Sample interview
questions for Anodea Judith, author of
Waking the Global Heart: Humanity’s Rite of Passage from the Love of Power
to the Power of Love.
Please request permission from adrienne@biggspublicity.com
before excerpting or reprinting any portion of this interview.
Q:
Your book, Waking the Global Heart, deals with a wide range of material that
combines psychology, mythology, history, and politics into a basic theme. Can
you describe the basic message of the book and why you incorporate such a broad
range of material?
A: The problems we face today have no simple solutions, nor are they restricted
to any one area of society. They cannot be solved by science alone, nor by religion,
nor merely by legislation, but by a complete evolutionary shift in our worldview
that reflects all of these areas and more. What I attempt to show in the book
is how we came to the worldview that is now destroying our planet and eroding
the quality of life for many people, so that we can understand the hidden motivations
behind events occurring today.
To this end, I ask the three questions posed in most myths: Who are we? Where
did we come from? (or, How did we get into this mess?) and Where are we going?
I don’t think we can implement a lasting change in values, behaviors,
or policies, without asking all three of these questions.
Q: So who are we?
A: I see humanity as an astounding species, unlike any other, that is going
through its adolescence – some of us in earlier or later phases of that
stage. As a culture, we are rapacious and greedy, bursting with power and libido,
yet sorely lacking in social and moral conscience. We use and abuse resources
and each other as if Mother Nature were going to supply all our whims indefinitely,
much as adolescents do, having come to rely on parents to supply their needs.
But in the process of adolescents becoming adults, there is often some kind
of rite of passage. For the Jews it is a bar mitzvah or bas mitzvah. In indigenous
cultures, it was an initiation rite. Unfortunately, for many boys today, initiation
takes place through a neighborhood gang or the military, or for women, early
pregnancy, or having to raise children alone. But I feel humanity as a whole
is headed for a global initiation, brought on by the direct results of our current
lifestyle: environmental crisis, rampant disease, natural disasters, global
warming, military warfare, air and water pollution, oil shortage, economic collapse,
and on the personal level – illnesses and tragedies that take us away
from our normal way of living.
So who we are is an adolescent species, undergoing a rite of passage into adulthood.
This rite of passage takes us from our current organizing principle based on
the love of power to a new organizing principle, based on the power of love.
Q: In answering the question, “Where do we come from?”
your book journeys through 30,000 years of human history. That’s a lot
of ground to cover. Why did you think it necessary to take it back so far? What
does the distant past have to do with where we are now?
A: I spent over twenty years as a psychotherapist. When a client came in to
my office, I knew that I needed to not only help alleviate their current crisis,
but lead that client to an understanding of how and why they created a crisis
in the first place. Otherwise, they would just go out and create it again. That
usually involved delving into their history, all the way back to early childhood,
and piecing together the events and assumptions that formed their beliefs and
behavior. Our earliest history is the original ground from which all the rest
of our history unfolded.
Q: So how does our early history relate to the events that followed later?
A: Most history books write in great detail about a specific period or culture.
We have American history, European history, Christian or Islamic history. And
as the word implies – his-story – most of these histories are about
a masculine period of cultural development that arose out of—and more
importantly – in reaction to – the original ground of the Great
Mother, and our primal embeddedness in Nature. If this were a client, I’d
point out that they grew up in a broken home, and that a one-parent family isn’t
the way things were meant to be.
Most of our subsequent history was in reaction to the original ground of the
Great Mother, pushing away from the Earth, and denying what I call the “lower
chakra” realms of the earth, the body, and sexuality. The events of our
later childhood can only be understood when we take a complete perspective that
builds upon our original foundation. That way we can understand what we have
lost and what we need to reclaim to become whole again. This is not about denying
anything, nor is it about blame, but about reclaiming the full spectrum of human
possibility – masculine and feminine, heaven and earth, mind and body.
As we began maturing, we gave up our ground to reach for the heavens. But now
we are losing our ground, and this threatens our very our survival.
Q: So you’re saying the the flow of history mirrors the process
of childhood development?
A: You can certainly look at it that way. We began in the realm of the mother,
embedded in Nature. We were like infants, unable to escape the strict boundaries
of Mother Nature – when it was cold, it was cold, when it was dark, it
was dark. We followed the game and gathered the plants, but had no control over
our surroundings and no means to transcend or escape their harsher side.
Then we learned to put seeds into the ground and gained some control over our
food supply. Population expanded and we crawled across the land in our teeming
toddlerhood, then were rocked in the cradle of the earliest civilizations.
As these civilizations grew, so did their resource needs. We matured into our
terrible twos and on into early childhood, and entering sibling rivalry as we
competed for land and resources, and rebelling against the mother. We entered
a militaristic phase – where a culture or city-state could only survive
if it had a good defense system, and often that defense was a good offense –
so power became equated with conquest. This was the beginning of the age of
power – an age from which we are only now finally ready to outgrow.
Our movement into the more intellectual realm began with the Greeks and blossomed
during the Renaissance and the Enlightenment period with scientific discoveries.
Our knowledge has continued to grow exponentially, but our maturity has not.
We are still governed by an imperial system based on young kings drunk on their
power. This is a parent-child model, based on obedience to parental authority.
We seem unable to collectively or compassionately govern ourselves – which
is a task of adulthood. You could say we suffer from arrested development. As
adolescents, we are beginning to outgrow this model, but there is always that
period of adolescence where the child both needs and resists the parent –
and where the parent fights to maintain ever stricter control. But this control
is eventually unsuccessful as the child sets out on his or her own.
Q: You talk about this as a rite of passage as moving from the love
of power to the power of love. What do you mean by that?
A: We have been living for the last 5,000 years in an imperial, top-down parental
power structure, with what is usually a single man and his select group at the
top, ruling successive hierarchies of larger numbers, down to the masses who
are basically powerless over their life circumstances. In ancient times, this
hierarchy flowed from from kings to slaves. Now it is the gap between the rich
and the poor, with an ever widening middle class.
From this model, it appears that the only way to overcome one’s own oppression
is to court power as it is modeled on high, either by loyal service to those
in power, by financial achievement or personal fame, or by conquest and domination
of others. This love of power – sought after at all costs – is a
model that is based on one part ruling over another. In the individual, it might
be mind ruling over body; collectively it is culture over planet, the rich over
the poor, white over black, men over women, and civilization over Nature. We
have adopted a love of power, because it seems that it is the only way to regain
our own sovereignty and freedom.
Yet, this is an old paradigm that was based on a younger, more impotent stage
of culture. This paradigm wastes resources, squanders economic capital, exploits
subcultures, and destroys the environment. It keeps everything in opposition
and competition, causes stress and disease, and in fact, it isn’t making
anybody very happy – not even those at the top! We suffer from epidemic
depression, chronic illness, stress, isolation, and we’re destroying the
environment in order to do so. It’s an outdated system, with the single
man at the top being like a dinosaur brain – to small to rule the immensity
of the beast.
Q: And the power of love, what can that do?
A: The power of love is the most basic power on Earth. It is the power that
brings things into relationship, the power that integrates and combines, the
power that creates more benefit from cooperation than competition, networks
rather that markets, group synergy rather than isolated struggle. It is the
power that heals, as medical studies have demonstrated, and as Christ tried
to show us so long ago; it is the power of compassion that leads to a socially
just society, espoused by the Buddha. A paradigm based on the power of love
finds its rewards from joining rather than dominating, serving rather than exploiting,
integrating rather than separating. Only by this monumental evolution in the
organizing principle for society can we create a just world that is sustainable
– but even more exciting – one that is dynamically creative, celebratory
and ecstatic.
Q: This is all very nice, but if you read the news today, it certainly
doesn’t seem like we are going in that direction. What makes you think
that we are?
A: Well, here’s where you have to read between the “lyings”
of the mass media. For instance, while crime has been reduced by half, reporting
of crime on the news has increased sevenfold. While the Bush administration
continues to spout the old model of us vs. them, people across cultures are
networking on their own in self-organizing, non-profit, non-governmental organizations
to address issues of social justice, environmental degradation, political regime
change, scientific research on alternative healing.
These organizations and the people in them have created countless publication
and websites. New technologies are leveling the playing field between first
and third world cultures. Europe has a Commission on Human Rights that holds
jurisdiction over individual countries, and in fact, sets policy for Europe
regarding the humane treatment of its citizens.
Beneath the old order a new order is already arising, organizing itself along
principles of compassionate caring, and the dynamics of self-organizing systems
that functin on the basis of freedom, autonomy, relatedness, and the ability
to see the larger picture, known as self-transcendence. Look at the aftermath
of Katrina, where the government failed to adequately serve the people, while
volunteer organizations raised millions from individual donations. Which system
is actually working?
Q: In Waking the Global Heart, you talk about self-organizing systems as becoming
the new organizing principle for society, as humanity matures into its adulthood.
You state that control tactics actually hinder an organization’s chance
of survival when it is under extreme stress. Are you proposing that we should
just let go of laws and government and just see what happens?
A: No, of course not. The replacement of the old order is a natural maturation
process, similar to the way a new tooth gradually pushes out the old one. When
the underlying structures of the new body politic grow strong enough they will
simply out-perform the old structures, which will eventually wither and die
from lack of support. This will be a natural process, but that doesn’t
mean it will be easy. Maturation never is, especially for those who rigidly
try to cling to the old structure.
What we should not do, in my opinion, is rush to strengthen the old tooth that
is now wobbling. That’s like tying down the deck chairs on the Titanic.
I believe the old system is dying and the best place to put our energy is into
the new systems that are rapidly developing, so that when the old systems collapse,
we have something in place to sustain ourselves with. And that means you better
invest your capital and energy in sustainable values, because they are the only
things that will last through the changes.
Q: Can you give me an example of that?
A: Yes. For example the town of Willits in Northern California is working to
become completely self-sufficient in terms of energy, food production, and medicine.
They discovered that even though they are a rural community, nearly all of their
food is trucked in from a great distance using up vanishing oil reserves, and
robbing the community of local income, while most of their residents were driving
out of the community to work to pay for that food. By employing solar energy
and collectively grouping land together for local farming, they will be in a
better place to survive an oil shortage or an economic crisis, regardless of
whether they have become completely sustainable, or are only part of the way
there.
Of course, most urban communities do not have that choice, but city planners
can examine the avenues of production and its attendant workforce to keep its
economy increasingly local. The more we localize our energy expenditures, the
less energy we use and therefore waste, and the more stable we will be in the
event of energy shortages.
Q:
Waking the Global Heart is one of the few books that has a positive outlook
on where we are going, yet doesn’t mince any words about possible difficulties.
Most books focus either on an “ain’t it awful” scenario of
everything that’s wrong with the world, or paint a pollyannic vision of
the future that ignores our current difficulties. What do you see lies ahead
for us?
A: Well, the reason I say that we are about the undergo a cultural initiation
process, is that I think it is inevitable that many, many people will experience
the stages of initiation: great loss, even death, with survivors undergoing
a kind of underworld journey, with eventual surrender, spiritual awakening,
transformation and rebirth. I don’t think it is going to be easy, and
I think there will be increased unemployment and even loss of life as we head
into the evolutionary wall that has had this message written on it for some
time: transform or die.
But if we regard this process as a means of maturation that teaches us compassion,
conservation, innovation, and a shift to humanitarian moral values, we will
come out on the other side into a world that I believe holds such enormous blessings,
that we can barely imagine it. When we support our fellow human beings instead
of spending money to kill them, when we cooperate instead of compete, when we
readjust our use of energy to work less and enjoy more, the creativity that
will be unleashed will bring benefits we cannot even imagine. I don’t
know if I will live long enough to see the new form in its fullness, but I firmly
believe it will happen. We haven’t come through four billion years of
evolution to spoil it now. We’re just teenagers, moving through an awkward
stage, getting our hard lessons in life. And like the unfortunate teenagers
that commit suicide – the tragedy is that they end their lives before
they realize what kind of possibilities lie ahead. Destroying the rainforest
before we understand all the medicines that we might find is a perfect example
of ending something before we have discovered its blessings.
I pray that our civilization does not take the route of an early suicide. I
believe we have a glorious future ahead of us, and a tremendous responsibility
to bring that future into realization.
Q: You talk about initiation forging a new identity. What do you
see as the new identity for us now?
A: Benjamin Franklin once said that his greatest invention was of the word American,
as a catch all term for the Dutch, English, Germans, French, and all those who
formed the early colonies. Our new identity rises above nationalities, genders,
creeds, or races, to become truly global.
I use the term “co-hearts” as descriptive of a co-creative community
of people working together to bring about a loving and sustainable world. And
as co-hearts, we are living in a kin-dom -- not a kingdom, based on kings, but
a kin-dom based on a living web of relationships that includes plants and animals,
and people of all kinds – place where we are all kin to each other. In
the new story, who we are is co-hearts in a kin-dom, co-creating a sustainable
world.
Q: What can the average person do to help bring about these changes?
A: In many ways, we all know the answer to this. Love more, fear less. Give
more, take less. Cooperate rather than compete. Listen and learn. Conserve resources:
recycle, renew, re-use, reduce. In the realm of technology, we are innovating
for better design quality that uses less and gives more. We need to do the same
for our behavior and social systems – design for more celebration and
less suffering. Work for peace, and stop wasting our precious resources for
purposes of destruction.
Every major social challenge of the past has required larger numbers of people
to work together in order to solve it. Population explosion in the Neolithic
called for massive irrigation projects. Getting goods to increasing numbers
of people created industrialization. The growth of European economies has given
rise to the European Union.
This time the social and ecological problems that we are facing will require
worldwide cooperation. Not an easy task, but we are at least given the tool
of the Internet through which to share information and networking and begin
to work with a group mind, or what is called the global brain. What is needed
now is to load compassionate values into that brain, and awaken the global heart.
All spiritual paths say the same thing. We are one community, one world, one
people. This world is a precious jewel. It is our responsibility to share and
care for that jewel and pass it on to future generations in better shape than
we found it.