Collapsing Consciously
Carolyn Baker's CollapsingConsciously: Transformative
Truths for Turbulent Times is perhaps the most approachable book on collapse you
are likely to find. Compared to Jarred Diamond's Collapse, which weighs
in at just over 600 pages, Baker's is well under 200. And yet in these few
pages Baker manages to tackle a topic which Diamond studiously avoids: Whatever
shall we do about the fact that collapse is happening all around us right now?
The reason Diamond avoids it is obvious:
collapse is an unacceptable topic of discussion if it relates to us. It is
perfectly fine to talk about past collapses, and perhaps even muse about future
collapses, provided they happen to someone else. That's because we are
exceptional and will go on forever. Here's a memorable example: I once gave a
talk for the Long Now Foundation in San Francisco, and during the Q&A
afterwards someone asked me about Russia's demographic crisis. Stewart Brand,
who was reading off the questions from cards, chimed in to say that it looks
like the Russians will be extinct in just a couple of generations (they
aren't). So, Stewart, in how many generations are Americans going to be
extinct? I need a number; what's the Long Now Foundation's estimate on that?
Crickets...
And the reason collapse is an unacceptable
topic of discussion if it relates to us, in the present or the foreseeable
future, is that the moment you mention it, the topic stops being it, or us;
the topic becomes you. What is wrong with you, why are you
collapsing, and is it contagious? (Actually, just go away anyway, because you
are probably bad luck.) This society operates on a combination of conformism
and one-upmanship. Collapse as reality is nonconformist—in a society that
worships success it is seen as defeatist and unpatriotic. It is also
noncompetitive—because who on earth would want to buy it? “After all, who wants
to hear that their very identity—the industrially civilized ego they have built
throughout their entire lives, the ego that defines who they are—is, well,
dying?” (p. 89) (By the way, this explains why my last book hasn't sold all
that well.) In any case, if you keep at it, you come to be seen as a loser.
Then you start feeling like an unlucky outcast, and before too long you end up
with a psychological problem, and start asking yourself questions such as :
“What's wrong with me?” “Have I gone mad?” and “Should I kill myself?”
Which is where Baker comes in: she is a
trained psychotherapist, and her book is a self-help book. She takes your
subjective reactions of hurt, loss, and bewilderment and gives them the status
of objective reality. Yes, insanity is just around the corner from where you
are standing, but that's a perfectly normal, justifiable reaction: “Anyone
preparing for colapse inevitably, on some occasions, feels mad. How at odds
with circumstance we are, and how profoundly crazy-making it feels!” (p. 8)
Helpfully, she enumerates the panoply of emotions that normally accompany the
dicovery of collapse: “crazy, angry, joyful, depressed, terrified, giddy,
relieved, paranoid, stupid, guilty, liberated, grateful, despairing,
heartbroken, courageous, compassionate, lonely, loved, hated.” (p. 8) For some,
the discovery of collapse may not even be necessary: “...I have never met any
resident of industrial civilization who doesn't carry some form of trauma in
their bodies." (p. 20) And, I would add, their minds and souls as well.
Symptoms may include “...sleepless nights, a weakened immune system, moodiness,
anger, depression, despair, and, often suicidal thinking.” (p. 26)
Baker's prescription is to heal thyself:
“...to become familiar with internal resources; to practice skills of
self-soothing, deep listening and truth telling with friends and family, and
regular journaling; and to have an ongoing, daily stillness practice that
provides grounding and centering in the midst of chaos.” (p. 15) “Healing our
own trauma prepares us for navigating the trauma of a world in collapse and
also equips us to assist others who are traumatized by the changes and losses
of an unraveling society.” (p. 22) And although much of the job that awaits us
is a sort of post-collapse hospice care for the severely disturbed, that is by
no means the full extent of it: “...hold in your mind the reality of what is
and what is yet to come and, at the same time, hold in your heart the vision of
what is possible for a transformed humanity, no matter how few in numbers, that
is willing to step over the evolutionary threshold and become a new kind of
human being.” (p. 83, my emphasis)
The old kind of human being comes in for a
good thrashing. Baker singles out the emptiness of the pursuit of happiness:
“...many people confess that their greatest happiness is derived from
shopping... [and from] having no constraints on consumption...” (p. 32)
The commercialized mind control field in which many people are trapped defines
happiness by positive thinking, which “...has become an integral aspect of
corporate culture.” (p. 32) “I believe that since the end of World War II,
positive thinking has become the quasi-religion of industrial civilization, and
the failure to maintain it has become tantamount to treason.” (p. 33) This
almost totalitarian emphasis on happiness and positive thinking amounts to a
system of enforced stupidity. To Baker, what matters is not happiness but joy
and not positive thinking but meaning: “Happiness comes and goes, but
meaning doesn't. The truth, of course, is that we can find meaning in
experiences that are anything but happy.” (For example, in war.)
Finding meaning doesn't necessarily lift our
mood or make us happy. But it does amplify our existence, making it less than
completely trivial. To find meaning, we have to confront sadness, loss, and,
ultimately, death. This is why the message of collapse is almost universally
rejected: “To speak of collapse, peak oil, demise, downturns, economic
depression, or unraveling is anathema, because it rattles the rice paper-thin
bulwarks we have constructed around darkness and death.” This is rather at odds
with the dominant culture: “It's so easy to disregard death, especially if one
is an [Anglo-]American.” (p. 55) (The English tend to regard death as the
ultimate embarrassment, and their cultural baggage is unfortunately still with
us.) Add to it a dollop of positive thinking and sprinkle on the “New Agey
mindset,” and you get people who act “as if human beings are the only species
that matter and as if the most crucial issue is that those humans are able to
feel good about themselves as the world burns.” (p. 55) Such people will not
fare well: “The collapse of industrial civilization will be challenging for
those who have been preparing for it; for those who haven't, it will involve
massive trauma.” (p. 29)
But what does it mean to prepare of collapse?
There is, of course, the question of the logistics of surviving collapse:
reskilling, relocalization, community organizing and the like. There is also
the task of finding meaning in it, beyond mere physical survival; to borrow an
aphorism from Nietzsche, the task of gazing into the abyss, until the abyss
gazes back at you. But “...most human beings who do have the capacity to
stare down collapse seem to lack the ability to dig deeper into its myriad
emotional and spiritual ramifications, focusing only on physical survival
issues.” (p 12). (I suppose preparing for the zombie apocalypse does make you a
bit of a zombie, as your attitude becomes: “Sure, I'll resort to eating brains
if I have to!”)
Baker wonders whether the “emotionally myopic
survivalists” might be busy creating a world eerily similar to the “vapid,
vacuous, barren inner landscape engendered by industrial civilization?” It's
largely a question of how they were brought up. Western education is riddled
with binary thinking: “Black or white, either-or, this way or that way permeate
the educational systems of modernity and torment our thinking about and
preparation for collapse. When will it happen—in this decade or in the next?
Will it be fast or slow? Should I take the lone survivor approach or go live in
an ecovillage? Should I stay in my home country or expatriate? The binary
questions are endless, and limitless obsession with them is likely to leave us
in the same predicament as the proverbial dog chasing its own tail.” (p. 7)
People who have been conditioned to think
that to make such binary distinctions is to be rational, analytical and
productive are loathe to accept that perhaps black or white are just moods: on
some days they may feel like collapse is already here, while on other days it
may feel far off; sometimes it may feels fast, other days slow; some days you
want to be alone, on other days you crave companionship; sometimes you want to
flee the country and give up your passport, while on other days you contemplate
wanting to coming back to visit.
The crisp delineation between the present and
the future is an artificial construct too: both the present and the future are
works of fiction—a bit of “framing” created for us by those expert
professionals who craft “consensual reality” on our behalf. The emphasis on
rational responses to collapse has produced efforts to achieve logistical
resilience: “Anyone not involved in this kind of logistical preparation is
only half-awake, yet many individuals believe that no other preparation is
necessary. Might that not, in fact, be one characteristic of trauma?” (p. 27)
Taking it just one step further, strictly logistical collapse preparation may
be a form of compulsive behavior that is quite obviously maladaptive
“...building one's isolated doomstead or underground bunker is not only
profoundly dangerous but astoundingly unrealistic.” (p. 97, my emphasis)
Much of the doomsteading activity is a
projection of middle-class angst—to which much of the world is immune: “...for
all the suffering of abjectly impoverished human beings, they have seldom known
any other standard of living and have learned how to survive on virtually nothing.”
(p. 26) On the other hand, “Those living a middle-class existence can comfort
themselves only for so long by reflecting on the plight of the destitute in
far-off places. Their immediate reality is an anomalous deprivation, a stark
loss of the familiar, and the looming reality that things will not get better,
but only worse.” (p. 26) Lastly, “...it is much easier to build cooperative
relationships with individuals who are fundamentally like us than it is to
build them with those who, for a variety of reasons, may be very different.”
(p. 69) And if the only acceptable way to prepare for collapse within your
middle-class, anglocentric cultural milieu is doomsteading, then I suppose you
build some doomsteads, even though this is “not only profoundly dangerous but
astoundingly unrealistic.” (p. 97) To understand why this is so is to challenge
some deeply held assumptions: that “...the privileges afforded to people of
Anglo ethnicity...” (p. 73) will remain in place, or that “the dominant culture
will prevail alongside a number of subcultures.” (p. 74) And this is already
manifestly not the case.
But the thought that part of what is
collapsing is the Anglo cultural hegemony would be so profoundly angst-inducing
that it might provoke a psychotic break in some of her readers, and so Baker
avoids spelling it out, tap-dancing around the issue in a way that strikes me
as slightly comic. “To be ‘civilized’ is synonymous with being domesticated,
restrained, and repressed, and if we participate in sexual behavior at all, we
are encouraged to do so in a controlled, sanitized, or even surreptitious
fashion.” (p. 63) Yes, she gets that part, which is why she puts “civilized” in
quotes. It is apparent that she has wandered outside the mental security
perimeter, has tasted the forbidden fruit, and knows what it means to be fully
human: “Benjamin Franklin said it best, after returning from living with the
Iroquois: ‘No European who has tasted Savage life can afterward bear to live in
our societies.’” (p. 56) And it is clear why she thinks that staying within the
cultural perimeter would be “profoundly dangerous [and] astoundingly
unrealistic.” (p. 97): “...collapse will decimate our anti-tribal,
individualistic, Anglo-American programming by forcing us to join with others
for survival.” (p. 105) Yes, it would appear that the Anglo ethnicity will go
down in history as the oddest of the odd: the anti-tribal tribe.
But if you are a fully paid-up member of that
tribe, then it is perhaps Baker who can speak to you like no other. This comes
through most clearly when she talks about the soul, by which I think she means
the Anglo soul, because it seems that there are some differences here. “The
soul blossoms and flourishes not by going upward but by going down into the
depths of emotion, body sensation, and intimate communion with nature.” (p. 38)
“The soul ... loves darkness, descent, downward mobility, and the razor-sharp
adversities of the human condition. In dark times, it doesn't have to be
guided; it knows exactly what to do.” (p. 39) To me, this all sounds very
strange. In my native language, the words soul, spirit and breath
are all variations on the same theme. This is not accidental but nearly
universal: the Sanskrit ātman (soul) and the German atmen (to
breathe) are the same word that has spanned continents and millennia. Like
breath, the soul is light (weightless). It is luminous and lucid, not heavy or
dark or drunk with emotion. It is apparent and visible, and shines in the eyes
of those who happen to have one. (Soulless people have eyes like fish, and even
children can be taught to spot them.) The action of soul and spirit is roughly
analogous to magnetism: when another soul touches yours, it strengthens it
withought weakening itself. A person whose soul is great is said to be
selfless, accommodating, forbearing, self-sacrificing... And so when Baker
writes that the “[s]oul waits like a crouched predator to deepen us...” (p. 40)
I can't help feeling that she is talking about something a little bit
different. Be that as it may; perhaps it speaks to you, and, cultural
differences aside, I fully agree with her that “...what will be most valuable
will not necessarily be a sharp intellect but a well-honed intuition” (p. 65)
Being able to tell at a glance whether someone has a soul is definitely part of
that intuition.
I also sense that Baker's soul is great, and
that she is selfless, accommodating, forbearing and self-sacrificing. She
worries about “...people of color, women, children, the elderly, and the LGBT
community—the most vulnerable members of a society in chaos” (p. 43) and that
“...the gains experienced by ethnic minorities, women, and gays in the past
forty years will essentially be erased as berserk, belligerent males succeed in
ruling the day.” (p. 43) Now, it bears pointing out that this has largely
happened already. Look at the prison population, at the gangs that are active
throughout the US military, and at narcocartels; look at the perpetually
depressed, disintegrating inner cities or the rapidly slummifying suburbs. Only
the still-sheltered middle class can place such things in the future rather
than the present. She does point out that “[c]ircumstances will vary from one
community and region to another. I use the word lumpy to describe this
phenomenon.” (p. 44) “Avoid the lumps” is the only advice I can give.
But some of these lumps are rather large—as
large as the Roman Catholic Church—making them hard to avoid. (One former
Catholic described it as “[a] large multi-national, tax-exempt, authoritarian
corporation, with a history of child sex abuse [that is] selling an invisible
product.”) Baker points out that much of the mysogyny present in Western culture
comes from the “irrational dread of the feminine archetype in general and women
in particular” (p. 49) that has been present in Christian relgious thought ever
since the church fathers expelled the Gnostics. She quotes St. Augustine, who
thought that women “should be segregated as they are the cause of hideous and
involuntary erections in men...” (Whereas those caused by the choir-boys are
what?) She also points out both the Catholic church's and the Republican
party's “war on women ... in which funding for contraception and abortion has
been savagely cut, along with funding for programs that alleviate poverty.” (p.
51)
Not all of us can hope to avoid such lumps,
and this brings us to what is perhaps the most important message of Baker's
book: there is much to do, so get cracking! A change of direction is called
for. Many people are still attempting to work jobs, while “...employment as we
know it will probably not exist a decade from now and ... this time of massive
unemployment creates space in our lives that allows us to prepare for a future
of permanent unemployment.” (p. 5) Many people are still trying to stockpile
advanced degrees or paper wealth, while “[i]n a post-collapse world, academic
degrees and stock portfolios matter little.” (p. 104) In the meantime, there is
much to do: “Volunteering in a homeless shelter, a daycare ceter for homeless
children, a nursing home, or other agencies still in existence that serve
vulnerable popultions is excellent psychological preparation for a time when none
of these services exist. First, it puts you in a serving mode. You allow your
innate compassion to reach out to other human beings in need. In addition, it
causes you to ponder how you might deal with the situation in the future when
members of the population you are serving are symbolically or literally on your
doorstep. Furthermore, it expands your horizons beyond ‘me and mine’ to a sense
of the commons and a camaraderie with the rest of humanity. (p. 67) “There is
something about being of service in the current time that could have lasting
benefits for us in the future, simply because a service mentality and
especially a willingness to see the suffering of others in this moment provide
us with critical emotional skills. In many cases, we may need to provide
nothing except the capacity to listen.” (p. 67) “I venture to say that most
collapse-aware individuals cherish some fantasies, no matter how frail or
infrequently spoken of, of a new culture in which we live in authentic
community, sharing resources, food, tasks, and recreation with each other. And
we already know that such a culture will not be possible without an attitude of
service and cooperation.” (p. 68) Such efforts may start out as responses to
practical, mundane needs, but their results can transcend them: “Paradoxically,
collapse may bring to our lives meaning and purpose that might otherwise have
eluded us ... With civilization's collapse, we may be forced to evaluate daily,
perhaps moment to moment, why we are here, if we want to remain here, if life
is worth living, and if there is something greater than ourselves for which we
are willing to remain alive and to which we choose to contribute energy.” (p.
106)
There
are quite a few books on collapse that provide “food for thought.” Baker's does
some of that too; but more importantly, she guides the reader in feeling
about collapse, progressing from hopelessness and helplessness to hope,
self-realization and a sense of belonging. And this, I think, is a singular
achievement.
The original link can be found at:
http://cluborlov.blogspot.com/2013/11/collapsing-consciously.html#more The fellow who publishes this blog is Dimitry
Orlov.
No comments:
Post a Comment