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June 28, 2017 by Terry Patten 2 Comments

Tender contact with the wonder and peril of our time—with Jeremy Lent

jeremy lentSunday, I was joined by author and “Integrator” Jeremy Lent, author of the recently released book The Patterning Instinct: A Cultural History of Humanity’s Search for Meaning. The book is a penetrating history of humanity’s patterns of thinking, explaining why some have come to dominate, and to lead human civilization to our current crises.

I am blown away by the rigor, depth and scope of The Patterning Instinct. He researched this profoundly edifying and elegantly written work for a decade. The result is an impressive exploration of many domains of scholarship and thought, and a tour through what he calls “cognitive history”.

During Sunday’s dialogue, Jeremy unpacked the basic ideas of his book, describing the “pattering instinct” as our universal human impulse to make sense of our world by using what we’ve already catalogued in our human experience. The human mind can’t conceive of abstract ideas without using some sort of scaffolding, which is why we routinely use metaphors to describe our world. At the level of culture and society, we develop “root metaphors” which come to shape our values, relationships, societies, and economies.

Jeremy says capitalism and consumerism are the result of root metaphors inherited from previous generations. They are extensions of deep cognitive scaffolding, extending (mostly European) metaphors that express a dualistic division of mind and body, spirit and matter: “the conquest of nature” and “nature as a machine”. And while this way of relating to the natural world produced remarkable progress, including global exploration, scientific and technological advances, and western medicine, these same patterns of thought now seem to be speeding us toward a great unraveling—either to collapse or, what Jeremy feels is more likely, a “techno-split.”

He uses the term “techno-split” to describe a future bifurcation of human society between a small number of wealthy genetically engineered and technologically augmented human beings with a privileged future, and the bulk of the human family, left behind in increasingly gritty, dystopian conditions.

But Jeremy believes a healthy holistic future is possible, but it will require a broad transformation of our very patterns of cognition. Cultures that did not conquer the world have something important to offer that project. We can consciously draw on ancient cognitive patterns, as well as contemporary systems thinking, to synthesize a radical shift in our very patterns of thought. He especially draws on the holistic worldview of Neo-Confucianism that emerged during the golden age of the Song Dynasty a thousand years ago. Jeremy’s own integrative framework, Liology, (“lee-ology”), integrates this ancient spiritually-informed model with the latest findings of western systems science, recognizing the interdependent and holistic nature of all natural systems.

My own years-long contemplation of what lies ahead for humanity points to our need to come out of denial and to face the terrible truth — that we’ve brought ourselves to the existential precipice where many of our cultural and environmental systems seem on the verge of collapse. I feel a kind of awe that in this moment of unraveling, we’re also participating in the beginning of enormously transformational breakthroughs on almost all levels of human culture — in both the natural and social sciences, in technology, in our understanding of human relationships and organizations and leadership, and in our understanding of our own brains and motivational systems.

Even as we’re heading toward an apocalypse, the greatest schools of wisdom of all human cultures throughout history are engaging vital and real conversations with one another in a culture of practice that’s informed by the rigor of the scientific method. This synchronicity is eerie and thrilling.

It’s a miraculously wonderful time and a terrifyingly perilous time. We face a multiplicity of tipping points, bifurcations and singularities — all of which are reaching critical mass simultaneously. What it is to be whole and coherent in integrity, and to be loved, to be wholeness in the age of fragmentation? How do we focus on one of these multiple bottom lines without myopically dissociating from all the others? These seem to be the core questions that all of us are up against right now.

And the outcome is far from certain. Toward the end of our dialogue, a listener posed a question that I know many of us have pondered. When faced with the mounting evidence that it may indeed be too late, we easily descend into hopelessness. And yet we are still here, alive and able-bodied. Is it possible to do “good work” from a place of hopelessness?

Jeremy invoked Rebecca Solnit’s “Hope in the Dark.” Hope is not prognostication—a prediction of good outcomes. He suggests neither optimism nor pessimism but rather a state of mind that’s open to the possibility that things can shift. He pointed to the “non-linearity of change”, and the idea that like all complex systems, human society operates in non-linear ways. In this non-linear space, each of us can have a significant, even exponential, impact merely by attending constructively to what is in front of us.

I added to Jeremy’s reflection, noting that human knowledge is tiny compared with the immense totality of this complex, non-linear system. We literally do not know enough to be pessimistic. What we do know with certainty is that we are co-creating the future.

A 1,000 year old poem from Jeremy’s book by neo-Confucian philosopher, Zhang Zai, beautifully expresses our embodied inseparability from our natural world:

Heaven is my father and earth is my mother,
and I, a small child, find myself placed intimately between them.
What fills the universe I regard as my body;
what directs the universe I regard as my nature.
All people are my brothers and sisters;
all things are my companions.

You can listen to the entire dialogue with Jeremy here.

Share your comments on our Facebook page here.

Purchase Jeremy’s book here.

Filed Under: General

July 20, 2016 by Terry Patten 1 Comment

Your Brokenness Leads You to Your Genius, Not to Despair—with Michael Meade

Michael Bio PhotoLast Sunday, I was joined by renowned storyteller, author, and scholar of mythology, anthropology, and psychology Michael Meade for “The World is in Trouble and it Needs Your Genius.”

Michael is one of the founding figures of the men’s movement, along with Robert Bly, Sam Keen, and Bill Kauth’s Mankind Project. He co-edited, with Bly and the great Jungian psychotherapist and writer, James Hillman, a best selling anthology of the poetry of passage called The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart. He is the author of Fate and Destiny: The Two Agreements of The Soul, Why the World Doesn’t End, and his latest book, The Genius Myth.

He is the founder of Mosaic Multicultural Foundation, a nonprofit network of artists, activists, and community builders that encourages greater understanding between diverse peoples. Currently he is working with at-risk youth. During our call he told moving stories of those encounters, often placing them in the context of myth and rites of passage.

Michael has a grounded masculine ability to communicate with soul-level authority. I am often deeply affected by his capacity to speak the truth and tell stories in ways that awaken insight, touch my soul and move my heart. Some of his stories are able to humble the pride of the thinking mind, transmitting the broken-open disposition in which wisdom becomes possible.

I invited him to have this public conversation because he has been working for years with the big questions I ask on Beyond Awakening, some of which are reflected in the below excerpts from The Genius Myth:

The answers to the overwhelming problems and daunting global issues we all face cannot simply come from the limited consciousness of abstract reasoning and scientific attitudes that currently dominate the world. The problems run deeper than the simple facts of the matter; the answers must be found in deeper places as well.

The loss of a felt connection to the divine spark hidden within each person may be the greatest curse of modern mass societies.

When the dark times come round and great changes are afoot, it becomes more important that awake people remain awake and that more individuals awaken to the nature of the spark of life they carry within. In the great drama of life the human soul becomes the extra quantity and distinct living quality needed to tip the balance of the world towards creation.

During our dialogue, Michael shared that in his work with at-risk youth, he discovered that whether rich or poor, they are pushed to the margins because they are born into a world on fire with conflict. In fact, we are all living in the margins during this time of “apocalypsis” — in which both collapse and renewal are unveiling all that has been hidden. We see the collapse aspect intensely manifested in the recent series of tragedies and disasters: Orlando, Istanbul, Dhaka, Iraq, Dallas, Nice, Turkey, Falcon Heights, Baton Rouge, and others. Institutions are not holding and nature is rattled.

But that adversity in the margins, at the edge, is what triggers each person’s unique genius and gifts, and thus is the source of renewal. In our time, this fomenting of unique genius in the margins takes on added importance, since there is no one “right” solution for many diverse, complex problems in the world. Instead, there are many solutions waiting to be awakened in each person.

Listening to Michael, I felt sobered. It occurred to me that in some way, collectively, we are being given a kind of intervention, a wake up call to the out-of-control, “addicted,” unsustainable way that we have been living. The wounded among us are going crazy and lashing out in ways that are so horrific that they force society to pay attention, so too are the disruptions we see in nature and with the animals.

It’s as if on all sides we’re being called to a process of reckoning and “sobering up.” It’s only by each of us personally letting this intervention bring us to our knees that we become vulnerable enough to participate in the kind of turnaround, and the outpouring of genius, that is needed.

The ideas Michael has gathered about genius and uniqueness have come from working with people in their darkest moments. He shared a heart-breaking, and deeply inspiring story of a Vietnam veteran who experienced such gruesome combat trauma as a 17 year old soldier that he lost his sense of smell and suffered decades of PTSD.

At one of Michael’s events where older veterans mentored younger ones, this Vietnam vet shared a war story he’d keep hidden for forty years. With Michael’s guidance, and a cleansing ceremony, he was able to reconnect with the inner desire to sing he’d had as a 17 year old before he was so shattered by his war experience. His voice was timid initially, he struggled to find it. But today he travels the country singing songs he’s written, “soldiers’ blues.” He discovered his genius and is giving his gift, and as he continues his own healing, so too the world is healed.

Michael works with people who are fighting life and death battles of the soul, where they’re ready to despair and even turn to violence. He says the soul is at the heart of the being. When we lose touch with it we become engulfed in a kind of fog — the red fog in war or street gangs that smells of anger and violence and keeps people hyper-inflamed; the white fog of “distancing” in suburban white middle class culture which substitutes comfort for being alive and is exacerbated by electronic devices which “disappear” us; the black fog that descends when the red or white fog pushes people into despair and even suicide. Young people in a black fog will say there is “nothing” inside them. They are devastated, utterly unaware of the genius they came into the world with. No one ever told them.

In response to my question about how to break out of the debilitating fog of confusion and self-hatred, thinking we’re just not doing enough to address the world’s ills, he recounted an Irish folk myth. When the center cannot hold, it doesn’t disappear, it fragments and goes into the margins. In our time, each of us must go to the margin that both attracts us and makes us most afraid. We only need find a single thread, pulling it back to the center.

In this incremental way, the center is re-woven. Not by big ambitious movements, but by individuals pulling themselves back to the center, their genius fired by adversity, bringing vitality and nurturing to the soul of the culture.

To be educated is for one’s genius “to be led out” (educare) into the world, to become engaged in ongoing creation. This process involves a shattering of ego attitudes, not just Trump-style megalomania, but the ego-trap of staying small and safe. Cultures used to help people to shatter the ego with rites of passage. Now our rites of passage are fashioned from the troubles of our own lives.

Reflecting on the tension between the “inner” and “outer” work, Michael says we are living in a time where it’s no longer appropriate to seek exclusively individual enlightenment or salvation. We are called to bring whatever shards of consciousness we’ve been able to contact back to the world. We have long ago passed a point where withholding one’s genius can be justified.

Fortunately, we don’t have to be experts, or have all the knowledge, before we act upon our genius urge. If we show up, things unknown will appear through us, just as Athena spoke through Mentor to Telemachus, guiding him to deal with the suitors. The divine will always meet us halfway.

Toward the end of our broadcast, in response to a listener’s question, Michael shared his resolute stand against cynicism and nihilism. He believes that life intends to continue and humans are essential to it. Inside the soul of each of us, there exists something divine that is inextricably linked to the cosmos. If well-intentioned people don’t feel part of that ongoing creation, then by default they’re contributing to the collapse everyone’s afraid of. We can’t risk colluding with such nihilism.

It was a stunning broadcast, one that I will be contemplating for some time. I invite you to listen to the audio here.

Share your comments on our Facebook page here.

Filed Under: General

July 12, 2016 by Terry Patten Leave a Comment

The World is in Trouble and it Needs Your Genius with Michael Meade

Michael Bio PhotoOn Sunday, July 17th, I’ll be joined by renowned storyteller, author, and scholar of mythology, anthropology, and psychology, Michael Meade, for a dialogue entitled: The World is in Trouble and it Needs Your Genius.

Michael combines hypnotic storytelling, street-savvy perceptiveness, and spellbinding interpretations of ancient myths with a deep knowledge of cross-cultural rituals. He has an unusual ability to distill and synthesize these disciplines, tapping into ancestral sources of wisdom and connecting them to the stories we are living today.

He says that when the world is churning — from our outer atmosphere and institutions to our inner tempests — wildness is unleashed. What scares us also calls to our depths, where our genius resides. Deep sea creatures of the psyche — hatreds and fears and huge forces, threaten to engulf us.

On Sunday, we’ll be exploring Michael’s idea that though the news is troubling, it may be that our troubles are of the “right kind.” They may be calling to the souls of each of us in ways we can learn to listen to and hear.

Another root meaning of apocalypse (the Greek word “apocalypsis”) is “to lift the veil.” What happens when the web of life loosens, when the veils lift? Old structures and systems may collapse or fall apart, but new energies and patterns may be given a chance to come forward.

What does that mean for each of us personally?

Michael suggests that in a rapidly changing world faced with seemingly impossible problems, it becomes important to understand that each person has something to contribute to the solutions. Each of us carries a unique way of seeing the world, a unique way of being and moving and communicating ourselves.

We don’t come into the world empty. Each of us brings a unique genius, a gift to the world. There is something seeded in each of us, waiting to be awoken, ready to lead us on the path to our true identity and our true purpose in life. Each person has meaning and value already inside them, ready to aid in healing this chaotic world.

There is no one “right” solution for the great number of problems in the world. Instead, there are many solutions waiting to be awakened in each person. Each person born participates in the genius of life.

I hope you’ll join us on Sunday. Our world is now in great need of an awakening of the genius qualities hidden in each of us, including you.

About Michael Meade

Michael Meade is a renowned storyteller, author, and scholar of mythology, anthropology, and psychology. He is the author of Fate and Destiny: The Two Agreements of The Soul, Why the World Doesn’t End, and The Genius Myth. He is the founder of Mosaic Multicultural Foundation, a nonprofit network of artist, activists, and community builders that encourages greater understanding between diverse peoples.

HOW TO PARTICIPATE:

*Sunday, July 17th 10:00am Pacific; 11:00am Mountain; 12:00pm Central; 1:00pm Eastern

*Find Your Local Time

Please Note: There will be a limited number of lines available on the live conference call, so we encourage you to listen online if possible. To make sure you can get through by phone, we encourage you to dial in early.

ACCESS INSTRUCTIONS

  • To listen live by phone, dial: (425) 440-5100 (alternate #: (415) 633-4267 )
  • Then, enter Access Code: 991220#
  • To listen live online go to:  http://iTeleseminar.com/87068109
  • To download the audio after the teleseminar is complete go to the Beyond Awakening Audio Page

Join the Dialogue: About one hour into the dialogue, we’ll open up the lines and you’ll have the opportunity to interact with us directly over the phone or via instant message. Here’s what to do:

To interact live by voice, dial into the conference line number and wait until we ask for a question from someone in your region, or

Send us your question via instant message in the teleseminar window on your computer, or

Send us your questions and comments before or during the live dialogue by posting them on our Beyond Awakening Community Facebook page

We look forward to your attendance!

Sincerely,
The Beyond Awakening Team

Filed Under: General

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Terry PattenTerry Patten is a key voice in integral evolutionary spirituality, culture, leadership, and activism. He is the founder of Bay Area Integral. With Ken Wilber and a core team, he developed and co-authored Integral Life Practice. He speaks, consults, and coaches on four continents and via the web. To learn more about Terry and his work, visit www.TerryPatten.com.

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