Optimism = The Path Forward

optimism.png

https://caitlinjohnstone.com/2018/06/15/optimism/

After writing about geoengineering yesterday, it was refreshing to wake up to this article in my inbox.

Pessimism vs. Optimism

Pessimism is a hell of a drug. Since most humans are deeply conditioned organisms and thus generally predictable, any bet against their ability to break out of their old habitual patterns is generally a safe one. Political analysts who do this are rewarded with both a reputation for making accurate predictions (which they will never fail to remind everyone of and crow about) and the hit to their brain’s reward center that they get from being right. If you enjoy being proven right and feeling smug about it, pessimism is the drug for you.

Indeed, that’s all optimism really is when you come right down to it: a faith in the human ability to pull out of unwholesome patterns. Whether you’re discussing the possibility of an individual maintaining sobriety, the possibility of two nations putting aside generations-old hostilities and moving into a new relationship, or the possibility of our species pulling out of its omnicidal, ecocidal trajectory toward extinction and turning its intellectual and creative powers toward creating a collaborative relationship with one another and with the environment instead, you are talking about humans breaking old patterns.

The Healers
Not a religious thing . . .

The revolution that we are fighting is being fought first and foremost not by the politicians, not by the activists, not by the journalists, but by the healers. The people who have committed to doing their own inner heavy lifting and uprooting their old, unhelpful conditioning patterns so that they can move through the world consciously and efficaciously instead of reacting unconsciously through the perceptual filters and mental habits born of childhood traumas and confused coping mechanisms. These are the people who are on the front lines of the battle to draw humanity out of its old unwholesome societal patterns born of countless generations of war, slavery, exploitation and degradation and into its new potentiality.

I will read this article several times today.

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I want to say more, but I don't know what to say. Some thing almost clicks.

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detroitmechworks's picture

Also known as a cynic.

I'm extremely pessimistic about political bodies and extremely optimistic about the people in them.

There's a reason IMHO, that cleaning is a ritual for some traditions. The removal of detritus and garbage are a mandatory part of living.

Sometimes the house is too destroyed to be fixed. That's where the hard work of building a new one comes in. It is far easier to sit in a burned and bombed out crater and rail against those that bombed it.

I'm not building a house yet, but I'd like to think I'm marking out some construction guides.

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

mhagle's picture

@detroitmechworks

A cool take on it IMO.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

Lookout's picture

Grey Wolf introduced me to them yesterday

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murray_Bookchin

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communalism

A prominent libertarian socialist, Murray Bookchin, defines the Communalism political philosophy that he developed as "a theory of government or a system of government in which independent communes participate in a federation", as well as "the principles and practice of communal ownership". The term 'government' in this case does not imply an acceptance of a State or top-down hierarchy.

And ties to a piece I wrote a couple weeks back asking why we don't ignore TPTB and just create our own worker coops and communities. I was only a few decades behind Bookchin's theory.

"Social ecology is based on the conviction that nearly all of our present ecological problems originate in deep-seated social problems. It follows, from this view, that these ecological problems cannot be understood, let alone solved, without a careful understanding of our existing society and the irrationalities that dominate it. To make this point more concrete: economic, ethnic, cultural, and gender conflicts, among many others, lie at the core of the most serious ecological dislocations we face today—apart, to be sure, from those that are produced by natural catastrophes." - Murray Bookchin, "Social Ecology and Communalism" The full book is available at the link below...
http://new-compass.net/sites/new-compass.net/files/Bookchin's%20Social%20Ecology%20and%20Communalism.pdf

from p.78 • Social Ecology and Communalism

We are thus in a position either to follow a path toward a
grim “end of history,” in which a banal succession of vacuous events
replaces genuine progress, or to move on to a path toward the
true making of history, in which humanity genuinely progresses
toward a rational world. We are in a position to choose between
an ignominious finale, possibly including the catastrophic nuclear
oblivion of history itself, and history’s rational fulfillment in
a free, materially abundant society in an aesthetically crafted
environment.

At any rate I found his views optimistic and realistic. We just need to walk on the right path. Thanks for Caity's piece!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

mhagle's picture

@Lookout

And ties to a piece I wrote a couple weeks back asking why we don't ignore TPTB and just create our own worker coops and communities. I was only a few decades behind Bookchin's theory.

I think this is an important part of optimism. Will check out the book too. Thanks!

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

mhagle's picture

@Lookout

https://www.resilience.org/stories/2018-06-15/cooperation-jacksons-kali-...

I think this speaks to what you are talking about. I am interested in co-ops too. Sort of old to be much of an activist, especially in rural Texas. But I am pondering it.

About to listen to this podcast series on Worker Co-ops. https://www.upstreampodcast.org/workercoops1

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

Lookout's picture

@mhagle

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

magiamma's picture

I am not a pessimist. I am not a cynic. I am a realist. I felt much more equipped to deal with life after this realization.

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

Hot Air Website, Twitter, Facebook

mhagle's picture

@magiamma

Being aware of climate, economics, and social unrest is the path to being an optimist.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

magiamma's picture

@mhagle
I remember being the only person in the room that talked about global warming. Lol. It is indeed a lesson in metaphysics if nothing else.

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

Hot Air Website, Twitter, Facebook

@mhagle to say realist?

Being aware of climate, economics, and social unrest is the path to being an optimist.

Being aware of our destruction of the planet, predatory capitalism and inequality is not being optimistic, in my mind. Accepting that this is happening is more like being realistic, if not fatalistic. Not sure how that path crosses over into optimism?

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mhagle's picture

@QMS

I don't know. Not helpful I guess.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

@mhagle Seeing optimism in the dark light of our times is a great endeavor. Step lightly on the bad stones and keep moving ahead!

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travelerxxx's picture

Funny ... had just finished reading Caitlin's article before cruising over to here.

Caitlin is right, of course. I guess I am quite naive; I actually thought the Democrats would praise Trump in regard to the North Korea deal. Heh. Wrong again. I suppose I shouldn't be shocked, but I still am shocked.

To me, this is all about the best way to defeat the American Two Party Duopoly -- it's about coalitions. I know of no better way at this time. Caitlin is all about this also, and has written about it. She's also taken severe flack for this position.

I learned much about the potential of coalitions during the 2016 election. Prior to the DNC convention, I had numerous "right-wing" friends and co-workers approach me with sincere questions about Bernie Sanders. I put "right-wing" in quotes, as the only reason most of them considered themselves right-wing was due to Fox telling them they were, and the obvious abandonment of them by the Democratic Party.

Take the good when you can ... and praise it. With Trump, the praise goes a long way. I know Bolton is standing two feet from him, but there is no way Bolton liked the North Korea deal. Good.

(Heading to work, so I'll check replies later this evening...)

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gulfgal98's picture

@travelerxxx is something I have been pushing here for some time. regardless of our self identified political persuasion, we have far more in common with one another than we have differences. I learned this from my days with the local Peace vigil.

We need to get past labels that are being used to divide us.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

travelerxxx's picture

@gulfgal98

As I'm sure you found during your Peace vigil, a smile and a handshake go quite a distance. What doesn't go far is implication that one is somehow "woke" (oh, please don't use that word!), and possessing some degree of superior office when talking with friends, neighbors, co-workers, etc. Naturally, the nth degree of this is the example of Hillary proclaiming half the population to be dunce-cap-wearing deplorables.

Americans are subject to the most refined, scientific, and powerful propaganda in the history of the world ... and it is ubiquitous. There are few that manage to see through it, although many can sense that they are being led about by something. I try to hit on that little sixth sense when I talk to folks. I've gotten a lot of mileage and also learned quite a bit in return by plumbing those depths.

I certainly have found much in common with some of the most hardened right-wingers that I ever suspected I could find. Quite often, the feeling is mutual. We need to keep talking, keep listening. Our neighbors are not our enemy, rather they are potential allies.

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gulfgal98's picture

I have my moments. The backbone of my optimistic philosophy is my belief that most people are basically good. We human beings are a social species so we must be able to rely upon one another. When I read Caitlin, I see much of that same philosophy.

The movement into the light of consciousness is a movement out of our old, deeply conditioned patterns. This means that the more we move away from our trajectory of death and destruction, the more wildly unexpected occurrences will start popping up. The gaps between the bars of our cages will emerge from way out of left field, because they will not arise from the old repetitive cycles which brought us here.

We must believe in the power of good over evil or we will never prevail.

Thank you for sharing this, Marilyn. It made me smile.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mhagle's picture

@gulfgal98

Smile

Smiling back at you.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

Hard to sometimes see the light but we’ve got to keep searching for it, otherwise what is there left?

I too believe the fundamental goodness of people will one day see us through.

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"uprooting their old, unhelpful conditioning patterns so that they can move through the world consciously and efficaciously instead of reacting unconsciously through the perceptual filters and mental habits born of childhood traumas and confused coping mechanisms"

and

"Since most humans are deeply conditioned organisms and thus generally predictable, any bet against their ability to break out of their old habitual patterns is generally a safe one."

I almost see this on a family and national level, almost saying the same thing. I am not sure about the pessimism part. Being powerless to affect change isn't pessimism. Kids feel powerless, and as an adult it's just as uncomfortable. We are getting to a point where one can live their entire life with that feeling of having little control. Few people I know think they will be able to leave their kids anything, that in the end it will all go to pay for a slow decline and painful lonely death. I really get the feeling that people are more aware of being in the moment, not some imaginary future. That some slick talking pol presenting hope and change isn't going to do either, nor is the one who promises to make America great again. Whatever solution to this the government and corporate America, the "wealth extraction industries", will oppose and sabotage it. Maybe it's time to organize a new religion based on living day to day actions, not some worship of ministers and ghosts.

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travelerxxx's picture

@Snode

Maybe it's time to organize a new religion based on living day to day actions, not some worship of ministers and ghosts.

Can't resist:

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgwvSTzWF6w]

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janis b's picture

@travelerxxx

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@travelerxxx non stop, almost 15 minutes of material with no filler. That would be a half hour show today.

I dunno, I think I am more than half serious. More and more people have convictions and beliefs in common, and look to politics to act collectively on them in vain. People have always made clubs, associations, groups to further their goals or meet needs unmet. If it becomes large enough it becomes a political force in itself. Look at the Evangelicals and Scientologists. The problem with the American model is that these organizations follow business models based on corporate culture. So, we get Scientology, and fabulous wealth for its leaders. In China it's FALUN GONG. China recognizes the danger, America co-opts it. It feels like we've been deliberately fragmented so the only collective path is politics and everything else is on hold waiting for a better future that never comes.

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mhagle's picture

@Snode

Had to look up FALUN GONG. Wow. Are they still being persecuted? From as much as I read, those teachings IMO are actually the same ideas Jesus taught. But corporate religion has corrupted that whole deal.

I am optimistic, yet feel powerless. The only power I hold to affect change is to be kind to my family and those around me and smile at people at Walmart. My "meditation" practice is to take time in the day to wish blessings (in a generic sense) on others. That's all.

Reading up on geoengineering made me feel even more powerless. It means we are further down the ecological shit hole than it feels like we are. Hmmm . . . that sounds pretty pessimistic!

So . . . optimism comes in the day to day present moment stuff I guess.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

@mhagle pessimistic that the current system will create beneficial change, optimistic that you, me, so many others know what is right. It's a grab bag of decisions that lean one way, away from what we've become. It's what motivates people to go nuts donating big sums to someone who just did the 'right thing' on Go Fund Me. Stuff that many just did as a matter of course, but seems extraordinary today. Optimistic that things will get worse, that what we see and are told will diverge into the hollow myth we've been told all our lives, and the truth that we see and live. It's taken 20+ years to show that it isn't that the system doesn't work any more, it's that it REFUSES to work for us at all .

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mhagle's picture

@travelerxxx

Hilarious! Makes me feel old though. Smile

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

@mhagle I know, all those old guys look so young. It's so different, their performance almost borders on craft, to maintain a level of competence throughout their career and appeal to the widest audience.

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mhagle's picture

@Snode

She was young once too.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

...but frankly, I'd rather have Trump preoccupied with something else. Everything that man touches turns to shit and this won't be any different. It's only a matter of time before he declares Kim in violation of their "agreement". I hate to think what happens next.

I can live with the pessimist label. I think the best we can hope for in the near term is the US not starting another war. How's that for being optimistic ?

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smiley7's picture

"Nothing is unthinkable, nothing impossible to the balanced person, provided it comes out of the needs of life and is dedicated to life's further development." ~ Lewis Mumford

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