Optimism is a Skill

 
icon for podpress  OptimismIsASkill Podcast #1 [7:57m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (96)

I’m optimistic about the future of mankind. I see humanity on the verge of an evolutionary leap in awareness where we recognize our inherent connectedness. The connectedness that we all share. I look around and I see three of the dominant ideologies of our time - science, religion and technology - all coming together at the same point and that point references our inherent connectedness.

Science, specifically quantum mechanics, has pretty well illustrated that at the subatomic level - protons, neutrons and electrons - that there is no difference between you and me and any other matter that exists in the universe - rocks, trees, birds, bees. There’s no difference.

Technology, through the internet and cellular technologies - you don’t even need a computer any more. Ideas can be everywhere at the same time. The same idea can be everywhere at the same time. It is very possible to have a common, shared awareness.

Religion has consistently come from one of two camps. There is an Eastern, organic universe where God is everything. There’s a Western, mechanical universe where God made everything and God is everywhere. However you choose to approach religion, they all say pretty much the same thing - God is everywhere, or God is everything. Everywhere includes you and me. There are seemingly apparent physical differences. That is easily explained to me when I consider the union of opposites, which suggests that nothing exists in the absence of its total opposite. Without a front, there can be no back. Without an up there can be no down. You are a different assemblage of protons, neutrons and electrons, but we’re all the same energy.

When those people who have put their faith in science and religion and technology come to the realization that their particular filters suggest that everything is everything, we’re all one, that we are all an infinity-plus number of facets expressing the same essence - that shift will lead people to treat others with compassion and empathy and patience and tolerance. And I believe that that is inevitable.

When I’ve told this story in the past, there are people who get it right off the bat. And then there are people who look around the world and see the horror and the degradation and the slavery and the genocide, and they wonder that if we are coming to a head where we are beginning to recognize that we’re all one, then why is this going on? That’s answered when you look at nature.

Look at animals. Animals who are wounded, injured, dying - they are the most dangerous. I see another one of the dominant dogmas of our time - the scarcity model - that suggests there’s not enough of everything to go around so I need my share of what there is - and I probably need to take a little bit of yours too because there’s not enough to go around - that scarcity model is dying. And the fear and desperation that exists in the world right now is the dying gasp of the scarcity model.

When enough people come to the realization that anything I do to you ultimately affects me, actually affects my life, my world - there is no separation. You and I are the same. We just have forgotten.

One of my heroes is Buckminster Fuller, and in future podcasts there will be a lot of his information presented. He recognized in the early ‘70s that the technology existed for every man, woman and child to have fresh drinking water, to have comfortable, safe, affordable housing. For 35 years, the technology has existed for every man, woman and child to have peace and security. You can’t think about things like peace if you’re hungry. Basic needs need to be met first. You need to have housing, you need to have fresh water, you need to have food before you can ever think about higher functioning things like art or even peace.

For the first 25 years of my life I believed what was being fed to me through the different avenues of media. I was 18 years old, and Reagan was president, and I was sure that he was going to blow up Russia and then assured mutual destruction. And so for the first 25 years I lived with that, but I realized that that wasn’t working for me. So I started to seek out alternative information - more hopeful, optimistic information. And some of the people who have influenced my way of thinking for the past 20 years have been Buckminster Fuller and Howard Zinn and Noam Chomsky and Bob Marley and Terence McKenna - John Lennon and Michael Benner and the Dalai Lama and countless others.

Well this initial episode was meant as basically an overview, a thumbnail sketch - something to whet your appetite. What I hope to do is provide people with tools that they can use to foment change - healthy change in their lives. These are not new tools. These tools have been around forever. This is ancient wisdom. I feel confident enough to put my name on a couple of these exercises, but in general, this stuff has been around forever. Come at people from a bunch of different angles. Right now this information is coming from a bunch of different places. What the Bleep Do We Know? is a movie that talks about what we’re going to be talking about. The Secret is another movie that talks about what we are going to be talking about. Some of the criticisms of those movies are that they are basically just, “Think yourself into health and happiness.” And you can’t underestimate the power of positive thinking, but there has to be more to it than that. You can’t just lie on your couch and think, “I’m going to get a job today. I’m going to get a job today.” You actually have to get out and go look for work. You can’t lay on your couch and think, “I’m going to be healthier today, I’m going to be healthier today.” That helps, but there are specific things that you can do to take those thoughts and turn them into actions, and the actions are going to determine whether you are healthier or not. Your thoughts are the seeds that create the fruit of your reality.

So many of our thoughts, so many of our seeds, are poisonous. If you have healthy seeds, you’re going to have healthy fruit. So what I hope to accomplish with these podcasts is to give people the tools to take their poisonous seeds and transform them into healthy seeds, and then take those seeds and tend those seeds to fruition. My goal is to produce at least one of these podcasts per month. In the future I plan to address issues such as self-image psychology, stress and anger management, healthy relationship building, change management. My dream is that people who listen to these podcasts will utilize this information to affect positive change in their lives, thereby affecting positive change in the lives of the people that they know and love. I invite you to join us. There are many more of us than we are being led to believe.

Episode 2 of these podcasts will be entitled, “Low Self-Esteem Is the Root of All Evil.” Look for it September 1st at optimismisaskill.com.

host: jim mclelland - music: anna huff - transcription: colleen mclelland - engineering: dave huff


Comments

  1. Quote

    I had no idea you were so smart. Nice work.

  2. Quote

    Jim-

    You mentioned Terrence McKenna as one of the people who influenced you. I know little about him, but I do know about a friend of his (also referenced on his web page that you link to).

    Ruper Sheldrake is a British biologist with some interesting theories and ideas about the perception and the mind. I was introduced to him at JFK University about 25-years ago and read one of his early books, “The Presence of the Past” where he laid out this theory of morphic resonance and morphogenetic fields. His views about what he calls a new science of life are optimistic to say the least. His ideas and experiments offer a unique and compelling insight into evolution, the nature of perception, and the role of memory in natural phenomena.

    I hope you will check him out and perhaps read some of his books/papers.
    http://www.sheldrake.org/homepage.html

    -Dave-

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