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The Next Big Green
The green movement has led millions to rediscover
the integral connection between people, place
and planet. Could a down-to-earth consciousness
revival be next?
By Lynn Braz
Source: www.commongroundmag.com
When a friend first suggested I read Eat, Pray,
Love, I balked. Having just returned from a three-month
sabbatical in Northern India, I felt I didn’t
need to read about someone else’s journey
there. It would only incite envy, since Elizabeth
Gilbert turned her life-at-a-crossroads crisis
into a blockbusting bestseller while one newspaper
article and a blog was the best I could manage.
Plus, I’d already read enough “spiritual”
books to last the rest of my lifetimes. But after
the fortieth friend/acquaintance/colleague raved
about the book, I caved, determined to be the
first person on the planet not to relish it. I
failed, of course, and I dare anyone who has ever
dined, dated or doubted themselves not to like
it.
“I would actually avoid any title with
the word ‘pray’ in it,” says
Oakland-based fashion consultant Tracy Miller.
“But eating and loving, I’m very interested
in.” Miller discovered that it wasn’t
the pasta in Italy or the lover in Bali that intrigued
her most. “What I identified with was the
search for self. I struggle with being my own
spiritual counsel. Eat, Pray, Love validated my
journey towards understanding who I am and what
I have to offer myself and the world,” Miller
says.
Elizabeth Gilbert, although a talented and accomplished
author, was by no means a household name before
Eat, Pray, Love was published. Her extraordinary
success and exposure — appearances on Oprah
and NBC’s Today show, speaking engagements
across North America, favorable reviews in the
New York Times, Miami Herald and just about everywhere
else — are all the more remarkable considering
meditation and mystics are not ordinarily super
hyped subjects. But part of what makes Gilbert’s
memoir irresistible is her ability to disclose
desire for a spiritual experience that is less
cosmic and more down-to-earth.
Her timing is perfect. With the green movement
reaching critical mass — corner bodegas
stocking recycled toilet paper and organic produce,
year-long waiting lists for hybrids, network TV
shows like Las Vegas airing special eco-themed
episodes, Al Gore winning an Academy Award and
Nobel prize — Americans seem ready to take
their growing concern for and care of the environment
and expand it to a deeper understanding of how
everything on this earth is interconnected. We
already have the technology to end global warming,
achieve energy independence and live in harmony
with the earth. Now all we need is the willingness
to use those tools. That means giving up not only
conveniences, but also our sense of entitlement.
We’ll have to become less self-centered
and more concerned with society as a whole —
states of being that some consider a spiritual
awakening. If we’re going to get there in
time, then consciousness just may be the next
green.
Green opens the door
Before the birth of her daughter Ruby three years
ago, San Francisco-based hair stylist Sherri Wheeler
didn’t give going green much thought, beyond
basic recycling. But, like many Gen Xers embracing
parenthood, concern for her child’s wellbeing
motivated her to become a more informed consumer.
Wanting to know the origins of the products she
buys — from the cotton in Ruby’s t-shirts
to the chemicals in her applesauce and sunscreen
— led to an increasing awareness of issues
that stretch beyond Wheeler’s backyard.
“I realized there’s more than just
me and my family out there,” she says. Recently,
Wheeler began practicing meditation as a way to
stay centered and also deepen her feelings of
connection to the world. Her interest in meditation,
she says, “sort of happened naturally.”
The shift from thinking green to thinking about
your place in the larger world and your impact
on humankind is inevitable, says San Francisco-based
healing practitioner Elizabeth Lutfy. Caring for
the environment leads to greater self-care, which
leads to deeper levels of concern for society.
“Green is spirituality. Paying attention
to nature comes from spiritual awareness,”
Lutfy says. “The next level is to move from
the “Me, Me, Me” version of spirituality
to service and altruism. And I think, as a country,
we’re doing that. It’s the hundredth
monkey theory — as spiritual consciousness
sweeps through, it’s bound to hit everybody.”
This consciousness, Lutfy believes, can save the
planet.
But consciousness is inauthentic without action.
Regina Leffers of Ft. Wayne, Indiana, has been
meditating every day for the past thirty years.
Cervical cancer was her impetus. She says that
in practicing meditation she has had the experience
of feeling no separation between herself and the
entire planet. “It’s not something
I get all the time,” says Leffers. “But
the experience is really incredible and intense.”
While writing her dissertation for a Ph.D. in
philosophy, she helped her brother Dan start a
construction company in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. During
the early years of developing that company she
and Dan occasionally encountered difficulty in
obtaining materials, including wood. They realized
that “we were rapidly approaching a time
when the natural resources of the earth would
be fairly scarce.”
The inner knowing that Leffers was refining in
her meditation practice helped her begin to understand
that the environment itself is “part of
us.” Conventional buildings — running
and maintaining them — she says, use up
tremendous amounts of energy. Spotting an opportunity
to merge her business with the environmental goals
cultivated through her spiritual practice, Leffers
determined to launch a sustainable commercial
construction company. “Green building is
one way of taking care of the environment,”
she says. Five years later, Leffers is now the
director for the Center of the Built Environment
at Indiana University-Purdue University, Ft. Wayne.
Apocalypse now?
Denizens of the new consciousness movement have
a slew of challenges ahead. Some scientists estimate
that up to 70 percent of the world’s population
lacks access to reliably potable water. Southeast
Asia is in danger of running out of clean, disease-free
water by 2015. Melting glaciers, disappearing
snow on Kilimanjaro and in the Himalayas, and
oil spills that destroy beaches, food supply and
wildlife are regular occurrences. Massive deforestation
is imperiling biodiversity. And our lack of respect
for our planet is mirrored in our disregard for
each other — most poignantly in regions
like Darfur, Sierra Leone and the Middle East.
Our nation is currently at war with two countries
and threatening a third. Pakistan, which is run
by a despot, has nuclear weapons. And despite
all of this, there are too many people on the
planet, living too long and leaving too many carbon
footprints behind. Without a quick collective
spiritual awakening, humanity may be doomed.
Our bleak fate was foretold centuries ago. Or
at least that’s the interpretation some
ascribe to the ancient Mayan Long Count calendar,
which infamously ends on December 21, 2012 at
11:11 a.m. GMT — the day of apocalypse.
But James O’Dea, President of the Institute
of Noetic* Sciences (IONS), a nonprofit membership
organization located in Northern California that
uses rigorously scientific methodology to conduct
cutting-edge research into the potential and powers
of consciousness, offers a different perspective
on 2012. It’s not a death, he says, but
a rebirth — into a new way of living.
Evolutionary breakthrough, says O’Dea,
is seemingly preceded by “deep, deep collapse.”
Consider the period following the Holocaust, during
which the United Nations was established and a
universal declaration of human rights emerged.
The current state of the world could be considered
ripe for a global upheaval.
“At this moment we have a huge confluence
of factors that are about the end of a particular
era,” O’Dea explains. “We’re
caught in an endless loop of war. We’re
caught in a loop of religious dogmas that are
plainly irrational and that are exacerbated by
media fantasy and distraction. These conditions
are extremely dangerous.” O’Dea points
out that the word “apocalypse” in
addition to being defined as a cataclysmic event
and the triumph of good over evil, also means
“revelation.”
Whether or not humanity is headed towards Revelation
may be foreshadowed by the upcoming presidential
elections here. According to Caroline Myss, consciousness
author, educator and creator of the new CD, The
Sacred Contract of America: Fulfilling the Vision
of Our Mystic Founders, our nation is on a respirator,
a situation we as citizens have allowed to happen
through our complacency. “The whole idea
of being a conscious culture went out the window.
We are as unconscious as it gets,” Myss
laments. “The only thing we’ve become
conscious about is our own needs. And in our narcissism,
we make the assumption that the quality of life
will take care of itself. And it doesn’t.”
Myss contends that nations, like individuals,
have “sacred contracts,” destinies
they were put on this earth to fulfill, with certain
nations such as the U.S. playing a “pivotal
role in the evolution of humanity.” Her
assertion is not arrogant, she says, but “passionately
patriotic.” The upcoming presidential elections
offer us the opportunity to begin that process.
We can choose a leader who has a proven commitment
to steering our country towards peace. But electing
him (or her) requires awareness. Consciousness
gives us the ability to see that suffering anywhere
— as in war — impacts everyone everywhere.
It’s simply the realization that we are
all one.
Generation Conscious
Despite the dreary state of national and international
affairs and the strong threat that the next administration
will be more or less the same as the current one,
signs that Americans are approaching a new age
of enlightenment are increasingly cropping up.
We spend about $3 billion a year on yoga-related
activities and products. You can’t walk
a block in a major American city without running
into a yoga studio. Ministers, medical journals,
athletes and CEOs tout the benefits of meditation.
As part of stress reduction programs, hospitals
offer mindfulness meditation classes. According
to the Washington Post, some 10 million Americans
claim to meditate. Meditation hits om for kids,
too. Film director David Lynch’s charitable
foundation created a Consciousness-based Education
program that sponsors Transcendental Meditation
(TM) training for educators and students. A teacher
in one San Francisco high school claims that suspension
rates have fallen by 50 percent since the initiation
of the TM program.
Baby boomers started dabbling in meditation back
in the Sixties after the Beatles studied TM with
its founder, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, in Rishikesh,
India. Gen Xers have grown up witnessing Madonna
evolve from the material girl to a Kabbalah-quoting
mom who credits yoga for her perfect body and
meditation for a peaceful mind. Now, millennials
have their own role model.
Twenty-five year-old Max Simon — son of
David Simon, medical director and co-founder of
the famed Chopra Center for Wellbeing —
has spent the last four years traveling around
the country teaching yoga and meditation. Disappointed
that no one in the 20- to 30-year-old age group
showed up for his classes, he wondered if the
younger generation is disinterested in consciousness
or if consciousness isn’t presented in a
way that they can relate to. Deciding on the latter,
in November, Simon launched the website getselfcentered.com,
a project designed to make meditation more palatable
to his peers.
“My vision is to inspire one million people
to join me in spending just a little time meditating
everyday. If we could do that, we’d live
in a much better world,” Simon says. He’s
developed a training program for meditation teachers
— or “Awareness Architects,”
as he’s dubbed them. Simon’s coolness
quotient ratcheted up immediately when APL of
hip-hop’s Black Eyed Peas learned the getselfcentered
technique and agreed to be featured on the website.
The Internet is a key meeting space for the new
consciousness movement. Revenue for Beliefnet.com
— which won the 2007 National Magazine Award
for “Online General Excellence,” beating
out fellow finalists ESPN.com and Slate.com —
has risen by 50 percent over the past four years,
according to an estimate from the New York Times.
The Institute for Noetic Studies has it’s
own online outreach campaign, OneMinuteShift.com,
a website offering snippets of video wisdom accompanied
by music. Featured on the site is author Marianne
Williamson, world-renowned lecturer on spiritual,
personal and political issues (all of them being
interconnected, after all), who claims that if
a mere 11 percent of the planet’s citizens
reach a certain level of consciousness, all of
humanity will take a quantum leap to the next
level.
A mere 11 percent doesn’t seem like too
much to ask. But not all pundits see the current
signposts as evidence we’re headed in that
direction. David Korten, Seattle-based author
of the bestselling When Corporations Rule the
World and The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth
Community, is tentative about naming a new consciousness
movement. While Korten concedes that some societal
shift is happening, he is particularly concerned
by the number of Americans who believe our nation
is the most advanced, democratic and benevolent
in the world — a mindset he calls “delusional.”
That delusion, he says, “reveals a monumental
lack of national self-awareness.”
Korten, however, remains hopeful that enough
of us will wake up in time to dramatically change
our behavior in the world before it’s too
late. To do that we must “turn to a cooperative
foreign policy committed to an equitable sharing
of earth’s resources, restore a domestic
ethic of frugality, and learn to live within our
own means.” We cannot afford to continue
to sit back and watch events in our world unfold.
We must act.
Traveling to a remote town in the Himalayas helped
me experience reprieve from my own rampant self-centeredness.
Asked repeatedly to explain why Americans allow
the Bush administration to retain its power, I
was forced to confront my own complacency. And
while I haven’t spent much time in Indian
ashrams, my spiritual quest led me to the mountains
of India where I enjoyed trekking, skiing, paragliding
and rafting, all of which were spiritual experiences
for me. I returned with a deeper appreciation
of nature’s gifts, which has inspired me
to behave more responsibly. I may still struggle
to maintain a regular meditation practice, and
I almost always choose jogging over yoga, but
I know there’s more than one path to the
top of the mountain.
And so does fellow traveler, Elizabeth Gilbert.
During her Eat, Pray, Love appearance on “Oprah”
she stressed that we “don’t have to
travel around the world” to deepen our spiritual
connection and consciousness. She says we should
just ask ourselves the questions she was asking
herself: “What to do I want to do? How can
I find peace within myself? What can I do about
the craziness of the world?”
Writer Lynn Braz lives, works, plays and prays
in the Bay Area. |