By Charles Eisenstein
January 03, 2013 "Information Clearing House" - Every culture has a Story of the People to give meaning to the world. Part conscious and part unconscious, it consists of a matrix of agreements, narratives, and symbols that tell us why we are here, where we are headed, what is important, and even what is real. I think we are entering a new phase in the dissolution of our Story of the People, and therefore, with some lag time, of the edifice of civilization built on top of it.
January 03, 2013 "Information Clearing House" - Every culture has a Story of the People to give meaning to the world. Part conscious and part unconscious, it consists of a matrix of agreements, narratives, and symbols that tell us why we are here, where we are headed, what is important, and even what is real. I think we are entering a new phase in the dissolution of our Story of the People, and therefore, with some lag time, of the edifice of civilization built on top of it.
Sometimes I
feel intense nostalgia for the cultural mythology of
my youth, a world in which there was nothing wrong
with soda pop, in which the Superbowl was important,
in which the world’s greatest democracy was bringing
democracy to the world, in which science was going
to make life better and better. Life made sense. If
you worked hard you could get good grades, get into
a good college, go to grad school or follow some
other professional path, and you would be happy.
With a few unfortunate exceptions, you would be
successful if you obeyed the rules of our society:
if you followed the latest medical advice, kept
informed by reading the New York Times, and stayed
away from Bad Things like drugs. Sure there were
problems, but the scientists and experts were
working hard to fix them. Soon a new medical
advance, a new law, a new educational technique,
would propel the onward improvement of life. My
childhood perceptions were part of this Story of the
People, in which humanity was destined to create a
perfect world through science, reason, and
technology, to conquer nature, transcend our animal
origins, and engineer a rational society.
From my
vantage point, the basic premises of this story
seemed unquestionable. After all, it seemed to be
working in my world. Looking back, I realize that
this was a bubble world built atop massive human
suffering and environmental degradation, but at the
time one could live within that bubble without need
of much self-deception. The story that surrounded us
was robust. It easily kept anomalous data points on
the margins.
Since my
childhood in the 1970s, that story has eroded at an
accelerating rate. More and more people in the West
no longer believe that civilization is fundamentally
on the right track. Even those who don’t yet
question its basic premises in any explicit way seem
to have grown weary of it. A layer of cynicism, a
hipster self-awareness has muted our earnestness.
What was once so real, say a plank in a party
platform, today is seen through several levels of
“meta” filters to parse it in terms of image and
message. We are like children who have grown out of
a story that once enthralled us, aware now that it
is only a story.
At the same
time, a series of new data points has disrupted the
story from the outside. The harnessing of fossil
fuels, the miracle of chemicals to transform
agriculture, the methods of social engineering and
political science to create a more rational and just
society – each has fallen far short of its promise,
and brought unanticipated consequences that threaten
civilization. We just cannot believe anymore that
the scientists have everything well in hand. Nor can
we believe that the onward march of reason will
bring on social utopia.
Today we
cannot ignore the intensifying degradation of the
biosphere, the malaise of the economic system, the
decline in health, or the persistence and indeed
growth of global poverty and inequality. We once
thought economists would fix poverty, political
scientists would fix social injustice, chemists and
biologists would fix environmental problems, the
power of reason would prevail and we would adopt
sane policies. I remember looking at maps of rain
forest decline in National Geographic in the early
1980s and feeling both alarm and relief – relief
because at least the scientists and everyone who
reads National Geographic is aware of the problem
now, so something surely will be done.
Nothing was
done. Rainforest decline accelerated, along with
nearly every other environmental threat that we knew
about in 1980. Our Story of the People trundled
forward under the momentum of centuries, but with
each passing decade the hollowing-out of its core,
that started perhaps with the industrial-scale
slaughter of World War One, extended further. When I
was a child, our system of ideology and mass media
still protected that story, but in the last thirty
years the incursions of reality have punctured its
protective shell and have ruptured its essential
infrastructure. We no longer believe our
storytellers, our elites. We don’t believe the
politicians, we don’t believe the doctors, we don’t
believe the professors, we don’t believe the
bankers, we don’t believe the technologists. All of
them imply that everything is under control, and we
know that it is not. We have lost the vision of the
future we once had; most people have no vision of
the future at all. This is new for our society.
Fifty or a hundred years ago, most people agreed on
the general outlines of the future. We thought we
knew where society was going. Even the Marxists and
the capitalists agreed on its basic outlines: a
paradise of mechanized leisure and scientifically
engineered social harmony, with spirituality either
abolished entirely or relegated to a materially
inconsequential corner of life that happened mostly
on Sundays. Of course there were dissenters from
this vision, but this was the general consensus.
When a story
nears its end it goes through death throes, an
exaggerated semblance of life. So today we see
domination, conquest, violence, and separation take
on absurd extremes that hold a mirror up to what was
once hidden and diffuse. The year 2012 ended with
just such a potent story-disrupting event: the Sandy
Hook massacre. Even realizing that far more, equally
innocent, children have been killed in the last few
years by, say, U.S. drone strikes, it really got
under my skin. No one was immune. I think that is
because its utter senselessness penetrated every
defense mechanism we have to maintain the fiction
that the world is basically OK. Unlike 9/11 or
Oklahoma City, and certainly unlike the horrors that
go on around the world, there was no convenient
narrative to divert the raw pain of what happened.
We cannot help but map those murdered innocents onto
the young faces we know, and the anguish of their
parents onto ourselves. At the base of our Story of
the People is separation, of humanity from nature,
of me from you, of each from all, and this event
united everyone, of whatever culture, nationality,
or political persuasion. For a moment, we all felt
the exact same thing. For at least a moment, I am
sure, most people were in touch with the simplicity
of what is important; I am sure many people had that
fleeting feeling, “It doesn’t have to be that
difficult, if only we could remember what is so
obvious now, that love is all there is.” We humans
have made such a mess of things, forgetting love. It
is the same realization we have when a loved one is
going through the dying process, and we think, “Ah,
how precious this person is – why couldn’t I see
that? Why couldn’t I appreciate all those moments we
had together? All the arguments and grudges seem so
tiny now.”
Following that
moment, of course, people hurried to make sense of
the event, subsuming it within a narrative about gun
control, mental health, or the security of school
buildings. Maybe I am imagining things, but I don’t
think anyone really believes deep down that these
responses touch the heart of the matter. Gun
culture, we know, is a symptom of something deeper,
and the violence that finds expression through guns
would, even in their absence, come out in some other
way. Mental illness too is a problem so vast that it
is essentially unsolvable in our current system; it
too comes from a deeper source. As for school
security, a Chinese saying describes all the
measures proposed: they stop the gentleman but not
the villain.
No one would
say that Sandy Hook was more horrible than the
Holocaust, the Stalinist purges, or the
imperialistic wars of the 20th century and 21st, but
it was less comprehensible. Try as we might, we
cannot fit it into our Story of the World. It is the
anomalous data point that unravels the entire
narrative – the world no longer makes sense. We
struggle to explain what it means, but no
explanation suffices. We may go on pretending that
normal is still normal, but this is one of a series
of “end time” events that is dismantling our
culture’s mythology.
The evident
futility of the responses that we are capable of
imagining also points to this deep ideological
breakdown. The responses are all about more control.
Yet control, as we may or may not realize, is a key
thread of the old story of humanity rising above
nature, imposing technology and reason on the wild
world and the uncivilized human. All around us, we
see our efforts at control backfiring: wars to fight
terrorism breed terrorism, herbicides breed
superweeds, antibiotics breed superbugs, psychiatric
medications lead to explosive outbursts of violence.
Looking back
on the community schools a couple generations past,
where children and parents could walk in and out of
any door, can we say that the inexorable trend
toward fortress schools in a fortress state is
something anyone would have chosen? The world was
supposed to be getting better. We were supposed to
be becoming wealthier, more enlightened. Society was
supposed to be advancing. Here I am in America, the
most “advanced” nation on Earth, yet even as our
financial wealth has doubled and doubled again in
fifty years, we have lost wealth of a more basic
form; for example, the social capital of feeling
safe, feeling at home where we live. Is more
security the best we can aspire to? What about a
society where safety does not equal security? What
about a world where no human being wields an assault
rifle? What about a world where we mostly know the
faces and stories of the people around us? What
about a world where we know that our daily
activities contribute to the healing of the
biosphere and the well-being of other people? We
need a Story of the People that includes all of
those things – and that doesn’t feel like a fantasy.
Various
visionary thinkers have offered versions of such a
story, but none of them has yet become a true Story
of the People, a widely accepted set of agreements
and narratives that gives meaning to the world and
coordinates human activity towards its fulfillment.
We are not quite ready for such a story yet, because
the old one, though in tatters, still has large
swaths of its fabric intact. And even when these
unravel, we still must traverse the space between
stories, a kind of nakedness. In the turbulent times
ahead our familiar ways of acting, thinking, and
being will no longer make sense. We won’t know what
is happening, what it all means, and, sometimes,
even what is real. Some people have entered that
time already.
I wish I could
tell you that I am ready for a new Story of the
People, but even though I am among its many weavers,
I cannot yet fully inhabit the new vestments. In
other words, describing the world that could be,
something inside me doubts, rejects, and underneath
the doubt is a hurting thing. The breakdown of the
old story is kind of a healing process, that
uncovers the old wounds hidden under its fabric and
exposes them to the healing light of awareness.
I am
sure many people reading this have gone through such
a time, when the cloaking illusions fell away: all
the old justifications, rationalizations, all the
old stories. Events like Sandy Hook help to initiate
the very same process on a collective level. So also
the superstorms, the economic crisis, political
meltdowns… in one way or another, the obsolescence
of our old mythos is laid bare.
We do not have
a new story yet. Each of us is aware of some of its
threads, for example in most of the things we call
alternative, holistic, or ecological today. Here and
there we see patterns, designs, emerging parts of
the fabric. But the new mythos has not yet emerged.
We will abide for a time in the space between
stories. Those of you who have been through it on a
personal level know that it is a very precious –
some might say sacred – time. Then we are in touch
with the real. Each disaster lays bare the real
underneath our stories. The terror of a child, the
grief of a mother, the honesty of not knowing why.
In such moments we discover our humanity. We come to
each other’s aid, human to human. We take care of
each other. That’s what keeps happening every time
there is a calamity, before the beliefs, the
ideologies, the politics take over again. Events
like Sandy Hook, for at least a moment, cut through
all that down to the basic human being. In such
times, we learn who we really are.
How can we
prepare? We cannot prepare. But we are being
prepared.
Charles
Eisenstein is an essayist and author of the books
Sacred Economics and The Ascent of Humanity. He is a
contributor to Shareable, where this article first
appeared.
No comments:
Post a Comment