Please Log in to Vote.
7 out of 7 members found this useful.
Finding Your "Yes"
I'm writing this in the spacious stillness of Thanksgiving weekend. My life has been moving at high speed, but over this holiday break an opening appeared. The phone barely rang, and a sense of deep peace naturally blossomed. My heart has been overflowing with spontaneous gratitude (or as Brother David Steindl-Rast so beautifully puts it, "great-full-ness".)
I'm grateful for many things—family and friends, my spiritual friends and communities, some inspiring creative projects, amazing partners, and my growing, vibrant communities of integral evolutionary spirituality and service. I'm especially grateful for the opportunity to serve humankind, and our current intensifying wild ride through what is certainly a kind of evolutionary whitewater rafting. Optimism vs. Pessimism About Humanity's Prospects We considered how attitudes tend to polarize. Many extreme postmodernists feel very pessimistic. Their words are haunted by a quality of dread, a sense of impending calamity. They seem depressed, or even possessed by an overwrought sense of guilt, shame, and foreboding. And we considered how some of our Integral friends, reacting to the self-fulfilling prophetic defeatism of postmodern anxiety and doubt, have attempted to opt radically for optimism. Since history and evolution are always developmentally progressing forward towards greater depth, complexity, and consciousness, they have installed optimism as an article of faith, perhaps even at the cost of going into denial of the likelihood of the global human economy being tested by some "500-year flood" type events—disastrous systemic shocks and large-scale socioeconomic dislocations. The Core Existential Question For me, this all goes back to a stark confrontation I engaged in 2002-2003. For years I've pondered the koan of how to respond to this amazingly "interesting time" on planet Earth. During those years, I researched and wrote a (to be published) book, The Terrible Truth and the Wonderful Secret: Answering the Call of Our Evolutionary Emergency. I looked closely at all the futuristic projections, whether they were inspiring, alarming, or depressing. I made it a practice to transcend my tendency to go into denial about what upset me. I felt like I was "putting my eyeballs in a vice" and forcing myself to look at all the potentials I found most upsetting. And at the end of the process, I realized that human knowledge was too incomplete, and my expertise was insufficient. The bottom line was that even though the world is out of balance, we just didn't know—and couldn't know—how bad (or good) things really are. We don't know how severe or sudden climate change will be. We don't know how much sea levels will rise. We don't know how disruptive the transition will be from our unsustainable global financial, food, and transportation systems to sustainable ones. We cannot and will not be able to know how much disruption, pain, loss, and degradation are in store for us—or not. Can I find in myself a no-matter-what commitment? Under the worst-case scenario, can I nevertheless find inspiration to meet each new day with passion, resourcefulness, and self-transcending integrity? If, in my lifetime, beyond my control, no matter what I do, evolutionary history is doomed to pass some awful point of no return resulting in grim outcomes, will I still have a basis for going on? Can I, no matter what, find the spring in my step and the twinkle in my eye to come alive fully, to do whatever I can? And can I do it nobly, in service of something far greater than myself? Can I make my evolutionary contribution, even if it seems tiny by comparison with the scale of deep time and a global 6 billion? Can I do whatever I can to further the emergence of a new humanity that could have turned the corner? Can I be inspired to do what little I can to bring forward the gestation of that embryonic next, even more sapient, homo sapien? Can I bring care, compassion, and consciousness into life just for the sake of doing so? Am I willing to invest my heart in evolutionary creativity without a guaranteed return? Can I find it exciting to help the human flower come an iota more fully into bloom even if it might be destined to wilt? Finding a "Yes" And that yes makes all the difference. So that's what I offer this month. A meditation: can you find your "yes"? Can you choose (again and again, every day) to live on the basis of an unconditional inspiration? If you can, you'll step over a threshold into a different level of evolutionary responsibility and leadership. There's a community building out here on the skinny branches. This is a transformational community, a powerful agreement, an amazing fellowship of Evolutionaries. It's my experience that we seem to be in the process of summoning something miraculous into being. Are you called to be a part of that?
Today at breakfast, Bert Parlee and I were discussing our multiple simultaneous emergencies (overpopulation, climate change, culture wars, and the new emerging design vulnerabilities of a single globalized human life-support system).
I told Bert that what I think haunts this discussion is a core existential question: Are we inspired or discouraged by an uncertain, treacherous human future? Can we use our fear productively? The prospect of a new dark age, of a "Mad Max" descent into warrior consciousness, or of human extinction is so terrifying as to be mind-altering. We don't want this for our grandchildren. Can we tolerate that possibility, and even be drawn to heroism by its potential eventuality? Is it worth working for evolution even if there's a significant likelihood of evolutionary regression?
An Unconditional Commitment
We don't have to be caught in the dilemma of having to figure all this out, though. We don't have to handicap this unknowable high-stakes evolutionary horse-race. We can cut through all the mind chatter by asking a deeper and more essential question:
I struggled with these issues for a couple of years, working to grapple them to the mat. And, pinned, I found my answer. It was, and is—yes.
- Please Login to Add Comments
- show all sub-comments
- Report Abuse
Please Log in to Vote.
0 out of 0 members found this useful.
imagining scenarios for practice
Posted December 12th, 2009 by Ambo SunoHi Terry - I was glad to be able to follow your succinctly laid-out contemplations on human nature, human possibility, evolutionary dynamics, passage through an existential core of understanding, being and 'faith' to imagined worst-case scenarios. These contemplations of yours coming together on a surprisingly quiet Thanksgiving Weekend.
It was a doable communication for me this morning. I am able to appreciate this description of the lay of the land and the imagined lay of the land. At this time, I don't consciously, intentionally, committedly say 'yes'. I feel/imagine myself at this time to be more pilot fish than sleek evolutionary cruiser. More sparrow than eagle. More cautious skittish and passive observer than impassioned actor for the cause of humanity.
But these images come and go, and actual situations present themselves such that one acts nonetheless sometimes almost inadvertently with a positive valence and intent. So I suppose that hanging out here around these conversations, and acknowledging, also as an inadvertent act of faith, that I don't know how I/me and things will unfold there is the possibility of being in sync with what you are suggesting in your last paragraph.
From within the strains that these ideas evoke, I tell myself that I can still deny or try to; I can still hang out around the edges; I don't need to grow up to fulfill my images of imagined injunctions. I don't need to feel the distracting and stressful inner reactions that begin to arise with your suggestion of saying the dreadful 'yes' to the dreadful situation. I suppose a big part of the threatening counter-reaction in me is the not wanting to feel ashamed or bad because I want to look away, or mutter or shout, 'uhuh'.
This, Terry, is a part of my ongoing imaginal journey. As I read your meditation and communication, I started out with a strong tentative appreciation of the truth, beauty and goodness of your description, then it veered on me South into the land of fear. Where, over time, will it head next and then next?
Thank you for the offered vision and for the interactive opportunity, ambo
- Please Login to Add Comments
- Report Abuse








.jpg)
Please Log in to Vote.
0 out of 0 members found this useful.
Great-full from Your Post. Yes to All of Us Being Alive & Together
Posted December 12th, 2009 by Stanley