The End Of
The World As We Know It
Hope Vs. Mindset”
By Carolyn Baker
08/17/07 "ICH" -- -- A
friend for whom I have a great deal of respect and
admiration recently challenged me on my incessant
hope-bashing stance and gave me some food for thought
which has caused me to reframe the concept of "hope" in my
own mind in a way that I can live with. What I cannot live
with is a definition of "hope" that externalizes it-that
fosters denial and a false and naïve anticipation that
government, religion, or to quote Lincoln, "the better
angels of our nature" will somehow save humanity from
slamming with lethal velocity into the brick walls of our
own making-climate chaos, global energy catastrophe,
planetary economic meltdown, population overshoot, species
extinction and die-off--or nuclear holocaust.
The iconoclastic and cynical
James Howard Kunstler is fond of mocking people who ask for
"hope" and insists that any hope we have in the face of the
end of the world as we know it (EOTWAWKI) must come from
within. I'm not sure what that means to Kunstler, but I'm
getting clearer about what it means to me.
Naïve hope takes myriad
forms and from my perspective one example is the hope that
impeachment of Cheney and Bush is even possible. And I must
add that Bush has not lost his "brain" with the departure of
Rove. Who needs a brain when Darth Vader is the real man
behind the curtain and has more political and economic power
in the United States government than the average American
can even imagine? Another example of false hope is faith in
the U.S. political system and the possibility that clean
elections exist, not to mention the hope that one will even
happen in 2008. Other "hopes" include: the hope that the
Democrats will finally find their spine, that the economy
will improve without the working and middle classes being
eviscerated by a financial meltdown as catastrophic or worse
than the Great Depression, that technology will solve the
energy dilemma, that moving to another country guarantees
personal safety and human liberty, that the human race can
exist for another century without a nuclear exchange, that a
global spiritual awakening will occur in time to transform
the human race and avert catastrophe.
As long as we are hoping for
any of these, we are assuming a passively reactive position.
Conversely, a pro-active mindset is willing to own that the
paradigm upon which the empire is based is not only shallow,
wanton, mindless, and infantilizing, but ultimately
toxic-mentally, emotionally, spiritually, and physically. A
truly pro-active mindset comes down to the question that
film maker Tim Bennett leaves us with at the end of "What
A Way To Go: Life At The End Of Empire" which is: "WHO
do I want to be as the world as I know it comes to an end?"
Do I want to find myself literally or metaphorically like a
2005 New Orleans resident crouched on one tiny dry corner of
my rooftop waiting for a government helicopter to rescue me
from an inundated house, or do I want to see the hurricane
coming and take myself to another location, that is, another
mindset? Do I want to assume that somehow citizens of empire
can keep a show on the road that should be canceled and run
out of town? Do I want to abdicate personal responsibility
because I've been taught from childhood to be a good citizen
and vote in elections because two different political
parties exist, and I live in one of the few countries on
earth where I have a "real" choice between them? Do I want
to kick and scream against the death of the world as I know
it, or embrace that death so that something else has a
chance to be born-even if I'm not alive to witness the
birth?
Specifically, the mindset to
which I'm referring is one that understands and feels in the
marrow of one's bones that the life/death/rebirth cycle is
as inherent in one's existence as breath itself. We can talk
about collapse-and we must-but we can also re-frame it into
the broader concept of life/death/rebirth. No, this does not
have to be some airy-fairy, sweet-lemon rationalization that
ultimately produces a new form of denial. Perhaps taking a
moment to ponder birth will be helpful. Birth is bloody,
uncertain, scary, painful, exhausting, and usually requires
more courage, stamina, strength, and perseverance than most
women ever thought they had. And--I cannot think of a better
description of the collapse of empire.
This birth-giving mindset
has been stolen from us by empire and replaced with
obedience to government; trust in economic, social, and
political systems; the perception of ourselves as consumers
who are entitled to be comfortable and stress-free with
access to the latest technological toys which make our lives
fun, exciting, and painless. As I write these words, I
recall an email I received earlier today from a woman in
South Africa who has to rely on an "if-y" dial-up internet
connection and who thanked me for my recent articles on
collapse, adding that living among impoverished native South
Africans reminds her daily of how Americans will be forced
to live during and after collapse.
I strongly recommend an
interview with Joanna Gabriel of Ashland, Oregon entitled "Who
Am I In A Post-Petroleum World?", which offers an
extraordinary articulation of collapse as opportunity for
rebirth or in her words, a crisis "which is forcing us to
create the kind of world we wanted all the time anyway."
A great American poet,
William Stafford, wrote a poem that could not be more
appropriate for this moment entitled "A Ritual To Be Read To
Each Other." I promise you that if you read and ponder this
poem every day for one week, you will find yourself moving
farther away from hope and closer to mindset.
A Ritual To
Be Read To Each Other
by William Stafford, from "The Darkness Around Us Is Deep"
If you don't know the
kind of person I am
and I don't know the kind of person you are
a pattern that others made may prevail in the
world
and following the wrong god home we may miss
our star.
For there is many a
small betrayal in the mind,
a shrug that lets the fragile sequence break
sending with shouts the horrible errors of childhood
storming out to play through the broken dike.
And as elephants
parade holding each
elephant's tail,
but if one wanders the circus won't find the
park,
I call it cruel and maybe the root of all cruelty
to know what occurs but not recognize the fact.
And so I appeal to a
voice, to something
shadowy,
a remote important region in all who talk:
though we could fool each other, we should
consider---
lest the parade of our mutual life get lost in the
dark.
For it is important
that awake people be awake,
or a breaking line may discourage them back to
sleep;
the signals we give---yes or no, or maybe---
should be clear: the darkness around us is deep.
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The poem begins with a
warning about what we risk if we do not engage in deep
listening and truth-telling with each other: We may follow
the pattern that others made and then follow the wrong god
home and miss our star. The small (and enormous) betrayals
of us by our culture have deeply wounded us, and like
elephants in a parade, we need to hold onto each other lest
our mutual lives become lost, and the surest way to become
lost is to "know what occurs but not recognize the fact." As
Stafford reminds us at the end of the poem, it is important
that awake people be awake or a breaking line may discourage
them back to sleep. We must be constantly vigilant and
support each other in remaining vigilant so that we do not
fall back into comfortable slumber. The signals must be
clear because the darkness around us is deep-so deep in
fact, that we dare not settle for anything less than
mindset.
That means voluntarily,
intentionally stepping into collapse-physically,
emotionally, mentally, spiritually, not allowing it to be
something that "just happens" to us, but an opportunity that
we embrace, despite all the suffering it will entail for
ourselves and the people around us. As I listen to the
various economic pundits discuss the current stock market
meltdown, I notice how they consistently speak of "the
opportunities" that exist in the midst of the grim financial
landscape. Like financial investing, there are no guarantees
that our investment in the opportunities of collapse will
prove to be advantageous, and like investing, our
willingness to step into collapse involves risk. But the
choice is ours: Do we invest in mindset, or do we rely on
hope? Hope which serves no practical purpose except
guaranteeing that collapse will be nothing more momentous
for us than the end of the world as we have known it.
Carolyn Baker. Carolyn is
an adjunct professor of history, a former psychotherapist,
an author, and a student of mythology and ritual. Please
visit her website
http://carolynbaker.net/site/