I want to share a quick video clip with you discussing why our world is feeling trapped in outdated ideas. The video is below, but I want to set some context first.
One of the key premises behind my first project, Collective Evolution, is that we can benefit from moving beyond old ways of thinking about ourselves and the world and awaken to new ways of knowing. These ways of knowing aren’t new per se, they are more so forgotten.
As CE’s about page reads:
We live in a time where our systems and overall society is crumbling or transitioning – media, technology, economies, education, consciousness, relationships and more. Our existing ways of looking at and understanding our world are no longer sufficient, and new conversations are encouraging us to look more deeply at why our world is the way it is, and what about us creates it to be this way.
Today, we orient to our world so cognitively, stuck in our heads and thinking constantly. Often focused on ideologies of someone else’s making, unsure how we TRULY feel about them. In the end, we often respond to, view and consider what’s possible based only on what we know from a limited way of seeing the world.
In modernity, we have lost sense of the sacred, the subtle, and the interior of ourselves. This has had a big effect on our mental, emotional, physical and spiritual health inevitably producing the practical decisions we collectively make in the world.
Simply, the state of our world is a natural manifestation of our existing level of consciousness. Therefore we should not be overly surprised by our outcomes.
Our global society is in decline. Some refer to these major global happenings as ‘crisis after crisis’, but I see it more so as ‘reflection after reflection.’ Either way, we seem to be awakening to the fact that something fundamental is ‘off.’
From the crisis lens, we can have much fear and worry, looking to use our existing ways of knowing and systems to URGENTLY fix the problems.
From the reflection lens, we might see that our existing systems and ways of knowing can’t solve the problems and aren’t meant to, because a fundamental shift in consciousness is needed. Here, because we are attuned to something deeper in ourselves, there tends to not be consistent worry and panic either.
This isn’t to say we should ignore all short-term changes to help bring more peace while we wait for a shift to occur, but there is a strong sense that we must think and feel more deeply about what’s occurring. (Of course, if you are in an active warzone this cannot be the case, obviously.)
Many object to this idea of exploring ourselves in this way. I believe this to primarily be because we are stuck in a baseline of mild survival stress and oriented too greatly toward urgency. Taking a breath is nonsensical to that angsty-ness.
What is also common now is people are ping-ponging back and forth with wanting new systems but also feeling all change can be created from our existing systems. It becomes difficult to know where to land in search of an all-or-nothing answer.
This represents the awkward space of exploring “How do we solve this? What shall we do next? I don’t seem to fit in this world, but I also am not sure where I do fit” in a time of fundamental shifts in the way we live. This has happened in history before, but this time perhaps more intensely.
Before we apply the “accept everything and don’t lose sight of presence” prescription here, I believe this IS the point of our moment. To sense this visceral feeling within our spirit and being that knows a new way of orienting to our reality is emerging.
This is why I built CE on the foundation of what I call Embodied Sensemaking, a process that looks at our reality, ourselves and our world (including current events) from a place that includes mind body spirit.
By listening to these layers of ourselves we can gently explore how our worldviews and what to choose to do are shaped. Then we can gently and skillfully expand, re-direct, or change them as needed – without the classic ‘rabbit hole’ moment so many people go through where they lose all sense of what is real and often struggle to find a stable worldview again – often becoming blackpilled.
With that said below is a clip from my full interview with Lubomir Arsov from earlier this year called The Collective Shadow of Modern Society with Lubomir Arsov.
In this clip, we discuss the ways in which we are orienting to and ‘knowing’ our world, and why those ways are producing outcomes we don’t like. The full episode is incredible and I recommend checking it out.