Where Is The Voice Of Sanity
By Paul Levy
06/13/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- A little while ago I ran into a friend I
hadn't seen for awhile. He asked me what I had been up to. I
told him that I was writing a book about the collective
psychosis that was wreaking havoc on our planet. He asked me
what made me think there was a collective psychosis going on.
His question left me speechless, literally not knowing what to
say. What made him think that there wasn't a collective
psychosis, I wondered. You could look in any direction and find
endless examples which proved that our species has gone out of
our minds. There was so much overwhelming evidence for the
collective psychosis that I didn't even know where to start. To
see our collective madness, all we have to do is simply look at
what we're doing to each other, not to mention the very planet
we depend upon for our very survival. We seem to have gone so
crazy that many people haven't even noticed, as our madness has
become normalized, which is just further proof of our collective
psychosis.
Where is the voice of the psychiatric establishment in pointing
out the obvious situation: not only that our leader is mad, but
that Bush's madness is a reflection of the fact that we, as a
species, have fallen into a collective psychosis? In a personal
conversation I had with the late Harvard psychiatrist John Mack
about exactly this point, he expressed his opinion that the
psychiatric community doesn't see it as their job to deal with
collective pathological situations such as we are in. Amazingly,
Mack was pointing to the fact that the psychiatric community
doesn't see it as their responsibility to track collective
psychic epidemics.
On the one hand, there is psychiatrist Justin Frank, author of
the fine book Bush on the Couch. Dr. Frank has my utmost respect
for his incisive psychoanalytic study of Bush, pointing out
Bush's pathological condition in a lucid and indisputable
manner. Frank's analysis is extremely important and very
brilliant, illumining Bush's pathology in relationship to the
dysfunctional family system of which he is a part. Frank points
out, both in Bush's family as well as writ large on the world
stage in the form of the media and his supporters, the
undeniable signs of the "enabling" behavior typically seen in
the disease of family alcoholism.
Frank's work has reached a very important edge, however, and is
calling to be unfolded further. By viewing Bush in relationship
to his family system, Frank reaches the limits of an
understanding based solely on family dynamics. Like a
traditional psychoanalyst, Frank considers Bush as a "separate
self" existing apart from the greater unified and unifying
field, that is to say the entire universe, of which he is a
part. And yet, at the same time that Bush exists as a separate
self who is autonomous and independent from the world at large,
he is interdependently embedded in and an expression of the
universe.
As long as psychoanalysis contemplates Bush as solely a
"separate self," however, it is under a form of illusion, as we
don't exist in isolation from each other, but rather, in
relation to each other. Though Frank's analysis of Bush in his
identity as a discrete, independently-existing person has
tremendous value, analogous to how the mechanical models of
classical physics have great general utility in understanding
the workings of our world, any analysis of an object or person
isolated from the universe of which they are an interconnected
part is of necessity incomplete. As quantum physics points out,
we simply do not exist, in the ultimate sense, as isolated
entities who are separate from each other or our environment.
Having reached the edge of psychoanalysis, and limited by its
worldview, it is not within the scope of Frank's analysis to
address the inherent psycho-spiritual condition that pervades
the underlying field, both in our country and our world at
large, of which
Bush is
merely a symbolic expression. I imagine that Frank himself would
be the first to admit this, and would enthusiastically encourage
others to further unfold and place his findings in a larger
psycho-spiritual context.
Frank points out the unconscious collusion in the silence and
collective denial towards Bush's behavior that pervades the
field. Constrained by the traditional discipline that he so
faithfully represents, however, it is not within Frank's purview
to diagnose our species as a whole as being in the midst of a
psychic epidemic.
Frank's analysis is the pinnacle of psychoanalysis, beautifully
illumining Bush's pathology on the "personal" level. Because of
the fact that Frank is viewing Bush as an isolated person
distinct and separate from the world around him, he doesn't
address the deeper level of the unifying field in which we're
all interconnected and interdependent. Ultimately, we are not
able to contemplate Bush's madness without looking in the
mirror. Bush's madness is truly our own.
Frank's analysis of Bush's "personal" pathology inspires and
places a demand on us to catapult off of his insights, like a
springboard, into the higher-order of the "transpersonal"
(beyond the personal) dimension. Adding a transpersonal
viewpoint, which recognizes that we are fundamentally and
ultimately interconnected parts of the whole, actually
complements and completes Frank's analysis of Bush's "personal"
psychology. Both of these perspectives, the personal and the
transpersonal, are incomplete by themselves. When neither of
these perspectives are marginalized, but are simultaneously
viewed together as both being true, they synergistically
cross-pollinate and illumine each other. The personal and
transpersonal interpenetrate each other so fully that they are
not two separate perspectives joined together, but are two
aspects of a deeper unified field which contains and unifies
them.
Seen transpersonally, the figure of Bush is a symbol which
re-presents and reveals the collective psychosis that we have
all fallen into. The figure of Bush is a portal which
simultaneously feeds and is an expression of the collective
madness that is in everyone. Bush is merely a symptom, an
embodied reflection of a deeper underlying pathology that exists
in the collective unconscious of humanity which is giving shape
to and in-forming world events. Seen transpersonally, the figure
of Bush is revealing something to us about ourselves.
We are all complicit in the madness that is playing out in our
world. Shedding light on our shared responsibility for the
deeper underlying psychological roots of collective world events
helps us to become truly empowered agents of change in our world
who can truly make a difference.
If the psychiatric establishment doesn't see it as their job to
illumine the fact that we are in the midst of a collective
psychosis that is potentially destroying our species, the
question then arises: whose job is it? Cultural anthropologists?
Sociologists? Where is the voice of sanity who is pointing out
the collective madness that our species has fallen into? Who are
the people who study mass psychological events? What is playing
out in the world has its origins in the unconscious psyche of
humanity. Whose job is it to map, articulate and shed light on
the psychic origins of collective world events?
A year or so ago I received an email from an irate Jungian
analyst who was very critical of my work. She expressed her
outrage by saying "How dare I write about Jung if I'm not a
trained and certified Jungian analyst!" It was her
non-negotiable opinion that it was simply "wrong" that I should
be writing an analysis of the deeper, underlying psychological
roots of world events if I wasn't a professionally authorized
"psychologist." I never wrote her back because I felt there was
no space for dialogue with her. Now I know what I would say to
her: I wouldn't write about Jung's brilliant insights that
illumine and heal the pathological aspects of our current world
situation if the people who's job it is to write about such
things, such as herself, would simply do their job. If people
such as psychiatrists, psychologists, therapists, and the mental
health community as a whole would shed sufficient light on the
collective psychosis that is potentially destroying our species,
I would be happy to do other, much more fun-filled activities.
As people who recognize the insane nature of our situation,
which is to be sane in a world gone mad, it is our job to come
to terms and deal with the collective psychosis that is wreaking
havoc on our planet. It is our job, our calling, our vocation to
deal with the indisputable fact that we are being ruled by
people who have fallen into a state of collective madness. It is
our responsibility to deal with the fact that everyone who
supports Bush in his madness: his administration, the corporate,
congressional, judicial, military industrial complex, the media,
the voters that allegedly put him into office, and ourselves as
well if we are doing nothing about our situation, have all
fallen prey to a psychic epidemic that threatens the entire
planet. If we continue to insist on being under-employed by not
stepping into our power and creatively speaking our true voice
to the abuse of power, we have no one to blame but ourselves.
The evil that is being enacted on our planet could only happen
because of a sufficient number of people who are passively
standing on the sideline and doing nothing about it. Not doing
anything about the evil we see being acted out in the world is
to ourselves become an unwitting instrument of evil, as our
in-action allows, enables, and feeds the further propagation of
evil in the field. Evil is truly calling us to pick up an
empowered role, whatever that is, and "act," as if we are actors
in a play or characters in a dream. Recognizing our
responsibility for the collective situation we find ourselves
in, we access our ability to respond creatively in the world and
act-ively do something about it.
Something is being revealed to us about ourselves by the fact
that we are being ruled by people who are mad. Imagine, what
would we do if we truly recognized that our government is being
run by people who have collectively gone mad? What would we do
if we realized that the leader of the most powerful nation on
the planet, the person with his finger on the button, is a
genuine psychopath? This is not a make believe question: How
would we respond if enough of us not only recognized that our
leaders were truly insane, but that we urgently needed to do
something about it? What do we imagine we would do? This is a
very relevant question, as this is the true nature of our
current situation.
Do we go belly-up, imagining that there is nothing that we could
possibly do about our insane situation? Do we imagine ourselves
collapsing into impotence, being totally dis-empowered, unable
to do anything about being ruled by a bunch of psychopaths? Or
do we imagine that enough of us, realizing the gravitas of our
situation, connect with each other and access our collective
genius so that we can truly make a positive change in the world?
The question is: Will the darkness that is manifesting in our
world destroy our species or wake us up to our true nature? The
choice, and responsibility, is truly ours.
Paul Levy, is the author of The Madness of George Bush: A
Reflection of Our Collective Psychosis, which is available at
his website
www.awakeninthedream.com. < paul@awakeninthedream.com>
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