The Current Global Crisis and the Future of Humanity
Stanislav Grof
Stanislav Grof was invited to a weekend think-tank held on January 26 and 27 of 2005, at Tomales Bay Institute in Point Reyes Station, California. The meeting was convened by Tomales Bay fellows and writers Jonathan Rowe and Peter Barne; additional participants besides Stanislav Grof were filmmakers/storytellers/story analysts Jim Bonnet, Gene Hines, John Korty and Cornelia Durrant, Susan Strong from the Metaphor Project, and Jason Salfi from Earth Island Institute.
The question discussed was: “What is the implicit narrative/drama or myth that is framing the public arena these days and what new counter-narratives are needed?” The task of the group was to outline a vision for USA that would have the power to inspire American people and successfully compete with the "American Dream" vision, which no longer seems to work, and with the dangerous "Left Behind" (Christian rapture) vision that currently dominates the thinking of tens of millions of Americans. The following is Grof's suggestion for such a vision, based on observations from consciousness research.
The Current Global Crisis and the Future of Humanity: A Transpersonal Perspective
Stanislav Grof. M. D.
It seems to me that one of the most basic human experiences, one that is genuinely universal and unites – or, more precisely, could unite – all of humanity, is the experience of transcendence in the broadest sense of the word.
–Václav Havel, President, Czech Republic
The Current Global Crisis
Humanity as a whole possesses enormous resources in the form of financial means, technological know-how, manpower, and womanpower. Modern science has developed effective means that could solve most of the urgent problems in today's world – combat the majority of diseases, eliminate hunger and poverty, reduce the amount of industrial waste, and replace destructive fossil fuels by renewable sources of clean energy. The problems that stand in the way are not of an economical or technological nature; their deepest sources lie inside the human personality.
Because of them, unimaginable resources have been wasted in the absurdity of the arms race, power struggles, and the pursuit of “unlimited growth.” They also prevent a more appropriate distribution of wealth among individuals and nations, as well as a reorientation from purely economic and political concerns to ecological priorities that are critical for survival of life on this planet.
Diplomatic negotiations, administrative and legal measures, economic and social sanctions, military interventions, and other similar efforts have had very little success; as a matter of fact, they have often produced more problems than they solved. It is becoming increasingly clear why they had to fail. The strategies used to alleviate this crisis are rooted in the same ideology that created it in the first place. In the last analysis, the current global crisis is basically a psychospiritual crisis; it reflects the level of consciousness evolution of the human species. It is, therefore, hard to imagine that it could be resolved without a radical inner transformation of humanity on a large scale and its rise to a higher level of emotional maturity and spiritual awareness.
The task of imbuing humanity with an entirely different set of values and goals might appear too unrealistic and utopian to offer any real hope. Considering the paramount role of violence and greed in human history, the possibility of transforming modern humanity into a species of individuals capable of peaceful coexistence with their fellow men and women regardless of race, color, and religious or political conviction, let alone with other species, certainly does not seem very plausible. We are facing the necessity to instill humanity with profound ethical values, sensitivity to the needs of others, acceptance of voluntary simplicity, and a sharp awareness of ecological imperatives. At first glance, such a task appears too fantastic even for a science-fiction movie.
However, although serious and critical, the situation might not be as hopeless as it appears. After more than half a century of intensive study of holotropic states of consciousness, I have come to the conclusion that the theoretical concepts and practical approaches developed by transpersonal psychology, a discipline that is trying to integrate spirituality with the new paradigm emerging in Western science, could help alleviate the crisis we are all facing. These observations suggest that radical psychospiritual transformation of humanity is not only possible, but is already underway. The question is only whether it can be sufficiently fast and extensive to reverse the current self-destructive trend of modern humanity.
Old Paradigm Worldview, Myth, and Vision Underlying the Global Crisis
The old vision driving the Western technological civilization received powerful support and justification from science based on the Newtonian-Cartesian paradigm and monistic materialism. This worldview is based on the metaphysical assumption that the universe is a mechanical system that is strictly deterministic and in which matter is primary. Life, consciousness, and intelligence are seen as more or less accidental side-products of matter, essentially flukes that happened in an insignificant section of a giant universe after billions of years of evolution of inert and reactive inorganic materials.
In the old paradigm, the universe and nature have no guiding intelligence or creative blueprint. All the incredible complexity of forms revealed by various scientific disciplines from astronomy through biology to quantum-relativistic physics has been attributed to meaningless play of material particles. Particles of inorganic matter just happened to generate organic compounds and these just happened to organize themselves into cells. The entire Darwinian evolution from unicellular organisms to humans is seen as having been guided by accidental genetic mutations and natural selection. According to this worldview, the principal mechanism of evolution in nature is survival of the fittest and the militant strategy of the selfish gene. This seems to explain and justify pursuit of individual interest in competition with and at the expense of others from personal life to collective economic, political, and military pursuits.
This was further reinforced by the findings of depth psychology pioneered by Sigmund Freud and his followers, which purported that all our behavior is, in the last analysis, driven by basic instincts. From this perspective, feelings of love are nothing but reaction formation to our innate hostility or desexualized interest in our parents, ethical behavior is based on fear of punishment, esthetic interest is psychological defense against powerful anal impulses, and so on. Without societal restrictions, penal institutions, and superegos created by parental prohibitions and injunctions, we would indulge in indiscriminate promiscuous sexual acting out, killing, and stealing (Freud, Civilization and its Discontents). Religious beliefs and spiritual interests of any kind are essentially attributed to superstition, gullibility, primitive magical thinking, primary process, obsessive-compulsive behavior resulting from suppression of anal impulses and unresolved Oedipal or Electra complexes, or a result of serious psychopathology (Freud: Totem and Taboo, The Future of An Illusion).
Our current scientific worldview provides implicit or explicit support for our ethics and life strategy. In Western capitalist society, personal success at the expense of others has been glorified. It appears perfectly natural to create a better future for one’s own group at the expense of others (e.g., plundering non-renewable resources of fossil fuels and turning them into pollution in pursuit of our own living standard, or seeing the killing of innocent civilians in other countries as “collateral damage” in the pursuit of our own security). We are unable to see and appreciate the critical importance of cooperation, synergy, and peaceful coexistence for planetary survival. We are also brainwashed into believing that our well-being is directly proportionate to and depends critically on material means – personal income and possessions, growth of the gross national product, and so on.
There are additional specific problems related to the current political situation in the United States, a country which, because of its enormous economic and political power, represents the key player in the global crisis. The democratic ideals are cherished and defended primarily by American liberals. The leading philosophy of this group is humanism; this is typically linked with atheism, because religious beliefs of any kind appear to this group to be naïve and in conflict with reason and the scientific worldview. This perspective thus does not address the spiritual hunger and needs. History shows that these are important and powerful forces inherent in human nature, more powerful than sex, which Freud saw as the primary motivating force of the psyche (Andrew Weil: The Natural Mind). The social concerns of liberals, their philanthropic efforts, ecological awareness, and antiwar protests in their present form lack a deeper ideological basis and spiritual foundation. They can thus easily be dismissed as signs of weakness alien to a capitalist mentality.
This seems to account for the widespread appeal of the fundamentalist and neocon groups, who present their ideas cloaked in religious terminology. These groups violate in many ways the basic principles of democracy, but address the spiritual needs of their followers. These followers tend to overlook that their leaders are feeding them useless religious dogmas and dangerous delusional nonsense, which only exploit their spiritual needs and do not actually satisfy them. Even in this distorted form, however, allusions to the divine are extremely powerful and can override democratic ideals and basic human decency.
Religion that should unite (religare means “to bind together again”) instead becomes a divisive element in the world, separating not only one creed from another (“We are Christians, you are pagans”; “We are Moslems, you are Infidels”; “We are Jews, you are Goyim”), but also one faction of a religion from another (“We are Catholics, you are Protestants”; “We are Shiites, you are Sunnis”) in a way well-known from history. In recent years this split has taken also a specifically American form, radically dividing the population, including the Christian community, into two irreconcilable camps (“We are the chosen ones who will experience ‘rapture’; we will be united with Jesus, you will be left behind”).
The convictions that drive these Christian fundamentalists are based on misinterpretation of the Biblical description of the Armageddon and the Apocalypse. Their beliefs are so preposterous and fantastic that they would provide a sufficient basis for diagnosis of psychosis if they were reported by an individual psychiatric patient. Unfortunately, in the contemporary United States they dominate the thinking of tens of millions of people and have found their way into the highest echelons of the government. Dangerous trends in the global situation, such as destruction of the environment, industrial pollution, political crises, and increase of violence are actually welcomed by this group, because they are signs of the approaching Armageddon and herald the imminence of “rapture” that will unite them with Jesus (see the scary entries on the Internet concerning the “rapture index”).
It is more than unfortunate that this insanity affects the political decisions on the highest level and has at its disposal the formidable power of the American military. Occasional heavy-handed and highly inappropriate references by our Commander-in-Chief to the war in the Middle East as a “crusade” feed into the equally deluded ideology of “jihad” entertained by Moslem fundamentalists and make the global situation particularly precarious.
What we need to counteract this dangerous religious propaganda that has succeeded in deluding and blinding so many Americans is a new guiding myth: an exciting new vision, one that would be based on the best of science and also spiritually informed, one that would appeal to both rational and spiritual aspects of human nature. We need a vision that is truly democratic (not one confusing democracy with aggressive export of the values and goods of Western capitalistic society) and that provides genuine satisfaction of human spiritual needs. It seems relevant to include here a passage from the Stanford lecture of the Czech president, Václav Havel, that illustrates this point:
“I am deeply convinced that [the answer] lies in what I have already tried to suggest – in that spiritual dimension that connects all cultures and in fact all humanity. If democracy is not only to survive but to expand successfully and resolve those conflicts of cultures, then, in my opinion, it must rediscover and renew its own transcendental origins…. Planetary democracy does not yet exist, but our global civilization is already preparing a place for it: It is the very Earth we inhabit, linked with Heaven above us. Only in this setting can the mutuality and the commonality of the human race be newly created, with reverence and gratitude for that which transcends each of us, and all of us together. The authority of a world democratic order simply cannot be built on anything else but the revitalized authority of the universe” (emphasis mine).
In the following text, I will try to outline such a vision on the basis of my observations made in years of research of holotropic states of consciousness. It is not a construct or result of speculation, but a worldview and life strategy that emerges spontaneously in individuals who, in the process of freeing themselves from the imprints imposed on them by the trauma of their birth and their early life, have had profound transpersonal experiences. Deep experiential work of this kind generates what we can call “spiritual intelligence.”
It is not difficult to understand that an important prerequisite for successful existence is general intelligence – the ability to learn and recall, think and reason, and adequately respond to our material environment. More recent research has emphasized the importance of “emotional intelligence,” the capacity to adequately respond to our human environment and skillfully handle our interpersonal relationships (Goleman 1996). Observations from the study of holotropic states confirm the basic tenet of perennial philosophy that the quality of our life ultimately depends on what can be called “spiritual intelligence.” Spiritual intelligence is the capacity to conduct our life in such a way that it reflects deep philosophical and metaphysical understanding of reality and of ourselves. Buddhist scriptures refer to this kind of spiritual wisdom as “prajñ para mit.” Unlike the dogmas of organized churches, spiritual intelligence acquired in the process of experiential self-exploration has the power to override the scientistic worldview of materialistic science. At the same time, it is equally effective as a remedy that can counteract the useless dogmas of organized religions.
Findings of Modern Consciousness Research and Transpersonal Psychology
Observations from psychedelic therapy, holotropic breathwork, and the work with individuals undergoing spiritual crises have shown that the human propensity to violence and greed has much deeper roots than current biological theories (naked ape, selfish gene, triune brain) and psychological theories (psychoanalysis, ego psychology, and related schools) assume. Deep motivating forces underlying these dangerous traits of human nature have their origin on the perinatal and transpersonal levels of the psyche, domains that mainstream psychology does not recognize (Grof 2000). The finding that the roots of human violence and insatiable greed reach far deeper than academic psychiatry ever suspected and that their reservoirs in the psyche are truly enormous could in and of itself be very discouraging. However, it is balanced by the exciting discovery of new therapeutic mechanisms and transformative potentials that become available in holotropic states on the perinatal and transpersonal levels of the psyche.
I have seen over the years profound emotional and psychosomatic healing, as well as radical personality transformation, in many people who were involved in serious and systematic experiential self-exploration and inner quest. Some of them were meditators and had regular spiritual practice, others had supervised psychedelic sessions or participated in various forms of experiential psychotherapy and self-exploration or shamanic rituals. I have also witnessed profound positive changes in many people who received adequate support during spontaneous episodes of spontaneous psychospiritual crises (“spiritual emergencies”).
As the content of the perinatal level of the unconscious emerged into consciousness and was integrated, these individuals underwent radical personality changes. They experienced considerable decrease of aggression and became more peaceful, comfortable with themselves, and tolerant of others. The experience of psychospiritual death and rebirth and conscious connection with positive postnatal or prenatal memories reduced their irrational drives and ambitions. It caused a shift of focus from the past and future to the present moment and enhanced their élan vital and joi de vivre – the ability to enjoy and draw satisfaction from simple circumstances of life, such as everyday activities, food, love-making, nature, and music. Another important result of this process was an emergence of spirituality of a universal and mystical nature that, unlike the dogmas of mainstream religions, was very authentic and convincing because it was based on deep personal experience.
The process of spiritual opening and transformation typically deepened further as a result of transpersonal experiences, such as identification with other people, entire human groups, animals, plants, and even inorganic materials and processes in nature. Other experiences provided conscious access to events occurring in other countries, cultures, and historical periods, and even to the mythological realms and archetypal beings of the collective unconscious. Experiences of cosmic unity and one's own divinity resulted in increasing identification with all of creation and brought the sense of wonder, love, compassion, and inner peace.
What had begun as psychological probing of the unconscious psyche conducted for therapeutic purposes automatically became a philosophical quest for the meaning of life and a journey of spiritual discovery. People who connected to the transpersonal domain of their psyche tended to develop a new appreciation for existence and reverence for all life. One of the most striking consequences of various forms of transpersonal experiences was spontaneous emergence and development of deep humanitarian and ecological concerns and need to get involved in service for some common purpose. This was based on an almost cellular awareness that the boundaries in the universe are arbitrary and that each of us is identical with the entire web of existence.
It was suddenly clear that we cannot do anything to nature without simultaneously doing it to ourselves. Differences among people appeared to be interesting and enriching rather than threatening, whether they were related to sex, race, color, language, political conviction, or religious belief. Following this transformation, these people (like many American astronauts who have seen the earth from outer space [see Mickey Lemle’s documentary The Other Side of the Moon]) developed a deep sense of being planetary citizens rather than citizens of a particular country or members of a particular racial, social, ideological, political, or religious group. It is obvious that a transformation of this kind would increase our chances for survival if it could occur on a sufficiently large scale.
A New Vision of Reality and a New Myth to Live By
The image of the universe at large underlying the new vision is based on philosophical implications of quantum-relativistic physics and the anthropic principle. It acknowledges consciousness as a fundamental aspect of existence, equal or possibly supraordinated to matter, rather than its accidental product, an epiphenomenon of matter. It sees the universe as a product of superior creative intelligence and permeated with it (“anima mundi”). Instead of the Newtonian supermachine consisting of separate building blocks (elementary particles and objects) it portrays the universe as a unified field, an organic whole in which everything is meaningfully interconnected.
New biology recognizes that evolution of species was guided by creative intelligence and that synergy and cooperation between species was at least as important a guiding principle as Darwin’s “survival of the fittest.” The biosphere and its inhabitants cannot be understood when we take into consideration only materials that constitute them without explaining where order, forms, meaningful relations, and esthetic aspects of creation come from. Concepts similar to Sheldrake’s morphic resonance and morphogenetic fields are critical for understanding the function of DNA and the genetic code, as well as the relationship between consciousness, memory, and the brain (see Sheldrake’s New Science of Life). Holographic thinking pioneered by David Bohm and Karl Pribram threw new light on the relationship between the part and the whole (see Bohm’s Wholeness and the Implicate Order and Pribram’s Languages of the Brain). Ervin Laszlo has provided a brilliant model of the interconnected universe in his concept of the “psi-field” or akashic field (see Laszlo’s books The Creative Cosmos, The Connectivity Hypothesis, and Science and the Akashic Field).
Modern consciousness research and transpersonal psychology have shown the painful limitations and misconceptions of Freudian psychoanalysis in understanding the human psyche in health and disease. It suggests urgent need of radical revision of the most fundamental assumptions of mainstream psychology and psychiatry in the following areas:
- The Nature of the Human Psyche, and
- The Dimensions of Consciousness.
Traditional academic psychiatry and psychology use a model that is limited to biology, postnatal biography, and the Freudian individual unconscious. To account for all the phenomena occurring in holotropic states, we must drastically revise our understanding of the dimensions of the human psyche. Besides the postnatal biographical level, the new expanded cartography includes two additional domains: perinatal (related to the trauma of birth) and transpersonal (comprising ancestral, racial, collective, and phylogenetic memories, karmic experiences, and archetypal dynamics).
The Nature and Architecture
of Emotional and Psychosomatic Disorders
To explain various disorders that do not have an organic basis (“psychogenic psychopathology”), traditional psychiatry uses a model that is limited to postnatal biographical traumas in infancy, childhood, and later life. The new understanding suggests that the roots of such disorders reach much deeper to include significant contributions from the perinatal level (trauma of birth) and from the transpersonal domains (as specified above).
Effective Therapeutic Mechanisms
Traditional psychotherapy knows only therapeutic mechanisms operating on the level of the biographical material, such as remembering of forgotten events; lifting of repression; reconstruction of the past from free associations, dreams, and neurotic symptoms; reliving of traumatic memories; and analysis of transference. Holotropic research reveals many other important mechanisms of healing and personality transformation that become available when our consciousness reaches the perinatal and transpersonal levels.
Strategy of Psychotherapy and Self-Exploration
The goal in traditional psychotherapies is to reach an intellectual understanding of how the psyche functions, why symptoms develop, and what they mean. This understanding then becomes the basis for developing a technique that therapists can use to treat their patients. A serious problem with this strategy is the striking lack of agreement among psychologists and psychiatrists concerning the most fundamental theoretical issues and the resulting astonishing number of competing schools of psychotherapy. The work with holotropic states shows us a surprising radical alternative – mobilization of deep inner intelligence of the clients that guides the process of healing and transformation.
The Role of Spirituality in Human Life
Western materialistic science has no place for any form of spirituality and, in fact, considers it incompatible with the scientific worldview. It sees any form of spirituality as reflecting lack of education, superstition, primitive magical thinking, or serious psychopathology. Modern consciousness research seriously challenges this misconception and shows that spirituality is a natural and legitimate dimension of the human psyche and of the universal scheme of things. However, in this context, it is important to emphasize that this statement applies to genuine spirituality based on direct personal experience and not to ideologies and dogmas of organized religions.
The Nature of Reality: Psyche, Cosmos, and Consciousness
The necessary revisions discussed up to this point were related to the theory and practice of psychiatry, psychology, and psychotherapy. However, the work with holotropic states brings challenges of a much more fundamental nature. Many of the experiences and observations that occur during this work are so extraordinary that they cannot be understood in the context of the monistic materialistic approach to reality. Their conceptual impact is so far-reaching that it undermines the most basic metaphysical assumptions of Western science, particularly those regarding the nature of consciousness and its relationship to matter.
The new worldview and basic life strategy that emerge spontaneously in the process of deep exploration are the following:
1. On the individual scale: Our deepest needs are of a spiritual nature; material means cannot, in and of themselves, bring us fulfillment and happiness once we have reached satisfaction of basic biological needs (food, security, shelter, sex). In the course of biographically oriented psychotherapy, many people discover that their life has been inauthentic in certain specific sectors of interpersonal relations. For example, problems with parental authority can lead to specific patterns of difficulties with authority figures, repeated dysfunctional patterns in sexual relationships can be traced to parents as models for sexual behavior, sibling issues can color and distort future peer relationships, and so on.
When the process of experiential self-exploration reaches the perinatal level, we typically discover that our life up to that point has been largely inauthentic in its totality, not just in certain partial segments. We find out to our surprise and astonishment that our entire life strategy has been misdirected and therefore incapable of providing genuine satisfaction. The reason for this is the fact that it was primarily motivated by the fear of death and by unconscious forces associated with biological birth, which have not been adequately processed and integrated. In other words, during biological birth, we completed the process anatomically, but not emotionally.
When our field of consciousness is strongly influenced by the underlying memory of the struggle in the birth canal, it leads to a feeling of discomfort and dissatisfaction with the present situation. This discontent can focus on a large spectrum of issues: unsatisfactory physical appearance, inadequate resources and material possessions, low social position and influence, insufficient amount of power and fame, and many others. Like the child stuck in the birth canal, we feel a strong need to get to a better situation that lies somewhere in the future.
Whatever is the reality of the present circumstances, we do not find them satisfactory. Our fantasy keeps creating images of future situations that appear more fulfilling than the present one. It seems that, until we reach these imagined goals, life will be only preparation for a better future, not yet “the real thing.” This results in a life pattern that my clients have described as a “treadmill” type of existence (illustrated by the image of a hamster running inside a rotating wheel) or a “rat-race” way of life. The existentialists talk about “auto-projecting” into the future – always imagining oneself in some more satisfying situation in the future and attempting to create it. This strategy is a basic fallacy of human life. It is essentially a loser strategy, since it does not deliver the satisfaction that is expected from it. From this perspective, it is irrelevant whether or not it brings fruit in the material world. In Joseph Campbell’s words, it means “getting to the top of the ladder and finding out that it stands against the wrong wall.”
When the goal is not reached, the continuing dissatisfaction is attributed to the fact that we have failed to reach the corrective measures. When we succeed in reaching the goal of our aspirations, it typically does not have much influence on our basic life feelings. The continuing dissatisfaction is then blamed either on the fact that the choice of the goal was not correct or that it was not ambitious enough. The result is either substitution of the old goal with a different one or amplification of the same type of ambitions.
In any case, the failure is usually not correctly diagnosed as being an inevitable result of a fundamentally wrong life strategy, which is in principle incapable of providing satisfaction. This fallacious pattern applied on a large scale is responsible for reckless irrational pursuits of various grandiose goals that result in much suffering and many problems in the world. It can be played out on any level of importance and affluence, since it never brings true satisfaction. The only strategy that can significantly reduce this irrational drive is full conscious reliving and integration of the trauma of birth in systematic inner self-exploration and connecting to the transpersonal level of the psyche.
Modern consciousness research and experiential psychotherapy have discovered that the deepest source of our dissatisfaction and striving for perfection lies even beyond the perinatal domain. This insatiable craving that drives human life is ultimately transpersonal in nature. In Dante Alighieri's words, "The desire for perfection is that desire which always makes every pleasure appear incomplete, for there is no joy or pleasure so great in this life that it can quench the thirst in our soul" (Dante 1990).
In the most general sense, the deepest transpersonal roots of insatiable greed can described in terms of Ken Wilber's concept of the Atman Project (Wilber 1980). Our true nature is divine – God, Cosmic Christ, Allah, Buddha, Brahman, the Tao, the Great Spirit – and although the process of creation separates and alienates us from our deep source, the awareness of this fact is never completely lost. The deepest motivating force in the psyche on all the levels of consciousness evolution is to return to the experience of our own divinity. However, the constraining conditions of the consecutive stages of development prevent an experience of full liberation in and as God.
Real transcendence requires death of the separate self, dying to the exclusive subject. Because of the fear of annihilation and because of grasping onto the ego, the individual has to settle for Atman substitutes or surrogates, which are specific for each particular stage. For the fetus and the newborn, this means the satisfaction experienced in the good womb or on the good breast. For an infant, this is satisfaction of age-specific physiological needs. For the adult the range of possible Atman projects is large; it includes, besides food and sex, also money, fame, power, appearance, knowledge, and many others.
Because of our deep sense that our true identity is the totality of cosmic creation and the creative principle itself, substitutes of any degree and scope – the Atman Projects – will always remain unsatisfactory. Only the experience of one's divinity in a holotropic state of consciousness can ever fulfill our deepest needs. Thus the ultimate solution for the insatiable greed is in the inner world, not in secular pursuits of any kind and scope. The Persian mystic and poet Rumi made it very clear:
"All the hopes, desires, loves, and affections that people have for different things - fathers, mothers, friends, heavens, the earth, palaces, sciences, works, food, drink - the saint knows that these are desires for God and all those things are veils. When men leave this world and see the King without these veils, then they will know that all were veils and coverings, that the object of their desire was in reality that One Thing" (Hines 1996).
2. On the collective level: As biological organisms, we are embedded in the natural environment and we are critically dependent on clean air, clear water, and soil. Our highest priority has to be to protect these vital resources necessary for survival and health. No other concerns, such as economic profit, nationalistic ideological, religious motives should be allowed to override concerns about health and survival of the individual and the species. As Buckminster Fuller reminded us, we are “spaceship earth” with limited resources.
This requires us to orient ourselves around renewable energy resources that will always be available and do not pollute our environment (solar energy, zero point energy). It should not be allowable to produce materials that are not biodegradable without providing for recycling or their destruction. The escalating chemical pollution of water, air, and soil, accumulation of radioactive fallout, and floating plastic in the ocean covering an area of the size of Texas should be a serious warning.
Our unity with nature, as well as with all fellow humans, dictates that we should transcend racial, sexual, national, cultural, political, and religious boundaries and divides, and create a planetary civilization. Violence has to be eliminated as an acceptable means of solving conflicts. We should have a world constitution that sees protection of the environment and human life as the highest imperative. Our primary focus in foreign politics should be on synergy, cooperation, and making friends – not fighting enemies (and certainly not making enemies).
The United States, with its incredible resources of scientific know-how and economic means, should become the leading force in the development of alternative energies. This goal deserves a concerted effort of the best minds in science, comparable to the Manhattan Project. Development of alternative renewable sources of energy would also be a long-term radical solution of serious political problems. Its success would make us independent of Middle Eastern oil and thus eliminate our dangerous economic dependence on the Arab world. It would also probably be the most effective way of combating terrorism of the fundamentalist Moslems and the danger of jihad.
It should be possible to develop programs that would help the American economy, and at the same time, help underdeveloped countries, make friends, and generate respect in the world. This could involve such projects as helping to develop infrastructure in India, irrigate parts of Africa, and eliminate hunger and diseases in the world. Increasing living standards in underdeveloped countries has also been shown to be the most effective way of combating social unrest and the danger of Communism.
Lessons from Holotropic States for the Psychology of Survival
Some of the insights of people experiencing holotropic states of consciousness are directly related to the current global crisis and its relationship with consciousness evolution. They show that we have exteriorized in the modern world many of the essential themes of the perinatal process that a person involved in deep personal transformation has to face and come to terms with internally. The same elements that we would encounter in the process of psychological death and rebirth in our visionary experiences make our evening news today. This is particularly true in regard to the phenomena that characterize what I refer to as the third Basic Perinatal Matrix (BPM III) (Grof 2000).
We certainly see the enormous unleashing of the aggressive impulse in the many wars and revolutionary upheavals in the world, and in the rising criminality, terrorism, and racial riots. Equally dramatic and striking is the lifting of sexual repression and freeing of the sexual impulse in both healthy and problematic ways. Sexual experiences and behaviors are taking unprecedented forms, as manifested in the sexual freedom of adolescents, premarital sex, gay liberation, general promiscuity, common and open marriages, high divorce rate, overtly sexual books, plays and movies, sadomasochistic experimentation, and many others.
The demonic element is also becoming increasingly manifest in the modern world. Renaissance of satanic cults and witchcraft, popularity of books and horror movies with occult themes, and crimes with satanic motivations attest to that fact. Terrorism of the fundamentalist fanatics and groups is also reaching satanic proportions. The scatological dimension is evident in the progressive industrial pollution, accumulation of waste products on a global scale, and rapidly deteriorating hygienic conditions in large cities. A more abstract form of the same trend is the escalating corruption and degradation of political, military, economic, and religious institutions, including the American presidency.
Many of the people with whom we have worked saw humanity at a critical crossroads, facing either collective annihilation or an evolutionary jump in consciousness of unprecedented nature and dimension. Terence McKenna put it very succinctly: "The history of the silly monkey is over, one way or another" (McKenna 1992). We either undergo a radical transformation of our species or we might not survive. It seems that we are collectively involved in a process that parallels the psychospiritual death and rebirth, which so many people have experienced individually in holotropic states of consciousness. If we continue to act out the problematic destructive and self-destructive tendencies originating in the depth of the unconscious, we will undoubtedly destroy ourselves and seriously damage life on this planet. However, if we succeed in internalizing this process on a large enough scale, it might result in an evolutionary progress that can take us as far beyond our present condition as we now are from primates. As utopian as the possibility of such a development might seem, it might be our only real chance.
Let us now look into the future and explore how the concepts that have emerged from consciousness research, from the transpersonal field, and from the new paradigm in science could be put into action in the world. Although the past accomplishments are very impressive, the new ideas still form a disjointed mosaic rather than a complete and comprehensive new worldview. Much work has to be done in terms of accumulating more data, formulating new theories, and achieving a creative synthesis. In addition, the existing information has to reach much larger audiences before a significant impact on the world situation can be expected.
But even a radical intellectual shift to a new scientific paradigm on a large scale would not be sufficient to alleviate the global crisis and reverse the destructive course we are on. This would require a deep emotional and spiritual transformation of humanity. Using the existing evidence, it is possible to suggest certain strategies that might facilitate and support such a process. Efforts to change humanity would have to start with psychological prevention at an early age. The data from prenatal and perinatal psychology indicate that much could be achieved by changing the conditions of pregnancy, delivery, and postnatal care. This would include improving the emotional preparation of the mother during pregnancy, practicing natural childbirth, creating a psychospiritually informed birth environment, and cultivating emotionally nourishing contact between the mother and the child in the postpartum period.
Much has been written about the importance of child rearing, as well as disastrous emotional consequences of traumatic conditions in infancy and childhood. Certainly this is an area where continued education and guidance is necessary. However, to be able to apply the theoretically known principles, the parents have to reach sufficient emotional stability and maturity themselves. It is well known that emotional problems are passed like a curse from generation to generation. We are facing here a very complex problem of chicken and egg.
Humanistic and transpersonal psychologies have developed effective experiential methods of self-exploration, healing, and personality transformation. Some of these come from the therapeutic traditions, while others represent modern adaptations of ancient and native spiritual practices. There exist approaches with a very favorable ratio between professional helpers and clients and others that can be practiced in the context of self-help groups. Systematic work with them can lead to a spiritual opening, a move in a direction that is sorely needed on a collective scale for our species to survive. It is essential to spread the information about these possibilities and get enough people personally interested in pursuing them. An important part of these efforts would be creation of a network providing psychological assistance and support to individuals undergoing spontaneous psychospiritual transformation in spiritual emergencies. Currently, many of these people are misdiagnosed as suffering from psychosis, and the potentially healing and evolutionary process of transformation is arrested by tranquilizing medication (Grof and Grof 1989, 1991).
The comprehensive vision described above can be seen as a mosaic consisting of many pieces, each of which represents the results of research in a particular scientific discipline. Further refinement and development of its various parts thus requires interdisciplinary cooperation and communication of the theoretical concepts and their practical application with the help of various media. We seem to be involved in a dramatic race for time that has no precedent in the entire history of humanity. What is at stake is nothing less than the future of life on this planet. If we continue the old strategies, which in their consequences are clearly extremely self-destructive, it is unlikely that the human species will survive. However, if a sufficient number of people undergo a process of deep inner transformation, we might reach a stage and level of consciousness evolution at which we will deserve the proud name we have given to our species: homo sapiens sapiens.
* * *
Literature:
Bohm, D. 1980. Wholeness and the Implicate Order. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Dante, A. 1990. Il Convivio. (R. H. Lansing, transl.). New York: Garland.
Goleman, D. 1996. Spiritual Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ? New York: Bantam.
Buckminster Fuller, R. 1963. Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth. New York: E. P. Dutton.
Grof, S. 2000. Psychology of the Future. Albany, N.Y.: State University New York Press.
Grof, S, and Grof, C. 1989. Spiritual Emergency: When Personal Transformation Becomes a Crisis. Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher,
Grof, C, and Grof, S. 1991. The Stormy Search for the Self: A Guide to Personal Growth Through Transformational Crises. Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher.
Hines, B. 1996. God's Whisper, Creation's Thunder: Echoes of Ultimate Reality in the New Physics. Brattleboro, VT: Threshold Books.
Laszlo, E. 1993. The Creative Cosmos. Edinburgh: Floris Books.
Laszlo, E. 2003. The Connectivity Hypothesis: Foundations of an Integral Science of Quantum, Cosmos, Life, and Consciousness. Albany, NY: State University of New York (SUNY) Press.
Laszlo, E. 2004. Science and the Akashic Field: An Integral Theory of Everything. Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions.
McKenna, T. 1992. Food of the Gods: The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge. New York: Bantam Books.
Pribram, K. 1981. Non-Locality and Localization: A Review of the Place of the Holographic Hypothesis of Brain Function in Perception and Memory. Preprint for the Tenth ICUS, November.
Sheldrake, R. 1981. A New Science of Life. Los Angeles: J. P. Tarcher.
Wilber, K. 1980. The Atman Project: A Transpersonal View of Human Development. Wheaton, Illinois: Theosophical Publishing House.
For more information, visit Stanislav Grof's website at http://stanislavgrof.com/index.htm.
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Access to Divine Insight
I really enjoyed this article. I have been reading Dark Night, Early Dawn by Bache, which echoes a lot of what this article talks about.
One thing that concerns me though. It seems there is a convention of thought here that believes one can only gain spiritual or divine insight through altered states of consciousness. What is one to do if he or she does not have access to psychotropic drugs or holotropic breathwork seminars? I have tried finding holotropic breathwork sessions near where I live without success.
Are those of us who have few resources (I am a painter who lives on very little income) meant to be left out of the coming consciousness change? Is accessing divine insight really so limited as drugs or extreme breathing? Sometimes I think my art taps into something quite powerful, but now I wonder if I am getting the whole message.
One View, Many Paths
Doan, I hope that this site doesn't give the impression that there's only one way to reach spiritual insights. We're trying to present a range of perspectives. A recent RS article you might check out is Erik Davis' Diamond Solitare, in which he describes a profound mystical experience that came while he was at a Zen center doing nothing more than washing beets. For some people, in certain contexts, deliberately altering consciousness can be the key to unlocking a direct connection to the spiritual. But that path's not for everyone, and there are certainly many different ways to have a visceral experience of the divine. Art is certainly one of them.
In response to Doan
The paths to wisdom are more numerous than the stars in the sky. Drugs and breathing are just two of the tools that seem to be mentioned alot by many people, but I would say they are tools which when used consiously produce good results for many people. Whatever helps you to grow and learn is good, a yoga if you will. Hatha, Karma, Tantra, Kriya, Prana, they are all yogas, or means of expanding our conciousness. Rajah yoga is held in particularly high esteem. I imagine one could practice that anywhere, and without fear of persecution as one might face for using often illegal entheogens.
WITH REGARDS TO STANSILAV GROF He is a wise man. I just finished his latest boot called WHEN THE IMPOSSIBLE HAPPENS. It is interesting entertaining and touches on many deep truths. It helped to change my view of the universe!
Happy Trails and good luck to you whatever path you follow!
important question
Hi Doan,
I think I speak for the vast majority of people involved in this site when I say that I emphatically do not think that using vision-inducing chemicals or plants - or any particular means - to access non-ordinary consciousness is necessary in any way. However, those of us who do care about shamanic techniques and plant teachers are happy to have this forum for exploring these experiences as an aspect of consciousness.
Many people have means of attaining "super-sensory perception," as Rudolf Steiner called it, that happen without developing techniques. Steiner himself had this gift naturally as a child.
"Will the transformation."-Rilke
can't help it
I know, I am a 60's relic, nevertheless, I need to kink in here a few thoughts on this. When I was a teenager all I knew was TV, is TV a drug? I felt like I could not get on with the education system, even though it was maybe much better then, then it is now.What was a kid like me to do? It was suddenly all around me, culture did a kind of kundalini sumersault to quote a favorite poet, one day kids were drinking beer, the next suddenly seeing this new thing called LSD come on the scene.People knew nothing about breathing techniques, or maybe they had a older friend that had read a book by one of the few writers that wrote about psychedelic drugs. In any event how much have things changed since those innocent perhaps naive days? I wonder if the events of the late 60's have ever cought up with how people relate to the same kinds of issues? We talk of spiritual things as if we somehow have a way to make a path through all the controversy and disinformation that surrounds all these practices and alternatives. In my experience, it all was stumbling through the corporate landscape and looking for some kind of nirvana oasis in the middle of this maelstrom.Ha, my hope would be that there are some Indigo kids or something that are stumbling out of the wings.Because at the rate of change that the strange days have tracked us down, to quote another poet, the karma must be speeding up to that photo finish that Terence spoke to. I offer so authoritive answers, I merely am a denizen of the dystopia.And no man is
an island, but it seems that islands are an indangered
species as of a few moments ago...
well, i do do breathing, and i recomend anyone
to experience as many kinds as there is possible.
Holotropic, or tropic of cancer ala Henry Miller.
and I totaly agree with transpersonal psycology
or variations there of.
ok I am not trying to project any rainbow veiled philosophy or deviant art willy nilly into this
exchange,I only aim to keep the dialogue rolling.
and I cast my ha penny into the pot. Sa ha.
Excellent Article
Similar problem as Sensi63
While its a great article and Dr. Grof clearly knows some Freud and likely has put forth a tremendous amount of work in investigating these methods, I have to admit I was highly disappointed when i clicked on the above link for states of holotropic consciousness only to find a website advertising, only at a very high price, Dr. Grof's work and a statement that the manual is available only after giving up thousands of dollars and countless time and effort in attending seminars.
While I do not mean to call out Dr. Grov here, I simply wish to reflect that I see this as a tremendous problem facing the dissemination of transformative information in general as well as increasing general readership at realitysandwich. Understanding that advertisements are likely necessary for the website to continue, it seems at least we could avoid any links to sales pages that may be construed as advertisements embedded in articles. Someone compelled by Grov's writing here may go on to spend a needless amount of time and money just to simply follow their curiosity when the information regarding holotropic breathing and consciousness, as well as all information period, should be freely available for any who feel inclined to investigate.
In my own life, I would love to undergo Reiki instruction and take yoga classes, but the money is simply not available and for most it won't be in these coming times. I think for those out there who have the understanding of these techniques, methods, and ideas, they should be willing to pay it forward for humanity. Embracing a barter/scholarship/pay it forward type of service cannot be too difficult to place into practice while maintaining a comfortable existence wihen one has such gifts to offer others and it will also show others that it is possible and likely even necessary to remove money from all equations in these coming years.
Another relevant writing on the wall that may help to convince some of us about this necessity is Book of Revelations 13:16-18, which tells us
" [16] And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads: [17] And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. [18] Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six."
I don't know about you but if buying and selling take part of being implicated with the beastly death of revelations, I wish not to be associated with it. I wish not be associated with it enough in my daily life already as I'm sure you all do as well. We just need to start stopping. Bring the best part of the burn to your local communities. This will be the best way to ensure that the U.S. or any part of the globe will not have the support and control (money) needed to start any great war. Just try a little bit each day, maybe in Grov's case he can enlighten someone each day with a short conversation on holographic breathing.
I myself would love to be the first recipient if possible, and I also offer my services to any who might wish them freely. My studies are in Comparative Literature, English, and Philosophy with focus on writers such as D.H. Lawrence, Aldous Huxley, and recently Thomas Pynchon, and a Kantian bent in philosophy. I can be reached at Bdewey1@Binghamton.edu and although I may not be able to help you with all of your inquiries, I will certainly be willing to pay it forward freely.
All bridges can be rebuilt.
Amended
Thanks, doctordewey, for voicing this concern.
We're very honored to host Dr. Grof's important essay here at Reality Sandwich. The hyperlinking of the phrase "holotropic states of consciousness" to the description page on Dr. Grof's site was done by myself when editing this piece. I added it as a service to help readers learn background information on the concepts discussed in the article – not intended as an advertisement. I understand your concern, and I've changed the link to a more neutral source of information in this case.
Thanks for reading!
-ST Frequency
Accessing the Divine...without the ATM!
Thanks for all the great responses to my inquiry. It is because of the intelligent, well-meaning people that connect here that I really appreciate this website.
I do believe that there are other ways to access the larger consciousness, and I am pleased to learn that many others here do as well. I trained as a buddhist monk for two years and with all the daily meditation and prostrations I did, I definitely connected with a divine consciousness. The training ultimately led me to art practice, which has connected me to that larger consciousness, but in a much different way.
I think my main concern with Grof's article, and it comes up because I struggle with it daily, is in the monetary value that a lot spiritual pursuits are tied up in. It is the sticky web that we have gotten ourselves into and from which many of us are now trying to get free of.
I appreciate "doctordewey" articulating my concerns much more clearly in his response. I also very much appreciate his offering some alternatives to making the transition from one way of living to a new, very radical way. Several people highly recommended that I do some holotropic breathwork, but I was quite frustrated when I looked into attending some sessions. The sessions are both very far away from where I live and quite expensive. I know there are many others out there like me who live very modestly on very low incomes, so having a discussion about alternatives is very important.
It is particularly difficult when the majority of those around us aren't aware enough of the need to change, or, worse, just outright refuse. If currency exchange is indeed a broken system that is on its way out, it would be wonderful to see more options for those of us who are trying to make the transition.
It might just give more people access to the tools and resources that will assist them for the kind of change Grof suggests are necessary in order to save humanity.
Again much appreciation and many blessings,
DoAn
a spammer hit ya
Hi, ST Frequency -- just signed up a couple of minutes ago, though I've been checking your site out for interesting food for thought for a while now, so as to state my disgust with whoever "vadosss" is, for cramming and spamming in the comments area. Could you please delete this crap?
Otherwise, MUCH good food for thought in this article and the thoughtful responses. Some of Mr. Grof's ideas I like a great deal; but I also agree with another commenter that it isn't a "one way only" or "my way or the highway" kind of proposition when approaching the expansion of one's awareness and the nourishment and responsibility for one's own energies. (BTW, I landed here initially via the always-thought-provoking Rob Brezny.) Thanks!
change of link
Thanks ST Frequency. That thought actually occurred to me while I was posting and is one of the reasons why I tried to be sure to tone any frustrating language down.
What I would like to add though is that the problem still remains that Dr. Grov and those teachers/masters who have such incredibly powerful and transformative knowledge and yet continue to hold it as if it were reserved for a very elite club, controlled by both economics and more importantly awareness.
If every reiki instructor, yoga instructor, artist, teacher, or "aware" person started offering up their work freely, at least at first in order to show those "unaware" folks what they are in for and the benefits available to them, at the very least this information and knowledge of the need for transformation would begin to spread in the best possible way - through a physical experience of such awareness.
I know it is not as easily solvable situation but I would like to see those who are in position to do so make these changes with the economic structure of their teachings. It will likely head off some of the headaches that will soon occur due to the upcoming recession and it will provide an incredible chain of love that will help take us into this human evolution with a generous spirit.
To any of those of you reading this or spreading this information to people you know who are teachers, you are my heroes. All bridges can be rebuilt.
Killing The Buddha
Having digested several of Stan’s books as aids in the development of my own personal evolution, and having congratulated him on receiving a recent award for his dedication and his vision on this site, and after agreeing with most of what he has written above, AND having been impressed with Chris Bache and others who have analyzed and then synthesized Stan’s influence, I stand forewarned by the following quotes stated above:
“The only strategy that can significantly reduce this irrational drive is full conscious reliving and integration of the trauma of birth in systematic inner self-exploration and connecting to the transpersonal level of the psyche”.
“Only the experience of one's divinity in a holotropic state of consciousness can ever fulfill our deepest needs”.
While I appreciate that someone who is most convinced of their belief will make the most convincing demonstration, I recognize the potential danger of surrendering to their exclusive view.
Ken Wilber, who has transcended Transpersonal Psychology, stated in his worthwhile read: Integral Psychology: “…the therapies at one level will acknowledge and often use the therapies from lower levels, but they are reluctant to recognize any level higher than their own”.
On occasion, a brilliant mind may get stuck for some reason, and be unable to transcend itself. The life and science of Albert Einstein comes clearly to mind. We may puzzle at the cause: Was he so constrained by his Jewish upbringing that he could not imagine a god who played dice? Even the phrase “Spooky actions at a distance” suggests his prejudice of unexplained phenomena as superstitious in origin. Einstein became stuck! …Believe it or not!
There is an old Zen admonishment: When you meet the Buddha, kill the Buddha. It’s important to move beyond the complacency and stagnation of belief, even the beliefs gained after a lifetime of searching, because while they reveal once-hidden realities, they hide many others.
Picture the most brilliant guides in your life as Buddha-like teachers. Thank them in your prayers, and move on…
Also, while Daniel’s disclaimer welcomes everyone to this site, it acknowledges the underlying benefit of this community to those who partake. So keep in mind that the Buddha’s you meet here will have a bias toward consciousness-raising substances.
Thanks to all on this site for being some of my new companions on this fantastic voyage!!!
"If only I could remember the future"
Can you Grof it?
"...the potential danger of surrendering to their exclusive view."
Don, I felt similarly when I read the article. I also love what Grof has to say but I feel there is a certain "this way or the highway" language to the piece. Some of it is semantics. He does reference other schools of thoughts and knowledge systems, recognizing the value that they bring to the table. I had to re-read it to recall that in the latter half, he is "outlining a vision." Perhaps that is why he adopts the language of an advocate rather than a scientist, using phrases such as "we need", "we should", "the only way" etc.
On one hand I like the assertiveness of it. There's a clarity and assurance that feels even-handed, balanced and yet deeply confident, grounded. The imagined speaker is to me an empiricist commingled with a person of great concern for the world and a mind that isn't contained by prevailing morays and dogmas.
On the other, there's a level on which this mission statement picks up the flavor of a manifesto. Whenever I get the whiff of such things it always makes me wonder if this isn't just a suggestion for replacing one dogma with another.
And yet, this is the challenge of this melding of science and spirituality, of materialism with wisdom that Grof seems to have embraced. The fundamental underpinning of the scientific method is to eternally undergo revision and advancement as sacred cows are slaughtered and re-shaped. Spirituality has a tendency, in the hands of imperfect humans, to entrench and "absolut-ify," to become institionalized, to dictate rather than explore. It seems to me that we need the same superstructure in our approach to our spiritual knowledge, an implicit backbone of understanding that our "spiritual method" will eternally be in a process of being broken and re-formed.
Eloquent and Timely
I just started reading "Beyond the Brain" so this article couldn't be better timed for me personally. This is an excellent summary of his work and practices and I'm grateful for its re-publishing here.
I also found great value in the citation of source material. While I know it isn't always practical and/or possible to do so here at Reality Sandwich, I would encourage it as a trend. The list of sourced books like the one that appears below his essay helps me connect the dots in my own thinking and also gives me something concrete to follow up with, if I'm so inclined.
the reality of nyc in relation to grof
i feel the need to be a "planetary citizen" as grof spoke about, instead of living in the insular, nyc bubble, whereby i just focus "on my own work"--daniel pinchbeck struck a chord when he challenged how artists need to start thinking beyond the relm of "self-expression", which was kind of painful to hear initially (to the ego), but now is making much more sense.
perhaps, not just artists, but human beings in general need to tap into what is beyond them "selves" and instead work on unifying both the individual and collective "Self". the fact is, there really isn't time to waste, and we need to research ways right now, as grof spoke about--gathering more data, researching more theories. but beyond the intellect, we need to find ways to make a "psychospirtual" process accessible to everybody, without the same old money exchange getting in the way.
in reference to taking action (as some of you have questioned in your comments), perhaps that is exactly what grof is proposing, that is, searching for modes of action to start unifying the world in harmony with our planet. so i say, let's attend to the important work before it's too late, so there may come a time soon, as daniel also alluded to, where we may have to put our personal interests and work on hold for a while in order to attend to a greater, collective work. however, i also feel that that will only be possible once we've somehow achieved enough clarity on what that work is exactly, on a "nuts and bolts" level.
how? is a question that remains a work in progress...many modes have already been proposed by rs's gifted writers. for example, asking yourself, "how can i honestly contribute to elevating consciousness in my own life?" "how can i find ways to take personal responsibility in order to create a wave towards healing the planet?" "can inner work, and meditation be a mode of action?" can "time is art" replace "time is money?" (jose argellues), etc.
i have a feeling if we keep asking ourselves these types of questions, along with many others, the universe will respond, it already is actually.
"ask and you shall recieve"
.
um
I think you said, what I was attempting to say, in my round about way, which brings me to another round about way;I use to be very psychic, well I still am but it has become more of a wrestle with the angel type like I have to use it or lose it, breathing deep now I was directed today to some communication about something like scientology, that mystery school that has attracted so many celebrities, and thus strange press.
I don't know what to make of this except that if we compare say, Transpersonal psycology/holotropic breathwork, with something that perports to do something like getting to the bottom of the birth trauma via E-meter and whatever behind lavish closed doors methods of keeping people involved like Tom Cruise, Beck,Chick Corea,come to mind.
My take, is that the idea of dealing with early trauma, and or birth trauma, which is another way of saying that, it all gets screwed up as we pop out, and then it's one traumatic reinforcement after another, so the idea being that we can get to the core experience that we can begin to release the initial reason that whatever trauma held its particular hold on our mental development.Breathing deeper now....
oops, the last by Ora post was removed, well anyway
Ora Ora
Re: um
Apologies cjmoore and others. In reading my post, I realized I basically just summed up what other commenters had already stated in their earlier posts. Additionally, I think the tone of my own response to Grof's article was not the highest energy I could be sending out. It is ironic that I would use such a tone to comment about Grof's tone in the article.
Apologies as I continue on the ever unfolding journey of life.
Namaste,
Ora
i hear you
after responding to other peoples posts for so many years now, and in various forums and chats, i am astonished at the strange journey, i have seen myself pass through, the types of responses that people make the, um, layers of social conditioning that just pour off of people's way of responding in this medium.When i first come on the internet it was like i jumped into a social mosh pit, but being a kind of street wise poet that had been living with a clunky thrift store typewriter, the internet became a new way to persue my art, however clunky i was.I had to teach myself enough computer skills not to crash my brand new iMac, but my main urge was to learn more about how to do my art, to enter into this new exciting world of possibility,.I was not interested in computer games, i wanted to find the edgy people and interact, and write.
My style is through my adherence to various poets, philosophers, and spiritual types, people that explore different techniques, which brings me to this thread and Grof's post. Which, i find a lot to admire, and yes
i tend to respond with my experience and style, it seemes to me that people don't really listen that well for one thing, and people that are younger then me tend or in other site configurations, i had to fend off constant attacks, simply because i come off as controversial, hey i know i am a bit out there, and a little rough around the edges, my computer skills have a lot to be desired, am prolly slightly in need of holotropic work, ha ha.
But one thing, for instance i recently left a site, that was mainly a literary site, where i simply wrote gobs of poetry for years, and the owner of the site was totaly oblivious to me. He had his own agenda.But when i posted to a thread, where he criticizes other critics that have a reputation to uphold, bla bla, and the site owner perfunctorily removed my response, and when i sorta called him on it, he said my post did not make any sense, well , maybe i did not play by his rules.So he insulted my intelligence because i was not important enough to his agenda.But it did not matter that i had written hundreds of poems on his site.And so it goes, i could give many examples of this type, I was on another site that had a lot of crazed people, and i also posted gobs of writing and poetry, and i had a lot of people that i communicated with, but the site owner seemed more interested in people's computer skills, and an occasional interaction that used all his skills, fine, but i pointed out that my skill was in writing and poetry.He kicked me off there for defending myself.
So, i am useing this an an illustration, i am not much good at conforming, to rigid ways of responding, and i certainly do not go out of my way to slight people, but i notice that people really do get uptight in this medium.So anyway what does this have to to do with Grof's article? Well I think it goes right to the root of the reason he does his art.His work.
And i am willing to explore, just because i don't write like i was trained in a university lit class, or writing class, or english class.I was trained in the university library on my own, and out there on the street.And I have been in two different communities, that practiced different techniques, and i had to leave them, because i did not find the politics condusive to the state of consciousness, or states that seemed to be what they were supposed to be about.
ok, nuff said, have a nice day, peace out.
Energy work to help birth us into the next phase
There is certainly a problem when healing work, especially energy work -- which ought to be sourced in love and directed through the heart – becomes a luxury product affordable only to the upper middle class and above. And that’s where we’re at. Just today I was reading in an airline mag about a spa in Bermuda that has a “tucked-away crystal mist chamber” – some elite, and no doubt expensive, service that commodifies what is essentially a conscious spiritual alliance with another order of life (in this case, the stone people).
And the model we have adopted -- selling a chargeable unit of time, the “session” – counters the formless, intuitive nature of really good energy work. As a practitioner, this is frustrating. Jack might need 45 minutes of work just in one spot, 3 days in a row. Jill might need a session that lasts half a day. And you won’t know this until you have them on the table with the clock ticking.
Don't get me wrong. I appreciate paying customers because it helps me defray the cost of a convenient, private, allergen-free practice space for my reflexology, Reiki, and crystal work. But at the very least this ought to be salaried work, with the salary provided by a community, group, or collective -- like a church pays a minister.
Another problem is that people get these techniques and then just essentially masturbate with them -- toys to play with, not tools to effect change. But I believe the Powers-That-Be , or the "Great Whatever," intend for these healing & spiritual techniques (which have spread so rapidly) to be used to help humanity birth ourselves into the next phase of being.
So here's an offer, and if this violates any rules of this board I apologize. I am a qualified Usui Reiki Master Teacher in two lineages. I normally don't do distance training but I will, free of charge, for five people who want to try it and who are willing to provide evidence that they are using it to help other people who need it (after a period of becoming comfortable with the energy and the techniques and working on themselves).
Contact me offlist at i_amm@yahoo.com and I will provide credentials and such, and we'll get the discussion rolling.
hmm...
I can't comment on the advantages of Grof's proprietary technique over the naturally occurring psychedelics, as i haven't really tried the former... but somehow i reckon it just doesn't cut it.
Some comments on the ideas in the text:
Unfortunately , due to variations in physiology and metabolism , and climatic/agricultural realities, only a fraction of human beings can live healthily and sustainably as vegetarians. Further , natural resources are finite, and human populations are always increasing -especially in a prosperous, peaceful and advanced , civilised scenario- so some sort of competition is inevitable.
For these reasons , the vision of a peaceful co-existence of all species on the planet is a fantasy.
Further, i have to take issue with this statement:
The demonic element is also becoming increasingly manifest in the modern world. Renaissance of satanic cults and witchcraft
I say bring on the Satan! Witchcraft has been "traditionally" reviled by doctors as that sort of primitive thing performed by deranged witches in graveyards...
The idea that our problems will be solved if we heal ourselves assumes that our problems originate in our individual and collective dysfunctionality, which n turn originates in birth trauma and our low level of consciousness.
But this ignores the very possible scenario that this lack of awareness and generalised woundedness is actually the result of deliberate activity by certain people and groups of people operating throughout historical time , at the expense of the rest of us.
This is actually a more plausible scenario than to say that human nature is basically flawed (birth trauma) and we have to fix it. If human beings were rendered dysfunctional by their very birth, what kind of evolutionary intelligence is this?
(unless i have misunderstood and Grof is saying that birth trauma is only a result of modern birthing techniques?)
Development of alternative renewable sources of energy would also be a long-term radical solution of serious political problems. Its success would make us independent of Middle Eastern oil and thus eliminate our dangerous economic dependence on the Arab world. It would also probably be the most effective way of combating terrorism of the fundamentalist Moslems and the danger of jihad.
It should be possible to develop programs that would help the American economy, and at the same time, help underdeveloped countries, make friends, and generate respect in the world. This could involve such projects as helping to develop infrastructure in India, irrigate parts of Africa, and eliminate hunger and diseases in the world. Increasing living standards in underdeveloped countries has also been shown to be the most effective way of combating social unrest and the danger of Communism.All this strikes me as really naive and uninformed...."combating terrorism", "the danger of jihad", "the danger of communism". Who created these dangers?
"Alternative renewable resources" have been the buzzwords for some time now, and many do-gooders unthinkingly parrot them ... The reality is, sad to say, that current levels of energy consumption will never be met even by all the alternative sources combined.... For example, solar panels require silver and other raw materials and factories to make them. What are the factories going to run on? where is all the silver going to come from, and what do people know about silver mining?
Many people who attempt to provide "solutions" have not really thought things through.... but often have their own needs to satisfy. . .
so...
www.organelle.org
www.truetao.org