PREFACE
Just what have
we done with the garden bequeathed to us? From outer space our beautiful
blue planet has no divisions, pandemics or degradation. On the ground -
the same blue planet is torn asunder by violence, greed and reckless disregard
for planetary care. Can we fix the planet? That is the wrong question.
Our present values and patterns of consumption are the architects of the
present global ecological emergency. We remain ignorant to the consequences
of the fact that everything interconnects. The right question is: can we
fix ourselves? Can we change the mindset that has created the global ecological
emergency? We must embark on a different kind of human journey – different
to the crazed ego, greed and power traits that characterize our collective
and presently mindless sojourn. We are neglectful of the fact that we depend
on this tiny planet for everything. Nevertheless, I give the reader a promise
- this slim volume provides understanding, issues a call for the adventure
of changing the existing world order by arriving at a deep understanding
of what needs to be done in terms of changing our minds. Then I provide
guidelines for action.
Part One: Gaia, Science
and the Teachings
For an opener
I talk to you about Mother Earth – Gaia - from the perspective of science,
with a dive into Dr. James Lovelock’s provocative findings. In The Revenge
of Gaia (2006) Lovelock extends the impeccable logic that produced the
Gaia Hypothesis to argue that the planetary control system, which has worked
to maintain conditions suitable for human life, is now working against
us. Temperature rise is presently a product of this control system. The
interconnecting feedback loops that constitute Gaia so intensify global
warming that it now appears to be beyond human control. Lovelock concludes
that billions of us will die with only a few breeding pairs left in the
Arctic Circle. The Earth itself is not in danger - we are. We have allowed
the environment to become an extension of human egocentric needs and values
an egosphere rather than an ecosphere. In this egosphere we consume
mindlessly in the global economy without regard for ecosystem balance or
concern about creating inequality and poverty between and within countries.
To survive on Planet Earth, industrial civilization must wake up and no
longer ignore its interconnectedness with the changing planetary web of
life or disrupt the control functions of the biosphere. Our blue planet
is already creating a new equilibrium that will not support a habitable
eco-niche for a Western style industrialized world.
I move investigation
into Gaia as Metaphor and Gaia as Social Movement. Not to dispute the science
of Gaia Theory but to bring the ball into my park – Consciousness. The
necessary inner work to change our mindset is to do an end run round Lovelock’s
conclusions about human breeding pairs in the Arctic. I bring the reader’s
attention to the Hero’s Journey – a favourite story told and retold in
all cultures of the world – and honor the vision of Black Elk, the legendary
Oglala Sioux medicine man. His vision of the hoops of all nations interconnecting
in strength and harmony is the reality achieved once we tame our wild mind.
The Failsafe
in Consciousness concept was created in my 2002 work The Essential Spiral
to describe how consciousness expansion will be held back by a deliberately
cultivated ignorance about better knowledge. That is until the global ecological
situation deteriorates to a breaking point. This breaking point will then
act as a catalyst, exposing such ignorance. At which point consciousness
is propelled into expansion, deliberation and change. My vision is a positive
one. I believe that humanity, drawing on a new consciousness, can create
new structures and organizations out of which emerge the radical solutions
to address the endemic environmental crises facing us. We have the knowledge
to create this, but the obstacles that stand in the way are the attitudes,
values and concepts that define the present dominance of corporate values.
Rampantly consolidated through “turbo-capitalism.” The necessary clarity
will emerge, once our thoughts, values and attitudes shift and no longer
sustain and feed our internal pollution. This is the radical internal Climate
Change necessary to engage intelligently with the external Climate Change.
Part Two: Failsafe in Consciousness
To make Failsafe
a robust concept I identify three major interconnected components:
1.Innate Earth
Wisdom,
2.Counter Culture
and
3.Tipping Points
in Consciousness.
We do in fact
possess innate earth wisdom. Ninety-nine per cent of our evolution as a
species relied on a hunting and gathering adaptation known as foraging
– a strategy of adaptation based on sophisticated ecosystem knowledge.
This was integrated into harvesting patterns through a spiritual understanding
of the world. Still hardwired into our brain, it is simply a matter of
re-accessing what we already possess. The radical remembering of this mindset
activates the feedback needed to prevent further degradation of the global
ecosystem. The counter culture pulls together the Ecology of Ideas from
Gregory Bateson, Rachel Carson’s Radical Ecology Movement and the New Age
beads and incense set. This strange coalition established the broad consensus
that provided a foundation for the new science of Ecopsychology. The counter
culture also touches base with a responsible corporate response and the
emergence of the powerful anti-globalization movement. Tipping points in
consciousness are about achieving a critical mass for radical change and
draw on the new science of Neuroplasticity. We are not necessarily
stuck with present mindsets. Our mindsets can be changed but that does
take extensive and diligent internal work. Just as there are tipping points
in the external ecology of Gaia, so are there tipping points in the internal
ecology of consciousness.
The failure
of the 1992 Rio Conference on the environment simplified matters, as it
enabled a booming clarity to emerge. With irreversible changes in the planetary
web of life and the catastrophic environmental disasters that are ensuing,
there is now only one strategy available:
Change
the collective human consciousness.
Why? So that
clarity, understanding and compassion provide the bedrock for human responses
to the impending crises. How? By entering into a practice of meditation
and self-healing that cultivates mindful awareness. This was the appropriate
solution before, but the promise of various environmental strategies obscured
the significance of this solution. The alarming crises of our times can
be viewed as a T-junction, one fork leading to breakdown in all domains,
the other directing us to break through to a new evolutionary level of
consciousness as a species. This “new” level has nothing to do with further
physical evolution of the human frame but lies in a quantum leap of consciousness.
I look directly
at the possibility that humanity is a failed genetic experiment. But once
we clearly recognize this as a possibility, we know for sure that despair
and denial will do us no good. Instead, a window opens in our mind for
peace and steadiness to enter, which could then propel our species to live
differently so that we may have a future on planet earth. This requires
a mass awakening of attributes that run counter to the bottom line of turbo-capitalism
and the ecology of greed. In Part One of Failsafe I conclude that
we have ten years. That is a very long time for mindful behavior to take
root. The methods for doing this rapidly are laid out in the following
chapter – Part Three: This Moment Heals All Moments.
Part Three: This Moment
Heals All Moments
Humanity has
faced many crises – threats of hominid extinction in the early days of
evolution, the Black Plague, Spanish Flu, and World Wars to end all wars.
Today it is Global Warming and International Terrorism. Although time and
space provide different defining contours, a similar human response is
required for each crisis. What is required are mature, steady people who
have done the internal work. Who are totally in the present moment. Not
haunted by fears of the past or traumatised by anxieties about the future.
Just steady, right here in the present moment. Capable of healing
all moments.
Albert Einstein
remarked that if there is a religion that could cope with modern societal
crises it would be Buddhism. I examine this statement before expanding
this chapter into the wisdom of the elders and the insights to be gleaned
from world mythology. The Buddha’s teachings are about the mind and what
to do when the mind is so overwhelmed by suffering that there seems to
be no way out. I describe teachings and practices most relevant to the
present historic crisis humanity is facing. We can see if they ring
an authentic bell. I draw on teachings about humanity and nature being
totally interconnected. That if we want to look after humans we have to
look after Mother Earth. Just as important is that if we wish to take care
of Mother Earth we must also take good care of ourselves. “The taking care
of” is through meditation, the practice of mindfulness, realizing that
interconnectedness is a fact of life and furthermore, being aware of the
consequences of our actions. These aspects are to be found in many spiritual
traditions, particularly aboriginal ones. Yet neglect, ignorance and exploitation
of the earth are the present order of the day whatever the spiritual tradition.
The Buddha had
a game plan. Similar insights are to be found in aboriginal and mythological
wisdom. All provide practices and guidelines to re-train the mind and strongly
throw away wrong perceptions. It is a matter of organic gardening in the
mind in order to create a new consciousness. We must deal with our “stuff”
– including our ridiculous consumption patterns. Driven by our most prominent
cultural traits – watching TV and shopping. Here we are struggling
with how to deal with terrorism, violence, environmental degradation and
war while folk just shop until they drop and watch Reality TV! I bring
mindfulness trainings about consumption to the fore and also focus on the
cultivation of Right Speech. We cannot afford to be trapped by our ego
narratives at this time of crisis and great transition. If the mind that
runs the mouth is not trained there is sure to be strife. We re-train the
mouth by retraining the mind that runs the mouth.
There is clear
guidance from a body of myths worldwide that deal directly with human consciousness
and the environment. The Tree of Life myths connect the planet, universe
and human beings in a template of astonishing similarity in culture after
culture. There are no accidents in these sacred narratives. Their
motif is a simple message. The human commitment to be present at the center
of one's being is what conjoins Mother Earth with the Universe and Humanity.
The myths also graphically represent the alternative - chaos, destruction
and breakdown. Yet always hold out the possibility of re-creation given
the same human choice to be present at the center. Our global 21st century
culture is in the midst of chaos, destruction and breakdown. The Tree of
Life myths are fresh and current. They speak to us directly, guiding us
to return to being fully present so we can transform the current global
ecological emergency.
Several years
ago at the beginning of spring after a severe winter in Canada, I participated
in a sweat lodge ceremony with respected elders from the Ojibway, Dene
and Mohawk First Nations. It took place in a remote part of Ontario and
we camped close to a newly constructed Inipi, specially built for this
sweat lodge ceremony. Inside the lodge the prayers offered were very moving.
We made deeply personal and collective commitments to serve the Earth Mother,
to do all that we could to heal her and ourselves. At the end of the final
round of the ceremony we emerged into the pristine beauty of a late snowfall
under a clear star studded sky. There had been a two-inch snowfall while
the sweat lodge was in progress. We walked barefoot in silence to where
we were camping. Quiet smiles, not thinking too much. My smile grew immense
when looking back at our footprints in the snow. I gestured to my
companions to stop and look. Words were not appropriate. We
all smiled with the same recognition and looked at one another with new
eyes. It was as though these were the first footprints witnessed
on Mother Earth. Such a vision strengthened our commitment and resolve.
Business as usual was no longer possible for us. Share the epiphany, as
it is no longer possible for you either, dear reader. What can help us
to truly serve the Earth Mother? We can use instruments of mindfulness
with their effect of freeing the human mind from suffering. Another way
is to remember the Wisdom of the Elders and what our myths have been telling
us from time immemorial.
Part Four: Quantum Leap
- The Big Morph
The present
intolerable and non-sustainable global market rests on economic structures
kept in place by very powerful cabals of international finance capitalists.
Their power over financial markets operates with very little political
control from national and international regulatory bodies. This is an extremely
unusual cultural development – the overwhelming focus on the accumulation
of wealth as an end in itself. Lacking in any awareness or responsibility
for the societal and environmental consequences of highly organized greed.
It should go without saying that a paradigm shift in values is essential
- the point of this book about Failsafe in Consciousness. The structures
that encase us at present create environmental degradation and must be
replaced. It is clear that a new design structure is required for globalization.
The 2003 World Trade Organization development round in Cancun hit a brick
wall of opposition from developing member countries. The erosion of this
powerful world body is imminent. Yet this crisis provides an opportunity
for its radical restructuring with fresh new logic and novel methods of
financial instrumentation. Fortunately, concerned scientists, scholars
and politicians have gathered over the past decade in Europe to fashion
a new structure to replace the market fundamentalism that has caused such
devastation to the planet and its peoples. The new structure for economics,
society, environment and world governance is the Global Marshall Plan –
A Planetary Contract (Radermacher 2004). It can be summarized in three
evolutionary quantum leaps:
One.
Dr. James Tobin received the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1981. He
always held true to the notion that the science of economics was about
improving the happiness of mankind. The Tobin Tax was an idea he
came up with in 1972 to curtail currency speculation. He proposed
a very modest tax of 0.01%, then 0.02% of value traded, be levied on all
foreign exchange transactions in order to limit speculation. He was
somewhat embarrassed at later becoming the darling of the anti-globalization
movement, yet his suggested tax is a profound insight whose time has surely
come, as it would generate over $40 billion per annum in funds. If
the tax went directly to support the UN, then in a single stroke the UN
would be free of corporate and political blackmail. Furthermore, it would
have the power and ability to act on behalf of humanity – to at last carry
out the mandate it was designed for. The Tobin Tax became the first
of three financial initiatives proposed by the Global Marshall Plan.
The second aspect of financially restructuring globalization is the Terra
Tax on global trade to be used to fund development investments to the tune
of a further $40 billion annually. The third aspect is the establishment
of an IMF investment fund of $30 billion plus a further $40 billion in
aid of developing countries for special drawing rights that would provide
a new direction for money flow. So it actually reaches local people and
enterprises rather than sticking to the fingers of corrupt intermediaries.
These financial instruments, delivered through different mechanisms to
those presently in place, will enable the necessary financial restructuring
for an Eco-Social Market Economy. This is fundamental to the success of
the Global Marshall Plan.
Two. The WTO
takes on a new mandate for responsible globalization with equitable provisions
for humanity and the environment. It becomes the instrument through
which the Global Marshall Plan is implemented. In this way civil
society reclaims political democracy through the Global Marshall Plan as
the organizing paradigm to take care of the global ecosystem and usher
in the era of an Eco-Social Market Economy. Such a market structure has
responsibilities for human justice issues and the eradication of poverty.
Corporate culture is no longer allowed to freely make and enforce the rules
for global culture and planetary care. A new structure of global governance
emerges, but interestingly is still deeply founded on free markets. Far
from eroding profitable business enterprises, this orientation assures
that the most balanced, resourceful and market-sensitive companies will
be the most competitive. This calls for a radical breakthrough in
the collective human consciousness to make these changes possible.
That these measures are already incorporated in a well thought out Global
Marshall Plan indicates that the Failsafe in Consciousness concept is no
longer a notion – it has taken on concrete form.
Three.
The UN oversees and regulates the newly restructured WTO, or takes steps
to create the appropriate structure. Ultimately it is the UN that
is given the mandate and resources to regulate world trade through a reformed
WTO. It not only facilitates world trade based on a holistic economy
but also mediates between corporate culture and the public interest of
communities and ecosystems around the world.
Because of the
already gathering forces of social pressure the WTO cannot remain as it
is. It must change, particularly as there would be no “post environment
economy” to exploit. That is the message to the present structure of globalization
based on market fundamentalism. And to the powerful cabals that control
it. The new structure encourages profits, yet within a framework of responsibility.
The Global Marshall Plan is based on new concepts and financial instruments
to structure world trade so that it is in synchronicity with humanitarian
concerns and environmental protection. The goal is to produce an Eco-Social
Market Economy that provides a new direction for globalization. It features
new structures to co-finance and equalize development worldwide resting
on novel taxes on international financial transactions, on world trade
and providing special drawing rights on the IMF. This would provide the
billions of dollars required to bring about a global economic miracle,
which at the same time is environmentally responsible. This radical proposal
has the support of prominent politicians, scholars and organisations in
Europe as well as business leaders. Furthermore, it has the solid support
of the European Union to implement such a Planetary Contract as the first
step to creating a worldwide Eco-Social Market Economy by 2015. It is intended
as a viable replacement for the present maladaptive world of free trade.
Part Five: Taming the Wild
Mind
A farmer came
across a wild horse in the mountains and captured it. Once the horse was
tethered to a tree he placed a bridle round the noble creature’s nose and
climbed up onto its powerful, broad back. The horse took off like a thunderbolt
and exploded with speed, racing through villages and over the plains. One
villager shouted out to the rider – “Where are you going so fast?” The
farmer shouted back “I don’t know – better ask the horse!”
We are that
farmer and the horse galloping away to unknown places is our wild mind.
We have to restrain that wild mind, by putting ropes round the horse first
to calm, then to tame the wild creature. That is what our practice of mindfulness
does to the wild mind, whatever the tradition. We use instruments of breath,
of ceremony, of being aware of our actions, speech and thought. Our life
experiences are the laboratory where we can consciously choose to cultivate
compassion and wholesomeness within our heart and mind. Then the wildness
diminishes and the dark afflictions in our mind dissolve. The wild horse
is transformed into a trusted companion.
I trace a particular
journey in Part Five: Taming The Wild Mind – my own. Not to provide any
formula or recipe but to bring home to the reader that there is internal
work to do, with attention to our anger, fear, ignorance, discrimination
and greed. It does not matter what spiritual, martial arts discipline or
yoga practice is drawn upon. It just matters that we get on with the task
of reining in and taming our wild mind.
Once the wild
mind is reined in, then clarity and compassion are suddenly there to provide
the basis for how we are with the planet and with one another. The account
of one person’s journey – mine - is to demonstrate that my activism for
peace, planetary care and social justice now comes from a very different
place. Steadiness, clarity and compassion are there rather than ego posturing
and anger from the lunatic fringe! Though there was certainly a “rush”
from the latter, I now prefer a stillpoint that is not colored by the excesses
of ego or the desire for control and kudos. Such a stillpoint permits me
to be free in my own sovereignty - no matter what I am doing. It also permits
me to serve the planet and humanity with joy, in a way of creating balance
and harmony that makes sense. It is all so seemingly effortless. Nothing
to do except be present with our mind, our consumption and the structures
we create with our mind.
Appendix I: Simple Steps
to Empowerment
Many years ago
in India I had an audience with Sai Baba. I was visiting this sage’s
ashram in Andra Pradesh with an Indian friend. As he slowly walked through
the morning gathering, to my utter surprise Sai Baba stopped in front of
me. He spoke to me for quite a while. Somehow he knew of my commitment
to environmental concerns. I remember very little of what was said - except
for one sentence that blazed into my mind and stayed there. Sai Baba said
to me that a transformation in human consciousness required 2% of the population
to meditate on a daily basis. I have no clue about the knowledge source
for his pronouncement, but I do remember vividly the “buzz” of energy in
my mind and body when I heard it. I translated this wisdom into a 2% option.
If only I, and others, could encourage 2% of the people we knew to change
their lifestyles to one of voluntary simplicity then the environmental
crisis could be averted. If everybody did so, then the planet would indeed
be safe. This would involve conserving energy usage, being aware of the
knock-on effects of consumerism and doing one eco-friendly action every
day. This may seem rather naïve, but to me the 2% option was readily
do-able and within the grasp of everyone. The end result of a transformed
consciousness would lead to different questions being asked and different
solutions found. There would be a new mind-set to make the necessary decisions
for change.
The obstacles
preventing people taking wise action with regard to the Global Ecological
Emergency are a mixture of fear, despair, sheer laziness, disempowerment
and a sense of hopelessness. “What on earth can I do to make a difference?”
is a phrase muttered all over the world in countless languages followed
by “So why should I do anything?” There is global awareness, but also fear
about our future place on planet earth. The overwhelming terror of Gaia
crashing down on us is unbearable. Yet please take hold of the 2% option
that creates the opportunity for ordinary citizens like you and me to make
a radical difference. Mass awakening does not mean that everyone “wakes”
up – just 2%. This spearhead would provide a catalyst, the strategic tipping
point, to get things moving in the right direction.
The challenge
is to be in society, but as a still island of mindfulness. Take small steps
at first, then larger ones. We do not have to be caught by the fast pace
of consumer madness and all that goes with it in terms of squandering energy.
We just need to make some essential changes - be television free for several
evenings, write in a journal, meditate, sort the clutter of the mind and
cultivate a mindful approach to everyday living. Voluntary Simplicity
is a good starting place, being more aware of our consumerism, making deliberate
choices about how we spend time and money rather than living on the automatic
pilot of busyness. Supporting environmental causes with the stored goods
in the basement, always thinking about whether we really “need” to buy.
Enjoy being simple and living true by shifting our perceptions just a little
bit. Not a big deal really. Let us all examine what we do with time,
money, clutter and our choices. And change. Then see whether the
consequences are peace and happiness.
Where do we
start? Of course we must think globally and step beyond the smaller pictures
of ourselves created out of fear and disempowerment. Yet we begin by acting
locally with great vigour in our families and communities, so that our
intentions spread as ripples from a pebble dropped in still water. In addition
to holding officials, politicians and corporate culture to account let
us begin with the small things that all of us can do. While at the same
time alerting the political and corporate decision makers that we do mean
business as voters and consumers deeply concerned about the planet and
our location on it. Our leaders are a manifestation of our collective will.
When the collective will changes, our leaders will act differently. Appendix
I has a few suggested guidelines. Browse your way through:
1. Take
Action;
2. Up
Close and Personal;
3. Reduce
Your Ecological Footprint;
4. Guidelines
for Business;
5. The
“Big” Picture for the Future;
6. Science
and Diversity;
7. Journals;
8. Environmental
Groups; and finally give
9. Warnings
to Governments a very close read.
A massive global
citizen response will elicit an equally massive government and corporate
response, as the bottom-up movement and top-down strategies for drastic
change meet and integrate. There is not room in this Global Ecological
Emergency for separating into “US’ and “THEM” categories. We are totally
interconnected whether we like it or not. We will all live together or
we will all die together. An intelligent and all encompassing green ideology
embedded in everything we produce and market is a means to bridge competing
agendas. Our dependence on fossil fuels reduces because we are aware of
the deadly consequences of our addiction to oil and coal. The transition
to a carbon neutral global energy system over the next few decades will
be costly and require a massive response from government and corporate
leaders to initiate the second industrial revolution. This is necessary
to blunt the impact of climate change. It is a huge global industrial project
that governments and corporations can bring about because of citizen pressure
to “Make It So!” On the stock market “eco-tech” is seen as the next big
global industrial thing! Global warming has certainly entered public consciousness.
All of these threads just have to penetrate the corridors of political
and corporate power. As global citizens we must find the ways and means
to support the shift in consciousness at all levels of global society to
make this so – the Failsafe notion.
Our future existence,
and the existence of other species on planet earth, depends on your making
a new beginning for all of us.
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