view exercising that ability to leap far ahead is ultimately the path to always being an innovator.   The question becomes can one maintain the courage to keep doing it over time when you have to deal with nasty shit like raging anxiety because your entire world was just rocked and the grocery check out clerk said "have a nice day" and you had to fight back tears while saying "You too"...

------

Even more thoughts on shadow:  

Doing shadow work and then a body practice seems to provide me a turbo boost in how good it feels to work out.  I can feel the clearing happen and it feels awesome.  

Yoga is a direct body practice that automatically clears shadow that is stored in the body.  Other, contextually aligned higher level cognitive therapeutic work will need to be done to stay in touch with rationality to make sure that you don't slip into too much magical new age thinking, but getting at the stuff stored in the body is required.

Shadow is context specific.   One can have a neurotic fear of learning Excel and no fear at all while walking up to say hi to the beautiful woman who is surrounded by her dressed to kill friends.  However, practicing the actual skill is still necessary, clearing the fear isn't going to teach you how to do nine step formulas and put it into a pivot table. 

Subdividing any problem into two or three smaller skill sets always will over time alleviate the shadow element in what you're doing.  There is always the key skill which is a guarantee of success, and if you can't get at that skill, subdivide it into smaller skills and practice those.  This then eventually leads to having to set limits to how much time you devote to practice, and deciding which practices are most important and which skill sets are going to be mastered by someone else. 

Since the tortoise always wins the tortoise vs. the hare race, remember that honoring shadow lets you play the tortoise role.   But doing the hare role for a while and then allowing the evoked shadow to kick you back into the tortoise role will sooner or later allow you, tortoise, to walk farther than all the other tortoises!  

 

 

 

 

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Are you sure it's your shadow?

I don't know you or your situation, but I thought I'd make a comment on my understanding of shadow.

One of the reasons shadow is a module of integral life is because meditation typically does NOT uncover shadow.  And if it does, by definition, you're experiencing an inauthentic emotion in response to the shadow which remains hidden.  Which is why highly developed Gurus can behave immorally.  While being quite non-dual, they still have a great deal of shadow.  Otherwise Integrallife would just say meditate, and everything will be ok.

Shadow is something about yourself that you've disowned and projected outside of yourself, that you're completely unaware of.  So if you are experiencing distress when meditating, how is that a disowned shadow being projected?

Shadow work usually entails uncovering the riddle of something that disturbs you in your daily walk in life.  You can then do Gestalt (meditation) on the shadow you've uncovered.  Note that this is not doing work on the original emotion or distress, but the shadow that causes the distress.  (and until it's identified, you're unconscious of it)

If something disturbing arises while meditating, you still have to guess at what is actually causing the distressing emotion.  And if it's really shadow, you won't be conscious of it. (do I sound repititious?)  Otherwise, you're just doing Gestalt on parts of yourself that you dislike or know are damaged.  But the shadow is disowned stuff that won't come into your awareness in meditation.  Shadow flies under the radar of meditation.

 

The way I deal with an identified shadow is I give it a name and do vioce dialog with it.  I am introverted and one of my shadows is my golden, red, narcissistic side that shines brightly.  Obama embodies this quality, as does Brad Pit and many entertainers.  This red, narcissistic vulnerable child is fundamentally important if I am to do great things in my lifetime.  My amber self beat up on my red vulnerable child and I dialog with my red, amber, orange, green, teal and turquoise self, integrating the narcissist in me into each stage.  It's not a red, 1st person, impulsive narcissism that I am trying to become, but it starts off that way and develops through the stages into 2nd and then 3rd person perspectives, etc...  But I have to immerse myself in the identity of the red narcissist to see the turmoil that ensues.  Doing it this way, I feel that I am not moving backwards at all, but transforming my shadow into a useful aspect of myself that finds appropriate expression through all the stages.

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Integral Healing

I'm actively working with students at JFK University on 1st person perspectives of healing.  The subject is quite relevent and rich.  So I'll open it up to the integral community. 

"What meanings do you associate with your experience of healing?"    To be clear, I'm not talking about when you are sick, I'm asking about the change from sickness to health--healing,  as you experience this change, how is it meaningful?  How do you understand this experience?  How can we learn from healing?  How can we grow our healing capacity for our own and community benefit?

I'll be posting some of the stuff I've found on my blog. 

Be well!

Joel

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integral healing

 Personally I am so over "healing" and "energy" as over-used and under-defined new age signifiers that I could SCREAM. I am confused further by your clarification of sick and sickness. I have experienced chakra healing, past life healing, interpersonal healing, spiritual healing, astrological healing, soul healing......and frankly I would like my money back. The best healing I every had was when a Orthopedic surgeon fixed my sick knee.  I would ask.....where in the upper right does all this "healing"  and "good energy/bad energy"  exists?  I wonder each time a "healer" waves a smoking bundle of sage purportedly to "heal the energy" in a room. Could somebody please explain to me what I am missing in this? Would not the reprograming of dysfunctional thought patterns describe more accurately what takes place on the road to "wellness"? Is it not circulation that I feel cursing through my body when I am directed to feel the "energy" flowing through my body?  I feel left behind and am almost certain I was born without a chakra or the colorful energy flowing out the top of my head....

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Aware of Awareness vs being fully identified with ego-self and content of mind

Is attending to awareness or "I Amness" an important practice for you? What techniques or skillful means do you use to let go of being absorbed in ideas and thoughts in order to rest naturally as Awareness and allow everything to be 'just as it is'? Is it simply a matter of where we place our attention and the "listening" or receptive quality that allows Awareness to reveal itself?

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Yes there is a way

Yes, there is a way to make yourself more receptive to Awareness.

The FASTEST way to get there is by doing the minimum 4 modules in the integral life practice! DOH!  Shadow, Mind, Body, Spirit.

You're a chicken crossing the road.  Each practice makes you cross the road again.  Enlightenment is not an attainment, but an accident, so the more you cross the road, the more accident prone you'll become.  So do your minimum 4 modules and cross that street!  You ARE here to do the minimum 4 modules, aren't you???

The book Integral Life Practice illustrates many different ways you can do spiritual inquiries and meditations that are the best of the best, distilled from thousands and thousands of years of practice and experimentation from the great wisdom traditions.  The Integtral Life Practice Starter Kit also contains these practices and also has the Big Mind Process video done by Genpo Roshi, which has a 90% chance to give you a peak experience. (I've heard it's abour 90%)

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What is the proper place for deconstruction as a value in your life?

As one of the original late 80's early 90's Gen X'rs,  I certainly know the bitter taste of meaninglessness and depression that comes with too much irony and rejection of traditional values.

Yet I also think an authentic, post metaphysical spirituality isn't possible without a great ability to cut through the crap.  

It's just that left to its own devices, deconstruction is the great destroyer.  

Have any of you had to make choices in your life to limit or balance or adjust your ability to deconstruct?

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But how do you explain...

"Have any of you had to make choices in your life to limit or balance or adjust your ability to deconstruct?"

Man, have I. I still go into deconstruction auto pilot on an hourly basis. I'm 42 and I had the pomo mofo head trip down to an art. I just discovered Ken's writing about 2 years ago. It was a perspective I coudn't fully deconstruct- he's pretty clever that Wilber.

It's a relief to be able to objectify and subsequently rectify the deconstruction tendency but there is still a lot of BS out there as you say,so transcend and include.

Trial and error check, trial and error check, trial and error check.

I hope more Gen-Xers show up here and walk the Integral talk.

Ev

--

Pixel Ink Design

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A Passion for the Impossible...

Deconstruction need not be nihilistic or relativistic... Yes, it is a great strategy for cutting through the crap, but moreover and as John D. Caputo argues - deconstruction is actually an "affirmation of the impossible" and in this sense deconstruction is structured like a religion. De-centering the "I" that wants the kind of self-approval and self-security that organizes everything around itself, deconstruction is like a prayer and tear for the coming of the wholly other (tout autre), for something impossible, like a messianic prayer in a messianic religion... As a passion for the impossible deconstruction is not merely nihilism, but more like a faith in the coming of something we cannot quite make out, a blind faith where knowledge fails and faith is what we have to go on... where hope is only real when everything is hopeless, faith is only real when everything is absurd, and when love is only love when we love our enemies...

Cameron

--

"Become passers-by" (Jesus of Nazareth)

 

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Deconstruct Deconstruction

Yes, deconstruction deconstructs everything.  So what?  Science itself is 10 feet off the ground.  It has the sincere intention of reaching solid ground, but good scientists will readily state that the foundation has yet to be found.

So you know that logic works by a frame and a set of rules, and the frame is based on personal preference and so are the set of rules.  So logic is also groundless.

So you know that deconstruction is itself a frame and a set of rules.  And these rules, too, are based on culture, or personal prefences.  So there, deconstruction is just as groundless as everything else.  It's just another perspective to take, among others.

Study the different developmental lines (kinesthetic, moral, spiritual, etc...) and work on 'em.  They're all groundless. hahaha.  Meaning cannot be reasoned through the use of a tool like logic or deconstruction.  Meaning cannot be deconstructed by a simple tool like deconstruction.  I like deconstruction.  I use it all the time.  It's fun.  When you've deconstructed all meaning, you'll discover that you haven't at all.

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It happens

Deconstruction seems to happen right before I am ready, finally to accept What Is and let go of being "the director."  Ha!  I mean "the decider."  My inner, higher whatever takes over when my ego gives up and everything begins to work out beautifully.  I like to let the crap be the crap.  It will all work itself out quicker if I stay out of it.  If I feel deeply inspired to do something it will be "for something."  Not "against the crap!"

Espavo,

Sheri Daigle

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Out with the old...

If something no longer fits in my life, it needs to be deconstructed.  If something feels off about situation or person, it needs to be deconstructed.  The key for my is following what feels right, as opposed to just deconstructing for its own sake.  It's about cutting through to the core of the issues, not just f**ing sht up for it's own sake.  

(I'm not sure if we're allowed to swear here, or that would be tainting these holy grounds :-)

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3-2-1

-- Would love to see some video, or an actual demonstration of the 3-2-1 process in action. As crucial as shadow work seems to be, think it is truly important to give people a concrete example so they might get a feel of how to walk through it with a bit more skill. One thing to read about it and try to implement as part of our daily lives. Another thing entirely to see it in action...

Erik W. Knapp

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3-2-1 is, in my opinion, a great insight but a really ineffective and...

Hi Erik,

From what I understand (correct me if I'm wrong people), Ken made up the 3-2-1 process one day in his loft while having a meeting about ILP. Ken's insight was right on: concentration practice and even insight practice often does not generalize to healing aspects of the psyche, and there needs to be a direct shadow-work process for any Integral Life Practice to be complete.

But Ken also admits in Grace and Grit that he hasn't done as much of this shadow work as he would have liked to, and that he often used his incredible concentration state access to avoid psychological difficulties (a common problem with those who can concentrate really well).

And furthermore, Ken just isn't a psychotherapist. He doesn't work with people day in and day out, constantly looking for more effective methods of getting results with clients. On the other hand, there are lots of people who do!

My particularly favorite technique is called Core Transformation. It's a powerful process that could be seen as structurally compatible with the insight of the 3-2-1 process, but with far more sophistication, and also with psychospiritual integration. You can learn Core Transformation from Connirae Andreas' fine book of the same title, or from a DVD set published by Real People Press, or in a live seminar.

I'd love it if more people in the Integral community were aware of and practicing this particular technique, because it has far-reaching benefits and is many decades ahead of the design of the 3-2-1 process in it's evolution.

Please send me a personal message if you have other questions, as this is a particularly favorite topic of mine.

~Duff

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ILP has 3-2-1 video

The ILP has a video of the 3-2-1 process in action. Diane Hamilton walks a group through the process. It really does help to work along with the video.

Ev--

Pixel Ink Design

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Sig ned.

I'm signing this post.

The ILP Starter Kit has a DVD that helps identify shadow.  Then, what do you do?  Go see a therapist?

Well, one thing I do is I painstakingly write out a script and then record it.  I make a voice dialog with each stage of my shadow, going from magenta (if applicable) all the way up to turquiose.  Then I listen to the script and embody my shadow and inquire into what each stage looks like. 

I also explore the original unhealthy form and what the healthy integrated form would look like.

It's a whole lot of work, and maybe I'll discover a template that can be used as a generic shadow integration voice dialog that I can share with the community.

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The role of social background in being (un)able to make it to global

Personal growth (from ego to ethno to global) is only possible when the right circumstances are there. So many people are just struggling to survive every day. So I think it is also important to reflect on how to reach out to those people, how to create favorable social circumstances for personal growth for groups in society who didn't have the chance to go to college or have a nurturing family, etc.


So my question would be: how can you create possibilities for personal growth for socially disadvantaged groups in your own community?

 SuzanneK.

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distinguish between "socially disadvantaged" and struggling to survive

Suzanne,

I'm wondering if there are really two questions here; struggling for survival is very different from not having had a nurturing family, or the opportunity to go to college.

If an individual, or family unit, or a whole sector of society is struggling to survive every day, helping them get healthy at whatever altitude they're on (traditional, modern, postmodern) is step number one. This might mean working in a soup kitchen to make sure they get a hot meal every night, or pressuring city council for low-cost housing in their neighborhood, or working as a liasion between the cops and the gang leaders to help facilitate understanding and stave off violence. These activities are certainly no guarantee, but they can make a difference.

It seems to me that if a person's basic needs for survival are satisfied (they're above the beige altitude), and they're encouraged to be healthy in the cognitive line of development and other lines, the personal evolutionary impulse will (or might) emerge.

On the other hand, I've known people who seemed to have all the social advantages, money, and brains that anyone could hope for, and they've sputtered and wallowed, regardless.

S.

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Kosmic Grooves

Where are the 'Kosmic Grooves' located? Are they located in all four quadrants? (The LR our Social structures in architecture and industry. The UR in the actual physical make-up of the human organism (as well as all other organisms). The LR in the literature and shared meaning-making symbols. The UL the noosphere or, a trans-human subjective field of some kind). What do ya'll think?


 

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What are the Kosmic Grooves

What really are these grooves?  What is the UR groove?  How is it manifested in the exterior reality?  How is it measured and comfirmed?

How do I feel this groove inside me? (UL)  Can I discover this "groove" through some kind of introspection?  Not see the stages I went through, but to see them as these "Kosmic grooves".

I need explanations for the What, Where, How, Why of these "Kosmic grooves"

Admittedly, it's not nearly as important as expanding the 4 minimum modules, but I am very curious.

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Got Conflict?

Hi all,

Being new to this site and still figuring it out and what should go where, I'm realizing I started an inquiry in the "wrong" place:  integrallife.com/member/larry-kiehl/blog/got-conflict-1 and would like to bring it here into the "Inquiry" section of the site, not sure how to best do that other than linking to my blog post.  If anyone knows of the mechanics of how to move it here, please feel free to inform me.  Thanks.  Otherwise, I guess we can just leave it as is.

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Economics, and the current financial crisis.

Lately I have been reading "Laissez Faire" theories of economics (a gift of the orange meme I presume) and have been very captivated by it. Articles about the current economic crisis like this one at http://mises.org/story/3165 from the Ludwig Von Mises institute seem to deconstruct an established myth that exists in our society. So, is the government's desire to restrict unbridled capitalism actually doing more harm than it is good? Reisman address this question in this article. George Reisman writes:

"In their view, laissez-faire capitalism and economic freedom are a formula for injustice and chaos, while government is the voice and agent of justice and rationality in economic affairs. So firmly do they hold this belief, that when they see what they think is evidence of large-scale injustice and chaos in the economic system, such as has existed in the present financial crisis, they automatically presume that it is the result of the pursuit of self-interest and the economic freedom that makes that pursuit possible. Given this fundamental attitude, the principle that guides contemporary journalists so-called is that their job is to find the businessmen and capitalists who are responsible for the evil and the government officials who set them free to commit it, and, finally, to identify and support the policies of government intervention and control that will allegedly eliminate the evil and prevent its recurrence in the future."

I am convinced that a significant portion of the responsibility for the economic crisis can be directed at the government's intervention in financial markets and their desire to produce capital out of thin air--either by printing money, or artificially manipulating such values as interest rates. This, in turn, artificially inflated (temporarily) the value of real estate by making money so easy to access. And since government has always been there to protect failed banks and insure many of these loans, they had nothing to lose. No real risk, as we now see happening with trillions in "bail-out" freebees.  Banks responded to an environment that was partially created by Federal Reserve monetary policy.

So, where is the balance? What is the integral solution?

 

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Von Mises

I think Reisman, who is a protege of Von Mises, is right.  There is a very compelling argument to be made that the market doesn't operate nearly freely enough, and it starts with principles such as our currency not being tied to an underlying gold standard.  The "free" market is actually a total misnomer.  "Capitalism," a book that is Reisman's epic tour de force on the "nature and value of human economic life" is a dense but important library addition for the serious student of economic theory.


Robb Smith

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Integral Life Financial Strength

Dear Robb:

  As I believe you are the CEO for Integral Life, I was relieved to see that you have a strong interest in capitalism.  One of my major concerns about Integral Life was my thought that to succeed,  it needed to become a financially strong and independent organization.  In the present market-mentality world, I don't foresee Integral Life  making many/any cultural changes and inroads unless it shows that it can compete with the best and still do ok or even excell. And when it comes to competition, capitalism wrote the book, so this is a good place to start.  I also think that Integral Life needs to get BIG to make much of a dent in the present world problems.  Integral Life as a Fortune 500 company, now isn't that a vision?

  I would also be interested in hearing what you thought about my comments to Keith in this same Inquiry Section about laissez faire and capitalism, if you have the time, as well as hear more about the other business aspects of Integral Life.  As I am now an Integal Life "fellow", I was hoping that this might allow me more access to the inner workings of Integral Life, including some of its business plans, as allowable.

  On the other hand, I don't want to put myself forward as some sort of business expert.  I am a physician who loves real estate and so I own a few rental houses.  I also have 401K's and other retirement portfolios.  However, I took all my money out 1 1/2 years ago and put it into money markets.  I just recently reinvested 1/2 of it, based upon Warren Buffett's advice of "When people get scared, I get greedy."  So, I at least have a clue about intestments and market cycles, etc.

Yours,

Mike Breland

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Integral Capitalism

  Regarding the question "What is the integral solution", it is my thought that there is not one "Capitalism" or one "Laissez Faire" world view, but a red capitalism, an amber capitalism, a green capitalism, a teal capitalism, etc.  In other words, a capitalism for each meme and each capitalism functions significantly differently and each has or needs different "rules".  An AQAL analysis takes into consideration both the development of the people running the "capitalistic" system, as well as the level of the people comprising the market. 

  I was going to get the book by George Reisman on "Capitalism" and read it in order to better understand and contribute to this conversation.  However, upon seeing it was written in 1996 and a used one costs upwards of $100, I decided to just read the synopsis.  In doing so, I concluded that his assumptions and conclusions are different than mine, even though I view myself as an avowed capitalist.  On the other hand, I'm sure if I read his book, that I would agree that his analysis still carries weight and from his world view it would make sense that I could understand.  However, since my world view is different than his, my basic assumptions are also different, and thus I would probably reach different conclusions than he would in certain situations.  Excuse me, is my green showing?

  However, my main point is that integral capitalism would take into consideration that there are many types of capitalism, consistent with the different levels of development of the people administering and participating in the system.  Thus, a laissez faire system may work beautifully in one country and fail miserably in another.  I think integral theory would both help explain why that would happen as well as forewarm a person doing business with different parts of the world such that they could shift into the different world views they were dealing with so as not to be surprised.

  A last point is that the response of the government in any situation is also dependent upon the world view and development of the person administering the response.  I think this is potentially what is happening in some situations where the government does more harm than good in the capitalistic arena.

   The whole gemish (stew) is a continuously varying mixture of world views of both capitalism and government; something integral theory is uniquely stationed to assess and address. But of course the results are strongly influenced by the world view of the person doing the analysis.  Since in making rabbit stew, the first step is obtaining the rabbit, the first step in integral capitalism is to know one's own world view.  Integral Capitalist: Know Thyself.

Yours,

mb 

 

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Integral capitalism

Mike,

Thanks so much for your thoughtful reaponse to my posting. I had assumed that there were differnent interpretations of various economic positions, but it had never crossed my mind that there are actually different capitalisms for corresponding worldviews. It makes perfect sense that some types of capitolism would work in some places better than others. So my question is this: Is laissez faire a healthy economic enterprise for certain memes, say orange or higher?  And does the values or moral lines of development matter more than the cognitive level? I would assume the center of gravity in the society would have to be at at least orange. Of course that would leave room for exploitation of lower moral lines, hence regulation. So there is a balance that needs to be struck.

Most Americans feel that we are so advanced that another depression is not a possibility. I don't mean to be an alarmist, but our economic situation has nothing to do with our development as a nation--at least right now.. In fact, I would make the case that there is more confusion and uncertainty about how money really works than there is about any other major aspect of our daily life.

This is such a complex issue, and I think it is very critical of the next president to consider this long and hard. I think the very livelyhood of our future (and the worlds) is at stake.

It will be hard for spiritual consciousness to manifest in a world where people are struggling to meet the basic standards of modern life.

Truly,

Keith

 

 

 

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Orange-Red capitalism

Dear Keith:

  I will attempt to answer the essence of your question: "Is laissez faire a healthy economic enterprise for certain memes, say orange or higher?  And does the values or moral lines of development matter more than the cognitive level?"

  I think you are absolutely right in that the values/moral lines of development matter more than the cognitive level and that laissez faire works better for certain memes.  In Wilber's "Integral Spirituality" book, he gives an example of the profile of terrorists as "amber beliefs with red self."  He explains that terrorists hold amber (ethnocentric) beliefs with red (egocentric, power driven) self development.  He also points out that once orange tools have been developed, they can be used by people with lower meme development, such as guns and bombs (orange) by terrorists (red).  I use this analogy to explain our present financial crisis situation.

  Thus, my interpretation of the Wall Street melt down was orange tools developing sub-prime mortgage packaging, but being managed and sold by financial executives at the red level of development.  At that level, their world view is such that they do not have the ability to look beyond their own needs and thus in maximizing their own "self-interest", the only self they are interested in is their own.  Thus, once the sub-prime mortgage is sold to someone else and they've got my millions in profit, their attitude to others is "Tough luck!"  Unfortunately their self-interest didn't even include the company they were working for, so now many companies are belly up.

  On the other hand, for someone at the green or turquiose level of development, their self is worldcentric and their worldview is such that they are able to look at other people as part of "themselves", to empathize with them, and understand how what they do effects other people.  Thus their "self-interest" now inclues not only their individual self, but the whole world, people and planet.  In other words, they do things "for the greater good."  For example, in selling sub-prime mortgages to someone else, they would include in their thinking how doing so would effect who they would sell it to, as well as the financial sector in general.  Thus, I would like to think that an integral capitalist like that would have restructured the sub-prime mortgage to be less volatile in nature and if it collapsed, take some of the responsibility for it, not just a "Not my problem, got my millions" attitude.

  This is not to say that green and turquiose level integral capitalists won't make mistakes, since they will because they are human, but I would think they would be less likely to make nuclear weapons levels of errors like the present financial melt-down.

  Hopefully this answers your question, at least somewhat.  I don't feel I've expressed my ideas all that well, but hopefully the essence was understandable.  The whole situation is also more complicated than I've described, but one of the reasons we have this Inquiry Section is so we can dialogue about things like this and eventually develop more sophisticated models.

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What is capitalism?

What is Capitalism? This is not such a easy thing to define since there are many many misunderstandings of it. First lets make the distinction between technology and capitalism. There is a technology to sustain each level of development and capitalism starts with the industrial unfoldment. And capitalism is what came out of the age of enlightenment. Its orignal idea was the accumulation of means, not just wealth. The monetary system came from the aristocratic class and was a means of accumulating wealth by the control of the banks in private hands. The ability to determine the value of money is a intervention in a natural free market that happens at every level not just orange social development as is very well articulated by Austrian economics. So there is a technical development for each social level amber,orange,green teal, but the monetary system, as is, is not orange,green,amber but RED. If there is a capatalism for each level then there should be a monetary system for each not a monopoly on the value of labor of all levels. Understanding that a monetary system that demands profit can never come from abundance but scarcity and fear. Since the only way to make a profit is to have something of scarcity. In a truly integral society the monetary system would be pluralistic depending on the level of the technology being used. This takes tons of imagination. Not just the ability to see a non object but time oriented monetary system but to have it stratified depending on the levels medium of  interaction. Phew.  First tier consciousness is pushed around by fear but what if the technological is no longer held back by the need to put it in monological red system called     How much? and can it make a profit to sustain itself? When the truth is that we can use systems that are self sustainable that could never make a profit since it would be giving a abundant good or service repeatably renewably. Like ever notice that geothermal is not one of the main ideas being looked at. Because there is no FUEL to sell and make a profit. It is way to abundant to not be a human resource. Making electricity our fuel except for large automobiles. Phew. Making heating not a fuel based system. Making robotics the automation of remedial jobs. Making time the human contemplation instead of how can I fill this lack by attaining money for a life style that is held up by fear.

To recap: The distinction between technology and the industrial development, The distinction between technology and capitalism, The difference between monetary system and economic levels of development and what capital means to each. Basically the aristocrats of the past have figured out a way to keep a monolopy on power beyond nations and cultures and have distorted the natural unfoldment of human society because they think they are superior to natural law. 

This is has been a crude expression and hope it can be refined in dialog.  

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Integral Economics

-- Hey Keith,

I think the underlying issues related to the dialog you've initiated here are significant to the point of being a little scary.  If you’re not already so aware however, I'd suggest you might want to (better) familiarize yourself with Jesús Huerta de Soto's work.  As an Austrian School economist, I'd contend his "Theory of Dynamic Efficiency" is very promising in regards to advancing developmental emergence within the field.  The Mises Institute also makes available de Soto's archive as an author there.

Brian

I invite your feedback for Integral economics at 'Editing Talk: Integral economics'.

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Online AQAL ENCYCLOPEDIA

I need an IOS ENCYCLOPEDIA!!!!!

I need to look up a term, see a one paragraph overview, a 1-3 page quick description, and finally, an in-depth explanation that will be as long as it needs to be comprehensive.  With links to other terms that have links to other terms, etc...

I cannot describe how fundamentally important I think this is!!!!!  It should be a top priority to develop.  No Ken Wilber book will be as important as this!!!  Are we to trust in and depend on Wikipedia to do it for us?

 

For example, where do I go to look up 4th, 5th or 6th person perspective?  Where do I go to look up turquoise level?  What if I need to explain something specific to a friend?

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Integral Wikipedia

Dear Alan:

  I say a big "Yes!" to your suggestion for an AQAL encyclopedia.  I was going to suggest this previously, but used up my one shot on inquiries on another topic, so thank you for suggesting this.  I was thinking that an Integral Wikipedia would not only help with newbies or clarify my own thinking (5th person, say what?), but I think it would help develop our own integral life culture and encourage others to join the integral life website.  Thus, I was thinking, as I think you are suggesting, that this wikipedia be part of the integral life website, not just as part of the regular Wikipedia online.

  As part of this, I was also hoping it would have sections on what I call "inner skills" or "techniques".  This would allow a person to peruse through them and find techniques that had worked for others and perhaps try them.  This might in turn allow a researcher to use this information for both research ideas as well as mine them for data.

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One Shot?

One shot? huh.  I guess you're right.  At least I used mines on something good.  A lot of the videos use the colors of development, but I haven't seen any explanation on each color yet.  I know it well, but those new to the color categorizations will find the bulk of the videos and audios a mystery.

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In agreement.

Hello Alan,

And a colour-coded one if possible. Similar to those very helpful lanes painted on floors on big public buildings. Maybe not so literal, but it would help enormously to find the connections and links without getting lost in abstruse corners of the site. Unless, of course you like that.

Marita.

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I agree. Or perhaps an "Integral Wiki."

Perhaps a communal location where a "community of the adequate," whatever that is, has access to begin building a "community of the knowledgeable."

 

 

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Totally agree!

Thanks for pointing out how important this is. It would make learning this stuff so much
easier.

Yes, please do this!

Roshana

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An Integral Approach to Occultism

--  I am curious if there are any Integral Occultists besides myself out there!  My spiritual journey began with Occultism by studying Qabalah and Thelemic Mysticism, the works of Aleister Crowley.  I will be the first to admit that within the occult community, an extremely erroneous pre-trans fallacy is only the beginning of the problems inherent in the practice of modern occultism and ceremonial/ritual magick.  But as Ken is fond of saying, I think the baby has been thrown out with the bathwater when observing and judging the merit of occultism and its practices.

     I also have a background in Eastern Medicine and Esoteric Korean Subtle Body Practices based on Tai-Chi, Ki-Gong, Meditation, etc.  I am an avid reader of both Ken Wilber and Sri Aurobindo.  I practice Bikram Yoga, and I am a practicing occultist.  I believe western occultism and ceremonial/ritual magick to be simply one of the many ways in which human beings have expressed their transformative capacities, and in the best cases occultism has been approached with the same scientific rigour that the most puissant forms of meditation systems in the east have.

     My question to the community is if there is anyone else out there engaged in this kind of work?  As well, does anyone believe in this as a valid sphere of inquiry to contribute to the Integral Community?

Timothy P. Bielec

aoiveae.luiahe@yahoo.com

exst.art.officelive.com

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Occultists welcome

 Hi Timothy,

wow I looked at your homepage and the work you do is amazing! You did all this and you are merely 27 years old? Holy Moly. You are in New York, yes? So it's true: NY is still one of the hottest (or coolest?) places to be on this planet...

Yes, I do believe the Occult is a valid sphere of inquiry, although I would not consider myself an integral occultist. I did study Aleister Crowley's Qabalah system, but I'm not too deep into the details. I kinda surfed on the surface and only stumbled on some Enochian Angelic Portal now and then...  I never had the discipline to really go into all of the allusions and meanings of the symbols etc. I admire you for your patience and endurance to wade through all of the material that you present on your website. It should be easy for you to get your degree in clinical psychology, and yes, I think that's a good idea and is a good supplementation to what you already achieved. Good luck!

I like what you say about magick being the Yoga of the West. It is less known as Yoga, because it was never so public in the first place. Usually there is some kind of a secret society that holds the lineage and organizes meetings at night, next to a lightning-struck oak or something (lol). When we look real close, we can find clues of societies that once really existed: for example the 'Acephale' society in France in the 1930's. Several well-known scientists and artists are said to have attained meetings of this secret esoteric group (e.g. Georges Battaille, Pierre Klossowski, Salvador Dali, Jacques Lacan and others). I wonder what kind of dark evil god they worshipped. Giving the name of the society, it might very well have been Y'golonac, the Defiler, the headless deity of perversion and sadism. But of course, we cannot be sure. Maybe we'll never know... 

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Yes I do think it is important

Check this out http://www.kheper.net/ 

A serious study in the more objective aspects of occultism is important to increase the scope of Integral Theory, including its possibility of making scientific predictions since many aspects of the paranormal have to do with how realms of being m connect. This is a serious inquiry that includes classical and Oriental metaphysics, quantum physics, parapsychology.

Giorgio Piacenza

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Transmission

I've personally had experiences that have felt as if someone was touching me with invisible fingers that moved waves of energy around inside me.

There have been times when such experiences have lead to illuminating dreams.

I would like to hear other peoples experiences and opinions, partly as an opportunity for them to share their subjective view of spiritual experiences, but also from my more objectively inclined aspects to get a sense of how grounded these types of experiences are within the world of scientific inquiry.

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Transmission?

  Since your subject title is "Transmission", it made me wonder if you thought perhaps your experience of feeling as if someone was touching you with invisible fingers was some sort of a transmission or perhaps something else.

  I'm also curious as to what you were doing when you had this experience, such as meditating, lying in bed, etc.  In other words were you doing some sort of meditation or energy work when this happened or was it spontaneous?

Yours,

mb

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Invisible fingers

Well, its happend on a couple of different occasions, and in the midst of different activites.

Once it was while I was playing the tamboura to accomany my friend Jerry, a long time TM meditator, on the sitar.

Another time it's happened was at the '06 Rainbow Gathering near Steamboat springs Colorado when I met a guru who was giving free lessons in Kundalini Yoga at Yoga camp.  He looked me in the eyes and I felt like his mere presence caused an eruption of energy through the center of my body.

Another time it happened I had met a woman at an I.O.N.S. meeting in Seattle and we had a brief conversation that was essentially to the tune of how a shift is occurring, and there is a growing mass that has stopped talking about what needs to be done, because they are just being and doing it.

In those instances, something about the interactions elicited an intense and unusual state that I had never before experienced.

There have been three people in my life whose mere presence seemed to cause an intensely unpleasant, white hot sensation in the pit of my stomach.  One was a police officer.  One I met through a circus group and I knew him for a while & came to find out he was a sociopath. And the third was a stranger that I met in Mexico.

It seems somewhat related that when I meet people with very vivid dream lives, that their presence can breathe a certain vividness into my own dreams. 

I'm familiar with emotional contagion, and I wonder if what eastern practice calls "transmission" might belong to the same family of experiences, though perhaps with a bit more intentionality.

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Transmissions and emotional contagion

Dear Noah:

  Thanks for your response.  For some reason I wasn't notified about it, so just found it today.

  Very interesting experiences, both the positives ones and the white hot negative ones.  It sounds like you are sensitive in a particular (not peculiar!) way to other people that some might see as sensitive to whatever energies people are putting out.  Thus, I would agree with your idea of "emotional contagion" being in the same family as the Eastern tradition of "transmission".  What I've read about emotional contagion, however, has been from a Western approach and much of it concentrates on behavioralism, and the level of abstraction they explain it on is one that just doesn't make sense to me (but that doesn't mean its wrong).  They have done some recent interesting work about how we have inborn physical mechanisms such that we synch automatically with people and there are PET scans that support the physical aspect of synching.  However, while I think there are physical corrolates with "transmissions" also, I think the mechanism is somewhat different than that of emotional contagion.  I would like to say there is more of an energetic component, but am reluctant to state that more strongly, since I can't state what energy I'm talking about without sounding either too metaphysical or too physical.

Yours,

mb

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Subtle Energy, Chi, William Tiller and Right Hand Correlates

I have done some investigation on Dr. William Tiller, professor emeritus at Stanford University and his work on psychoenergetics. Wilber includes Tiller on chart 2B in Integral Psychology.  Dr. Tiller acknowledges each of the domains in manifest reality as matter to body to emotion to mind to soul/spirit. He also acknowledges internal development and the strengthening of one's "internal infrastructure" to manifest more spirit by means of meditation and practices like Qi Gong.

In these fascinating videos where Tiller is interviewed, he discusses having created a device that "allows us to measure the energy level of a conditioned space above our normal background reality," which will ultimately evolve into a biofeedback device that will essentially measure the Chi flow in and out of the body. This new understanding of physics will bring about a Copernican scale revolution in science as it uses consciousness to connect these distinct energy levels and realize enormous potential in the manifest domain.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d35l5Kxg7ik                                  : PART 1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kmgEQN4xro&feature=related    : PART 2

I would be fascinated to hear a discussion between Ken and Dr. Tiller on these higher energetic domains and their role in the future development of technology that assists with internal development. I would love an Integral discussion on this issue as Dr. Tiller opens up quite a fat can of worms.

 

--

"At the end of our exploring we'll be to arrive where we started but to know the place for the very first time."
-T.S. Elliot

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Off course

I totally agree. This would enhance the future of a more complete Integral Theory. It would help us to make predictions for science incorporating metaphysical principles applicable to today's discoveries that imply inter-realm connections and who we are in the Kosmos. 

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Observational Evolution

 If consciousness is the modality by which we can travel, how do I ensure a safe passage and complete trip?  If I send out a triangular shape, will I know ahead of time what shape to accept for its around the world trip?  Is discernment the same?  How much unconscious becoming conscious is necessary before I set an "evolve" pace?

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Spiritual bafflegab

I am interested to know whether anyone has any spiritual pet peeves. I have one that occasionally triggers me. Have you ever heard someone ask a spiritually related question or make a spiritual comment that is so confusing and so convoluted that I can only describe from my perspective as spiritual bafflegab. Of course, it could be that it is just at a higher altitude than the stage I am at or that it is a case of my shadow material being projected on the questionner. I am, however, always grateful when I hear a question and answer offerred with clarity and transparency. I always marvel how Ken brilliantly makes even the most complicated topic so clear and understandable.

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Bafflegab and Integralese.

That's a new word for me, but is sounds close to what I call "Integralese" I hate to sound sexist, but I was thinking maybe this has something to do with action rather than connection. I could be wrong. And maybe it cannot be helped at this point in evolution. But connect we must, and I agree with you, leave the convolutions in the smoky rooms and let's try to speak with clarity and from experience rather that fall in love with the jargon. All experiences are valid and whether you say "God is with me, I have Buddha nature or I must develop to amber and beyond, it all comes down to the same thing: relative concepts pointing to ultimate realities. "Fingers pointing to the moon" Simplicity is the word I want.

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I'd like an Integral "case study" and also a Wiki on this...

By a case study I mean some author who goes through a holon in its entirety not just talking about the worldspace of one quadrant in that holon but giving a description of that holon from every quadrant--theoretical, detailed, practical--sing Integral tools to do an Integral analysis of that holon.  I feel like we all could (or at least I could) learn a lot from that.

Also, what would be great on this website is to start a Wiki.  Let a collaborative effort begin at some level.  It could be in the form of a database of vocabulary--something that I have already started on my own to avoid total confusion as I have learned.

I would also like to see a more representational balance of all four quadrants in the work of Integral philosophers.  I recognize that perhaps the majority of the Integral community came from the Descended side of the path but it seems like the community is overemphasizing spirituality at the expense of the other three quadrants.  Why this concerns me is that I feel like there are probably a group of "rational" folks who are turned off by this because they don't understand that in fact there is nothing at all that is non-rational in the Integral approach.  As Wilber says, spirituality has been associated with the amber meme and rationality with the orange meme.  Thus,  many rational people who may be ready to journey into Integral may first need an entrance to Integral through the two right hand quadrants as they gradually begin to understand the depth of the Integral approach.

 

 

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Glossary

Hi Keith,

Your idea for an Integral Glossary of terms has merit.

Would you consider making  a post of what you have so far, either on your profile or on a blog category? 

That would be helpful, for sure.

Thanks,

Kamm

 

 

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Integral Conversations

Dear Keith:

  I've long suggested there be a Spiritual TechniquesWiki made through IL, so I hear what you're saying.  I think they are just too busy right now with the basics.  However, somewhere on this mega website, there is an Integral Dictionary that was somewhat interesting and you might find helpful.  Unfortunately I'm not sure how to find it again!  But now that you know there is one, with a little searching you should be able to find it.

  I've also been doing work somewhat like you discussed above regarding an every quadrant analysis of a topic and I'll paste what I've done below, but first a few comments about how to have those integral discussions that you want.  Because of how this website is set up, there are some tricks.  The main trick to having an integral discussion is to be visible to other people.  Your present comment is about number 95 in the list and so almost impossible to find.  To be visible means that whenever the weekly Integral Newsletter comes out, no matter what the Discussion of the Week is about, you need to write some comments and ask what people think of your comments or perhaps be a little controversial.  After 2-3 tries, you'll start getting replies from serious people like Steve Mcdonald, "Steve" and "Camus".  By replying to their comments, you can get some pretty good conversations going on.  These guys want to do what you're talking about and have the ability to do so.  Once you find people you'd like to chat with, you can email them directly by going to their profile (just click on their highlighted name in their comment) and there is a place to click that says something like: "Email Steve McDonald."

  I think the IL set up will change in the next few weeks to months to something more like you want, according to a note by Robb Smith the CEO, but don't ask me where I found his comment as it's buried several layers deep in his Integral Sucks comments.

 Next is an outline of what constitutes AQAL (All quadrants, levels, lines, states, and types) from the Integral Spirituality book Introduction and Chapter 1:

AQAL Categories – An Incomplete List from the IS Introduction and Chap. 1

February 8, 2009

AQAL

The 5 elements of AQAL: All Quadrants, Levels, Lines, States, Types.   These are the most basic elements that need to be included in any truly integral or comprehensive approach.  AQAL is a comprehensive, inclusive, and effective approach, to organize or understand any activity.

The 3rd person AQAL map insists that we also include 1st person feelings, experiences, consciousness, as well as 2nd person dialogue, contact, and interpersonal care.  All of these must be included in any comprehensive approach to any activity.

AQAL can be used by any discipline and is a way to begin extensive and fruitful conversations between all disciplines because it creates a common language with which to communicate.  This advances an evolutionary unfolding to greater dimensions of being, knowing, and acting by expanding an isolated identity of “me” to an even deeper identity of “all of us” and all sentient beings.

3 dimensions: the beautiful, good, and true.  4 dimensions: the 4 quadrants.  I call this the 3(4) dimensions.

AQAL: the patterns that connect.  Look at every event from all 3(4) dimensions: how I feel/see event, how we see event, and “it”: objective facts of event.  Take all 3(4) dimensions into account and arrive at a “more comprehensive” and effective approach.  The 4 basic ways of looking at anything.

IOS: integral operating system.  When AQAL is used to organize or understand any activity.

The 4 Quadrants:

The Four Quadrants: the inside and outside of the individual and the collective.  Every occasion has 4 quadrants and each quadrant goes “all the way down.”  Each quadrant also has an inside and outside view (view through, view from), making a total of 8 “primal” perspectives or zones.    Perspectives replace perceptions with each zone as a definitely location in the AQAL matrix (IS p. 39).  However, the 8 methodologies give a perspective of a perspective of a perspective (IS p. 40), and thus each zone needs at least 3 perspectives to locate it.  All holons have view through and view from.  Objects are only viewed from 4 perspectives (a quadrivium of views) and have no view through.  All 4 quadrants show growth, development, evolution.  Quadrants and developmental lines move through developmental levels with states and types at each level.  Every occasion has 4 quadrants, and includes all important possibilities, but does not say what I, we or it should do.  This brings clarify, care, and comprehensiveness to every occasion, making success more likely.  Integral Methodological Pluralism involves at least 8 irreducible perspectives, methodologies, injunctions, or paradigms for gaining reproducible knowledge or verifiable reproducible experiences.  They are not only views, but places from which action can be taken.  Figure 1.3, IS, page 37, 8 Major Methodologies.  An injunction is a set of concrete actions in a real world zone which brings forth or discloses the phenomenon that are apprehended through the various perspectives.  Perspectives tetra-arise with injunctions/actions.  Address of a holon = altitude + perspective.

(In integral medicine practice,) the factors in each quadrant need to be limited to those that can be effectively engaged.  Integral business: each quadrant is a market in which the product has to survive. Spiral dynamics can be combined with the quadrants shows how these levels of values appear in the different environments and give a comprehensive map of the marketplace.   Integral leadership: the 4 main business management theory are basically the 4 quadrants.

Quadrant I: ULQ (Upper Left Quadrant)

I,  Beautiful: self, self expression, art, aesthetics.  Immediate thoughts, feelings, sensations, etc.  Individual event from the inside.  Integral Medicine: visualization, affirmation, and conscious use of imagery, emotions, psychological attitude, imagery, intentions, coping ability.   The subjective truth of aesthetics.  Z1 = experience my I from the inside  = phenomenology, Z2 = from the outside = structuralism.  Z1 =Introspection, meditation, phenomenology, contemplation, etc.  Meditation is actually the inside view of the interior view of an individual view and so is actually a perspective of a perspective of a perspective IS p. 40).  States and stages of consciousness, realization, and spiritual experiences.  Z2 = approach the I from the outside, objective or scientific stance = see myself as others see me and do this with other I’s as well, of how other people experience their I.  This is structuralism, some systems theories (usually Z8), and spiral dynamics, which uses structuralism.

Quadrant II: LLQ (Left Lower Quadrant)

We, Good (morals): culture (the broad sense), the way you and I interact with each other.  Intersubjective awareness.  Inside plural view.  Inside awareness of the group: worldviews, shared values, shared feelings.  Cultural development (Gebser: magic to myth to..).  Integral medicine: cultural views of the disease (care, compassion, derision, scorn, acceptance, derogation), shared communication, attitude of family/friends, support groups, cultural judgments and effect on the disease.  The collective truth of ethics.  Intersubjective (dialogical), cultural, contextual.   Intersubjective truth and the social construction of reality.  Z3 = hermeneutics, Z4 =  ethnomethodology.   Z3 =  study of we from the inside = attempts you and I make to understand each other = hermeneutics = how we can reach mutual understanding with each other or anything = the art and science of we-interpretation.  Hermeneutics is actually the inside view of the interior view of the collective view (IS, p. 49).  Z4 = study of we from the outside = cultural anthropologist, ethnomethodologist, Foucauldian archeologist.

Quadrant III: URQ (Upper Right Quadrant)

It: True, nature, science, singular.  Individual event from the outside.  Described in 3rd person objective terms.  Bodily matter-energy lines: gross, subtle, causal (as developmental sequence, eg stages), exterior behavior, action, movement of objective body.  Integral medicine: medicines, surgery, behavioral modification, material.  The objective truth of science.  Z5 = autopoiesis (eg cognitive science), Z6 = empiricism (eg neurophysiology).

Quadrant IV: LRQ (Lower Right Quadrant)

Its: True, nature, science, plural.  Culture: outside. Social dimension, exterior forms and behaviors of the group, studied by 3rd person science, such as systems theory.  Collective social system (systems theory), stages of foraging,..industrial, etc. Group, nation, global as 3 stages, unfolding greater social complexity.  Integral medicine: social, economic, insurance, delivery system, hospital/room layout and access, environmental toxins.  Z7 = social autopoiesis, Z8 = systems and complexity theories.

Levels:

Stages of development or stages of consciousness, spiral dynamics.  Egocentric, ethnocentric, worldcentric.  Preconventional, conventional, postconventional, integrated (moral stages).  Integral medicine : All individuals have at least physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual levels in all these quadrants.   Every quadrant: I, we, it, have physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual levels and waves and an integral account will take all of these into account.  Integral business:  the levels give the types of values that will be both producing and buying the product. 

Lines: 

Developmental lines/multiple intelligences: cognition, interpersonal, mental, emotional, aesthetics, spiritual, psychologial.  Five most important: cognitive, interpersonal, psychosexual, emotional, moral (IS, p9).  IS, p 23: cognitive, moral, emotional/affective, interpersonal, needs (Maslov), self-identity (who am I, Lovinger, ego development), aesthetics (self-expression, beauty, art, felt meaning), psychosexual (eros), spiritual, values (spiral dynamics)

States:

Of consciousness: waking, dreaming, deep sleep (gross, subtle, causal bodies).  Also peak, meditative, shamanistic vision, altered states.  States occur in all quadrants: weather states (LL?) to states of consciousness (UL), energetic states of gross, subtle, causal (UR)

Types: present at all stages/states, horizontal topology.

Masculine (justice, autonomy, rights, agency, rules, individualism, wisdom), feminine (relationships, care, responsibility, communion, connections, compassion).  Enneagram types: 9 types.

 

   I  hope this is interesting or helpful to you.

mb

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Helpful Mike

Dear Mike,

I wish to thank you for this. Now the "only thing " I have to do is to try to apply it to my own multi-faceted worldview: meditation, experience, realisation, loving-kindness, chakra energy flows, music, dancing, poetry, the natural world, relationships, the internet (that's a tricky one) compassion, wisdom, and so on..... (which by the way is the other way around, ie, compassion is the masculine and wisdom is the feminine, at least in my tradition, other traditions too)  These two, compassion and wisdom have to be integrated anyway, so maybe the definitions are not so hard and fast.

In any case I have read it carefully and although there is still reluctance to take it all on board, I usually try to balance my natural instinct of adventure with my equally "natural" reserve when dealing with systems.  I'm never sure why it is that my mind is never confortable with theoretical stuff, unless it comes on the wings of direct experience, you may call it realisation. Maybe that comes later with the practice. Well I will give a try, so that having been decided, I have to say thanks for your presentation. There are many questions remaining, but I will let you be for the moment. It is holiday time after all, or retreat time, or going-up-the-mountains time, or helping with someone else's garden, ( a big one!) I am going to do it all while trying non-doing. How does that sound?

Love, joy and not too much work.

Marita.

 

 

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A case study would be great.

Keith I agree with you about the need for a wiki (which I don't know much about but sounds like the ticket) or at least a module for writing up a case study and some examples.    a practical application of this model would help me re-train my thinking.  Just a set of questions or steps + the map would be at least a framework with which to proceed.  

I bought the boxed intro set a few years ago (map+dvd+cd) and it was helpful but I still don't know the process.  That is the trouble as I see it.  THere is a lot of talk about what integral is, but I don't see it in action as a discernable process.

Perhaps its so complex that there is no simple process.  In this case it could be chunked down into recipes for situational experiences.  For example IL-AQAL for Meetings, IL-AQAL for Family, IL-AQAL for Relationships, IL-AQAL for Sports Teams, IL-AQAl for Decision Making, IL-AQAL for Weddings (blended marriages), IL-AQAL for Personal Goal Setting, IL-AQAL for Negotiations, IL-AQAL for Marketing /the self-employed etc.

Also I would love a teleseminar where a real life situation is used to demo the AQAL process (if it is a process! huh, it just occurred to me that IL-AQAL perhaps isn't a process.  It's just an education that informs your understanding and consequently you do life more effectively.  Still - I am a Martha Stewart person at heart.  Show me the recipe!

Thank you for your post.  Hope it rises to the top of the heap on the hit parade here!


Carolyn W.

 

"All that matters is what we do for each other" - Lewis Carroll

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The downflow of Divine Energy into a space working with people in therapy

As a psychologist working with people who live in constant fear and doubt, a change has begun in how the treatment proceeds. There appears to be a downflow into the physical space of palpable energy that assists the patient in developing new insights. They seem to move into a different dimension which is characterized by spontaneous understandings related to the ongoing problem. Be it depression, panic, or obssessive behaviors. As this energy makes itself available, boundaries of their physical body fade. I am only holding space without trying to analyze. Their mind I quiets along with a feeling of heaviness.

I would like to hear from anyone who might be experiencing similar energetic changes during a therapeutic session.

 

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THE MEMBERES

AUTONOMY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Inquiries for the Integral Community

How to we work together to create a world in which human rights abuses such as torture will finally be eradicated?

 

How do we work together to create a world in which more people live in democracies and tyranny breathes its last gasp?

 

How do we work together to create a world in which non-violent methods of resolving conflicts replace militarism, warfare, and other forms of violence?

 

How do we work to create a world in which valued resources (clean air, clean water, food, clothing and shelter) are shared and distributed fairly through a humane, democratic, ecologically sound and sustainable economic system?

Shalom,

 

Marion L.

 

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Questions for the Integral Community

How do we work together to create a world in which the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the foundation for law in every national jurisdiction?

 

How do we work together to create a world with a global, humane, democratic and ecologically sustainable economic system?

 

Shalom,

Marion L.

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Downflow

The downflow of energy you describe is talked about in great detail in the book, "Stillness," by Charles Ridley.  It is nominally a book on craniosacral, but it goes very deeply into the nature of presence and the centrality of the heart as an actual organ of perception (it does produce the strongest electromagnetic field of the body.)  Holding space with analyzing, reaching out or pulling back is the essence of this technique, which is not just for hands on healing but applies to any situation.  He has some great excercises in the book for accessing this place more deeply.  This book is right up there with Ken's work for me, and reading it was a life changing experience for me (that's not something I say lightly.)

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Pain

I would like to see inquiry about pain and suffering.  It seems that all inquiry has it's roots in  the pain of the loss of connection to True Nature, or the Lover longing for the Beloved.  A blog at clarityliberates.com has inspired this inquiry for me.

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the akashic field...

i would like to hear a discussion about ervin laszlo's akashic field... the idea is that it helps explain consciousness and some of the mysteries associated with consciousness... i only have a shallow knowledge of what it is and would also like some different perspectives... it's a field like any other physical field (em, gravity, higgs, etc..) and should have a particle model associated with it... it's speculation and not mainstream.. but what could be more absurd than the higgs field that gives energy (e=mc^2) texture... or in the scientist's wording " gives matter mass".... could consciousness just be a brain fart of the universe... really?... 

 

 

 

 

 

adam

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Integral Law

Before I could figure out how to post what I wanted to say on this thread, I blogged it.

http://integrallife.com/member/jennifer-grove/blog/my-inquiry-spite-technical-difficulties

So, yeah.  Not very pretty, but then the problem has me pretty haggard.  The whole left side of the quads is ignored in Law.  Therefore people get away with interior murder every day.  I've been a victim of such interior murder and it is a BITCH trying to get through it without becoming an interior murderer yourself.  So far, I've been able to stay out of jail and mental institutions, but the pressure to hate is intense.  I'm glad and grateful to have survived.  One of the small threads of hope that keeps me motivated is that Integral will eventually come up with a solution. 

Don't have the time or the patience to recount what I've been through.  Just trust me, I've seen Law block various creative efforts to do good and punish numerous victims. 

Eagerly awaiting either the solution from on High or a chance to help create it. 

~J

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Integral Justice . . . the last frontier.

-- Hey J,

I happened to see your inquiry here as a result of posting one of my own, and thought I'd offer a comment.

In recent months I've been devoting considerable focus to the idea of 'integral economics'.  From an integral perspective, I see people as being (socially) constructed and consequently, comprised of various components.  In other words, there's a financial (or economic) dimension of being, a psychological dimension, a legal (justice) dimension, etc.  In many ways, and depending on the individual's respective level of development, these aspects of reality then, present themselves to our conscious awareness nearly as archetypes.

Consequently, I think a great number of us are finding ourselves subjected to the systemic imposition of unjust power, and subsequently wondering how or when, we relinquished choice in the matter.  My experience over the last 3 years in particular however, suggests that developing an integral perspective and practice is an especially viable means of better understanding the nature and historical dynamics of human interaction in facilitating subsequent development.

Certain elements are especially important then; action, creativity, adaptability, learning, etc.  In this respect, I'd like to encourage you to continue to listen intently to your 'inner self' in determining the course of your own personal pursuit of love and life.

Brian

I invite your feedback for Integral economics at 'Editing Talk: Integral economics'.

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Communicative Disorders

I'm curious on whether implementing the Integral approach on communicative disorders such as stuttering, will yield better results in that field. I've read a personal account of someone who said that his stutter was practically cured from saying certain mantras. The root cause of stuttering has yet to be found, I think, and an exploration as to how and why such practices work, along with its already established techniques, would be perfect for an Integral inquiry into its field.

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Shadow work

I think that some communication problems/disorders could stem from shadow material.  Delving into this material by bringing it back into first person helps reintegrate fragmented parts of ourselves.  My friend who stuttered since way back now is stutter free!  He cultivates willingness to be uncomfortable.  This willingness helps him handle and navigate his shadowy fragment material.  

Any thoughts of your own?

 

-S 

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Yoga for Stuttering

Shadow could definitely be a factor. I kind of doubt there are any Zen masters that our stutterers out there. I just bought a book called Yoga for Stuttering, becuase I stutter myself and getting to the self that can be fluent is crazy confusing. Work needs to be done for sure.

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Is it possible to be an atheist? Can one be an atheist, believe in...

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In the mind...

In the mind one can create the perception of one's choice.   That is why awareness of one's thoughts, and to not identify them, but see them as you would observe clouds in the sky is important.  

Beliefs are created within that reality which we try to explain, therefore are not all inclusive of reality.  Therefore, beliefs are fragmented.  

One can be an atheist in mind, as one can deny anything within mind, and make it appear nonexistant.  But no matter what heaven or hell we decide to percieve with, ultimately reality continues to stand even after our mental death.   

In other words, ultimately speaking, no, there is no such thing,  because in the end, when the physical body and the beliefs and perceptions that were held during that lifetime are left behind, we come back to that Essence and have to face reality, one day.  In eternity, there is always time for that day to come.  

But mentally speaking on this physical manifestation, I'm sure people will continue to find the argument somehow.   and that is the way their path goes...

 

--

SharonStar*

"Conquistada por la Verdad, y solo la Verdad"

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What words will be most effective to help us personally and socially identify...

The question I want to ask you is; What words will be most effective to help us personally and socially identify and publish our states of consciousness?

Two stories to clarify the question.

First story: There are four of us sitting at the table talking, indubitably about Integral Theory, and one of us says "Wow, I just regressed, I'm sorry about that." We all then notice that ,boy, there had been a change in our social state, something was different.  We noticed it but only when one of us chose to recognize their own change in state did the rest of us notice the change in the group state and how it affected the conversation.

Second story: As a group facilitator, I noticed that I admired other facilitators I worked with who had the awareness to facilitate every group they were a part of.  Any time we were meeting, eating dinner, etc. as a group of facilitator's, these people would be constantly, effortlessly facilitating. Torbert (2004) would call this "action inquiry." I wanted that ability!  It felt so good, so present, so....aware.  And so helpful.

I am recognizing that the ability to be aware of and label a state and watch our states change in our moment to moment lives is a joyous and valuable ability. To then be able to bring that up in a group context is even more helpful.  I'm doing it.  And some other members of my community are doing it.  Yet we stumble on how to label these states.

We first try calling them Gross, Subtle, Causal, Non-dual or Toria and Toria Tita from the buddhist tradition.  But those are too broad.  We then struggle with words to communicate the experience and the effect to the group. We are looking for a better categorization of states that might help us more quickly and definitively communicate our changes in state.

One place we've turned is Stephen Wolinsky (2002) who identifies different dimensions (states) of consciousness. He then helps us de-label these states so we focus on the the gestalt of the experience; where we feel it in our body, how it feels, how it makes us think, etc. While it is tremendously helpful, we still need clear concise labels to effectively communicate our states with each other.

So the question again is: What words will be most effective to help us personally and socially identify and communicate our states of consciousness?

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Is 'knowledge' . . . 'power'?

-- In authoring a particular section of a paper I'm writing:

"Consequently, but beginning with the Spanish conquest and colonization of the 'New World', on through the Battle of Vienna, the 16th and 17th centuries marked an especially brutal era in conflictual savagery over the domination of religious influence. It's oddly peculiar that formation of the Royal Society by members of an 'Invisible College' including Boyle, Hooke, and Wren in 1660 then, should represent an early precursor of the role modern Science would subsequently play from this point on, in both centralizing power initially, and later dissipating between respective educational, political, governmental, economic and monetary divisions (LR) of Western society."

I've stumbled across the notion that the entirety of human evolution as it translates to experience is (may be?) a dynamic function of knowledge and subsequent learning.  While there's certainly nothing novel in this idea of scientia potentia est, within this (my) particular context, Foucault's own modification of his 'power-knowledge' concept in favor of governmentality seems perplexingly significant . . .

Help??

I invite your feedback for Integral economics at 'Editing Talk: Integral economics'.

 

 

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If I were to ask everybody here a single question...

Why are you here? 

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Education: Are there schools that others feel are teaching our kids to be...

I would like to see an exploration of education.  I deeply believe that what we need is an educated, thinking community/world.  As I progress, I am concerned over the lack of THINKING that goes into making decisions in our world.  I am concerned that masses listen to the media for truth.  I am concerned that we aren't taught to be ok with being individualistic.  Are there existing (education) philosophies out there that meet this?  How about Waldorf?

--

Here is to love, life and learning!

Andrea Pettit

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there will be no schools in a teal society..

A great deal of thinking went into creating this wonderful resource on the future of education:   see page

3. Action Learning, on http://8thlife.org 

there's some great videos on there, really worth the time

 

I think you're totally right, and personally I believe that the quicker we de-couple the idea of education from the idea of schools, the better.

Especially 'alternative schools' are a sad contradiction in terms .. and Waldorf suffers from an additional handicap (integrally-speaking) -

http://sites.google.com/site/waldorfwatch/steiners-racism

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Mytho-poeic

Can we re-assess the role of mytho-poeic literacy? Is myth really relegated to a particular stage? What role does the imagination play in relation to the world? Are they separate? Should we relegate our models to a linear "pre-modern/modern/postmodern/postpostmodern" definition, or might this be a little misleading? In short, I'd like to see the integral community actively explore and engage an "integral gnosis," or metaphysics. :)

 

--

 Mu!

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An Inquiry into Too-much-free-time-on-my-handsed-ness

I'd like to see an inquiry into why so many White upper middle-class Americans feel that their life is so empty that they need to join a cult that offers nothing except a bunch of long-winded mumbo-jumbo and New Age-sounding jargon about tiers of enlightenment and spectrums and holons and other nonsense which they can only fully gain access to in exchange for large sums of cash.

There are people starving and dying in the world whilst a bunch or vaguely dissatisfied white collar workers are saying to themselves, "sigh...There must be more to life than just being happy, healthy, clothed, sheltered, comfortable and the envy of all my friends...sigh"

Get some fucking perspective. 

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I think you have a point ..

 

... but it's the same kind of point that people who denounced the techies who were wasting their times developing the printing press (whilste there were lots of people starving) had,

and later the nerds who spent a few lifetimes developing computers and internet (whilst more people kept starving)

all of which probably appeared little more than mumbo-jumbo to ordinary humans at the time, results of which could be only accessed in exchange for large sums of cash - certainly at the time of invention,

then steadily decreasing through time until now we can buy a good paperback for one euro and I can sit here enjoyinand tg this conversation with you for nearly the same price..

People are still starving, wars still rage, but now integral science is being taken into the sustainability movement, where we hope to (eventually) do away with not just hunger and war, but the kind of class society that probably started with the invention of the 'priests' caste .. which is what it sounds like you're protesting about - quite rightly, but without a left leg to stand on if you don't propose viable alternatives for the depressed middle-classes.

Certainly for any sustainability to take off we'll need the depressed white collars to become sweaty-collar as we all learn to grow at least some of our own food: touching the earth on a daily basis will probably do more for the advancement of cheer and spiritualiy than anything else on the planet.

 

 

 

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What are the implications of the oil spill with respect to Integral Ecology?

I'd be interested in reading/watching an analysis of the implications of the oil spill with regards to Integral Ecology. Thanks.

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eating disorders are not psychiatric disorders yet it's the leading cause...

After watching the Stockholm Solution,

www.babelgum.com/2831/the-stockholm-solution.html

I was astonished that Dr. Cecilia Bergh discovered that eating disorders are not psychiatric disorders; that by teaching these young women how to eat again, they recover. Says she,

DR CECILIA BERGH: We are measuring carefully psychiatric symptoms every six weeks during treatment and we see that the obsessional compulsive symptoms as well as depression and anxiety decreases when the eating behavior normalizes and as an effect of that the BMI or the weight goes up.

Q: So as they learn how to eat again, the psychiatric illness goes away?

A: Correct.

 Elsewhere she says,

 Unlike traditional diagnoses, “we say that the psychiatric symptoms such as anxiety, depression and obsessional behavior – are the consequences of the distorted eating rather than the cause”, says Dr Bergh. As the disease takes hold, sufferers quite literally forget how to eat properly and a vicious cycle begins.

Learning "how to eat again" speaks volumes and it seems to me that the treatment given to women has to be some kind of shadow work in order to free themselves to such distorted thinking regarding food. If indeed eating disorders are not mental illnesses then it begs the question what the hell is going on in the mind of so many women that end up committing suicide out of despair at not knowing why they literally forget how to eat.

I don't know about you but it's astonishing that the human mind can concoct such an aberration that it literally attacks itself and the body. If eating disorders are the leading cause of death from all metal disorders, will somebody shed some light on this integrally? 

George C.

 


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Why reject the "self" the "ego"?

It struck me as ironic the other day when thinking about different meditative techniques, in different "faiths" that seemed to be "at war" against the "self", the "ego".

And the reason it struck me as ironic was that, if I understood things correctly, the most common goal was to establish some kind of harmony in life, thinking, feelings, daily life, faith, vision, comprehension, experience and all the things that make you "up" including all the different "you"s but particularly in the way all these and many other aspects of you and your life evolve.

So many techniques start off by silencing "the self", by moving it out the way so as to go "deeper", "beyond", as if it was blocking the way. As if there was a realm you could not share with it, as if it were condemned to deal with material things.

Two things inspired this idea ;

a) the shadow subject that is described in Ken Wilber's books and on this website, about not rejecting parts of you that you may be ashamed of, parts of you that you wished were not you, and eventually become identified as not being you.

b) what everyone tells you when you are about to meet someone you care for ----> "be your self"...

 

If the goal is evolution in a harmonious way in all aspects, why reject the self which, you will agree, is a fundamental and natural part of what you are, at least here and now?

I've got my own ideas on the topic, but would be interested in hearing others :)

--

 

One day, you going to need someone  to stand by you

www.youtub

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A 79 Minute Into, Neurology, Economics, The Pentagon's New Map

 I wish there was a 79 minute introduction I could put on a CD and give to people who are curious enough to listen to one disk but aren't likely go get a book.  Perhaps there is something out there you could recommend?

For all the talk about the importance of all quadrants, where are the integral neurologists?  All I ever see on neurology is in the first tier media (some of which is good), but I like my information to be integral.

We're coming out of the biggest recession in history and all we got was half of a good power point presentation!  Come on guys, you need to do much better.

Global politics, Thomas Barnett actually has the integral answer (he calls it "a proposal") to minimizing war and terrorism.  He actually got interviewed on Enlighten Next.  His 20 minute TED talk:

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/thomas_barnett_draws_a_new_map_for_peace.html

Esquire magazine article:

http://www.esquire.com/ESQ0303-MAR_WARPRIMER?click=main_sr

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Games and Chance

How could world changing, socially conscious games and social-networking help develop a more integrally aware society? I like what Jane McGonigal suggests, perhaps we could attempt this too:

http://www.ted.com/talks/jane_mcgonigal_gaming_can_make_a_better_world.html

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Connection

Have you seen the other "Inquiry" asking how we can foster more authentic interactions on the Integral Life website? I think it ties in nicely to what you're suggesting. Maybe a gaming format might be a next step?

http://integrallife.com/community/inquiries/how-can-we-cultivate-more-authentic-interactions-between-each-other-website

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Bioenergetics & Transformations of Consciousness

G'Day

I have two inquiries.  The first is probably simple.  I have been listening to Ken's "A Deeper Cut".  Several times he has referred to the updated version of his book, "Transformations of Consciousness".  My question, does anybody know when it will be released?

 

Second inquiry.  I am wanting to explore some deep shadow work and would like to find both an Integral psychologist and a bioenergetics practitioner.  Does anybody know a good source I can start to explore to find such practitioners?

 

Thanks, Shane

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Mapping Integral Architecture

As an intern-architect who discovered Vipassana and the Wilber Model years before architecture school, I've been struggling to develop an integral architecture on my own.  As it grows, the Wilber Model itself is a living architecture.  But as a tool for design, it is still sorrowfully lacking.  

To me there has been a huge chasm to cross between spiritual and material endeavors in life.  If it weren't for Gaudi & Wright, I doubt I would have believed it possible to pursue architecture and enlightenment together in a sincere way.  I mean, why would a Buddha want a building? Indeed, Gotama taught the Bhikku and Bhikkuni how to live outside with nothing more than the triple robe, a bowl and a tube of oil.  I've come pretty close to this lifestyle for long enough to know how good it can be.  Once acclimated and otherwise becoming accustomed to natural conditions, outdoor living gets cozy and easy.  From this perspective, architecture seems like cage design.

I also read somewhere in Chogyam Trungpa’s books that there is a war between material and spiritual worlds.  If we don’t pick a side, we merely betray both!  But perhaps an integral architecture can be a material spirituality rather than “spiritual materialism.”  (Interesting to note that the only picture of a building hanging in Frank Lloyd Wright’s office, other than his own designs, was the Potala Palace.)

It was Maria Montessori’s books and a handful of Montessori teachers who practice Vipassana that lead me to see architecture as nursery school design.  In this light, we expose any fetter that our designs might become because after all, the point of a nursery school is to educate and encourage students to develop the skills to leave school behind.  With this in mind, I entered my masters program.  I chose a degree in the tradition of Organic Architecture because it might just as well have been called Integral.  

Christopher Alexander, et. al’s, Pattern Language is a work of Organic Architecture and probably the most influential book on architecture in the twentieth century.  One could read into this book all four quadrants and perhaps even levels and types and well… states too I suppose.  It’s a great book!  Even still, a formal, Integral Architecture needs to be developed.  

I’m working out some designs for this on my own.  Any help is much appreciated.  Specifically, my most pressing concerns are: materials & methods; design & build process; and a rationale for developmental guidelines in architecture.

We are cresting an era of abundant, eco materials that can simply be “printed” in 3 dimensions.  I’ve even seen a house sized 3-D printer demonstrated!  So the cost of architecture is about to plummet.  We will be able to rebuild the entire urban landscape in our lifetimes.  Lets get it right!

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Patterns

A building and site as a pattern in the Lower Right quadrant -- spaces, light, flow, rhythm, utility etc. have their correspondence in the LL and UL quadrants -- and getting those relationships right are what makes a building work or not work.

Really if there's a field that should lend itself to cross-quadrant perspective-taking very naturally, it is architecture and the built environment.

I'm am architecture school dropout. I loved it when I went in, but somehow it didn't work out. 

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Waitaminute

A "building" is an artifact. Architects are Holons. Architecture is a field of study which would prolly be in the LR. But a building isn't in the Quads.

I don't think.

I suck at the Quads. 

--

"The Left Hand Path, not merely the Right ... must take the lead."

~SES pg. 148

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Mysteries of the Paranormal, Psy, Survival Research

I would like ot see the integral community explore the conection with other realms of being in order to develop Integral Theory to the point of being able to make some useful scientifc predictions or at least provide some useful guidelines.

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Mysteries of the Paranormal, Psy, Survival Research

I would like ot see the integral community explore the conection with other realms of being in order to develop Integral Theory to the point of being able to make some useful scientifc predictions or at least provide some useful guidelines.

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New Site Function - "My 20 Tenets"

Hi, 

I would like to see a special section on this site in which people could amplify their personality profile by including their own "20 tenets" etc.  I've tried this in my own profile section but I think people would check each other's lists out very readily if a structure existed for it.

Everybody finds, in numerous engaging conversations, that they end up making a lot of the same points.  These are their points.  We need to capture & affirm the spontaneous contributions that everyone has to make.  

And by articulating, if we wish, we can gain a new level of perspective on the character that we are presently animating. 

By limiting it to a certain number of points (possibly as an homage to the Wilbersaurus' 20 Tenets) we offer people the chance to evaluate, prioritize and modify their own "integral persona" as a "source of wisdom position".  The variety of insights people have is extraordinary and there needs to be some overt method of inviting and sharing one's standard integral positions and one's tangential (and possibly post-integral) positions.

We could all really benefit from this.

I know, it's not exactly in the inquiry section but it is a kind of mutual investigation.  Plus the inquiry section is clunky to access and tends to fall by the wayside.  I want to click on anyone's 'name' and find out if they have any interesting 'characteristic assertions' which can complement, challenge or expand my comprehension of the worldspace we are co-creating.

Sound good?

Thanks, I've been...

Layman Pascal

 

(to receive other "Weekly Harangues" write to: pretendtomeditate@gmail.com)

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communicating to different stages of development

im curious at exploring how to communicate effectively with different stages of development. particularly communicating to Kegan order 3.

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Ken's Books

OK - so you are entertaining and you meet someone who you realize is at a reasonably high level of human development and you mention the name Ken Wilber and you get a blank look.  No time of a "quick" (hah!) intro - Simple question: Which of Ken's books do you hand them to take home

-Best always, Ed-

P.S. I always keep a couple extra copies (ebay/used cheapies - sorry Ken) of my favorites around for just such an occasion - what one is yours?

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HOW DO YOU INTEND TO INTEGRATE YOUR INTEGRAL WORLD VIEW WITH REAL LIFE ON THE...

It's not a well formulated question but I'd like to know how people intend to transfer their ideals "downwards" into the realm of real people and real people - by real I mean what we experience here in terms of suffering and day-to-day issues. How do you make a lofty philosophy make sense on the grass root level, how do you communicate these things and how do you intend to function as an integral person within your profession? How is this helping the world today? I'm especially interested in disability, because even though people may have karmic reasons for being ill, society is also responsible for the increasing number of people with ill health. Protestant work ethics and right-wing ideology is making disabled people increasingly cut off of the rest of society, and it is truly a world apart. Healthy people have no idea what this world looks like nor do they care - yet every one can become a disabled person any time during their life time. Stress is a major cause of chronic health problems and often hit way before the subject even has a chance to learn anything about meditative practices. Such practices may help those who are ill but chronic conditions can't be cured. This is not a call for pity but for action to integrate and help society to cope with these issues.

Arte Dea - Symbolist Art