Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Un-Classification- The Circle of Humanity
Recently a CNN news bite at the bottom of the screen said
“Republicans say the bombing (Boston) came from the Muslim community”
suggesting “they” need more scrutiny. Millions of people that live normal
day-to-day lives side by side with everybody else are grouped for suspicion
because of two deranged individuals. This seems like such a primitive fear
response. Perhaps it is the left hemisphere verbal analytical classification
that we use for so much conditions people to stick with their own groups, to
limit ideas to what’s already believed and see only what supports their
existing worldview. Perhaps it’s the conditioning in right or wrong answers
that designates different as having to be wrong. Either reflects a highly
limiting mindset. a rigid skin that needs to be shed. The human reward system
is designed to encourage behavior that extends our boundaries, that embraces
novelty. We wouldn’t get that extra dopamine from what’s new if it wasn’t good
for us. Our brains are designed to reward what we should do more of, which
includes stimulating curiosity about what’s unknown to us. This interest in the
new is the action of learning rewarding us with endorphins to encourage
continued growth. The cycle of seeing the new, becoming interested, then
learning, is the action of the brain’s development, of feeling alive in the
world while finding out what is possible.
The desire to tame the dangers of the world with labels and
laws creates more separation between people. It creates an attitude of
suspicion and mistrust that makes it hard to fully invest ourselves in
participating, cooperating and appreciating. When you look at pictures of the
earth from space there are no divisions, no national boundaries or
political/religious states. We are a single species on a single world and its
time to grow out of species adolescence and its cliquishness into a mature
humanity, not so easily threatened by the unfamiliar, not so sure of our own
right answers. The beauty of thinking in images and looking at them is that
images are fluid, the whole seen at once, everything in relationship, rich with
action and function and qualities that categories leave out. Thinking too much
in categories misses the fullness. Ultimately we can’t even see the depth in
ourselves, hidden beneath all the classifications, boxes we check on the forms.
Peter Breggin, a psychiatrist who speaks out against the
practice of drugging people into the acceptable categories, wrote in his book
“Beyond Conflict”, “Wisdom grows with the size of the group with which you
identify.” The right hemisphere of the brain sees the whole, the more
perspective that’s included the more accurate the whole. More time with imagery
and less with words might help us break out of the shell of fear created by the
cultural obsession with enemies and “Bad guys”, as adolescent a terminology as
I can imagine that stirs the very few dangerously unstable among millions of
peaceful people to dramatic acts of violence that can be more fuel for the
media fires. The act of classification obscures the individual and substitutes
the existing association with the categories contaminated by whatever media
permeates the day. It blinds the classifier not only to people who could teach
us something but also to personal dimensions not acknowledged by their own
category. We are all the human species embedded in the world of living things.
Some use their category to claim more than their share or the absolute right of
their ideas for all. Brain science shows how thin those claims are. Each life
strategy grew from what it had to experience. It involved knowledge and skills
for a particular way of coping. What the authorities say may not fit the
circumstance. From the beginning of life, for better or worse, we learn by example.
Self-improvement is emulating who we admire, not what somebody says.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
The Production of a Free Workforce
This is the left side panel of a three panel painting to be auctioned for the benefit of CASA of Baltimore this Sunday, April 28, 2013 from 3-6pm at Area 405, 405 East Oliver Street in the
Station North Arts District.
Prison
In the panorama of life going on around us we notice what
helps us see ourselves, search out what’s relevant to where we’re going and
affirm our sense of the beautiful and ugly. The choices we make regarding where
we look are a window on deeper motives and can expand self-awareness. We may or
may not get the point. On a psychological level, the thing the eye is scanning
for is something that will clarify things about the self that need to be seen.
Marcel Proust and Willa Cather are just two of the many writers long before
modern psychology to have pointed out the human tendency to criticize our own
faults in others. It’s not just on a personal level. It’s easily seen at every
level of human interaction. This came to mind today listening to a man on the
radio demonizing North Korea for its extensive prison system. Since the US is
known world wide for the growing private prison system housing a higher
percentage of the population than any other country, his statement was an
excellent example of projection regarding our own national pathology. There are
lots of things he might have criticized North Korea for but the one he chose
was the one he recognized from the inside. And since he didn’t get the point,
what could be changed doesn’t. He talks about extensive prisons as a problem to
be solved, not thinking to turn that energy to the problem in his own sphere.
Our society is too punitive. Rather than celebrate positive qualities we limit
behavior with the threat of punishment. We’ve become more focused on obedience
than justice. Anthropologist Jean Liedhoff observed
that the Yequana people of Venezuela had no word for “disobedience”. They
looked at children as children and didn’t get into a power struggle making them
into little adults. The children don’t hurt others because adults don’t.
If kids are bullying others
there’s a good chance they are being bullied at home, whether or not the
parents realize it. They’re just imitating the behavior of the adults they see
like their parents did before them. Teasing shades into ridicule then into
humiliation, which is institutionalized by the prison system where brutality is
common, a national symbol of the mandate to obey enough laws to make everyone a
lawbreaker. And everyone is immersed in a culture where ridicule is
entertainment. Too much damage has been done by dominant cultures
forcing their worldview on people with entirely different life experience. It
happens at every level of society. It’s time for us to transcend our national
ego and learn from all that’s good in the world. The hyperconcern for safety
only cultivates fear and distrust of others, a population of isolated
individuals cowering in their houses with only their screens for safety. We
should start to notice and question the coercive systems that disrespect the
variety of individuals by labeling and diagnosing from childhood, when a world
of talents could flourish in each one.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Assembling Reality
“Reality is a construction with which we actively
participate.”
Ilya Prigogine, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1977
Much of what we see as we move through the world is already
in our heads. The degree to which what we see when we look around is built up
and constructed over time is amazing. Hold up an index finger and keep your
focus on it, then slowly bring the other index finger in toward it until it’s
equally clear. It’s shocking to realize that so little of the visual field is
in focus at any one time. The clear picture we think we see is an illusion, is
not the same clear picture another person sees. It is the result of the eyes
scanning and accumulating details that supply the background for what hits the
retina at any given moment. This is one example of the efficiency of the brain,
which only needs the general feel of the surroundings to know where to focus.
It also makes our picture of reality very personal, a creation of our own mind
based on the information our needs select. The central illusion in all human
perception is that personal reality is the Reality.
Everything we see is represented in the brain and informs
what we look for and what we expect. Though there is correspondence between our
image and reality, it is never complete or without inaccuracies. Yet we trust
and rely on it. From the beginning
of life we construct this picture of the world based on our own experience and
use that inner image as the basis for comparison to new stimulus as it arrives.
A representation of the territory is necessary to remember where we’ve been and
what happened there, an inner map that enables us to find our way to what we
need and be alert to signs of trouble. This internal image supports our image of
the scene in the present with what we’ve already seen. The sense of recognition
comes from the new matching similar situations in the past. It’s like the pattern resonates with a
similar chord in the patterns of our own experience. When a pattern unfolds
over time we can anticipate what’s coming and be better prepared for it.
The demands of movement require an understanding of where we
are in relation to what we need. Imagery of locations is part of most memories.
Brains evolved and grew larger as more experience needed to be represented. The
folds seen in pictures of the brain are always different because every life is
different. The varied personal experience of each of us creates the brain,
develops some parts more than others depending on what we use the most.
Awareness of these differences liberates us all from absolutes seeing how the
variety of contexts changes the equation. Guided by what best fits a given
situation, harmony is achieved without coercion.. The
better we understand our inner model the more we can learn from the rich
variety of other worldviews and break down barriers to our own expansion.
Looking at art is one tool for self-awareness. When we
respond to art the chord that runs beneath the surface signals deep concordance
with individual emotional themes. It offers a glimpse of the personal
substructure so crucial to how we understand the world. Then we may recognize
them when they turn up in our relations with others.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
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