Life Purpose and Social Transformation
This article is written for those of you who are concerned about what's
going on in the world, who sense that we are in a planetary crisis and want to help. There
is a movement of awakened planetary citizens looking for ways to bring about a new
healthier society. I keep hearing from people who want to contribute to social
transformation, but don't know how. I hope to help you find a way by broadening the way
you think about helping the world. I want you to see how you can have an important effect
on society by the way you live your life, and especially by following your deeper purpose
in life.
The Planetary Crisis
I believe, as many of our leading thinkers do, that we are in the midst
of a major historical transformation. By this I don't mean that society will by
transformed overnight or in a few years; it may take hundreds. I mean that the degree of
change will be all encompassing. The number of social problems we are currently confronted
with is staggering: nuclear war, ecological decay, terrorism, homelessness, drug and
alcohol abuse, crime, violence in schools, corruption and deception in government. The
list goes on and on. But it is not chance that all these things are happening now. We have
come to the end of an era, and our old ways of doing business are no longer working.
For the last 3 or 4 hundred years we have lived in what is sometimes
called the "industrial era." We have lived under a world view based on science,
rational thought, and competition for power. (The competition for power has been going on
for 5000 years.) Because of this world view, we have treated everything in our world as a
machine to be analyzed and controlled. We have treated the natural world this way. We have
treated other people and other nations this way. We have even treated ourselves this way.
This has brought us tremendous gains in knowledge, freedom, and comfort, but it no longer
works for our benefit. It's very success has brought about its own obsolescence.
The tremendous explosion of our technical power, our population, and
our ability to exploit the earth faces us with a whole new set of issues which our
industrial world view can't comprehend. That world view can't think in terms of limits or
being part of a whole. It doesn't understand feelings or intuition. It has outlived its
usefulness, and our continued attempts to apply it to our current problems are only making
matters worse. Similarly our current lifestyle has outlived its day. This lifestyle of
material consumption and personal ambition, which once made so much sense in fueling our
drive toward mastery of our environment, is now contributing to the problems and dangers
we face.
As a result our society is breaking down. This is causing tremendous
stresses and dangers, and it is also allowing for the possibility of a transformation to a
whole new social structure and world view which is appropriate to the current
historical situation. Our collective psyche is erupting with signs and portents of this
new way of being. We don't know what it will finally be, but we have hints that it will be
built on a foundation of cooperation, interconnectedness, and an interest in the inner
life, and that it will involve cultural diversity, human scale institutions, and reverence
for the earth. In this new world, we won't discard all the advantages of science, analytic
thought, and technology. Instead we'll integrate them with the new emerging values in a
life-affirming synthesis.
What You Can Do
In this time of breakdown and transition, in this time of ferment and
hope, many people feel concern, even passion; many people want to help, but don't know
what they can do. This is because we have too narrow a view of what it means to contribute
to social transformation. We think it has to be done through "political"
channelsthrough canvassing or demonstrating or writing letters, through working for
candidates or activist groups. We think that our ordinary lives have little to do with
social change. We think that if we care, we ought to do more in our spare time, though few
of us have any.
This is the old model of social change, which is accurate as far as it
goes: If you want small changes, you work for reform through established political
channels. If you want large scale change, you organize and demonstrate as an activist.
These are both still important today, but the depth of change that is happening in this
historical period is far beyond even that which has usually been envisioned by political
activists.
It isn't just certain governmental policies that need to change; it
isn't even just our political and economic system as a whole that needs to change, though
it does. Far more than that is obsolete at this time. All our institutions and social
structures are in transition--our schools, our businesses, our gender roles, our ways of
relating to each other, the way we treat our bodies and emotions, the way we relate to the
natural world, and ultimately our view of the nature of reality.
Since the level of social change is beyond our usual conceptions, the methods
for contributing to change also can and must go beyond our usual methods. The social
structures and ways of being which are changing as part of the ferment of our times are
all highly interconnected, and everything we do in our lives contributes to and affects
the larger direction of society. Everything you do that promotes a new, more appropriate
way of being is a contribution to social changefrom the way to relate to your kids
to the products you buy, from the investments you make to the vacations you take, from the
work you do to the way you care for your health.
Your Life Purpose
The most powerful way you can contribute to social transformation is by
fulfilling your life purpose. I believe that each of us has a special function to perform
in the world, based on our unique talents and personal qualities, our lifetime
learnings,
and our heartfelt concerns and passions. When you discover these gifts within yourself and
create or uncover your purpose in life, you will have found the key to a meaningful, happy
life and to making your greatest contribution to healing our planet.
I believe that if you are aware of the planetary crisis and concerned
about the world situation, you will naturally find that your life purpose is related to
planetary healing. It may not look like something "political." Its impact may
not be obvious. But it will be the most valuable help you can give. After all, you will be
using all of you. What could be more potent than that?
Social Movements
You may say, "The actions of one person can't change
anything." And that might be true if done in isolation. But most of the positive
actions of today are not done in isolation. Whatever your life purpose turns out to be,
there are probably many other people making the same changes in their lives, and when
enough people are moving in a certain direction, a movement is born.
There are movements of many different kinds, both organized and
unorganized, some which are leading toward a new healthier society and some which are
clinging to the old. I'm not just referring to political movements. There are social
movements, religious movements, cultural movements of various kinds, and many currents in
society which are not even called movementsfrom the new systems science to the
burgeoning interest in consciousness, from the self-help movements to the rise of women,
from ecological awareness to the emergence of a global sensibility.
So in asking what you can do to heal the planet, first ask what you
already are doing that encourages a healthy society, then look around and notice what
movement exists that embodies what you are doing. For example, suppose you have chosen to
have a baby using natural childbirth methods. Or suppose you decide that your life purpose
is to teach natural childbirth or to be a mid-wife. This means that you are already part
of a significant social movement toward natural childbirth using Lamaze, the LeBoyer
method, home births, etc. This is also part of a larger movement toward reconnection with
our bodies and the natural rhythms of the earth. In order to become more consciously part
of these movements, you might want to subscribe to a magazine, join an organization,
attend workshops, etc. In this way you would be making even a larger contribution than
just your personal choice of how to give birth.
But more importantly, you would also give yourself the opportunity to
experience yourself as part of something larger. It wouldn't be so easy to doubt that you
were making a contribution to the world. You could measure "your" contribution
not by how much of a difference you alone were making, but instead by how much of a
difference your organization, or your movement, was making. This is good practice in
letting go of your ego and feeling your power as part of something greater. It is very
empowering to measure your value in this way!
An Example
Let me be more specific. One of the significant positive currents of
our time is a reawakening of an interest in the inner life. One of the characteristics of
the outmoded industrial world view is that it finds value only in the objective, material
world--the world of technology, possessions, power, and status. The subjective world--the
world of emotions, of images, dreams, relationships, the entire consciousness
curriculum--is often ignored, devalued, or assumed not to even exist. This has resulted in
an overemphasis on material possessions, on domination of the natural world, and on
bureaucracy. It has contributed to a lack of empathy and compassion for other people,
other races, other nations.
The consciousness movement is part of a significant current of our
times which involves a reawakening of interest in the subjective world, and which is
pointing in the direction of a healthier balance between inner and outer realities. It
includes psychotherapy, the various psychological self-help movements, inner-oriented
health practices, spiritual disciplines, intuitive and artistic endeavors, and other
pursuits, all of which are contributing to this rebalancing.
Let's suppose that you have discovered that your life purpose is to be
a counselor or therapist, working with individuals and leading groups and workshops. Your
interest in personal and spiritual growth leads you to become part of the personal growth
and transpersonal psychology movements, as well as the larger movement of people
interested in consciousness.
In addition to healing emotional pain and empowering people, your work
as a therapist encourages people to look at their lives from a psychological and/or
spiritual viewpoint. Your groups and workshops encourage self-exploration and the
enhancement of the power of the mind. As part of the various psychological movements, your
work is contributing to a renewed interest in the inner life. It may also help academic
psychology to break free from its rigid concepts and bring people in general to question
the closed assumptions of the industrial world view.
Making the Personal/Planetary Connection
Now you may ask, "This is all well and good, but what does it have
to do with the issues I'm deeply concerned aboutwar and ecological
destruction?" To look at this in a deep way, we must ask ourselves what forces are
fostering wars and the destruction of the biosphere? There are many, of course, but at a
psychological level, one of the main factors is that we in the developed nations are
generally out of touch with ourselves and our deeper nature and not very open or
compassionate towards other people and the natural world. Thus we can get few pleasures
from genuine loving contact or community, from communion with nature, or from
self-exploration. In place of these we seek ever more entertainment and security from
material possessions, power, and status.
This never-ending search for material happiness leads us into economic
competition and the building of a global economy, which is destroying our ecological
support system. The need for power and status drives many nations into international
aggression, paranoia, revenge, and ultimately war.
So if there were a world wide shift in values toward those encouraged
by the consciousness movement, it would certainly help to reduce the threat of war and
ecological destruction. Therefore your work as a therapist is contributing to this end.
And you can measure your success partly by watching the growth of your movements (the
spread of psychotherapy, the popularity of self-help books and groups, the tremendous
interest in spirituality). This is a sign that you (plural) have the power to make
important changes in the world. This is not to imply that inner growth is all that is
necessary to change the world; changes are needed at all levels. But it has an important
part to play.
In this example I have traced out the connections between one person's
life purpose and important world issues. I encourage you do the same for yourself. What
are the connections between your life purpose (or what you currently do) and the world or
community issues which you care most about? You might, for example, trace connections
between eating health food and ending the erosion of top soil, or between teaching
creativity and ending racial oppression. The world is vastly interconnected in ways we do
not normally see. We must raise our consciousness to guide us in this crucial work.
How to Expand Your Impact
You may say, "It's nice to think that what I'm already doing (or
what I'd most like to do) is contributing to solving world problems, but it doesn't feel
like enough to me. I want to do more. I want to see something more tangible." There
are a number of steps you can take to expand the impact of what you do and to target it
toward social transformation. These can be summarized as follows:
1. Understand the links between your work and world issues (discussed above).
2. Be consciously part of a movement. You can align yourself with a movement through the
psychological act of identifying with itowning it, taking it into your sense of
self, caring about its future. You can also add to its vitality by participating in
itsubscribing to a magazine, joining an organization, attending conferences,
networking with like-minded people.
3. Work to include more and more people in your movement. You can help to encourage others to become a part of your movement
through personal contact, by teaching or writing, by playing a leadership role in an
organization, through public speaking.
4. Help others to see the links between your movement and world issues. Once you have gained an understanding of the impact of your work on
various world issues, you can help to raise other people's consciousness about this. For
example, in your groups you might discuss the connections between empathy, international
understanding, and world peace.
5. Study the changes in social structures related to your movement and world issues.
Of course, it takes more than just changes in consciousness to
affect major world issues. It also requires changes in institutions, government policies,
economic structures, value systems, etc. In understanding the links between your life
purpose and your world concerns, it is also helpful to understand the changes in social
structures that would help, and how your work might bring these about. For example,
democratic world governance would be enormously helpful in alleviating the conditions for
war, and our widespread fear and condescension toward people from other backgrounds is one
of the stumbling blocks to this. Group psychotherapy, which teaches empathy with other
people, can be used in a modified form to bridge gaps between people of different nations
(as Carl Rogers has done).
It would also be exciting and useful to understand the changes in
social structures which would enable your movement to gain momentum or which might result
from your movement gaining momentum. For example, you might ask yourself: If the
consciousness movement really made inroads into mainstream society, what changes in social
structures might we be able to bring about? Would businesses be small and egalitarian?
Would conflicts be decided by mediation rather than legal battles or political
machinations? How would this affect international governance or ecological concerns?
Conclusion
If we view the world from a broad enough perspective, we can see that
we have far more power to affect our future than many have thought. Your life purpose is
the most effective vehicle you have for healing the planet. Follow your heart, develop
your vision, and join with others in helping to transcend the planetary crisis and build a
new society of love, cooperation, and reverence for the earth.
I teach a class on
finding
Your Contribution to
Transforming Society.