Tag Archive for Evolution

Lost in the Flood

I wear my iPod when I go for a walk. Today, when I heard Springsteen’s “Lost in the Flood” off his first album from way back in the 70’s, a new meaning occurred to me: Lost in the flood of thoughts.

All of us, unless we take great pains to step outside them, are lost in a flood of conscious thoughts that prevent us from connecting with our true selves. We’re focused on the things that are right in front of us, right off the front bumper of our awareness, instead of looking down the road and getting a more comprehensive view of what’s actually affecting all of us.

We get absorbed with our own self identities instead of the fact that we are all human beings on planet earth. We are all the same.

All of the hate and separation we feel from others is based on a belief that we are all different and that those differences are dangerous. They are dangerous because the others may want to hurt us, or because the others have ideas that if correct, would make us wrong, or cause us to question what we believe. And no humans are really in love with being wrong or having to change.

And that’s the point, under the superficial differences of appearance, culture, religion, class, gender and politics; we are a single species that is way more the same than different. We are all here together on this planet, an infinitesimal oasis in a cold and empty universe (so far as we know). After billions of years, we are the highest example of life-based, matter-connected consciousness that exists (so far as we know). And we’re in danger of destroying ourselves because we see our own personal survival and that of our group as being in competition with other humans who are exactly the same as us.

I believe the highest calling we have as humans, is to recognize that all of us are responsible for getting our species through to the next stage of evolution. This can be a world in which we cooperate together by acting from a set of beliefs based on we are all the same, we are all valuable, and we are all deserving.

The alternative is a set of beliefs based on I’ve got mine, good luck to you. That belief is not going to move humans forward. That belief will keep us divided and invested in fighting with each other, because it is based on a fundamental untruth—that I, my family and my group are better and more deserving than all the others. It is based on denying the truth that we humans are all the same underneath.

Toward a Species Consciousness

While in college in the mid 1970’s I read the book Star Maker by Olaf Stapleton. Written in 1937 as the forces that caused World War II were already brewing, Stapleton described a mind-only astral trip through the space-time of the universe. Along the way he encountered numerous highly evolved, highly self-aware species with a level of consciousness and technology analogous to our own.

I have always remembered the main point: the planetary civilizations that survived all evolved a collective “species consciousness” (my term) at a point when they were in a global crisis. A powerful meme of recognition took the form of “a widespread passion for a new social order which should be just and should embrace the whole planet.”1

“Tribal prestige, individual dominance, military glory, industrial triumphs lost their obsessive glamour, and instead the happy creatures delighted in civilized social intercourse, in cultural activities, and in the common enterprise of world-building.”2 In the book, civilizations that continued on this path eventually developed a “psychically unified community.”3

Flash forward to today where a new meme is beginning to propagate. This meme begins with a belief that through meditation we can still the machinery of the individual mind long enough to make contact with the universal mind—the vast void of infinite consciousness that animates our true, authentic selves and all life in the cosmos. The meme continues with the thought that this universal mind is the force that is driving evolution in the direction of higher and higher consciousness (i.e. single-celled organism to human).

Finally, the meme concludes with this thought expressed by Andrew Cohen, evolutionary scholar and editor of the magazine EnlightenNext: “The next evolutionary leap, as I see it, is the leap from the individual to higher collective, a ‘higher we.’”4

In other words, humans will not only begin to see themselves as one, they will literally be one through a common sense of immersion and experience of the cosmic mind. Who is to say if this is true? But it feels true. And it feels necessary if we are to avoid a future of planetary suffering, strife and death.

1-3 from Chapter 9, Part 1 of Star Maker by Olaf Stapleton, Busy Utopias.

4 from page 32 of EnlightenNext, Issue 46, Spring/Summer 2010.

We Are All the Same

In the beginning there was the big bang. Thirteen and half billion years later the universe becomes aware of itself through the emergence of human beings on planet earth.

Some believe that human consciousness is the result of an astoundingly lucky chemical reaction that has been running on autopilot for millions of years. This life-creating reaction required heavy elements that could only have been produced in the cores stars. Flung billions of miles through space, they landed on a planet orbiting in the warm energy of a second generation star.

Others believe that humans are the creation of a divine all-powerful entity.

Which is the bigger miracle? It doesn’t really matter. Our miraculous existence shows that evolution is about producing higher levels of consciousness and awareness. This consciousness is unique and almost impossibly rare in the universe. And though it has manifest itself on different parts of our planet using different languages, ways of dressing, social hierarchies and religions, all human beings are the same species.

We are all the same in much more fundamental ways than we are different. And yet most of us seem to believe that the social, governmental, or religions belief systems into which we were born makes us superior and gives us the right to kill and enslave other humans.

If these notions of superiority and urge for power over others once served a valuable survival function they no longer do. They are causing needless suffering and hardship. Our adherence to primitive and outmoded ways of thinking is literally killing millions of humans. Unless we change how we conceive of ourselves, we will cause our own destruction.

What’s required is a new species consciousness—a clear, innate, unambiguous belief that all humans are exactly as valuable and worthy as I am. This begins by stating and accepting this simple affirmation: I am a human being on planet earth. This is an undeniably true statement for all 6.8 billion people on this planet. If this becomes everyone’s core identity it reinforces the fact that we are all fundamentally the same.