by TWilliam » Tue 15 Jan 2008, 17:19:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('culicomorpha', 'I') couldn't agree more. And perhaps it is not a coincidence that new-age beliefs are developing most in a country that has the strongest myths about multicultural capitalism. They seem to go hand-in-hand. The new-age beliefs and adherents present practically no threat to business as usual. In fact, they spend good money "improving themselves" as you point out.
Focus on yourself but don't worry about that razed forest, or the polluted air, or the massive inequality. Don't worry... be happy.
It seems to me a recapitulation of the basic premise of psychotherapy. *YOU* are the problem, not the system, not the government, not the destroyed environment, not the corporations, YOU. Change yourself and everything will be alright.
You seem to have a good grasp of the situation culico. The only caution I would offer is don't get sucked into the tendency (very common today when looking at these issues) to throw the baby out with the bathwater. There
is a
lot of confusion and misunderstanding in the West when it comes to Eastern spiritual philosophy, and much of New Age thought especially is notorious for compounding the problem, but that
doesn't mean that these traditions are therefore of no use to us. It's true that there is a great deal of 'cultural window-dressing' that doesn't translate well to the Western mindset, but many of the actual practices have definite benefits.
Wilber points out that meditation especially is the only 'psychological tool' that to date has been empirically shown to promote genuine growth of consciousness. He's clear that it may not be the
only one that does so, but it's the only one that so far has actually been
proven to. One of the reasons I like his work so much is that he's probably one of the most comprehensive and articulate thinkers out there when it comes to delineating both the pitfalls and the benefits of the various human philosophies, both East and West, as well as showing clearly where many of the misunderstandings lie.
I do believe that you have one thing backwards however; psychotherapy's '
you're the problem' is actually the West's re-discovery of what the East has maintained for millennia - framed differently of course, and also subject to misunderstanding. New Age is probably guiltiest of all for taking these advanced understandings and infantilizing them into pre-rational magico-mythic 'tools' for 'creating your life' (ala
The Secret). I've maintained for a number of years now that one of the biggest misunderstandings at the root of a lot of this revolves around the Eastern concept of
maya, frequently translated as
illusion in the West. Westerners have taken this concept to mean that the world isn't real and that we create it with our minds (this is greatly simplified), but
illusion does
not mean something 'unreal'; what it means is something
mis-perceived, and it is those
false perceptions that are 'mind-created'. A simple example is that we tend to think of our bodies as these solid, sort of permanent objects that we walk around in experiencing life, and that "the body I have today is the same body I've had all my life", when the reality is that it's
not the 'same' body at all.
Every single atom in your body is replaced over a span of something like two years or so. Not just the cells,
the very atoms; it's seeming permanence is an
illusion.
Anyway once again, great thread TB, and you're welcome. Yes, it's nice to know that there are a few of us out there...

"It means buckle your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas? Is goin' bye-bye... "