The more beautiful world my heart knows is possible is a world
with a lot more pleasure: a lot more touch, a lot more lovemaking, a lot more
hugging, a lot more deep gazing into each other’s eyes, a lot more fresh-ground
tortillas and just-harvested tomatoes still warm from the sun, a lot more
singing, a lot more dancing, a lot more timelessness, a lot more beauty in the
built environment, a lot more pristine views, a lot more water fresh from the
spring. Have you ever tasted real water, springing from the earth after a
twenty-year journey through the mountain? None of these pleasures is very far
away. None requires any new inventions, nor the subservience of the many to the
few. Yet our society is destitute of them all. Our wealth, so-called, is a veil
for our poverty, a substitute for what is missing. Because it cannot meet most
of our true needs, it is an addictive substitute. No amount can ever be enough.
Many of us already see through the superficial substitute pleasures we are
offered. They are boring to us, or even revolting. We needn’t sacrifice
pleasure to reject them. We need only sacrifice the habit, deeply ingrained, of
choosing a lesser pleasure over a greater. Where does this habit come from? It
is an essential strand of the world of separation, because most of the tasks
that we must do to keep the world-devouring machine operating do not feel very
good at all. To keep doing them, we must be trained to deny pleasure.
We are not just a skin-encapsulated ego, a soul encased in
flesh. We are each other and we are the world.
No one's ever completely broken. It's
just a matter of how much has to fall apart before the ember of life is exposed
to air.
We sense that ‘normal’ isn’t coming back, that we are being
born into a new normal: a new kind of society, a new relationship to the earth,
a new experience of being human.
Ultimately, work on self is inseparable
from work in the world. Each mirrors the other; each is a vehicle for the
other. When we change ourselves, our values and actions change as well. When we
do work in the world, internal issues arise that we must face or be rendered
ineffective.
The things we think we want are often substitutes for what we
really want, and the pleasures we seek are less than the joy that they distract
us from.
These include the need to express one’s gifts and do
meaningful work, the need to love and be loved, the need to be truly seen and
heard, and to see and hear other people, the need for connection to nature, the
need to play, explore, and have adventures, the need for emotional intimacy,
the need to serve something larger than oneself, and the need sometimes to do absolutely
nothing and just be.
Addiction, self-sabotage, procrastination, laziness, rage,
chronic fatigue, and depression are all ways that we withhold our full
participation in the program of life we are offered. When the conscious mind
cannot find a reason to say no, the unconscious says no in its own way.
We are all here to contribute our gifts toward something
greater than ourselves, and will never be content unless we are.
The state of interbeing is a vulnerable state. It is the
vulnerability of the naive altruist, of the trusting lover, of the unguarded
sharer. To enter it, one must leave behind the seeming shelter of a
control-based life, protected by walls of cynicism, judgment, and blame.
When both sides of a controversy revel in the defeat and
humiliation of the other side, in fact they are on the same side: the side of
war.
If we want to reach them, our articulation of the problem has
to avoid ascribing personal evil to them, while also being uncompromising in
describing the dynamics of the problem. I cannot offer a formula for how to do
this. The right words and strategies arise naturally from compassion: from the
understanding that the bankers or whoever do as I would do, were I in their
shoes. In other words, compassionate—and effective—words arise from a deeply
felt realization of our common humanity. And this is possible only to the
extent to which we have applied the same to ourselves. Truly, to be an
effective activist requires an equivalent inner activism.What is power, after all? Every one of the power elite’s overwhelming advantages—military forces, surveillance systems, crowd control technology, control over the media, and nearly all the money in the world—depends on having people obeying orders and executing an assigned role. This obedience is a matter of shared ideologies, institutional culture, and the legitimacy of the systems in which we play roles. Legitimacy is a matter of collective perception, and we have the power to change people’s perceptions.
It is the cry of the separate self, ‘What about me?’ As long as we keep acting from that place, it doesn’t matter who wins the war against (what they see as) evil. The world will not deviate from its death-spiral.
The financial crisis we are facing today arises from the fact
that there is almost no more social, cultural, natural, and spiritual capital
left to convert into money.
Contemporaneous with the financial
crisis we have an ecological crisis and a health crisis. They are intimately
interlinked. We cannot convert much more of the earth into money, or much more
of our health into money, before the basis of life itself is threatened.
Why are we so desperate to escape the material world? Is it
really so bleak? Or could it be, rather, that we have made it bleak: obscured
its vibrant mystery with our ideological blinders, severed its infinite
connectedness with our categories, suppressed its spontaneous order with our
pavement, reduced its infinite variety with our commodities, shattered its
eternity with our time-keeping, and denied its abundance with our money
system?
You can’t just do whatever you feel like.” “You can’t just do
anything you want.” “You have to learn self-restraint.” “You’re only interested
in gratifying your desires.” “You don’t care about anything but your own
pleasure.” Can you hear the judgmentality in these admonitions? Can you see how
they reproduce the mentality of domination that runs our civilization? Goodness
comes through conquest. Health comes through conquering bacteria. Agriculture is
improved by eliminating pests. Society is made safe by winning the war on
crime. On my walk today, students accosted me, asking if I wanted to join the
“fight” against pediatric cancer. There are so many fights, crusades,
campaigns, so many calls to overcome the enemy by force. No wonder we apply the
same strategy to ourselves. Thus it is that the inner devastation of the
Western psyche matches exactly the outer devastation it has wreaked upon the
planet. Wouldn’t you like to be part of a different kind of revolution?
We need to change our habits of thought, belief, and doing as
well as change our systems. Each level reinforces the other: Our habits and
beliefs form the psychic substructure of our system, which in turn induces in
us the corresponding beliefs and habits.
I am saying that there is a time to do, and a time not to do,
and that when we are slave to the habit of doing we are unable to distinguish
between them.
The rhythm of the phases of action and stillness has an
intelligence of its own. If we tune in, we can hear that rhythm, and the organ
of perception is the desire, the nudge of excitement or the feeling of flow, of
rightness, of alignment. It is a feeling of being alive. To listen to that
feeling and to trust it is a profound revolution indeed.
A Chinese saying describes it well: “As far away as the
horizon, and right in front of your face.” You can run toward it forever, run
faster and faster, and never get any closer. Only when you stop do you realize
you are already there. That is exactly our collective situation right now. All
of the solutions to the global crisis are sitting right in front of us, but
they are invisible to our collective seeing, existing, as it were, in a
different universe. When we are trapped in a story, we can only do the things
that that story can recognize. Often we are aware of being trapped (the old
story is ending) but don’t have access to any alternative (we haven’t yet
inhabited a new story).
I think most kids have a sense that it's
not supposed to be this way. You're not supposed to hate Monday, or be happy
when you don't have to go to school. School should be something that you love.
Life should be something that you love.
It is quite normal to fear what one most desires. We desire
to transcend the Story of the World that has come to enslave us, that indeed is
killing the planet. We fear what the end of that story will bring: the demise
of much that is familiar. Fear it or not, it is happening already.
When we must pay the true price for the depletion of nature’s
gifts, materials will become more precious to us, and economic logic will
reinforce, and not contradict, our heart’s desire to treat the world with
reverence and, when we receive nature’s gifts, to use them well.
The present convergence of crises––in money, energy,
education, health, water, soil, climate, politics, the environment, and
more––is a birth crisis, expelling us from the old world into a new.
The things we need most are the things we have become most
afraid of, such as adventure, intimacy, and authentic communication. We avert
our eyes and stick to comfortable topics. We hold it as a virtue to be private,
to be discreet, so that no one sees our dirty laundry. We are uncomfortable
with intimacy and connection, which are among the greatest of our unmet needs
today. To be truly seen and heard, to be truly known, is a deep human need. Our
hunger for it is so omnipresent, so much apart of our life experience, that we
no more know what it is missing than a fish knows it is wet. We need more
intimacy than nearly anyone considers normal. Always hungry for it, we seek
solace and sustenance in the closest available substitutes: television,
shopping, pornography, conspicuous consumption — anything to ease the hurt, to
feel connected, or to project an image by which we might be seen or known, or
at least see and know ourselves.
Even the most thorough change happens once choice at a
time.
Before they are able to enter a new story, most people—and
probably most societies as well—must first navigate the passage out of the old.
In between the old and the new there is an empty space. It is a time when the
lessons and learnings of the old story are integrated. Only when that work has
been done is the old story really complete. Then, there is nothing, the
pregnant emptiness from which all being arises. Returning to essence, we regain
the ability to act from essence. Returning to the space between stories, we can
choose from freedom and not from habit.
The holistic acupuncturist and the sea turtle rescuer may not
be able to explain the feeling, 'We are serving the same thing,' but they are.
Both are in service to an emerging story of the People that is the defining
mythology of a new kind of civilization.
One of the ways that your project, your personal healing, or
your social invention can change the world is through story. But even if no one
ever learns of it, even if it is invisible to every human on Earth, it will
have no less of an effect.
True discipline is really just self-remembering; no forcing
or fighting is necessary.
Each experience of love nudges us toward the Story of
Interbeing, because it only fits into that story and defies the logic of
Separation.
When any of us meet someone who rejects
dominant norms and values, we feel a little less crazy for doing the same. Any
act of rebellion or non-participation, even on a very small scale, is therefore
a political act.
Is it too much to ask, to live in a
world where our human gifts go toward the benefit of all? Where our daily
activities contribute to the healing of the biosphere and the well-being of
other people?
We have to create miracles. A miracle is
not the intersession of an external divine agency in violation of the laws of
physics. A miracle is simply something that is impossible from an old story but
possible from within a new one. It is an expansion of what is possible.
To conduct a revolution of love, we must reconnect with the
reality of our system and its victims. When we tear away the ideologies, the
labels, and the rationalizations, we show ourselves the truth of what we are
doing, and conscience awakens. Bearing witness, then, is not a mere tactic; it
is indispensable in a revolution of love. If love is the expansion of self to
include another, then whatever reveals our connections has the potential to
foster love. You cannot love what you do not know.
The situation on Earth today is too dire for us to act from
habit—to reenact again and again the same kinds of solutions that brought us to
our present extremity. Where does the wisdom to act in entirely new ways come
from? It comes from nowhere, from the void; it comes from inaction. When we see
it, we realize it was right in front of us all along. It is never far away; yet
at the same time it is in a different universe—a different Story of the
World.
The gift economy represents a shift from
consumption to contribution, transaction to trust, scarcity to abundance and
isolation to community.
In a gift economy, the more you give,
the richer you are.
More than a mere alternative strategy,
regenerative agriculture represents a fundamental shift in our culture’s
relationship to nature.
The radiance of that which wants to be born illuminates the
shadows, bringing them into the light of awareness that they may be
healed.
Trust your intuition and be guided by love.
How beautiful can life be? We hardly dare imagine it.
The force of love, the force of reunion
is unstoppable.
― Charles
Eisenstein
Quotes from The More Beautiful
World
Our Hearts Know Is Possible
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