The Year of the Holomovement; What We Must Do to Make 2019 a Time of Transformation

December 29, 2018
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We’re nearing the end of 2018, and with any closing of a cycle, it inspires both reflection and a sense of urgency for positive changes in the new year. Personally, these past twelve months have left me feeling simultaneously more passionate about taking action and more compassionate than ever for the plight of the world and its people.

For 2019 to be a year of transformation we must embody a feeling of hope for a positive future. This feeling needs to be a belief and understanding within ourselves and our souls of what we can personally do to make a difference. This is about taking action.

When is the Time for Action?

The time is now. In fact, it’s not now, it was about 50 years ago. I remember 1968 quite well, the year Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy were killed, the year of the Democratic convention in Chicago, the election of Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War.

I remember that year as the time I was radicalized as an activist, not to be angry and go out and shout and be violent, but to dedicate my life to making a difference and helping people to find their purpose. Fifty years have gone by, and I’m not sure much progress has been made at a global scale. This is why the time is now to take action.

Timing in life is a critical thing. We find ourselves in the great turning, in this monumental moment in human history where it is either break down or break through. The swing of this momentum is so delicate and sensitive that this spinning top of our world only requires the slightest nudge of an intention to move it in a new direction. This is humanity’s time to draw inspiration from the butterfly effect, the idea that the small flapping of wings of a butterfly in Brazil can create a thunderstorm in China.

The real message, of course, is not that every time a butterfly flaps their wings we have thunderstorms, but rather it is a reminder that small actions can have profound effects. And now is the time for all of us to flutter our wings toward positive change.

This ripple effect of global action has science on its side as well. In 1977, the physical chemist Ilya Prigogine won the Nobel prize in Chemistry for his theory of dissipative structures. This is important, as he showed us that biochemical systems, when put under enormous amounts of stress and pushed far from their state of natural equilibrium, can and will transform themselves. They do this by mastering timing.

Alvin Toffler, in his forward to Prigogine and Isabelle Stenger’s book “Order Out of Chaos,” described the timing and action of these molecular systems using an analogy of ping pong balls in a glass bowl. Toffler offers the visual of a bowl filled with half white balls, half black balls, and randomly mixed together without any form or pattern. These ping pong balls represent molecular structures under extreme chemical pressure that could result in destruction if organized transformation doesn’t occur. What Prigogine proved was that at their bifurcation point of dying or transforming, these molecules will transform and will organize themselves into the systems called chemical clocks. If we were watching our ping pong balls, we would see that out of chaos, the black and white balls had formed organized patterns allowing their structures to absorb energy from outside their system to transform themselves into a stable system.

Now, last I heard, molecules don’t have the brain power we humans enjoy. What we’re able to take away from Prigogine’s findings is the importance of timing, rather than overthinking transformation. Under pressure, molecular structures take action with urgency, adapting in whatever way is needed to survive. It’s time that we consider doing the same.

What is the Message in This Transformative Action?

Action without intention is not what I’m suggesting despite our sense of urgency for change. With so many challenges in our world it is important we understand our unifying message and vision for transformation that brings humanity together.

It’s said that in resistance movements we need to speak truth to power; that somehow truth in all of its manifestations will save the day. Except now, we see on news reports like CNN, a woman being interviewed saying that she doesn’t believe anything the president says is truthful, but that she still trusts him.

To further demonstrate the lack of respect for truth, especially in our political arena, short-lived White House Director of Communications, Anthony Scaramucci seems to sum it up. In response to the question if President Donald Trump lies, Scaramucci replies he is an “intentional liar,” which apparently is different than being a “plain old liar.” This behavior and disregard for truth and integrity makes it difficult to speak truth to power under these circumstances.

Our message for worldwide transformation needs to adapt in these trying times to one that isn’t an overload of information or overstating our position. Instead, it’s time we find a new way to connect and build trust within the hearts and minds of those individuals on the opposite side of the divide.

To bridge such divisive gaps in our communities, 2019 is a year we have to take action with a message of evolutionary, agape love. This is not an easy strategy to uphold, but Integral Transformative Practice co-founders Michael Murphy and George Leonard created one method we could use to practice compassion in the face of resistance—“taking the hit as a gift.” Life is full of hits. It knocks us down all the time, and rather than rage back without conscious intention or compassion, we must reflect on why we had that hit in the first place and how we can turn it into fuel and energy for action.

We can use these challenges as gifts to bring us together in higher meaning and a deeper purpose instilled in our actions. It’s time to seek the greatest and most universal common denominator of human values we can find.

We all come from the same source; we’re all part of the same species. We are one humanity struggling together through a trauma of separatism. Unfortunately, it seems we sink ever deeper into this perception of isolation, but we must remember our prior unity. We can still source this Oneness within small community groups taking action around the world, to bring Purpose to the People.

The universe is purposeful. Hungarian philosopher of science, systems theorist, integral theorist and author, Ervin Laszlo beautifully delineated this idea explaining; “If the universe is purposeful, then we are purposeful, and we are the crown jewel of the universe’s purpose.”

We are one humanity, and we are purposeful. This is what drives us forward. Our message and movement for the new year is Global Oneness, Global Purpose.

How Do We Deliver this Message of Global Purpose?

There’s no political spectrums or ideologies that have a monopoly on populism. Populism is something that ignites in a people because there is an injustice creating the need to stand up for their rights to create change. And in this new year, we too can form a movement of world populism to transform our society from the inside out. We all share in humanity’s struggles and when each of us answers our soul-based calling to honor our sense of purpose, in all its forms of expression, we can truly change the world for the better.

Delivery and acting on this message isn’t about working against the system, or even within the system. It’s time to reach beyond the current system and find a new source of energy to transform the patterns of behavior to serve the global family. By reaching toward a higher source, by whatever name you want to call it, we can ignite our purpose and create a ripple effect of positive action.

Remember our small but mighty butterflies creating thunderstorms? The timing is now to do our part, and if each of us takes action in this bifurcation point of break down or break through, we will see a pattern emerge that resembles nothing short of what theoretical physicist David Bohm defines as a holomovement. Defined, this movement “brings together the holistic principle of ‘undivided wholeness’ with the idea that everything is in a state of process or becoming. 

What an exciting opportunity to change the world, and the best part of this process is we don’t have to know exactly how it works. It’s like riding a bike. As author Michael Talbot says: “We do not learn to ride a bicycle by painstakingly memorizing ever feature to the process. We learn by grasping the whole flowing movement.”

This holomovement will build in strength around a common cause, with chaos and divisiveness the universal strange attractor. There’s no need for messianic leaders to take ownership of this message. I’m inspired by a quote from Thich Nhat Hanh reminding us that “The next Buddha could very well be a Sangha.” 

We can visualize this process by imagining the Buddhist symbol of a lotus blossom emerging from the murky and muddy depths of a stagnate pond. Just as the lotus flowers with grace and beauty at the surface of dark waters, this holomovement has the potential to rise above the chaos of our challenging times and bloom in global transformation.

Let’s make 2019 the year humanity joins together to take action with a sincere message bringing Purpose to the People. We don’t need to know the specific details, or outline the perfect strategy. What matters is that the purpose in our hearts knows we can consciously create positive transformation in the year ahead. As we close out the year, we can do well to continue to ask ourselves these important questions:

When is the time? Now.
What is the message? Purpose to the People.
How do we deliver it? By taking action.

Feature Photo by Jay Castor on Unsplash

Susan Clayton
March 27, 2024 1:20 AM
Resolutions start with intentions. Now more than ever, ever before we must state our intentions and act purposefully. I am sickened by the lies, the deaths, the outright refusal to recognize the direction of our country right now. Their trick is to compare and support actions with, “0bama did it....Clinton did it and it didn’t matter...Hilary did it....” If Johnny shoots his buddy, it is OK to do the same to Michael? Why, or better, “HOW” can people believe this?

I am indeed joining the fight and will work in any way to stop this foolishness.
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Read articles and book reviews reflecting my work in envisioning a world transformed.
Book Review: A New Republic of the Heart by Terry Patten
August 2, 2018
Restoring spiritual values within the foundation of democracy has taken on a new sense of urgency. How can purpose, compassion and spirituality coincide as a beacon for a system that seems fueled by populism, anger and greed? These are the questions I had been asking myself when I was introduced to <a href="https://www.terrypatten.com/a-new-republic-of-the-heart/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Terry Patten’s new book, A New Republic of the Heart</a>. The subtitle hints to the wealth of information shared in the book. Terry Patten’s writing on the “Ethos for Revolutionaries” is a guide for what is required of us to co-create a more compassionate globally democratic society. The theme throughout the chapters is a wake up call that we can no longer afford to leave the heart out of our activism and evolution. To transform humanity requires us to reawaken to our connection to the greater whole and release the illusion of separate selves that fuels so much fear. But why the heart, when it seems love is the last thing being shown in our challenging times? Terry writes: <i>“A New Republic of the Heart:  Because its center is everywhere and its circumference is nowhere, wholeness cannot be pointed to. It has no particular location, because it is not “other” than anything. But if it is anywhere, it is here, at the very center of each “when” and each “where.” The wisdom of the center of the being reflects the character of the whole. And we intuit its intelligence at the heart.”</i> As we work to create positive change, it’s critical we have guides to offer insight and inspiration, and Terry Patten’s A New Republic of the Heart remains on my bedside table to continue using as a resource.<i> </i>My reflections below touch upon only a small part of the vast amount of inspiring information presented in his book, and I hope it inspires others to explore his writing in more detail. <h2><b>Reawakening to the Heart’s Capacity for Compassion</b></h2> A New Republic of the Heart explains that the first step in positive transformation is finding resources for healthy change that already exist. This could be as simple as forming and maintaining meaningful friendships. To be in service of the greater whole, to have a democracy that is respectful and empathetic, first requires us to get along with our neighbors, our family members and our colleagues. It is a simple yet critical reminder. As activists, our energy and intentions matter, but so do our daily habits in how we show up in the world, and Terry writes why this is so important. <i>“It is a deep truth that when we join in battle, we tend to become like our opponents. Evolution and the course of life would be served if we could learn to fight such “evil” in a different way—such as Gandhi and other non-violent resisters have discovered—so that we can prevail without becoming like what we oppose.”</i> Acting with love and care, especially when so many groups seem to thrive on hate, is no easy task and this book doesn’t pretend to offer easy answers. Again and again, Terry returns to the power of the heart as our guide for the journey. I resonated with Terry’s words, and how <a href="https://emanuelkuntzelman.com/balancing-agape-and-eros-love-in-global-transformation/">we need to return to agape love</a> in our evolutionary growth. We have strayed from the platonic compassion that nurtures our transformation, and instead have become distracted by the need for instant gratification and excitement often found in eros love. While both are important in our evolution, humanity must find a balance to reconnect with the greater whole. Terry writes in chapter three just how important this understanding of love’s capacity is to building a new republic of the heart. A practice in trust, compassion, appreciation, generosity, courage and creativity is needed as individuals and as a collective culture. In a time where a chasm seems to grow deeper and wider between those with differing opinions, and democracy itself is under threat, it will be our heart’s deeper intelligence that will inform our way of being and how we respond to challenges. <h2><b>Change Requires an Understanding of Reality’s Undivided Wholeness</b></h2> The book explains that Wholeness is intuited at the heart. In fact, reawakening to our sense of connection could be the most revolutionary form of activism we could engage in at this time. Terry writes that this isn’t just an ideal, it’s a necessity. We can no longer afford to leave this sense of interconnectedness, even to those people and ideas we oppose, out of our intentions and co-evolution. This is a big ask, but this book doesn’t propose we need to be enlightened to achieve positive change. Instead, the message is to realize our connectedness rather than compartmentalizing our reality. Terry considers: “<i>how our usual approach (especially in “civilized” societies) is to bypass this perspective in favor of endless fragmentation and analysis, which contributes to the pathology by which we have wrought ecological havoc on our whole planet.</i>” I agree with the book’s description of humanity’s illusion of separation, and the idea that we can’t seek out a connection to wholeness, but instead must <i>reawaken</i> to this way of being. This is why the heart is taking center stage. Unfortunately, this isn’t going to happen overnight and as Terry writes, will require a lifetime of practice. In the latter chapters of A New Republic of the Heart, Terry pays homage to <a href="http://www.itp-international.org/the_people" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Michael Murphy and George Leonard,</a> as well as Ken Wilber’s teachings, to defend this declaration. The solution to our global crisis isn’t going to arrive as a quick fix. And it isn’t going to come from strictly meditating, or an individual pursuit of enlightenment. This is an integral practice of body, mind, heart and soul. Our challenge in reawakening to our connectedness is stalled by our natural tendency to compartmentalize identities, opinions and actions. However, Terry writes how “integralists” are working to “transcend the fragmentation of our postmodern world.” One way to achieve this is by understanding that every generation and stage of evolution has highlights and shadows of its time. In this chapter of A New Republic of the Heart, much of the writing is inspired by Ken Wilber’s teachings of “including and transcending.” He lays the foundation for the wisdom of respecting lessons we can learn to “include and transcend” by describing the Traditionalist, Modern and Postmodern perspectives and worldviews that have evolved and what we can learn from each stage. This step is also critical if we are to transform our current democratic system to one of cooperation and compassion. We can no longer afford to separate into various camps of thought, pointing fingers at who’s to blame for our global situation. To practice this also requires a narrative that holds a coherent story and meaning. The book describes the need for an archetypal story that can be true for both us as individuals and also as a culture. What I found interesting in this chapter was the importance of yin and yang in our hero/heroine’s description. Terry writes that “at the heart of yin heroism there’s a call for a new level of yang action.” To be effective agents of change we must honor both the time to reflect, to be receptive and diligent about strategy and research, but then also know when it is time to take action. Both stillness and movement are critical components of this process. Once again we come back to the theme of the book, a heartfelt revolution of wholeness against fragmentation. <h2><b>Introducing Love in the Domain of Politics</b></h2> In the final chapters, Terry touches on ways to go “around the system” in achieving results in our activism, as well as the reiteration that communication and meaningful dialogue are the remedies to a fragmented society. He also highlights some work being done specifically in the realm of politics, which I found particularly interesting. To enact love in the domain of politics is profoundly tricky, yet incredibly important, and Charles Eisenstein’s quote in the book suggests we start with empathy: <i>“As we enter a period of intensifying disorder it is important to introduce a different kind of force to animate the structures that might appear after the old ones crumble. I would call it love if it weren’t for the risk of triggering your New Age bullshit detector, and besides, how does one practically bring love into the realm of politics? So let’s start with empathy. Politically, empathy is akin to solidarity, born of the understanding that we are all in this together.... I see its lineaments in those marginal structures and practices that we call holistic, alternative, regenerative, and restorative. All of them source from empathy, the result of the compassionate inquiry: What is it like to be you?”</i> This is entirely different from the kind of activism that intensifies polarization, scorning those it opposes. It counters progressive activist tendencies to demonize political enemies. Eisenstein goes on to suggest we take time to ask perhaps a more important question as we rebuild our political system. Yes, as a global community connected to a greater whole, we can say we’re all in this together, but what does that mean: <i>“In what together?”</i> Terry believes that we are in “uncertainty together.” And if this is the case, each moment requires the ongoing process of learning and growth. Intelligence alone is not going to help us transform. The heart and even our spiritual center of our <i>hara</i>, must work in tandem with our mind to co-create a better future for humanity. I really think Terry is on to something important here.  Our educational systems have taught that “certainty” is the way to go—as there is always a “right” answer to our questions, but in the cultural, political and social quagmire of our present time, we are definitely ensconced in uncertainty, whether we like it or not.  So, we are better off embracing this, feeling into the core of our being, and allowing our hearts to give us intuitive direction of the path to take, rather than expecting the mind’s logic to show the way.  Again, the solution lies in the common source we all share of agape love, even if the best we can do for now is to muddle through and find some form of empathy for our adversaries.  At least it’s a start. <h2><b>A Heartfelt Sense of Purpose in Integral Evolutionary Activism </b></h2> The true integral revolution isn’t along the left/right spectrum. A revolution of wholeness is inclusive; it does not leave people, or good ideas, behind. In many ways, the integral revolution is uncharted territory. It is useful to examine the three domains of activism if we are going to bring the heart into evolutionary change. The book describes these forms of activism as: working within the system, against the system, and around the system. Sometimes these are presented as competing alternatives, but evolutionary activists work in all three of these domains when necessary. According to Terry’s writing, evolutionary activism is integral. <i>“On one hand, it expresses a serious commitment to whole-system change, and the emergence of a life-sustaining global culture. On the other hand, it expresses a serious commitment to becoming the kind of people who can create and enjoy a life-sustaining global culture. That means simultaneous care for and engagement with individual human beings and local initiatives even while keeping the metasystemic big picture in mind. Evolutionary activists view all their initiatives as collectively impacting a whole-system transition. We keep our hearts on the prize of a life-sustaining global culture. We stay human, humble, and real, and we keep growing. Then we can also notice the synergies and commonalities among our projects, and we can harmonize apparent conflicts and cultivate a greater coherence.”</i> Integral politics also looks beyond the two opposing camps of liberal and conservative voters, and instead works to expand the perspectives rather than polarize. <a href="http://www.transpartisanreview.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">James Turner and Lawrence Chickering, executive editors for the Transpartisan Review</a> identify two axes: freedom and order and the left and right. Integral philosopher Steve McIntosh has identified another axis of polarity to include: the tension between nationalism and globalism. In the book, Terry doesn’t believe transpartisanship requires transcending all partisanship or diluting the efforts to find consensus, but rather, working to get things done by identifying “common interests and values and complementary benefits.” In the book, he describes this process starting with meaningful interactions: <i>“Our first frontier is our relationships with one another. At first it is a private matter, in individual hearts; but we can engage collective practices. And eventually, countless personal and interpersonal acts can co-create a social act, the knitting together of more and more personal virtue, strengthening the social mycelium, creating a new republic of the heart.”</i> So what does it look like when we take action with a heartfelt and integral sense of purpose? In chapter nine of the book, Terry uses a powerful quote from Thich Nhat Hanh to sum up his thoughts on this vision. “<i>The next Buddha may very well be a sangha.</i>”  Personally, I would go so far as to say that the next Buddha has to be a sangha.  No single individual is going to transform our world, but a cultural revolution of brotherhood/sisterhood of humankind could pull it off. As the book comes to a close, the reader is left with hope that authentic connections and communication, alongside an integral life of practice, will create a new dimension Terry refers to as “we space.” This new dimension of being and acting in accordance to the whole rather than the illusion of separate self is not impossible. We just need to find our way back “home” to this interconnectedness. As Terry sums it up: <i>That new republic already exists, as our social mycelium, and as our intuition and intuitive attraction toward a still-unmanifest possibility. It is already fully present, but mainly as a potential. It is where we are heading, our telos or omega point. It is like the “strange attractor” that conjures order out of a chaotic open system as it transitions through a bifurcation point into a higher-order state. Even though it is still out of reach, it functions to orient and organize all our values, actions, projects, and plans. Moreover, as an attractor of the heart, not just my or your heart, it reveals a new potential in human relatedness rooted in the deepest truth of our nonseparation. I am also “we,” for real.”</i> Terry Patten has given us some beautiful, heartfelt, heart-generated thoughts about finding the way out of our darkest hour of uncertainty.  I would summarize it as a call to stop <i>thinking</i> about it all and start <i>doing</i> something about right now.  Let’s get out of our minds and back to our hearts.  The republic of the human heart is the same one for all of us.  Sometimes we think we are on the other side of something, but in the end it cannot be, because we are most definitely in this together.  The only differences are a matter of perspective. It reminds of one of my favorite stories of the Mulla Nasrudin, that comically wry and legendary teacher of the 13<sup>th</sup> century.  Once there was a group of people making their way through the woods in unknown territory.  They came upon a raging river that offered no possibility of crossing.  Perplexed, they sat on the bank and thought about it until they espied their good friend the Mulla Nasrudin, standing on the other side of the river.  “Mulla, Mulla,” they shouted.  “How do we get to the other side?” The Mulla looked at them in confusion, raised his hands in a gesture of simplification, and shouted back:  “But you are already on the other side!” There are no “sides” in the human heart, only the integral wisdom that we are all one in the we-space of now.  Let’s live together from that premise and move forward in our activism, one friendship at a time.
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