Archives for posts with tag: Evolution

Things in the world show up based on the way we look at them.  The more we look at the imperfections of the world, the more imperfections we see.  The more we see things as perfect, the more the world shows us its state of perfection.

Our Challenge

One of the most difficult tasks for all of us is to turn our attention away from all the problems we see out in the external world and to focus our attention on our dreams of what we know is possible.  This is not a call to hide our heads in the sand and pretend that issues don’t exist.  Yes, the world may currently exist in its manifest form in ways that are less than what we desire.  Our goal is to use those conditions to give us guidance on what we don’t want so that we can turn our attention towards what we do.

Each of us must learn to spend less time whining about what we currently see that we don’t like, and spend more of our time on the perfection we know is possible.  If we were to perform an “energy audit” on our thoughts and actions, where might we find our energy flowing?  Let’s close the negative energy leaks and be more positive energy efficient.  Can we move to seeing the perfection in an imperfect world?

What is Perfection?

The Wikipedia article on perfection shows that the term encompasses a number of concepts including — that which is complete containing all its parts, or that which is good so that nothing of the kind could be better, or that which has attained its purpose.  Can we see the world in this light?  Does the world contain all of its parts?  Is it so good that it could not be better?  Has it attained its purpose?  What do you think?

Metaphysical traditions such as the Science of Mind and Spirit state that each of us as well as the world is already “perfect, whole and complete”.  Newcomers to the philosophy often struggle with this concept as they mentally compare the state of their lives and the state of the world against a vision of what is truly possible.  The gap between what currently exists and the vision of our potential makes it hard to see the perfection.

Yet the perfection that the Science of Mind claims already exists is not necessarily a description of the current condition.  As its founder, mystic Ernest Holmes described the concept of perfection, he used words such as “the real state of being” and “the divine attribute of complete excellence”.  He advised us to “see only perfection… regardless of appearances”.  In other words, he was pointing us to focus our attention into the realm of the divine beyond the realm of what might be right in front of us.

Behind the world of the “seen” is the world of the unseen.  Here is a reality that metaphysics frequently claims is “more real” than the external world demanding our sensory attention.  Here is the world of our consciousness, of energy, of thoughts and visions, of our dreams of what is possible.  Here is the world that creates our mental picture of perfection that we use in comparison with the material world and its seeming imperfections.  Here is the world in which our free will exists to move our thoughts in the direction of our desires.  Here is the world in which all of our collective consciousness joins together in one divine consciousness where our highest dreams combine to know at the deepest level of our soul what is truly possible.  This is where real perfection exists and serves to call us towards it.  Our seeking this perfection is truly a motivating force in our lives and on our planet.

Similarly, philosophers have long pointed to a paradox is contained within the human concept of perfection.  If the world were totally perfect, then there would be no room for improvement and therefore be imperfect.  This paradox claims that true perfection depends on the ability to grow, evolve and make progress.  Ironically, true perfection involves our movement towards that perfection.

Quick Summary

  • There exist in our inner realm of consciousness a vision of what perfection is.
  • As we look at the world, things appear to be less than perfect.
  • Our judgment of imperfection comes from noticing the gap between our inner sense of our highest potential and our outer experience.
  • We are at choice as to whether we focus on the vision of perfection or the worldly imperfections.
  • That which we focus on tends to grow in our outer experience.
  • Regardless of where we direct our attention or any imperfect conditions, there always exists the state of true perfection.
  • True perfection is a force that is calling us towards it.
  • The process of our moving towards this true perfection is part of the true perfection.

Our Charge

So what does this means for our lives? Armed with this knowledge, let us all:

  • Be aware of our vision of the highest state of perfection for humanity.
  • Turn our attention more and more towards this perfection.
  • Experience the perfection of our vision as more real than the outer world.
  • Recognize the perfection in the process of our evolution from the imperfect outer world towards this greater inner true perfection.
  • Allow that true perfection to be a force that calls us to learn, grow and evolve.

So how can you actually apply this in your life? I’ll be sharing some ideas in the near future, but would love your thoughts!

Mark Gilbert

transcending the third dimension-loveToday, we conclude our self dialogue in exploring our evolution through the third dimension and our opportunity to transcend it….. Click here to read part one in which we explored what we mean by the third dimension, how we came to be in and our evolution through it. Click here to read part two in which we discussed why it is imperative for each of us to consciously take control of our personal evolution and what that means. Today, we finish our discussion considering our collective evolution and transcendence.

So, as our personal evolution unfolds and we become more aware of our interrelationship to everyone, how does that relate to the collective evolution of humanity?

As mentioned previously, as we as individuals evolve or grow in consciousness or become enlightened… however you wish to describe it… we become more aware and truly embody the reality that we are all interconnected — that we are all part of some grand “oneness”. As that occurs, it is inevitable that we will grow in our sense of love and concern for all our fellow beings. This is one area where religions have served us. There is a common thread in all faiths that teach the Golden Rule — do unto others as you would have them do onto you. This call to ethical behavior served us early in our evolutionary process as we banded together in tribes and cities and countries. The more we all cooperated within “our group”, the more our group flourished. Yet the Golden Rule’ s guidance was never limited to any one group. As we expand our sense of the “other” to greater and greater degrees, soon it envelops all humanity, all life, the planet, and ultimately the universe in total. What would it mean to treat every person on the planet as we would wish to be treated? What would it mean if we treated the planet and the universe as we would wish to be treated?

There is certainly plenty of evidence that we do not treat one another nor the planet as we would like to be treated. What do you think it would be like if we did?

I suspect most of us could agree on many of the characteristics of such a world, but there is obviously no consensus. I have my vision of what such a world might look like. First, each person would have access to the basic rights as outlined by the United Nations–for adequate water, food, education, to be treated with dignity and respect, to be able to live with certain freedoms. Yet beyond that, each person would have a reverence for all life — as we look outward, we would see ourselves in other people, in animals, in plants — we would sense our connectedness. Yes, we would continue to seek to meet our basic needs for our own lives. Yet, there would be greater awareness where our continued efforts to meet our needs crossed over into the territory of meeting “wants and desires” (stuff we exert effort towards attaining that in the big picture we don’t really “need”). There is nothing wrong with meeting wants and desires, experiencing the fullness of life in the third dimension as previously mentioned is one of the gifts of being here. Our full experience of the infinite variety of life here is one of the main purposes that we were placed here — through us spirit or infinite consciousness experiences the richness of this physical domain. However, our expanded awareness of meeting wants and desires would bring knowledge of when our efforts crossed into harming others. There is goodness in our meeting our needs, wants and desires so long as they express life. When our efforts cause harm, they no longer express life.

Could you give some specific examples of when our meeting wants and desires cause harm and no longer express life?

Sure. First, here are some larger global examples. Consider Wall Street where their desire for greater profits for their company caused harm to individual homeowners as well as our collective economy. Consider the Gulf oil spill where the combination of our government’s desire to increase domestic oil production as well as the oil company’s desire to maximize profits led to cutting corners and our ultimate ecological disaster. Consider the ongoing violence in the Middle East tied to the self-interest of particular countries or religions. In each of these cases, some group is attempting to meet its wants and desires that are beyond the level of basic needs. And, in each case such effort crossed over into harming other people or the environment — at this point they are no longer “expressing life” in its greatest expression. If the individual decision-makers in each of these cases stopped to ask themselves something like “what action can we take here that will serve the greatest number?” or “what can we do here to meet our needs that will cause no harm?”, then would they have made the choices they did? If they were truly treating others as they wish to be treated, I believe different choices would have been made. To be clear, my point here with these examples is not to debate any specific government or corporation political decision. Rather I am simply suggesting that in a possible world where all humanity lives by the Golden Rule, where the “other” they are “doing onto” is everyone and everything, there would have been other decisions, actions and outcomes.

Yet to get to that world, doesn’t it start with each one of us?

Absolutely. Each of us can examine our own lives to find examples where we are not living the Golden Rule. Do you ever cut someone off on the highway because you’re in a hurry to get where you want to go? Do you ever gossip or bad mouth someone because they don’t think or act like you want them to? Do you ever ignore someone’s request for help because for some reason you’re mad at them? Do you ever forward on some viral but untruthful e-mail because it makes a political statement you happen to favor? Do you ever judge others negatively because they’re different from you — different race, religion, sexual orientation, etc.? The point is, every day we are at choice. Are our choices in alignment with doing onto others as we would wish to be treated? As each of us grow in our personal awareness, we will sense and know how we are each stewards of this planet in the third dimension as well as caretakers and teachers for those continuing to struggle. It does not serve the collective good for us to stay mired in the third dimension, but rather it serves the greater good for us to grow and become enlightened. The more of us who move into that place in our consciousness, the greater the collective evolution of humanity.

In what ways are we “collectively evolving”?

We are growing collectively inwardly and outwardly. Inwardly, we are evolving at both a cultural level as well as in our collective consciousness. Outwardly, we might consider that our global systems — the outward expression of society such as our technology and ability to tap the collective “global brain” is also evolving.

How are we evolving culturally?

This is where I find a model of Spiral Dynamics so helpful. The data that supports this theory shows that humanity is evolving through a series of worldviews. As we make a level of needed one worldview, we evolve into a higher view of looking at life and the planet. Humanity’s earliest worldviews were centered around meeting base needs similar to Maslow’s theory we looked at previously — safety and survival, banding together in tribes, etc. Current predominate worldviews on the planet include a traditional view superseded by a modern view followed by a postmodern viewpoint. Descriptions of these levels can be found with a little research or by reading some of my other articles on the subject. Ultimately, Spiral Dynamics as well as other similar models point to our evolving to even higher levels of individual and group awareness where we are able to recognize and value the interplay of all the other levels. Interestingly, some of the characteristics at these higher levels of awareness include such factors as the melding of science and spirituality, recognizing the interconnectedness and systems interplay of everything on the planet, of an awareness of a greater unity of all. Characteristics that mystics often sy come at higher levels of awareness. Although Spiral Dynamics data shows that much of humanity are at earlier worldviews, the theory points the way towards our evolutionary future and shows that growing numbers of people are headed towards these higher worldviews.

So what do you mean by “collective consciousness” and how is it evolving?

Just as we have an individual consciousness, all of our individual consciousnesses feed one group consciousness for all of humanity. Carl Jung wrote extensively about this. What many have realized is that not only does our individual consciousness provide input into humanity’s collective consciousness but that this greater consciousness is tapped into by each of our subconscious providing silent input into our thoughts and choices. The group mind, in a sense, serves to limit us and what we see as possible. As each of us grow individually, we feed a greater level of potential for all humanity into this group consciousness raising the bar on what is considered possible for all of us.

And what about outward evidence of our evolution?

In spite of all the challenges our planet currently faces, there is plenty of evidence that we are moving into a world where humanity senses at a greater level our interconnectedness and our related expanded sense of care and concern for each other. The Internet and related phenomenon such as the rise of social media sites connects us with each other globally and immediately. There is a rising trend in corporations to be considered successful by the combination of profits and social responsibility. There is an increased tendency by individuals later in life to release careers that brought material success and move into “work” that feeds their soul. There is a rise in the number of nonprofit groups whose mission is to enhance life conditions for everyone around the planet. The United Nations continues to promote the meeting of certain basic human needs as a “right” through such efforts as their Millennium Development Goals designed to end poverty and hunger around the planet. These and similar examples point to a trend in our evolution.

So what is our role in contributing to such evolution?

Hopefully by now it’s clear. The collective consciousness of humanity evolves by our personal evolution. Humanity’s cultural and societal evolution moves forward by our personal growth. Each of us has a responsibility to answer that inner call that asks us to transcend our limits and grow to the greatest levels of possibility for our lives. Our growth occurs in our consciousness inwardly and in our actions outwardly. We previously mentioned that each of us should set our intention towards our highest possibility for our lives, to create a vision of what that looks like and then to act in alignment with that vision. We also mentioned using logic and intuition to create our individual plan as well as some components the plan should contain. Considering our collective evolution, we must add one additional aspect to our plan — service to others. There are so many issues facing our planet at this time that it’s easy to get overwhelmed and do nothing. Let go of that feeling. Pick one issue that you are passionate about and then act to do something to address it no matter how small. Add this service action to all your other personal aspects to your plan for growth. The combination of our individual actions coupled with their igniting cascading change through the “butterfly effect” will truly make a difference. Hold firm in the knowledge that to the degree that we all grow individually to transcend the third dimension, that growth supports the collective growth of all.

We sort of assume here that we wish to transcend the third dimension. Is this true?

That’s an individual decision for each of us to make based on experience and our own free will choice. I believe that ultimately more and more of us will become enlightened and realize the importance of transcending this school and playground of space and time. There may always be some who will choose to move through the third dimension, but in the vast expanse of time as experienced in the third dimension, I believe those numbers will diminish.

Any final thoughts?

Yes. One aspect of being human is that we learn and grow by the dual gifts of our intellect and our intuition. We listen to our heads and to our hearts. On the one hand, the thoughts expressed here were hopefully presented in a logical and easy to understand manner that fed your intellect. But beyond that, I hope that as your intellect resonated with the ideas presented here, it also opened your heart. French philosopher, paleontologist and Jesuit priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin wrote about the evolution of humanity and our path as we move upward in consciousness. He described the melding of individual human minds into one global mind called the noosphere. As our consciousness grew beyond that, he pointed to what he called the “Omega point” — some point in the future that is pulling all creation towards it. So let us consider this: Spirit or Ultimate Consciousness divided itself up in awareness and embedded itself in all of life so that we could experience individuality and free will choice as we simultaneously moved upward followed the laws of evolution. This evolutionary track involved smaller pockets of consciousness coming together in greater pockets of consciousness until in humanity here on earth (and perhaps elsewhere) such consciousness crossed a threshold into self-awareness. Our personal individual pocket of consciousness is now being pulled by the process of evolution to combine with others at an even higher level of awareness that we can only imagine. What is this Omega point that is pulling us upward and onward so that we might ultimately transcend the third dimension? What force can we imagine that seeks to pull us out from our sense of separation from one another and desires to connect us in our awareness with others? What force could that be? Teilhard de Chardin wrote, “Someday, after mastering the winds, the waves, the tides and gravity, we shall harness for God the energies of love, and then, for a second time in the history of the world, man will have discovered fire.” That force is love. Spirit embedded in us consciousness and love. It was love that placed us here in the third dimension. It is love that is calling us home.
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So let’s turn the question around — what you think? What is your experience of the third dimension and our evolution? Do you believe we are called to transcend it or not… and why? I would love to hear your thoughts and your beliefs.  Thank you for reading mine.

Mark Gilbert

transcending the 3rd dimensionToday, we continue our self dialogue in exploring our evolution through the third dimension and our opportunity to transcend it…..  (Click here to read part one)

So picking up where we left off–regarding our evolution — you say that ultimately humanity will transcend the third dimension.  What exactly does that mean?

Well, in my thinking, it means that some aspect of us will move beyond the limitations created by living in a world of time and space where things appear to be separate from one another.  Although I certainly have no insider knowledge about the characteristics of life beyond the third dimension, I have to imagine that it entails leaving behind the need for a physical body as we know it, as well as the experience of linear time.  My belief is that the aspect of our being that we carry with us from the third dimension relates to our consciousness.

So is this transcendence done by each of us individually?

Good question.  On a certain level, I believe that it is.  I believe that each of us grow and evolve at an individual level that leads to our personal transcendence beyond the third dimension.  This personal evolution is in consciousness.  However, I also believe that as an individual evolves to higher levels of consciousness, such levels bring awareness of the interconnectedness of all life and an expanded circle of care and concern for others.  This awareness brings a desire to serve others, a desire that seems natural from the viewpoint that we are all one.  This intent to serve others frequently includes a desire to assist others in the expansion of their consciousness.  Therefore, in this light, one person’s evolution assists the group’ s consciousness.  Also, we might consider that an individual’ s consciousness is part of the collective consciousness of all humanity, so that one’s growth also contributes to everyone’s growth in that regard.

Must we really take an active role in our personal evolution?  Won’t we just naturally “transcend the third dimension” when our bodies experience the process of death?

There are some spiritual teachers who say that — that the transition from this life to our next experience allows us to automatically release the limitations imposed upon us by our identification with our bodies and our sense of separation from one another.  Yet these same teachers usually share that some type of sense of personal identity is carried with us into our next level of expression.  Although the release of the body may bring an expansion of our awareness, such expansion doesn’t eliminate the necessity for our growth during our time in the third dimension.  The higher our growth while here now would seem in my way of thinking to be beneficial.  On the one hand, the greater our wisdom at the point of transition, there might be the opportunity for enhanced assimilation of our new expanded awareness.  On the other hand, if as some spiritual teachers and traditions suggest — that reincarnation back into the third dimension reoccurs until we learn our lessons here, then the greater our wisdom at the point of transition brings with it increased likelihood that we have “completed” our experience here.

Okay, then what must each of us do to transcend the third dimension and evolve personally? 

Well, the simple answer is be aware of this process, set an intention to further your evolution, create a vision of what your personal evolution looks like and then act in a manner that is in alignment with that vision.  Your vision and your related actions must incorporate all aspects of your life — your inner work and your outer work, your work on yourself and your work in relation to others.  I find philosopher Ken Wilber’s integral practice is helpful here in understanding the various parts of your life in which you need to consider your plan for growth.  Working on your shadow self is essential.  Some type of spiritual practice that builds within you an awareness of the oneness of life is key.  Other spiritual teachers frequently offer other specific guidance.  My suggestion is that we use logic to build our plan, but that we also use the vast power of our intuition to choose the path that is best for us individually.

That’s the simple answer?

Yes.  Obviously it sounds simple but that doesn’t make it easy.  Yet there is a more complex piece to our evolution that we need to consider, in my opinion.  Our physical nature has evolved through the third dimension for thousands of years.  That process has hardwired within us certain factors that have served us along our evolutionary path but now create barriers as we seek to evolve further.  Some consider these factors to be coded into our DNA, others say it’s part of our collective consciousness.  Either way, these structures keep us with one foot firmly planted in the third dimension even as some aspect of us calls us to higher levels of awareness.

What are some of these structures that have served us but now limit us?

There are parts of humanity that may be considered animalistic.  Consider Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and their lower levels.  We have base needs where we seek to meet basic physiological needs such as air, water, etc. Beyond those needs we seek basic safety and security for ourselves — shelter, procreation to continue the species and so. Next Maslow says we seek to create a sense of belonging with others and a desire to experience love.  We must consider that for thousands of years, meeting each of these needs served an evolutionary purpose — we continued to live and thrive and reproduce.  Yet our hardwiring to meet these needs keeps us stuck in sensing the need to compete against others for what appear to be limited resources — food, water, land, money, sexual partners, power, possessions that make life easier, etc. Although at some level we may be called to transcend these desires, our third dimensional hardwiring keeps bringing us back to them.

So how do we overcome this hardwiring?

Well it comes back to the simple answer — awareness, intention, vision and action.  If we’re not aware of how our third dimensional evolutionary process has created both these gifts and challenges, then in our ignorance we will continue to ignore them and never overcome them.  We will continue to live our lives in competition and struggle, seeking to fill the bottomless pit of needs that can never be satiated, keeping our attention and focus on the lack and limitation and growing more of the same.

Is there anything else we need to understand in moving beyond the third dimension?

Yes.  We need to understand what many mystics and philosophers have pointed out to us — the creative power of our thoughts–thoughts are things.  Evolution has allowed consciousness to make a critical leap within humanity, we have become aware of the fact that we are aware.  With that, we have also moved into the awareness that the consciousness embedded within us is actually the creative power of the divine — and that through our free will choice we can use that power for destructive purposes or creative purposes.  We need to learn to harness that vast power within us for good, for ourselves and for others.  We need to remember the truth that we are interrelated to everyone else.  We need to grasp that on an intellectual level and then embody it into our emotions and choices.  Next we need to release our attachment to all the trappings of the third dimension.  To be clear, yes, let’s enjoy the vast array of beauty and bounty of life here on planet Earth.  It truly is a gift.  But attachments to all that is here will keep us stuck here.  Finally, we need to be aware of the evolutionary process and our role in it.  We need to recognize that we are conscious co-creators in the process.  As we grow and evolve personally, we need to consider how we might use the power of our thoughts and intentions for the greater good of all so that we not only complete our individual third dimensional experience but assist others on their path as well.

So are we really continuing to evolve?

Yes, I believe so.  As mentioned previously, this evolution is more in our consciousness.  We become more aware.  Another word for this is to say we become enlightened.  Evolution’s next step for us is in consciousness, awareness, enlightenment.

So where does religion or spirituality fit into this?

In my opinion, religion represents the formalized rules, dogma and organizations that have evolved to point humanity back towards this divine unity.  To that degree that have served a useful purpose.  Yet they are tainted by humanity’s animalistic base needs and thus have limited us simultaneously by dividing us and keeping us separate from one another.  One must consider this — does a religions’ stressing of their rules, their sacred texts, the specialness of their group, their discouragement of marriage outside their group, and their way being “the only way to God” serve to unite us as a people or divide us?  More often than not such thinking brings more divisiveness and less love.  Such characteristics of religion have even encouraged violence and war. Is this the next logical step for humanity?  Is this our highest possibility as a people? Spirituality, on the other hand, implies a direct experience of unity.  Spirituality seeks us to have a direct link to the divine without any intermediary such as religion.  Religion may have served our evolution but it is spirituality will take us to the next level.  Spiritual practices such as prayer and meditation seek to create within us our own personal experience of God.  Such experience moves us into higher levels of care and concern for our fellow mankind as well as assisting us in releasing attachments to third dimensional desires.  Hence, as mentioned, a routine spiritual practice of communing with a sense greater than our smallness is essential to transcending the third dimension.

Next time we conclude this discussion as we consider humanity’s collective evolution and its shared transcendence of the third dimension…

Mark Gilbert

Today, we use the time tested method of the self dialogue to explore very quickly humanity’s evolution through the third dimension and our opportunity to transcend it.

First off, what you mean by the “third dimension”?

The third dimension is this physical reality in which we find ourselves living. The sense that I am right here and you are over there, that I am separate and apart from everything else, and that I am moving through all of this other stuff in a linear experience of time are all aspects of the third dimension. All of the physical matter and energy that we experience in a world of space and time where everything has its distinct location in a distinct moment is all an aspect of the third dimension.

Why does the third dimension exist?

To me, it exists as a sort of school or playground where growth and experiences can occur. It’s a place where Spirit or ultimate oneness can allow aspects of itself to divide up and sense themselves as being separate and have experiences of such separation. It’s a place that we move through on our way back to oneness and unity.

How did we get here?

That question can be answered a couple of ways. As many mystics and sages have pointed out, if God or Spirit or oneness or infinite intelligence (or whatever name you wish to give ultimate reality) knows and senses everything that ever is or ever was or ever will be all in the one instant of the holy moment, then what experience remains that is unknown? Their answer was that infinite intelligence was called to divide itself up, not in reality but only in awareness, placing aspects of itself in compartmentalized pockets that considered themselves separate from the other compartmentalized pockets that considered themselves separate. The end result was something called “multiplicity within the unity”, the sense of multiple things that are ultimately united in one. These compartmentalized pieces of Spirit were thrown into the third dimension so that spirit could have the experience of separation and all that comes with that — relationships with other separate things and free will to make choices of one thing over another. Traditional religion often refers to this process as “the fall” — we lived in perfection in oneness but fell into the world of duality, the world of good and bad, right and wrong.

Then what is the other way in which you can describe we came to be here?

This is where science comes in. It describes our third dimensional origin as coming from “the Big Bang”. Although science is silent for the most part on what preceded this beginning moment, current scientific thinking says that all physical matter was contained in a very hot, very dense area which exploded outward very quickly. At the moment of this expansion, all of the physical laws that we have since “discovered” already existed. One such law was gravity which acted upon the unevenness in this soupy plasma to begin bringing matter together into very hot and dense stars containing hydrogen and helium. Through a process of collapse and expansion caused by gravity, stars went through a lifecycle that ultimately created the other elements and cast them out into space. Through time, gravity brought together dense pockets of matter such as planets who moved into gravitational orbits around other stars. Certain planets developed conditions favorable for third dimensional life to evolve. The process of evolution was also embedded in everything from the moment of the Big Bang. This process favored life to build up in greater and greater degrees of complexity, from single cell organisms to more complex organisms and on up the chain to humanity.

How did life come from inert matter?

That’s a magical question that science really doesn’t answer. The common description is that physical conditions simply arose that were conducive for “life to emerge”. One has to consider that the potential for this emergence always existed. One has to wonder, how and why did that potential get embedded into this dimension?

So how do these two stories, the fall from unity into multiplicity and our physical evolutionary path from the Big Bang, interrelate?

Well, as I see it, Spirit’s creation of the multiplicity for the experience it offered began with the creation of the third dimension via the Big Bang. Infinite intelligence created all matter and all laws (including gravity and evolution) in that first moment, embedding itself into everything. It has allowed these aspects of Itself to evolve and to experience all that that evolutionary process entails. This evolutionary aspect of the third dimension not only allowed planets to form, but life to emerge on the planets and from life, consciousness to emerge.

What is consciousness and how did it emerge?

Another one of those magical questions. What consciousness is has been the subject of philosophers and scientists for a long time. Some even question its existence as real. The great irony, of course, is that such questioning is created within that person’s consciousness. We humans experience consciousness as our self-awareness — that part of us that assimilates the combination of our sensory input, our thoughts and our memories to create this persona or ego that we sense as ourselves. Stop for a moment and ask yourself “who am I?” Most likely the picture you come up with is this bundle that includes a physical body and a sense of its awareness of itself. That awareness is your experience of consciousness. You can only know your experience of it. You can’t know mine although you imagine that my experience is similar to yours. Yet we can also imagine that some aspect of this consciousness is also experienced by other animals. I know my dog has consciousness of some type. So science tells us (when it chooses to discuss the subject at all) that consciousness “emerged” at some point in the evolutionary process. Where that might be is subject to debate. But again, one has to consider and wonder about the fact that the potential existed from the Big Bang onward for the emergence of consciousness.

Where do you think consciousness emerged?

I happen to believe what some philosophers, mystics and a few scientists have been saying — consciousness was there all along. It is only our experience of it that has emerged. Consciousness is embedded in everything. It is in the smallest bits of matter and is in all energy. There is nothing that does not contain “consciousness”. Even subatomic particles and single cell organisms have a degree of consciousness. What is it within them that gives them “agency”, the ability to hold themselves as distinct and interact appropriately with the rest of the world? That “something” is the consciousness or intelligence embedded within them.

But wait, you’re making consciousness sound like Spirit?

That’s right. Spirit is consciousness. The One Consciousness imbedded that consciousness in everything. Consciousness is, as they say, “the ground of all Being”. It is the connecting aspect of the universe that allows everything to be created and experienced. Consciousness is not a by-product of our brains as many scientist seem to believe. Consciousness is the underlying field that gives rise to all matter including our brains. That piece of us that experiences consciousness is our tasting the oneness from which we sprang. The evolutionary process by which matter built up higher degrees of consciousness leading to humanity crossing a threshold into self-awareness is part of our return to oneness. If we can imagine all of our little individual pockets of consciousness being reunited into a single awareness (a stretch for our little minds, I agree), then we can get a sense of consciousness at the level of Spirit.

So then what’s next for humanity in this process? How do we continue our evolution and return back into unity from which we came? How do we transcend the third dimension?

There are several layers to the answers to these questions. First, there is the role that each of us play in our own personal evolution which must be considered. Hence, each of us must ask ourselves — what must I do to transcend the third dimension and evolve personally? Second, there is the process whereby humanity is evolving from individuals on their own path to a collective humanity evolving at a societal worldwide level as well as in our collective consciousness. How is this process playing out and what is our role in contributing to it? Furthermore, behind all of this is a basic assumption that we wish to transcend the third dimension. Is this true? Humanity is certainly at an interesting point in its evolution.

We will look at these layers in part two next time.

Mark Gilbert

answers along our pathA week ago I offered for your contemplation four questions posed by Deepak Chopra as part of a EnlightenNext Magazine web article (questions repeated in bold below).  I thought I might give you my thoughts on them as of today.  One caveat — these answers are subject to change as I grow and change! 

1. What kind of world do you want to live in and what kind of world you want your children and grandchildren to live in?

I’ve answered this question a number of times in the context that humanity needs to set a vision of its highest possibilities that the vast majority of us can buy into and then collectively work towards it.  However instead of repeating a full positive vision for humanity’s future, here is a short version — I want to live in a world where everyone honors and respects everyone else, a world where everyone has an opportunity to express their gifts and to succeed.

2. What is your role in bringing this about?

I see my role as a teacher.  To the degree that I have any ability to bring clarity to others through either the written or spoken word, I hope to inspire them to work in their sphere of influence towards a world that works for everyone.

3. Regarding the organizations that you’re part of, what kind of team do you want to have and what kind of relationship do you want to have with this team?

Obviously, all teams of which I’m a part must work in a manner that respects all members and helps each to reach their highest potential.

4. What do you see as the primary need in our current cultural moment?

Our greatest need is to foster a shift in consciousness such that humanity no longer defines success primarily by one individual or group gaining at the expense of others.  The greatest good for all must be our greatest motivator for all.

So these are my current thoughts… how would you answer the questions?

Mark Gilbert

keys to evolutionToday we look at seven key activities that are important for your personal evolution.  The fact is, life is evolving.  You are evolving, I am evolving, we are all evolving.  Although our individual and collective evolutionary path is, in my opinion, a given — that doesn’t mean we can’t stray off the path.

Where are we headed eventually?  Simply stated, we are ultimately moving towards higher levels of consciousness and awareness where we recognize the unity of everything.  We are realizing that although we are living through an experience of individuality and uniqueness, at our core we are all one.  There are intermediate steps along the way as our systems become more complex, as we are able to tap more easily the sum total of human knowledge, and as the groups of others for whom we exhibit care and concern expand and expand.

Each of us has a choice to cooperate with this evolutionary process or not.  If you wish to facilitate your personal evolution (which of course facilitates our collective evolution), then here are seven key actions which will move you in a positive direction.  Although all of these steps are important, the first ones start within you while the later ones move outward.

Turn inward – So much of our lives directs our senses outward, it’s easy to live with the belief that all the stuff we sense “out there” is the only stuff that is real.  A daily practice of turning inward allows us a degree of balance.  It shows us a truer reality where we know that there is a presence that connects all.  It is important that our lives experience this base.

Set the vision — As we turn inward, it’s important that we set a vision as to where we see our lives headed.  We must begin with the end in mind.  We must visualize the highest outcome for our lives.  What is it we are called to be?  This vision gives our life direction.

Feed the mind – We must continue to grow intellectually.  We must continue to learn.  It’s too easy to stay in our comfort zone and only learn more about what we already know and only pursue sources that are biased in the direction of our beliefs.  We must continue to challenge ourselves by exploring new areas and new ways of looking at things. 

Nurture the body — We must take care of these physical vehicles which serve us while here on earth.  We must ensure that these “temples” are exercised and well fed. 

Heal the shadow — We must recognize that our early life experiences buried deep within us hidden beliefs and motivations which must be healed.  We must seek to understand why we believe or act as we do when such beliefs or actions are not in the best interest of ourselves and others.  We must seek out and utilize established methods to bring our shadow into the light so we can heal it and make a higher choice.

Act in alignment – Our actions in the outer world must be in alignment with our vision for our life.  Each of us has unique creative ability which we are called to express.  As we express that ability in our work or play, we must consider how it serves our growth, both as individuals and as part of the collective humanity.

Cultivate relationships — As we move outward in our action in the world, we must seek to connect with others.  Developing relationships with others heightens our sense of interconnectedness.  Expanding our involvement with others allows our talents and gifts to touch them and for their gifts to touch us.  The interplay of our individual evolutionary gifts expands their influence and speeds up our collective growth.

These are the seven keys that I believe are essential for each of us to be utilizing in our personal growth.  Each is important. 

Do these seven steps resonate with you?  Are you developing all of them?  How might you grow one you are ignoring currently?  Would you add any other steps to this list?

Mark Gilbert

Deepak Chopra's 4 questionsRecently, EnlightenNext Magazine ran a contest seeking input on four questions posed by Deepak Chopra.  The winner received free enrollment in a class called “The Evolutionary’s Guide to Changing the World”.  Although I didn’t have time to submit my thoughts for the contest, I held onto the questions to ponder.

Here are the questions:

1. What kind of world do you want to live in and what kind of world do you want your children and grandchildren to live in?

2. What is your role in bringing this about?

3. Regarding the organizations that you’re part of, what kind of team do you want to have and what kind of relationship do you want to have with this team?

4. What do you see as the primary need in our current cultural moment?

They received over 100 responses — here’s the link to read them if you’re interested:   Deepak’s four questions

Here’s the link to the response that won:   The winner is…

I love these questions — they get at the same issue that I was raising in my recent article in Integral Leadership Review (link to article).  In fact, the underlying purpose of “the Bridge” is to consider the future we wish to see for ourselves and all of humanity and then to take personal responsibility for our role in moving towards that future.

So how would you answer these questions?  — send me a note or post a reply answering any or all of them — I’ll be posting my thoughts in the next few days.

Mark Gilbert

Why are we here?  What is the meaning of life?  What is consciousness? 

These are the questions that have been behind so much of my spiritual seeking for all of my life. I remember as a child, laying out in the grass behind my house and looking up at the sky and wondering about life. I would look at the sun and clouds and wonder where they came from? Who made the air who made the grass and clover in which I’m laying? Who is this God guy people keep talking about? Is there really some old man up in the sky who made all of this? And why is life like it is with my house and my parents and school and all the things that surround me? All of these questions would finally lead me to the big question…why is it that I have this internal awareness that even allows me to wonder about these things? Who am I really? 

As I grew up and explored various churches… such as the one my parents went to and the ones of the various faiths of the girls I dated… I discovered that none of these religions truly resonated with me. Yet, I continued to wonder about the meaning of life. I finally decided that I would have to learn about the meaning on my own. That’s not to say that there wasn’t truth and wisdom out there for the discovery, I just knew that I wasn’t going to find all of my answers in organized religion. 

When I went to college, I didn’t even know what I didn’t know. I found the subjects that I studied interesting but not always fulfilling. Eventually I was asked to declare a major and I decided that psychology was the only subject that came close to questions I was asking. Although I dipped my toe into philosophy, I found that much of what I read was over my head. Perhaps it might answer the big questions, but I certainly wasn’t ready for how it approached them. Besides, there was a unspoken pressure to declare a major that had some degree of practicality. It was already a bit of a stretch to declare psychology is a major in that regards…..no way I was going to say “philosophy”. 

I found that as I studied psychology, there were areas where I really found answers. For example, the work of Abraham Maslow, and specifically his “Hierarchy of Needs” gave me some answers as to be reasons for my motivations. And, although the university I attended was steeped in behavioralism at that time… I even worked for a professor running rats in experiments… they did offer in my senior year at class which delved into the subject of consciousness. We reviewed a book by Robert Ornstein called “The Psychology of Consciousness” which intermingled the results of brain studies and Sufi stories to offer answers regarding this consciousness that I have long wondered about. 

After I graduated with my bachelors degree, I thought about going on into graduate school in psychology. However the blessing of marriage and children turned my focus and attention into the outward world. Much of my life could easily be tracked in Maslow’s hierarchy. I worked long hours and moved up the organizational ladder in order to meet the safety and security needs of my family, my own relationship and self-esteem needs, and occasionally (on my own) would see glimpses towards self-actualization. 

In the outer world, life served me greatly. One thing that was silently instilled in me as a youth was the need to provide for my family. Therefore, when I married early and had five children, by the time I was 25. This instilled drive to be a provider drove me to succeed in the business world. I worked long and hard and learned. I moved up the ladder within the federal government. I learned how to get work done, and how to work with people. For much of my career I worked in management and leadership positions. The success that I received in my long career with the government also served to feed many of my internal needs. Another belief that had been instilled in me was that outward material success validated my existence and success as a human. I didn’t understand this for many years and only came to understand that I held this belief later in life. 

Outwardly, I was also concerned with my children having the best possible life they could have as they grew up. I’m talking not only about material success and having “things”, but also about having the right experiences that instilled in them the right morals, and the right worldview. I have been very pleased to see the adults that these children have grown into.

 My point in mentioning all of this is to acknowledge that I had this outer life that was very important to me and grew me while I meanwhile continued to ask those inner questions about life and consciousness. That external life has served me to be the person I am today. But along the way, small things continued to crop up that drove me to look at the big questions. Sometimes they were obvious and consciously intentional, other times more hidden from my awareness but real none the less. 

One of those factors was to uproot my family while the children were still a very young age and move them across the country. My wife and I gave logical stories about the move… such as wanting to raise the children in a more enlightened area or the greater chance of career success in the new town… but also underneath all of this was our own internal desire to live somewhere else, where we might grow deeper in our own truth and wisdom. 

Throughout my life, I continued to explore religion, science, philosophy, and other paths, but I discovered looking for the answers to life. Along the way, coincidences continued to put me in the position to have experiences that ensured I pursued these bigger questions. Answers would be put before me, coming like clues in a Dan Brown novel. Now I can look back and see that something inside me was conspiring to bring these experiences into my awareness. 

Eventually I discovered a philosophy called the science of mind and spirit created by Ernest Holmes. I found it answered more questions for me than anything I discovered up to that point. I delved into the teachings, eventually became a spiritual counselor, and later took their masters program that led me into becoming a Science of Mind minister. Some days I look at this path with great irony that the child who ran from religion became a minister in later life. 

Along the way my life certainly changed… the end of my first marriage … my children growing into happy and successful adults with grandchildren arriving… a wonderful new marital relationship……a retirement from the government and moving more deeply onto my path of being a spiritual teacher…

Do why do I mention all of this?  Some days I grapple with the issue of how can I truly be a spiritual teacher, when I’ve walked this other more material life for so many years? I wasn’t some long time spiritual teacher with tons of experience teaching “spiritual classes”.  But as I’ve come to discover my path was perfect. It gave me the experiences to teach from an awareness that will resonate with others who walked a similar path. And, I have discovered that many people are now coming into the spiritual path having walked a very similar material life. 

I have discovered that there are many paths and many teachers who have been pointing in the same direction from different vantage points as Ernest Holmes and the Science of Mind. Although this should not be a surprise, as Holmes created this philosophy by drawing on the great truths from all the other paths, it’s one thing to know that intellectually, and another to feel it through the experience of learning. 

So coming full circle now… why are we here? What is the meaning of life? What is consciousness?  These are some of the questions that drive our spiritual evolution.  The motivation to understand is the push that forces us to grow….we may walk the material path, but at some point something ensures we stay on the spiritual path.

Mark

Blog, twitter, facebook, analysis paralysis with dataMuch of modern life seems to be about balancing opposing forces.  The issues we face are more complex than ever, each having many detailed facets we need to consider.  Yet the fire hose flow of information that comes at us 24/7 challenges our coping mechanisms such that we beg for quick sound bites.

Blogging and Twitter

Ever since I started writing “the Bridge”, I’ve been reading books on blogging.  They consistently tell me to keep my posts short.  I consistently fail to follow that advice.  Those who know me well are not surprised.

Although most articles could be edited to be more succinct, I find it hard to shorten the content without losing the nuances of the point.  Yes, I’m sure for most posts I could give you a 140 character summary, but the path to the point is usually essential for understanding.

I’ve gotten into Twitter lately.  It’s an interesting phenomenon.  Share whatever in 140 characters.  It has certainly led to some creativity — cutting out words, increasing abbreviations and new programs to automatically shorten Internet links.  Twitter certainly has appeal for our short little spans of attention.  Yet it has exponentially increased that fire hose pointed at me and challenged many of us to say anything meaningful in such a short burst.

I see three kinds of comments most often on Twitter — brief descriptions of what one is doing or thinking, lots of quotes, and an enticing blurb followed by a tiny URL “hooks”  to take you to another site.  These last ones reflect our work around on the 140 character limitation.  It’s like the tweets are fishing — the bait is the brief comment to grab your interest, the link is the hook to take you somewhere.  Obviously marketers use it for selling.  Many use it (as do I) to take you to another site where we can go down the rabbit hole into the complexities of a point.  We’re balancing those opposing forces I mentioned.

Letters to the Editor

Recently I wrote a letter to the editor of the Christian Science Monitor.  I was pleasantly surprised to hear they were considering publishing my letter.  I had to give my concurrence so they could edit it to fit.  My edited letter appears in their June 7, 2010 issue.  (Link to their Letters to the Editor page)

An unedited version of my letter (with slight variation) was previously posted on “the Bridge” as the article entitled “Our Fingers Point to the Moon Just As Our Religions Point to God“.  I knew my letter was way too long for complete publication.  My wife tells me that what was published makes sense, but I’m not so sure.  Maybe it does and I’m just too close to the content.

The Monitor is one of the better publications for outlining the details of complex global issues.  I highly recommend it.  However, reading their edited version of my letter highlighted even their ongoing challenge for simplifying complex matters.

President Obama’s Balancing Act

The same issue of the Monitor describes how President Obama is “faring on message control”.  It describes how he is dealing with this balancing act of complex issues and short sound bite messaging.

On the one hand, Obama is using social media — blogs, Facebook and Twitter — to message to us.  The Administration provides short bursts to keep us fed on what they’re doing.

The traditional way in which presidents have given us short answers to complex issues has been in White House correspondent press conferences.  Interestingly, Obama is using this mechanism much less than his predecessors.  Seeking to feed a never ending daily need for concise bullet point content, the White House corps have been frustrated by the reduction in these Q&A sessions.  They want to ask Obama a short question to a complex issue and get a short answer that they can quote.

Yet on the other hand, Obama has tripled the number of extended one-on-one interviews to reporters compared to his predecessors.  These interviews allow him the opportunity to explain the nuances of complex issues as well as foster deeper relationships with the interviewer.

Many (especially the media) may want short concise answers from the White House on extremely complex matters but that may not always serve our best interest.

How Do You Balance Complexity and Information Overload?

My wife and I are going on vacation to Europe shortly and I’ve been planning the details.  Each place we are visiting has more to see and do and we have time.  Online one can find extensive reviews of every hotel, restaurant and entertainment venue.  Putting the itinerary together led me into information overload.  Too many places, too many choices.

Scientific studies have shown that when humans are presented with too many choices, they become unable to choose.  It’s called analysis paralysis.  I experienced that in my vacation planning.  At one point, I finally told myself to make a choice and move on.  Be happy with your choice and quit second-guessing it.

Modern life is what it is.  Yes, we have access to all the world’s information instantaneously at our fingertips 24 hours a day.  Yes, this information can tend to overwhelm.  Yes, our world is faced with extremely complex issues.  The more we look at an issue, the more we see how everything is connected.  Part of our evolutionary path is a growing realization that everything is interconnected.

So what can we do?  How can we best navigate this world? The answer is in being aware.  Be aware that the complexities of life don’t always lend themselves to 140 character answers.  Be aware that our incessant flow of information causes us to want to retreat into 140 character answers.  Recognize this dynamic tension within you and balance it consciously.

Mark Gilbert