Revolutionary Misfit

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The People Planet Party

April 10, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The People Planet Party

Why is it that every political, economic, or other discussion of social order always has to be judged as falling along a spectrum of…

right, left, or center?

I believe that’s what turns many “normal” people off from ever having these discussions in the first place. And they actually are very useful, even vital, discussions for us to have…wouldn’t you say?

Because either “we” have them ourselves, or simply relinquish control over such issues to “them.”

Of course, that’s precisely what “they” want us to do.

I’m beginning to sound a little too much like Glenn Beck for my own comfort…

I’m not a conspiracy theorist!

But I do have a “theory”, or two, about what might be going on here.

I mean what should be the real question…how should political, economic, or social order ideas and actions actually be judged?

As to the affect they have on us…meaning People and Planet…

right?

So, why do we so quickly apply labels and then, according to the label, either tune them in, or out?

It’s sort of like we’ve been conditioned to do that.

And that’s because we HAVE BEEN conditioned to do that!

There was a proverbial once upon a time, long, long ago, when that wasn’t, at least, as true. That getting involved in such discussions was a mark of one’s civic responsibility…or status as a caring and impactful human being.

That’s before we moved from being human “beings” to being human “doings.”

From being actual players to mere spectators…who let Bill O’Reilly and Shawn Hannity do our thinking for us.

And they want us to label. They want us to tune everything out, but them. Drives their ratings and increases their pay-checks.

In fact, the whole political system is built on the assumption that you will label everything. If you happen to be one of those “centrists”, they’ll spend buko bucks trying to move you in their direction.

In fact, that’s pretty much what entire political campaigns are about, since they already know who’s on their side of the spectrum, i.e., their base.

So, we end up with political, economic and social order discussions that are never really about what’s best for People and Planet, but only about whether they are right, left, or center.

Isn’t this whole concept of spectrum, or continuum, merely an impact blinder that prevents us from arriving at real solutions to the problems we face?

I’d say that, well, yes, it is.

Why can’t there be a non-spectral party known as The People Planet Party, or the PPP?

One that doesn’t judge according to the spectrum, but according to the merit of how a given course of action will impact us?

Is this a completely nutty notion, or what?

The two party system that’s so dominated the political, economic, and social order discussion in the U.S.A. for the last 100 years, or so…

might be overdue for a bit of an overhaul.

So, I hereby propose The People Planet Party as one that judges ideas and actions on the merits of good or bad, as opposed to the labels of left or right. Tweet it Out!

Now there’s a catch to pulling this off…

You see, this post has been a rant against the incessant impact blinder that I’ll hereby dub as “spectral labeling.”

But in order to pull this off, we have to get out of our habitual zero-sum, scarcity mentality, my prized ox is about to get gored, mode of thinking.

We have to learn to put impact over interest…

and to embrace the concept of the Big Us.

In short, we have to adopt the worldview of impact mindfulness.

In fact, we could call it The Impact Mindfulness Party…but, The People Planet Party is a bit more “catchy”…wouldn’t you say?

So, what do you think?

Who should we nominate to lead The People Planet Party?

Any ideas?

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: removing impact blinders, the people planet party

Indiana and Impact Mindfulness

April 3, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

Indiana and Impact Mindfulness

The heat is coming early to Indiana this year.

In the form of a new law, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act …

A law that has drawn national attention and the ire of the LGBT community.

Without getting into the contortions of how the law is supposed to work, or might work…

The effect can be, and most likely will be, to sanction religiously motivated discrimination against gay people.

The example that’s continually used is where a christian wedding cake baker refuses to provide service for a same-sex wedding.

But real world situations are far more expansive and potentially pernicious than that already worn-out hypothetical.

Now, I believe it’s fairly clear that when it comes to “protected classes”, one cannot use religious persuasion as an excuse to discriminate.

The Jim Crow laws in the south from reconstruction until the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and 65, were, at least in part, and I’d even argue at their heart, religiously motivated.

The problem is that in many states, Indiana included, sexual orientation is not a protected class.

This new law is a backhanded attempt to take advantage of that, in favor of religious persuasion…

and, let’s face it, primarily christian religious persuasion.

Many are trying to make this a political issue, or a religious issue…

To me, it’s simply a human rights issue.

It comes down to this…

If you can’t use religion as an excuse to discriminate based on race, you should neither be able to use it to discriminate based on sexual orientation.

The argument that the LGBT community should be denied protected class status is one purely based on religion…

Due to the fact that there’s this ancient text of dubious sources containing a few scattered sentences condemning homosexuality as a sinful choice.

And to deny protected class status on that basis is to allow religion to exert far too much influence on how we govern our affairs…

to allow it to rise to the level of an “establishment”, which our First Amendment clearly prohibits.

That is, when religious influence of a particular persuasion begins to undergird the very laws we enact to govern ourselves…well, we got a real constitutional problem on our hands.

But constitutional arguments aside…

I believe we should step back, remove the impact blinders of religion and politics, and ask ourselves what is the impact on PEOPLE here…

Simply put, what’s the right thing to do?

You see the LGBT community is comprised of decent, loving, hardworking, intelligent, creative, beautiful people…some of whom are even religious themselves…

Yet they have endured and continue to endure discrimination, sometimes brutally.

How can that be justified?

When a group of people, who are the way they are because, well, “god” made them that way,…

are routinely and viciously discriminated against, very often due to religious motivations…

why shouldn’t they be deemed a protected class?

Of course, they should!

In fact, many states have already taken such action. Indiana happens to not be one of them…which is very sad.

You know, I guess this worldview of impact mindfulness that I hold fast to, the one that tries to remove impact blinders like religion and politics in order to get a clearer view of the impact of our choices on People and Planet, helps me to arrive at the conclusion that what Indiana is doing is just plain wrong.

Good people will be hurt.

Ask a black person who endured discrimination back in the Jim Crow days how it felt.

Nobody should have to endure that…for any reason.

And all this political mumbo jumbo is just a distraction, or red herring…

The real issue is that we need to elevate People and Planet over religion and politics, 24/7/365! Tweet it Out!

image credit: Wowsy via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Indiana, removing impact blinders

Crying in the Wilderness

April 2, 2015 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

Revolutionary Misfit Manifesto

OK, time to step back and reevaluate what I’m doing.

As anyone who reads this blog (and I know there are a few of you out there) knows…

I’ve done and repatriated to Portland, Oregon.

Is it sticking, you ask?

Or, am I ready to head for those Costa Rican jungle-tops with my idealistic tale tucked between my legs?

The thought has crossed, but I’m not one to give up so easily.

I’ve sort of awakened from the fantasy of finding it easy back here.

I’ve been looking for work, but so far nothing has worked…out.

I’m even dipping a toe into MLM waters…something I still can’t really imagine myself doing, but, hey, what the hell?

It’s just so damned easy to get caught up here…caught up in the rat-race of trying to make a buck and keep up with those Joneses, who seem to always have it better than you…

Know what I mean?

So, this post is going to be one of those cathartic, hey Costa Rica Guy…chill out for a moment…kind of ones.

It’s time to take a step back and remind myself about what and who I am before I find myself caught up trying to be and do something entirely inconsistent.

I’m that voice crying in the wilderness, right?

The revolutionary misfit.

Not just another joe caught up in the capitalistic matrix of living for work and money and the shit that it allows me to buy.

We have to constantly give ourselves these gut-checks…

if we want to live an impactful life…

What’s it really all about?

If the answer is money, then I suggest we find another one.

Oh for sure, everyone will tell you, but MONEY is the way to achieve your dreams…that it removes the constraints that keep you from maximizing your human potential.

Bullshit!

The problem is that just as soon as you make money the driving force in your life…BAM!…

you’re off track.

And it’s so easy for that to happen. It just kinda creeps in there, unnoticed.

And it’s happening to me, right now.

Is this some kind of American-borne virus that’s floating around in the air searching for vulnerable victims?

We need to find a vaccine for that sucker.

Because money and the property it can be used to acquire are not the things I want to pursue in this short life.

Everything out there in capitalandia has a price. It all looks so enticing. It looks like happiness. And those advertisements showing how happy those photoshopped people are that have all that…well…

You see, the price is your life, your true potential as a human being…as opposed to a human doing.

I just don’t buy the idea that happiness is found in material. I refuse to let myself be drawn into that formulation of the American dream, or myth.

It’s found in connection.

It’s found in love.

It’s found in contribution.

It’s found in service.

It’s found in impact.

I need to remind myself, from time to time, to be mindful of that.

Impact Mindful…

You?

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: removing impact blinders

LA County Jail Part 5: The Division Fiction

March 25, 2015 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

LA County Jail Part 5: The Division Fiction

Jail is a bad place. LA County Jail is no exception.

What’s taking place behind those bars is a microcosm of what’s taking place on the streets.

Nevertheless, I was astonished at the racial division inside the jail. A division that is promoted by those in charge. A division that’s become, over the years, ingrained in the system. Everything is set up around it.

Inmates come into the system dripping with the gasoline of racial tension. A small spark can set off an explosion.

The history of the LA County Jail system is not unlike LA County itself. And the whole nation knows about the deadly riots that have taken place over the decades…like the Watts riots of the 60’s and the Rodney King riots of the 90’s.

So, I guess this systematically enforced racial division does help to maintain order. But it just seemed wrong. And many of my fellow inmates, of all races, expressed similar sentiments.

I spent the largest amount of time during my three weeks in the jail in Dorm 611 of Wayside, aka, Supermax. This dorm housed around 70 or so inmates of all races. About 10% were white. The rest were evenly divided between blacks and latinos.

The racial division was very much a part of day to day life in this dorm. Everything was divided racially, from the bunk areas, eating places, showers, toilets, phones, to cleaning duties, use of the exercise area, etc., etc.

You weren’t supposed to share food with other races, or make gifts of food, or other items to them. You could talk to them, but you weren’t to get too friendly.

These were the rules and it didn’t pay to disobey.

Sounds pretty ugly, doesn’t it? Like another world…

well, sort of.

But, even though all that was like an overlay on life in the dorm, underneath it, I witnessed a racial harmony that belied this division fiction.

I say division fiction, because, even though the rules were certainly a reality of your everyday experience, the unspoken truth that everyone realized was, hey, we’re really all in this boat, shit-hole, or however you might want to refer to it, together.

I saw tough guys who you probably wouldn’t want to come across in a dark street alley on the outside, being nice to one another.

Please, thank you, excuse me, were words spoken repeatedly throughout the day. That seemed kind of odd, considering the circumstances.

I never would’ve thought prison could be so, well, polite. Even to a greater degree than life on the outside.

I write in this blog about this concept of the Big US. That the reality of things is that even though society is divided along racial, ethnic, cultural, political, socio-economical, religious, and other such lines, we humans really are all in this boat together.

That’s the reality behind the overlay of the division fiction.

When things get bad, really bad, that sense of togetherness tends to rise to the surface…as it did on the tough streets of New York in the immediate aftermath of the 9-11 attacks.

And prison is definitely a place were things are bad for everyone, no exceptions. There’s no one, I repeat, no one, in there who wants to be in there.

So, despite the division fiction, there’s truly a sense of togetherness, of brotherhood, of unity.

The point of this post is that if the division is indeed a fiction on the inside…

I would surmise that it’s also one on the outside.

And if we could just step back and take notice of that fact…

maybe all the idiocy behind racial strife and tension would just melt away.

And those in charge of perpetuating systematic racial division in our society, and who even benefit from it, would lose much of their power to do so.

image credit: Ryan_Brady via Compfight cc

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: LA County Jail, the big us

A Road Less Traveled

March 22, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

mara

I was reminded this morning of a great book I’ve read many times over the years…one that has had an impact on my philosophy of life…The Road Less Traveled, by Dr. M. Scott Peck.

I’ve written a couple posts that were motivated, in part, by this book. Here’s one that I thought I’d resurrect from the ashes of my old Costa Rica Guy blog…

In Buddhism, the counterpart to christianity’s Satan is a dude called Mara.

Mara is the instigator, or the embodiment, of human suffering.

The Buddha, while seeking enlightenment under the bodhi tree, was tempted by Mara, much the same way that Christ was tempted in the desert by Satan.  And, like Christ, Buddha was able to withstand these temptations.

There are many stories in Buddhist literature of encounters between Mara and Buddha.  I came across one recently that tells how Mara one day came to visit Buddha.

Buddha’s most trusted disciple saw Mara approaching and was very distressed and wished to drive the demon away.  However, when Buddha learned of Mara’s arrival he was overjoyed, as if he was seeing an old friend.

He told his disciple to ready some tea and he invited Mara to come, sit and talk.  Mara confided to Buddha that things hadn’t been going so well lately. That he wished he could be something other than the great demon tempter.

This story, while humorous, has a really important meaning.

In Buddhism and indeed in my reality in general, life is suffering.  Life is hard.  Life hurts sometimes.  Suffering is inevitable.  It cannot be avoided.

But what is suffering?

If suffering is an integral part of life, then why fight it?  Why resist it?

In The Road Less Traveled, Dr. M. Scott Peck makes the profound claim that all human mental illness is a direct result of trying to avoid suffering.

Is it not the wiser path then, rather than to resist suffering, invite it in for a tea? Tweet it Out!

Suffering, like all other events in the time span of our lives, is temporal.  It will pass and be replaced by other, different, and perhaps more pleasurable experiences.

So why fight it?

If you believe that there’s an intelligent design to life, that things don’t really happen by accident, then maybe suffering is actually meant for our good.  Of course, in the midst of it that’s a hard thing to accept.

But that’s only because we are so deathly afraid of it and will do anything to avoid it…

And most of those “things” that we do, those attempts at medicating our suffering away, only lead to more suffering.

I know because I’ve done my share of suffering and of medicating.

I believe that rather than resisting, maybe we should just relax, invite the experience of suffering in, feel it in its fullness, discover what we are supposed to during its endurance, and only then move on to the next level of our human experience.

That might be a road less traveled, but perhaps it’s the correct one…the way of Buddha, the way to enlightenment, spiritual growth and evolution.

Suffering, if responded to in the correct way, may just lead us a little closer to god, or, at least, to our true selves.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: road less traveled

The High Price of a Free Market

March 21, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

The High Price of a Free Market

My last post made the point that we are living in a state of rising inequality and a root cause of that is a society that has become increasingly money-driven, and not people and planet driven.

Everything is done in the name of self-interest and very little in the public interest.

And the things proposed to be done in the public interest are decried as being too expensive, or, worse, socialistic.

I did not, however, mention a word that looms large in my argument…

capitalism,

or, better, capitalism run amok.

The reason that our system has become completely “money-driven” as opposed to driven by an interest in the betterment of people and planet, is partly because of our deeply entrenched notions of a “free market” society.

We regard the free market as an indispensable hallmark of our freedom.

But I am here to tell you that a free market, really isn’t free at all.

We all pay the high price of a free market. And the “freer” that market is, the higher the price we pay. Tweet it Out!

And that price is called greed.

Here’s the thing. We have so embraced the notion that capitalism and the free market are inherently sacred in our society that we shun any idea that might tend to regulate them, or apply brakes to their sometimes careless and wreck-less forward motion.

Oh no, that’s socialism, we gasp in unison!

This idea is ingrained into the culture of American thought, as if it was enshrined in the minds of our founders…

When the truth is that our founders were very anxious and worried about just the sort of situation that has now reared its ugly head…

The situation I like to call “capitalism run amok”,

or, a system that has become wholly and completely driven by economic self-interest.

That’s what is feeding this growing inequality that we’re witnessing rise to levels not seen since the roaring 1920’s…the decade just before the advent of two seminal events in our history…

The Great Depression, and

World War II.

History has a way of repeating itself.

Capitalism and the free market are simply economic ideas, and pretty good ones, I might add.

However, they are not religiously inspired notions, as many seem to believe.

They are not God-breathed expressions of how man should govern his affairs.

The sort of capitalism run amok we are now seeing unfold is largely based on the idea, espoused by Milton Friedman, that man is wholly governed by self-interest…

that his economic decisions will always be made in that light.

And that it’s best for government to get out of the way of his doing so…

That’s what will move society onward and upward to greater evolutionary levels.

It’s as if there’s an invisible hand guiding such unregulated self-interest, so that in the end, the common good of all will prevail.

Well, truths are only truthful when based on a solid foundation of observable facts…

And I believe what we have observed, especially as of late, is that a system that is purely subservient to self-interest, will be one in which greed grows to uncontrollable proportions.

So that money is the driving force behind most of what’s done.

We go to wars to make money.

We build jails and incarcerate our citizenry to make money.

We educate our children to make money.

We care for the health of our populace to make money.

We worship according to our faith to make money.

We run for office and exercise our duty as “public servants” to make money.

We basically, to put it harshly, become a system of capitalistic whores.

We sacrifice our national character on the alter of the “free” market.

I propose that it’s high time we dethrone the word capitalism from it’s lofty heights in our political and cultural lexicon.

That we begin to evaluate not only its virtues, but also its vices.

Because, in my humble opinion, when it comes to action that is public interested, rather than self-interested…

or impact over interest, as I am fond of saying…

the relentless pursuit of money in an unbridled free market becomes an imposing barrier, or impact blinder.

Our society becomes corrupt…we lose the capacity to govern ourselves in the name of the public good.

And that seems to be exactly what’s happening.

We pay the high price of a free market…greed…

and our society becomes increasingly vulnerable to ultimate collapse.

Filed Under: Impact over Interest Tagged With: capitalism run amok, impact over interest

The Politics of Divide and Conquer

March 19, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

The Politics of Divide and Conquer

What America now faces, if we do not want to change the fundamental structures of the relationship of money to legislative power, is neither mob rule nor democracy, but oligarchy.

Zephyr Teachout, Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s Snuff Box to Citizens United

I smell a rat.

Don’t you?

Well, if you can’t smell it, there are over the counter remedies.

I often get embroiled in Facebook debates on political issues. These are generally friendly, or at least they tend to end friendly…

but they can get downright ugly at times.

Often, it seems, that the participants are occupying diverse planets…at least in terms of their political viewpoints.

I can almost certainly guess that those of us participating in these discussions are components of that vast swath of Americana known as the middle class.

The one that politicians always claim, come election time, to be concerned about.

Now, it’s funny that the middle class consists primarily of folks who blame everyone, but themselves, for the problems that are befalling our nation.

We love to point fingers…usually at each other, or at those on that dreaded level below us…

the “dependency class”, as some derogatorily refer to them.

And we all love to point our bony fingers of indignation at government, as we are pretty much in agreement that “it” is failing us.

And even though we might have distinctly different reasons for doing so, there does exist that strong common ground amongst us.

Government is failing us.

Now let’s explore the real reason behind that mutually agreeable fact…

I’m currently reading a book by Zephyr Teachout, professor of law at Fordham University, on political corruption.

Teachout’s underlying premise is that the driving force behind rising inequality is corruption in politics. Not quid pro quo type corruption, also known as bribery…

but structural corruption.

Corruption that is “built-in” to the system itself.

Teachout claims that such corruption has always been around, but it accelerated in the 70’s and reached its zenith with the Supreme Court’s landmark 2010 decision in the Citizens United case.

That’s the case in which the court held that the First Amendment prohibits the government from restricting independent political expenditures by nonprofit corporations. The principles articulated by the Supreme Court in the case have now been extended to for-profit corporations, labor unions and other associations.

Basically, it paves the road for the uninhibited flow of “dark money” into campaign coffers.

Now, Teachout’s point, and one that I agree with, is that it’s utterly nuts to think that all this money doesn’t buy influence.

And influence is the sine qua non of corruption.

Government is supposed to act in the public interest, not in the interest of its wealthiest donors. Tweet it Out!

So, what we end up with is a system that’s money-driven, rather than people and planet driven.

And that’s perpetuating this growing inequality, as more and more wealth is being “driven” into the hands of fewer and fewer folks.

A phenomenon that is accelerating to alarming levels, as shown to us by Thomas Piketty, the celebrated French economist, in his now famous economic treatise, Capitalism in the 21st Century.

As long as the ones on the receiving end of this great wealth concentration are pulling the strings, nothing will be done about it…

Well, except for events that none of us really want to bear witness to. Events like wars, bloody revolutions, or severe economic depressions.

Yes, it has all happened before.

Therefore, I believe that we, the 99%, should stop pointing fingers anywhere but up.

The problem is not government spending on poverty and other social causes society actually benefits from…

It’s the fact that government action is by and large being manipulated by those at the top of the wealth pyramid…

And for middle class folks to argue and fight over spending that actually does “us” good is a red herring that won’t do anything, but make matters worse…

That’s exactly what “they” want us to do, point the fingers at each other, point them anywhere, except at them!

And as long as we’re fighting amongst each other…

they’re laughing all the way to the bank!

That really is the politics of divide and conquer and, at the moment, we’re letting them get away with it!

image credit: We the People – Needham via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: removing impact blinders, the big us, Thomas Piketty, Zephyr Teachout

An Exceptional Idea

March 17, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

An Exceptional Idea

I always get very concerned when I hear that term “American exceptionalism” being bandied about…

usually, these days, on Fox News.

Indeed, “America” (or, the part that encompasses the U.S.A.) is exceptional in many ways…

It was founded upon an exceptional ideal…

for a government of, by and for “the people.”

It’s funny these days that the folks who seem to have co-opted the phrase are the ones who want to do away with government altogether…even though it was our form of government that made us “exceptional” to begin with!

And throughout the years we have made good on the characterization…

We have, actually…acted exceptional…

by ending the institution of slavery…

in overcoming a Great Depression…

in defeating fascism…

in educating our people…

in giving equal rights to vote…

only just recently, in providing equal access to health care (one that was long overdue, by the way)…

and many other ways that have had as their impetus, government action.

Our hallowed military, which is the paramount example of our exceptionalism, in the eyes of many, is the largest government program in the history of the world!

Now, it seems, that this idea for exceptionalism gets twisted and warped in the minds of many…

Who think it means that we are somehow better than the rest of the world.

That it means that we have somehow earned the right to impose our will on the rest of the world.

That we are possessed of a degree of wisdom that the rest of the world lacks.

That “they” are, to put it bluntly, lesser beings.

And that, my friends, is a dangerous way to think.

I believe that particular ideology of exceptionalism, which often almost rises to the degree of a “theology”, puts wind in the sails behind our impetus to intervene in the affairs of others…

to try to mold them in the image of us…regardless of how “they” might feel about it.

To try to mold the entire world in our image and likeness.

I believe that makes the world a more dangerous place…

because it causes others not to like us all that much…

even hate us to the extent of trying to do us harm.

It gets us into messes we ought not be in!

We’ve got better things to do. We’ve got important problems to solve right here at home…so that we can actually live up to the manner in which we seem fond of characterizing ourselves.

The truth is, even though our form of government is at its core tenets, exceptional, as compared to others that have been tried, it doesn’t mean “we” are!

We aren’t better than the rest…different maybe, but not better, nor different in a better way, which is what “exceptional” implies.

We’re all made of the same stuff, flesh and blood…and with the same basic desires…

to live a dignified, good life, free of exploitation and free to be the masters of our own destinies.

Everyone wants that. Everyone deserves that.

And we can’t impose our ideas of how that should be accomplished on others.

Let them try it their way. And let us get out of the way, whilst they’re doing it.

This old world is big enough for more than one idea of what constitutes exceptionalism. Tweet it Out!

Our hope should be that others out there can be exceptional in their own way.

That the entire world can be exceptional.

It may come as a surprise to many, but…

it’s not a contest!

How’s that for an exceptional idea?

image credit: FDR Presidential Library & Museum via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: exceptionalism, removing impact blinders, the big us

Impact Mindfulness: What Good is It?

March 14, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

What Good is It?

We live in a cynical world. A cynical world. And we work in a business of tough competitors.

Jerry Maguire

It’s a real jungle out there!

There are a million reasons to be cynical. To ask yourself…

What good is it?

I know, cuz I ask myself that at times.

But I try to be guided by this framework for a mindset that I describe in two simple words…

impact mindfulness.

You see, this great country of ours was actually founded in mindfulness, which is at heart an optimistic ideal.

It was founded on the optimistically mindful ideal that all men are created equal and endowed with rights to pursue happiness, dignity, a good life.

So, what happened with all that optimism?

Where, when and how did our world turn so cynical?

I mean, we did do a pretty good job of pursuing…

but we pursued something else…

We even changed the phrase from happiness…to property.

We replaced the idea of happiness, by some slight of hand, with stuff.

And we became world class property pursuers, didn’t we?

We created a structural success unlike anything the world had ever seen.

Here’s the thing…

Much of that structure, the foundation for our successful pursuit of property, was built on the backs of the unhappiness of others.

Now, I didn’t write that to criticize, but for you to realize…

that a lot of folks have suffered, indeed the entire planet has suffered, for you to have all that shiny success that you’re so rightfully proud of.

In fact, you couldn’t even have it if it weren’t for a whole lot of suffering…

Even that white powder you sprinkle into your coffee each morning, as well as the coffee itself, was brought to you by someone’s suffering…

I know that, since I’ve lived for the past 14 years at ground zero, where that shit comes from and the folks that bring it to you are poorer that you can even imagine.

And if you’re of the kind that likes to ingest white powder into other orifices, well then my point becomes even stronger.

All this is to say that our successful pursuit of property has an impact…

and a negative one, on people and planet.

So, my suggestion is that we be mindful of that…

impact mindful.

But what good is it?

What good is it for little ole me to be mindful and what does that even mean?

Well, first, it means being mindful of how the way you live your life is impacting people and planet…

down to the clothes you wear, the food you eat, the shit you accumulate, the way you make the money that allows for said accumulation, how you treat your fellow humans, as well as the planet we’re all passengers on, and, certainly, the way you participate in your government via voting and other means.

The concept of impact mindfulness is pretty wide ranging.

And if you’re mindful, perhaps, just perhaps, you can inspire others to be as well…

You can spread the idea like a virus and thus change the world…

leave it better than you found it.

How does that sound?

There are lots of really good reasons to be impact mindful and, really, we’re getting to the point where our planet, the universe, is demanding it.

So, I’d say, we start paying attention more towards mindfulness and less to property pursuit.

It’s about taking care to take care…of each other and our planet…

and there’s good in that, I think.

Here’s a funny little clip from one of my favorite shows, Portlandia…

it’s a parody of the mindfulness concept, but also shows how there are people out there who are at least trying…

image credit: tchab51 via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: portlandia, removing impact blinders

On Not Averting Your Eyes

March 13, 2015 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

I Was Blind, but Now I See

I remember very clearly seeing an unfolding news story that made me mad…fighting mad…

It was the scene of Reginald Deny being pulled from his truck and smashed in the head with a brick during the horrific LA riots of 1992.

You remember, the one sparked by the acquittal of the officers charged in the Rodney King beating.

Back then I had a different worldview than I hold today. One that was far more to the right…

I mean, way far more!

And I felt a great degree of righteous indignation about that terrible beating…

that no matter what motivated it, it was wrong and the perps had to be punished…severely.

Well, I still believe all that. Of course, it was wrong.

But that’s only part of the story…and after 3 weeks in the LA County Jail, I’ve got an entirely different perspective about, as old Paul Harvey used to say, “the rest of the story.”

Recently, I got embroiled in a Facebook comment thread that seemed to go on ad infinitum about an article written by Thomas Sowell.

Dr. Sowell put forth the proposition, using statistical reference, that blacks in Ferguson are not unfairly targeted by the local police…

That the scathing DOJ report to the contrary is just a bunch of hooey.

I strongly disagree.

You see, I tend to view things differently now than I did back in 92.

Back then I’d probably have agreed with Dr. Sowell.

So, why the dramatic metamorphosis in thought, Costa Rica Guy?

Well, thanks for asking, since that’s the real motivation for this post.

I believe what changed is my ability to see things from more than one perspective…

To empathize with others, or not avert my eyes, even when their situation in life is far removed from my own…

as that of those involved in the LA riots were and those protesting and rioting in Ferguson now are.

I recently came across a post by Seth Godin that seemed to offer some insight as to why we often get stuck in a particular worldview that prevents us from seeing things from any other perspective…

that compels us to…avert our eyes.

Seth says…

There’s a long history of denialism, defending the status quo and ignoring what others discover. That two balls of different weights fall at the same speed. That the Earth rotates around the Sun. That the world is millions of years old. That we walked on the Moon.

Seth does on to say…

Why deny? It’s a way to avert our eyes.

Two related reasons, internal and external.

The external reason is affiliation. What happens to one’s standing when you dare to question the accepted status quo? What are the risks to doing your own research, to putting forth a falsifiable theory and being prepared to find it proven wrong? What will you tell your neighbors?

When adherence to the status quo of our faith or organization or social standing looms large, it’s often far easier to just look the other way, to feign ignorance or call yourself a skeptic…

The internal reason is fear. The fear of having to re-sort what we believe. Of feeling far too small in a universe that’s just too big. Most of all, of engaging in a never-ending cycle of theories and testing, with the world a little shaky under our feet as we live with a cycle that gets us closer to what’s real.

Seth says, in conclusion…

Part of being our best selves is having the guts to not avert our eyes, to look closely at what scares us, what disappoints us, what threatens us. By looking closely we have a chance to make change happen.

I believe one’s social circle and standing in it, religious and political connections (as those two often go hand to hand), among other things, represent the “affiliations” that largely determine our degree of empathy…

or, as Seth says, the degree of our tendency to look the other way, to avert our eyes to realities that may be far removed from our own.

That doesn’t make us bad people…it’s very normal human behaviour.

But the question I pose this morning is this…

Is it conducive to greater impact?

You see, the ones who need your impact the most, may not be the ones sitting in the pew next to you on Sunday morning, or with whom you play golf, invite into your home, or agree with politically.

Empathy, or not averting your eyes and turning a cold shoulder to the plight of others, is the key to solving many problems we face in our world today.

How so?

Well, it certainly has an influence on things like…

who you vote for.

And who you vote for has an influence on…

who actually gets elected.

And once elected, what policies are implemented, what wars are started, etc., etc.

These are important things to think about, wouldn’t you agree?

So, it’s a good idea maybe to step back and evaluate how your worldview got inside your head to begin with.

And then ask yourself, is it consistent with how the world really is…

from the perspective of all its inhabitants, even those far removed from your present reality and affiliations?

Don’t avert your eyes and allow affiliations and fear to determine how you think about problems and what actions you actually might take to solve them.

Don’t let affiliations and fear lead to averting your eyes and thereby become impact blinders.

image credit: ONE/MILLION via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: removing impact blinders, seth godin

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