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       # 2020-02-26 - The Different Drum by M. Scott Peck
       
       # The Different Drum by M. Scott Peck
       
       # Introduction
       
       In and through community lies the salvation of the world.
       
       Nothing is more important.  Yet it is virtually impossible to
       describe community meaningfully to someone who has never experienced
       it--and most of us have never had an experience of true community.
       The problem is analogous to an attempt to describe the taste of
       artichokes to someone who has never eaten one.
       
       I am dubious, however, as to how far we can move toward global
       community--which is the only way to achieve international
       peace--until we learn the basic principles of community in our own
       individual lives and personal spheres of influence.
       
       Community neither comes naturally nor is it purchased cheaply.
       Demanding rules must both be learned and followed.  But there are
       rules!
       
       # Chapter 1, Stumbling into community
       
       The word "radical" comes from the Latin radix, meaning "root"--the
       same word from which we get "radish."  The proper radical is one who
       tries to get to the root of things, not to be distracted by
       superficials, to see the woods for the trees.  It is good to be a
       radical.  Anyone who thinks DEEPLY will be one.  In the dictionary
       the closest synonym to "radical" is "fundamentalist."  Which only
       makes sense.  Someone who gets down to the root of things is someone
       who gets down to the fundamentals.  Yet in our North American culture
       these words have come to have opposite meanings...
       
       While on one hand we bandy about the word "community" in such a
       shallow, meaningless way, many of us simultaneously long for the
       "good old days" when frontier neighbors gathered together to build
       one another's barns.  [Or for the archaic revival of tribal
       lifestyles.]  We mourn the LOSS of community.
       
       Frenchman Alexis de Tocqueville traveled through our young United
       States, and in 1835 he published what is still considered the
       classical work on the American character.  In his Democracy in
       America, he described those "habits of the heart," or mores, that
       gave citizens of the United States a unique new culture.  The one
       characteristic that impressed him most was our individualism.  De
       Tocqueville admired this character trait immensely.  He very clearly
       warned, however, that unless our individualism was continually and
       strongly balanced by other habits, it would inevitably lead to
       fragmentation of American society and social isolation of its
       citizens.
       
       -----
       
       Simply seek happiness, and you are not likely to find it.  Seek to
       create and love without regard for your happiness, and you will
       likely be happy much of the time.  Seeking joy in and of itself will
       not bring it to you.  Do the work of creating community, and you will
       obtain it--although never exactly according to your schedule.  Joy is
       an uncapturable yet utterly predictable side effect of genuine
       community.
       
       # Chapter 2, Individuals and the fallacy of rugged individualism
       
       Christian theologians have reached a well-nigh universal conclusion:
       God loves variety.
       
       ... we never truly learn to think for ourselves or dare to be out of
       step with the stereotypes.  But in light of all we understand, this
       failure to individuate is a failure to grow up and become fully
       human.  For we are called to be individuals.  We are called to be
       unique and different.
       
       We are also called to power.  In this individuation process we must
       learn how to take responsibility for ourselves.  We need to develop a
       sense of autonomy and self-determination.
       
       Furthermore, we are called to wholeness.  We should use what gifts or
       talents we are given to develop ourselves as fully as possible. ...
       If we are to grow, we must work on the weak spots that prevent
       growth.  We are beckoned toward that self-sufficiency, that wholeness
       required for independence of thought and action.
       
       But all this is only one side of the story.
       
       ... the reality is that we can never be completely whole in and of
       ourselves.  We cannot be all things to ourselves and to others.  We
       cannot be perfect. ... the reality is that there is a point beyond
       which our sense of self-determination not only becomes inaccurate and
       prideful but increasingly self-defeating.  Yet the reality is that we
       are inevitably social creatures who desperately need each other not
       merely for sustenance, not merely for company, but for any meaning to
       our lives whatsoever.  These, then, are the paradoxical seeds from
       which community can grow.
       
       So we are called to wholeness and simultaneously to recognition of
       our incompleteness; called to power AND to acknowledge our weakness;
       called to both individuation AND interdependence.  Thus the
       problem--indeed, the total failure--of the "ethic" of rugged
       individualism is that it runs with only one side of the paradox,
       incorporates only half of our humanity.  It recognizes that we are
       called to individuation, power, and wholeness.  But it denies
       entirely the other part of the human story: that we can never fully
       get there and that we are, of necessity in our uniqueness, weak and
       imperfect creatures who need each other.
       
       This denial can be sustained only by pretense.  Because we cannot
       ever be totally adequate, self-sufficient, independent beings, the
       ideal of rugged individualism encourages us to fake it.  It
       encourages us to hide our weaknesses and failures.  It teaches us to
       be utterly ashamed of our limitations.  It drives us to attempt to be
       superwomen and supermen not only in the eyes of others but also in
       our own.  It pushes us day in and day out to look as if we "had it
       all together," as if we were without needs and in total control of
       our lives.  It relentlessly demands that we keep up appearances.  It
       also relentlessly isolates us from each other.  And it makes genuine
       community impossible.
       
       Trapped in our tradition of rugged individualism, we are an
       extraordinarily lonely people.  So lonely, in fact, that many cannot
       even acknowledge their loneliness to themselves, much less to others.
       Look at the sad, frozen faces all around you and search in vain for
       the souls hidden behind masks of makeup, masks of pretense, masks of
       composure. ... We are desperately in need of a new ethic of "soft
       individualism," an understanding of individualism which teaches that
       we cannot be truly ourselves until we are able to share freely the
       things we most have in common: our weaknesses, our incompleteness,
       our imperfection, our inadequacy, our sins, our lack of wholeness and
       self-sufficiency. ... It is the kind of individualism that
       acknowledges our interdependence not merely in the intellectual
       catchwords of the day but in the very depths of our hearts.  It is
       the kind of individualism that makes real community possible.
       
       # Chapter 3, The true meaning of community
       
       If we are going to use the word meaningfully we must restrict it to a
       group of individuals who have learned how to communicate honestly
       with each other, whose relationships go deeper than their masks of
       composure, and who have developed some significant commitment to
       "rejoice together, mourn together," and to "delight in each other,
       make others' conditions our own."
       
       We can define or adequately explain only those things that are
       smaller than we are. ... And there are certain questions about
       electricity, despite its known physical laws, that even the most
       advanced electrical engineer cannot answer.  That is because
       electricity is something larger than we are.
       
       [But part of us, our nervous system, utilizes electricity.  That
       would seem to make electricity a sub-set of what we are.]
       
       There are many such "things": God, goodness, love, evil, death,
       consciousness, for instance.  Being so large, they are many-faceted,
       and the best we can do is describe or define one facet at a time.
       Even so, we never seem quite able to plumb their depths fully.
       Sooner or later we inevitably run into a core of mystery.
       
       Community is another such phenomenon.  Like electricity, it is
       profoundly lawful.  Yet there remains something about it that is
       inherently mysterious, miraculous, unfathomable.  Thus there is no
       adequate one-sentence definition of genuine community.
       
       The facets of community are interconnected, profoundly interrelated.
       No one could exist without the other.  They create each other, make
       each other possible.  What follows, then, is but one scheme for
       isolating and naming the most salient characteristics of a true
       community.
       
       * Inclusivity, commitment, and consensus
       * Realism
       * Contemplation
       * A safe place
       * A laboratory for personal disarmament
       * A group that can fight gracefully
       * A group of all leaders
       * A spirit
       
       ## Inclusivity, commitment, and consensus
       
       The great enemy of community is exclusivity.
       
       Inclusiveness is not an absolute.  Long-term communities must
       invariably struggle over the degree to which they are going to be
       inclusive. ... Communities do not ask "How can we justify taking this
       person in?"  Instead the question is "It it at all justifiable to
       keep this person out?"
       
       Commitment--the willingness to coexist--is crucial. ... Exclusivity
       appears in two forms: excluding others and excluding yourself.  If
       you conclude under your breath, "Well, this group just isn't for
       me--they're too much this or too much that--and I'm just going to
       quietly pick up my marbles and go home," it would be as destructive
       to community as it would be to a marriage...  Community, like
       marriage, requires that we hang in there when the going gets a little
       rough. ... Our individualism must be counterbalanced by commitment.
       
       Decisions in genuine community are arrived at through consensus, in a
       process that is not unlike a community of jurors, for whom consensual
       decision making is mandated.
       
       ## Realism
       
       We are accustomed to think of group behavior as often primitive.
       "Mob psychology" is properly a vernacular expression.  There is, in
       fact, more than a quantum leap between an ordinary group and a
       community; they are entirely different phenomena.  And a real
       community is, by definition, immune to mob psychology because of its
       encouragement of individuality, its inclusion of a variety of points
       of view.  Mob psychology cannot occur in an environment in which
       individuals are free to speak their minds and buck the trend.
       
       An important aspect of the realism of community deserves mention:
       humility.  While rugged individualism predisposes one to arrogance,
       the "soft" individualism of community leads to humility.  Begin to
       appreciate each others' gifts, and you begin to appreciate your own
       limitations.  Witness others share their brokenness, and you will
       become able to accept your own inadequacy and imperfection.  Be fully
       aware of human variety, and you will recognize the interdependence of
       humanity.  As a group of people do these things--as they become a
       community--they become more and more humble, not only as individuals
       but also as a group--and hence more realistic.  From which kind of
       group would you expect a wise, realistic decision: an arrogant one,
       or a humble one?
       
       ## Contemplation
       
       Among the reasons that a community is humble and hence realistic is
       that it is contemplative.  It examines itself.  It is self-aware.
       "Know thyself" is a sure rule for humility.
       
       The spirit of community once achieved is not then something forever
       obtained.  It is not something that can be bottled or preserved in
       aspic.  It is repeatedly lost.
       
       No community can expect to be in perpetual good health.  What a
       genuine community does do, however, because it is a contemplative
       body, is recognize its ill health when it occurs and quickly take
       appropriate action to heal itself.
       
       ## A safe place
       
       Once a group has achieved community, the single most common thing
       members express is: "I feel safe here."
       
       It is a rare feeling.  Almost all of us have spent nearly all of our
       lives feeling only partially safe, if at all.  Seldom, if ever, in
       any kind of group, have we felt wholly accepted and acceptable.
       
       So another of the characteristics of community is that it is healing
       and converting.  Yet I have deliberately not listed that
       characteristic by itself, lest the subtlety of it be misunderstood.
       For the fact is that most of our human attempts to heal and convert
       prevent community.  Human beings have within them a natural yearning
       and thrust toward health and wholeness and holiness.  (All three
       words are derived from the same root.) ... But put a human being in a
       truly safe place, where those defenses and resistances are no longer
       necessary, and the thrust toward health is liberated.  When we are
       safe, there is a natural tendency for us to heal and convert
       ourselves.
       
       Experienced psychotherapists usually come to recognize this truth.
       ... With experience, however, they realize that they do not have the
       power to heal.  But they also learn that it is within their power to
       listen to the patient, to accept her or him, to establish a
       "therapeutic relationship."  So they focus not so much on healing as
       on making their relationship a safe place where the patient is likely
       to heal themself.
       
       ## A laboratory for personal disarmament
       
       Vulnerability is a two-way street.  Community requires the ability to
       expose our wounds and weaknesses to our fellow creatures.  It also
       requires the capacity to be affected by the wounds of others, to be
       wounded by their wounds.
       
       [A laboratory can be defined as a place designed to be safe for
       experiments.]
       
       So it is in community: it is a safe place to experiment with new
       types of behavior.
       
       An experiment is designed to give us new EXPERIENCE from which we can
       extract new wisdom.  So it is that in experimenting with personally
       disarming themselves, the members of a true community experientially
       discover the rules of peacemaking and learn its virtues.  It is a
       personal experience so powerful that it can become the driving force
       behind the quest for peace on a global scale.
       
       ## A group that can fight gracefully
       
       In genuine community there are no sides.  It is not always easy, but
       by the time they reach community the members have learned how to give
       up cliques and factions.  They have learned how to listen to each
       other and how not to reject each other.  Sometimes consensus in
       community is reached with miraculous rapidity.  But at other times it
       is arrived at only after lengthy struggle.  Just because it is a safe
       place does not mean community is a place without conflict.  It is,
       however, a place where conflict can be resolved without physical or
       emotional bloodshed and with wisdom as well as grace.  A community is
       a group that can fight gracefully.
       
       That this is so is hardly accidental.  For community is an
       amphitheater where the gladiators have laid down their weapons and
       their armor, where they have become skilled at listening and
       understanding, where they respect each others' gifts and accept each
       others' limitations, where they celebrate their differences and bind
       each others' wounds, where they are committed to a struggling
       together rather than against each other.  It is a most unusual
       battleground indeed.  But that is also why it is an unusually
       effective ground for conflict resolution.
       
       ... there is a fantasy abroad.  Simply stated, it goes like this: "If
       we can resolve our conflicts, then someday we shall be able to live
       together in community."  Could it be that we have it totally
       backward?  And the real dream should be: "If we can live together in
       community, then someday we shall be able to resolve our conflicts"?
       
       ## A group of all leaders
       
       Communities have sometimes been referred to as leaderless groups.  It
       is more accurate, however, to say that a community is a group of all
       leaders.
       
       Because it is a safe place, compulsive leaders feel free in
       community--often for the first time in their lives--to NOT lead.  And
       the customarily shy and reserved feel free to step forth with their
       latent gifts of leadership.  The result is that a community is an
       ideal decision-making body.  The expression "A camel is a horse
       created by a committee" does not mean that group decisions are
       inevitable clumsy and imperfect; it does mean that committees are
       virtually never communities.
       
       The flow of leadership in community is routine.  It is a phenomenon
       that has profound implications for anyone who would seek to improve
       organizational decision making--in business, government, or
       elsewhere.  But it is not a quick trick or fix.  Community must be
       built first.  Traditional hierarchical patterns have to be at least
       temporarily set aside.  Some kind of control must be relinquished.
       
       ## A spirit
       
       Competitiveness is always exclusive; genuine community is inclusive. 
       If community has enemies, it has begun to lose the spirit of
       community--if it ever had it in the first place.
       
       The spirit of true community is the spirit of peace.
       
       Nor will one question that it is a spirit of peace that prevails when
       a group enters community.  An utterly new quietness descends on the
       group.  People seem to speak more quietly; yet, strangely, their
       voices seem to carry better through the room.  There are periods of
       silence, but it is never an uneasy silence.  Indeed, the silence is
       welcomed.  It feels tranquil.  Nothing is frantic anymore.  The chaos
       is over.  It is as if noise had been replaced by music.  The people
       listen and can hear.  It is peaceful.
       
       The "atmosphere" of love and peace is so palpable that almost every
       community member experiences it as a spirit.  Hence, even the
       agnostic and atheist members will generally report a
       community-building workshop as a spiritual experience.
       
       The wisdom of a true community often seems miraculous.  This wisdom
       can perhaps be explained in purely secular terms as a result of the
       freedom of expression, the pluralistic talents, the consensual
       decision making that occur in community.  There are times, however,
       when this wisdom seems to my religious eye to be more a matter of
       divine spirit and possible divine intervention.  This is one of the
       reasons why the feeling of joy is such a frequent concomitant of the
       spirit of community.  The members feel that they have been
       temporarily--at least partially--transported out of the mundane world
       of ordinary preoccupations.  For the moment it as if heaven and earth
       had somehow met.
       
       # Chapter 4, The genesis of community
       
       ## Crisis and community
       
       Genuine communities of a sort frequently develop in response to
       crisis.  Strangers in the waiting room of an intensive-care ward
       suddenly come to share each other's hopes and fears and joys and
       griefs as their loved ones lie across the hall on the "critical list."
       
       On a larger scale, in the course of a minute a distant earthquake
       causes buildings to crumble and crush thousands of people to death in
       Mexico City.  Suddenly rich and poor alike are working together night
       and day to rescue the injured and care for the homeless.  Meanwhile
       men and women of all nations open their pocketbooks and their hearts
       to a people they have never seen, much less met, in a sudden
       consciousness of our common humanity.
       
       The problem is that once the crisis is over, so--virtually always--is
       the community.  The collective spirit goes out of the people as they
       return to their ordinary individual lives, and community is lost.
       
       There is a dreadful form of psychiatric disorder that compels its
       victims to lead destructively histrionic lives.  The far more common
       curse, however, is for us human beings to fail to live our lives with
       a proper sense of drama.  Here those people with an active religious
       bent have another advantage.  Secular people have plain ups and downs
       in their lives, while we religious get to have "spiritual crises." It
       is much more dignified, or so it would seem, to have a spiritual
       crisis than a depression.  It is also often the more appropriate way
       of looking at things.  But, in fact, all psychological problems can
       be seen as crises of the human spirit.  In my practice of
       psychotherapy, more often than not I have to work quite hard to teach
       people a sense of their own importance and dramatic significance.
       
       We do not have to manufacture crises in our lives; we have merely to
       recognize that they exist.  [Or...] We can keep pretending that this
       is not so.  We can continue refusing to face the crisis until the day
       when we individually and collectively destroy ourselves and our
       planet.  We can avoid community until the end.  Or we can wake up to
       the drama of our lives and begin to take the steps necessary to save
       them.
       
       ## Community by design
       
       I began to conduct "community-building workshops" with frequency.  I
       have been able to reach a number of conclusions with such a degree of
       certainty that I know them to be facts.  The most basic are these:
       
       * The process by which a group of human beings becomes a community
         is a lawful process.  Whenever a group functions in accord with
         certain quite clear laws or rules it will become a genuine
         community.
       * The words "communicate" and "community," although verb and noun,
         come from the same root.  The principles of good communication are
         the basic principles of community-building.  And because people do
         not naturally know how to communicate, because humans have not yet
         learned how to talk with each other, they remain ignorant of the
         laws or rules of genuine community.
       * In certain situations people may unconsciously stumble onto the
         rules of communication or community.  That is what occurred in the
         communities I have already described.  Since the process is
         unconscious, however, people do not consciously learn these rules
         as a result and therefore immediately forget how to practice them.
       * The rules of communication and community building can be simply
         taught and learned with relative ease.  This conscious learning
         allows people to remember the rules and practice them at a later
         date.
       * Learning can be passive or experiential.  Experiential learning
         is more demanding but infinitely more effective.  As with other
         things, the rules of communication and community are best learned
         experientially.
       * The vast majority of people are capable of learning the rules of
         communication and community-building and are willing to follow
         them.  In other words, if they know what they are doing, virtually
         any group of people can form themselves into a genuine community.
       
       # Chapter 5, Stages of community making
       
       Communities, like individuals, are unique.  Still we all share the
       human condition.  So it is that groups assembled deliberately to form
       themselves into community routinely go through certain stages in the
       process.  These stages, in order, are:
       
       * Pseudocommunity -- Forming
       * Chaos -- Storming
       * Emptiness -- Norming
       * Community -- Performing
       
       I do not insist that community development occur by formula.  But in
       the process of community-making by design, this is the natural, usual
       order of things.
       
       ## Pseudocommunity
       
       The first response of a group seeking to form a community is most
       often to try to fake it.  The members attempt to be an instant
       community by being extremely pleasant with one another and avoiding
       all disagreement.  This attempt--this pretense of community-is what I
       term "pseudocommunity."  It never works.
       
       The essential dynamic of pseudocommunity is conflict-avoidance.
       Pseudocommunity is conflict-avoiding, true community is
       conflict-resolving.
       
       What is diagnostic of pseudocommunity is the minimization, the lack
       of acknowledgment, or the ignoring of individual differences.
       
       Another characteristic of pseudocommunity is that the members will
       let one another get away with such blanket statements. ... To avoid
       the risk of conflict they keep their feelings to themselves and even
       nod in agreement, as if a speaker has uttered some universal truth.
       Indeed, the pressure to skirt any kind of disagreement may be so
       great that even the very experienced communicators in the group--who
       know perfectly well that speaking in generalities is destructive to
       genuine communication--may be inhibited from challenging what they
       know is wrong.
       
       [To nip pseudocommunity in the bud] Often all that is required is to
       challenge the platitudes or generalizations.
       
       Once individual differences are not only allowed but encouraged to
       surface in some such way, the group almost immediately moves to the
       second stage of community development: chaos.
       
       ## Chaos
       
       The chaos always centers around well-intentioned but misguided
       attempts to heal and convert.
       
       Chaos is not just a state, it is an essential part of the process of
       community building.  Consequently, unlike pseudocommunity, it does
       not simply go away as soon as the group becomes aware of it.
       
       In the stage of chaos individual differences are, unlike those in
       pseudocommunity, right out in the open.  Only now, instead of trying
       to hide or ignore them, the group is attempting to obliterate them.
       
       The stage of chaos is a time of fighting and struggle.  But that is
       not its essence.  Frequently, fully developed communities will be
       required to fight and struggle.  Only they have learned to do so
       effectively.  The struggle during chaos is chaotic.  It is not merely
       noisy, it is uncreative, unconstructive.  If anything, chaos, like
       pseudocommunity, is boring, as members continually swat at each other
       to little or no effect.  The struggle is going nowhere, accomplishing
       nothing.  It is no fun.
       
       Since chaos is unpleasant, it is common for the members of a group in
       this stage to attack not only each other but also their leader.  "We
       wouldn't be squabbling like this if we had effective leadership,"
       they will say.  "We deserve more direction than you've been giving
       us..."
       
       In response to the perceived vacuum of leadership during the chaotic
       stage of community development, it is common for one or more members
       of the group to attempt to replace the designated leader.
       
       The problem with the emergence of such "secondary leaders" is not
       their emergence but their proposed solutions.  What they are
       proposing, one way or another, is virtually always an "escape into
       organization."  It is true that organizing is a solution to chaos.
       Indeed, that is the primary reason for organization: to minimize
       chaos.  The trouble is, however, that organization and community are
       also incompatible.  I am not an anarchist.  But an organization is
       able to nurture a measure of community within itself only to the
       extent that it is willing to risk or tolerate a certain lack of
       structure.  As long as the goal is community-building, organization
       as an attempted solution to chaos is an unworkable solution.
       
       The proper resolution of chaos is not easy.
       
       ## Emptiness
       
       "There are only two ways out of chaos," I will explain to a group
       after it has spent a sufficient period of time squabbling and getting
       nowhere.  "One is into organization--but organization is never
       community.  The only other way is into and through emptiness."
       
       It is no accident that groups are not generally eager to pick up on
       my suggestion of emptiness.  People are smart, and often in the
       dimmer recesses of their consciousness they know more than they want
       to know.  As soon as I mention "emptiness," they have a presentiment
       of what is to come.  And they are in no hurry to accept it.
       
       When the members of a group finally ask me to explain what I mean by
       emptiness, I tell them simply that they need to empty themselves of
       barriers to communication.  And I am able to use their behavior
       during chaos to point out to them specific things--feelings,
       assumptions, ideas, and motives--that have so filled their minds as
       to make them impervious as billiard balls.  The process of emptying
       themselves of these barriers is the key to the transition from
       "rugged" to "soft" individualism.  The most common barriers are:
       
       * Expectations and Preconceptions
       * Prejudice
       * Ideology, Theology, and Solutions
       * The Need to Heal, Convert, Fix, or Solve
       * The Need to Control
       
       ## Expectations and Preconceptions
       
       Community-building is an adventure, a going into the unknown.  People
       are routinely terrified of the emptiness of the unknown.
       Consequently they fill their minds with generally false expectations
       of what the experience will be like.  In fact, we humans seldom go
       into any situation without preconceptions.  We then try to make the
       experience conform to our expectations.  Occasionally this is useful
       behavior, but usually (and always in regard to community-building) it
       is destructive.
       
       ## Prejudices
       
       Prejudice, which is probably more often unconscious than conscious,
       comes in two forms.  One is the judgments we make about people
       without any experience of them whatsoever...  Even more common are
       the judgments we make about people on the basis of very brief,
       limited experience.  One reason to distrust instant community is that
       community-building requires time--the time to have sufficient
       experience to become conscious of our prejudices and then to empty
       ourselves of them.
       
       ## Ideology, Theology, and Solutions
       
       It is not only such ideological and theological rigidities that we
       need to discard, it is any idea that assumes the status of "the one
       and only right way."
       
       In speaking of this emptying process, however, I do not mean to imply
       we should utterly forsake our sometimes hard-won sentiments and
       understandings.  A community-building workshop in Virginia several
       years ago offered an example of the distinction between emptying and
       obliteration.  The group was the most dedicated band of converters I
       have ever encountered.  Everyone wanted to talk about God; everyone
       had a different idea of God; and everyone was certain she or he knew
       exactly who God was.  It didn't take us long to get into chaos of
       magnificent proportions.  But thirty-six hours later, after the group
       had made its miraculous transition from chaos to community, I told
       them, "It's fascinating.  Today you are still talking just as much
       about God as you were yesterday.  In that respect you haven't
       changed.  What has happened, however, is the way in which you talk.
       Yesterday each of you was talking as if you had God in your back
       pocket.  Today you are all talking about God with humility and a
       sense of humor."
       
       ## The Need to Heal, Convert, Fix, or Solve
       
       During the stage of chaos, when the members of a group attempt to
       heal or convert each other, they believe they are being loving.  And
       they are truly surprised by the chaos that results.  After all, isn't
       it the loving thing to do to relieve your neighbor of her suffering
       or help him to see the light?  Actually, however, almost all these
       attempts to convert and heal are not only naive and ineffective but
       quite self-centered and self-serving.  It hurts me when my friend is
       in pain.  If I can do something to get rid of this pain I will feel
       better.  My most basic motive when I strive to heal is to feel good
       myself.  But there are several problems here.  One is that my cure is
       usually not my friend's.  Indeed, offering someone my cure usually
       only makes that person feel worse.  So it was that all the advice
       that Job's friends gave him in his time of affliction served only to
       make him more miserable.  The fact of the matter is that often the
       most loving thing we can do when a friend is in pain is to SHARE that
       pain--to be there even when we have nothing to offer except our
       presence and even when being there is painful to ourselves.
       
       The same is true with the attempt to convert.
       
       ## The Need to Control
       
       The need to control--to ensure the desired outcome--is at least
       partially rooted in the fear of failure.  For me to empty myself of
       my overcontrolling tendencies I must continually empty myself of this
       fear.  I must be willing to fail.
       
       Just as the physical death of some individuals is rapid and gentle
       while for others agonizing and protracted, so it is for the emotional
       surrender of groups.  Whether sudden or gradual, however, all the
       groups in my experience have eventually succeeded in completing,
       accomplishing, this death.  They have all made it through emptiness,
       through the time of sacrifice, into community.  This is an
       extraordinary testament to the human spirit.  What it means is that
       given the right circumstances and knowledge of the rules, on a
       certain but very real level we human beings are able to die for each
       other.
       
       ## Community
       
       When its death has been completed, open and empty, the group enters
       community.  In this final stage a soft quietness descends.  It is a
       kind of peace.  The room is bathed in peace.  Then, quietly, a member
       begins to talk about herself.  She is being very vulnerable.  She is
       speaking of the deepest part of herself.  The group hangs on each
       word.  No one realized she was capable of such eloquence.
       
       When she is finished there is a hush.  It goes on a long time.  But
       it does not seem long.  There is no uneasiness in this silence.
       Slowly, out of the silence, another member begins to talk.  He too is
       speaking very deeply, very personally, about himself.  He is not
       trying to heal or convert the first person.  He's not even trying to
       respond to her.  It's not she but he who is the subject.  Yet the
       other members of the group do not sense he has ignored her.  What
       they feel is that it is as if he is laying himself down next to her
       on an altar.
       
       The silence returns.
       
       A third member speaks.  Perhaps it will be to respond to the previous
       speaker, but there will be in this response no attempt to heal or
       convert.  It may be a joke, but it will not be at anyone's expense.
       It may be a short poem that is almost magically appropriate.  It
       could be anything soft and gentle, but again it will be a gift.
       
       Then the next member speaks.  And as it goes on, there will be a
       great deal of sadness and grief expressed; but there will also be
       much laughter and joy.  There will be tears in abundance.  Sometimes
       they will be tears of sadness, sometimes of joy.  Sometimes,
       simultaneously, they will be tears of both.  And then something
       almost more singular happens.  An extraordinary amount of healing and
       converting begins to occur--now that no one is trying to convert or
       heal.  And community has been born.
       
       Or the task of community may be the difficult one of deciding whether
       it will or will not maintain itself.  This decision usually should
       not be made quickly.  In the joy of the moment members may make
       commitments that they shortly discover they are unable to fulfill.
       The consequences of long-term commitment are major and should not be
       taken lightly.
       
       Because I have spoken so glowingly of its virtues, it worries me that
       some might conclude that life in community is easier or more
       comfortable than ordinary existence.  It is not.  But it is certainly
       more lively, more intense.  The agony is actually greater, but so is
       the joy.  [Intensity junkies?]
       
       It is like falling in love.  When they enter community, people in a
       very real sense do fall in love with one another en masse.  They not
       only feel like touching and hugging each other, they feel like
       hugging everyone all at once.  During the highest moments the energy
       level is supernatural.  It is ecstatic.
       
       Great power, however, can sometimes hold potential danger.  The
       danger of the power of true community is never the creation of mob
       psychology but of group sexuality.  It is only natural when a group
       of people fall in love with one another that enormous sexual energy
       should be released.  Usually this is not harmful, but it is wise for
       communities to be aware of their great potential sexuality in order
       that it does not get out of hand.  It may need to be suppressed.  It
       should not, however, be repressed.  And it is wise to remember that
       the experience of other forms of love, "phila" and "agape" (brother
       or sister love, and divine love) can be even deeper and more
       rewarding than simple erotic or romantic bonding.  The sexuality of
       community is an expression of its joy, and its energy can be
       channeled to useful and creative purpose.
       
       # Chapter 7, Community maintenance
       
       [Entropy happens.]  To remain such, therefore, a community must
       forever attend to its own health.  While external service may be its
       ultimate task, self-scrutiny and the other efforts required for
       self-maintenance must remain its first priority.
       
       Every living organism exists in tension.  For there to be life there
       must be tension.  At the level of physiology, the process of this
       ongoing tension is referred to as homeostasis.  We humans hunger for
       genuine community and will work hard to maintain it precisely because
       it is the way to live most fully, most vibrantly.  Being the most
       alive of entities, true communities must consequently pay the price
       of experiencing even more tension than other organizations.
       
       The parameters over which tension will most frequently be experienced
       as communities struggle to maintain themselves are:
       
       * Size
       * Structure
       * Authority
       * Inclusivity
       * Intensity
       * Commitment
       * Individuality
       * Task definition
       * Ritual
       
       Another crucial issue was worked out in the first two years.  It was
       natural for the early members to probe each other and interpret each
       other's lives.  But gradually the group discovered that some degree
       of chaos was the invariable result.  All by itself it came to the
       wisdom that attempts to heal or convert were generally more
       destructive than supportive.  As it had come to define itself as a
       group that did not party, so it defined itself quite quickly as "not
       a therapy group." "We are just, merely and only, a support group," it
       would tell new members.  "It is our purpose to love, not to heal."
       
       Since its virtues are so great, the maintenance of genuine community
       over as long a time as possible is an ideal.  However, it is an ideal
       on general principle, which means it is not necessarily virtuous for
       each and every community to attempt to be immortal.  Communities,
       like individual human beings, are organisms with different life
       spans, some of which, as we shall see, are more proper than others.
       
       The longevity of a community is no more adequate a measure of its
       success than the length of an individual human life attests to its
       fulfillment.
       
       We human beings have often been referred to as social animals.  But
       we are not yet community creatures.  We are impelled to relate with
       each other for our survival.  But we do not yet relate with the
       inclusivity, realism, self-awareness, vulnerability, commitment,
       openness, freedom, equality, and love of genuine community.  It is
       clearly no longer enough to be simply social animals, babbling
       together at cocktail parties and brawling with each other in business
       and over boundaries.  It is our task--our essential, central, crucial
       task--to transform ourselves from mere social creatures into
       community creatures.  It is the only way that human evolution will be
       able to proceed.
       
       # Chapter 8, Human nature
       
       Perhaps the first step then, toward community on a grander scale lies
       in the acceptance of the fact that we are not, nor can we ever be,
       all the same.
       
       Because each of us is unique, inevitably we live in a pluralistic
       society, and we take pride in the United States as a pluralistic
       society.
       
       For the fact of the matter is that we Americans live together only in
       RELATIVE peace.  The relationship in this country between blacks and
       whites and groups of various ethnic and national origins is generally
       uneasy at best.  The wealthy and the poor are seldom enamored of each
       other.
       
       Through community the problem of pluralism ceases to be a problem.
       Community is a true alchemical process that transforms the dross of
       our differences into golden harmony.
       
       To understand more deeply how this happens, we must also understand
       at the most radical level just why we human beings are so different
       and, at the very same time, just what it is that we all have in
       common.  We must answer the question What is human nature?
       
       To most people a myth is a tall tale, a story that is not true or
       real.  Increasingly, however, psychologists are coming to realize
       that myths are myths precisely because they are true.  Myths are
       found in one form or another in culture after culture, age after age.
       The reason for their permanence and universality is precisely that
       they are embodiments of great truths.
       
       Dragons are creatures of myth.  Long before the fire-breathing
       fantasies of today's comic books and television cartoons, Christian
       monks throughout Europe were illuminating manuscripts with
       painstaking illustrations of dragons.  So were Taoist monks in China.
       And Buddhist monks in Japan.  And Hindus in India.  And Muslims in
       Arabia.  Why?  Why dragons?  Why should these mythical beasts be so
       extraordinarily ecumenical and international?
       
       The reason is that dragons are symbols of human beings.  And as
       mythical symbols, they say something very important about the basic
       truths of human nature.  We are snakes with wings, worms that can
       fly.  Reptilelike, we slink close to the ground and are mixed in the
       mud of our animal nature and the muck of our cultural prejudices.
       Yet, like birds, we are also of the spirit, capable of soaring in the
       heavens, transcending, at least for moments, our narrow-mindedness
       and sinful proclivities.  So it is that I sometimes tell my patients
       that part of their task is to come to terms with their dragonhood, to
       decide whether they want most to exercise the more slothful or more
       spiritual aspects of their nature.
       
       Even the simplest of myths is multifaceted, because, like dragons, we
       are multifaceted beings.  Indeed, this is the very reason for myths.
       Our nature is so multifaceted and paradoxical that it cannot be
       captured in words that represent single, simple categories.  Myths
       are required to contain and embrace the richness of human nature.
       
       Because it is multifaceted and complex, simplistic definitions of
       human nature not only fail to do its richness justice, they are
       extremely dangerous.  Any falsity is dangerous, and the
       misapprehension of human nature particularly so, since such
       misapprehensions is one of the foundations of war.
       
       The reality of human nature is that we are--and always will
       be--profoundly different, for the most salient feature of human
       nature lies in its capacity to be molded by culture and experience in
       extremely variable ways.  Human nature is flexible; it is indeed
       capable of change.  But such a phrase fails to do justice to the
       glory of human nature.  Far better is the phrase "the capacity for
       transformation."  It is the capacity for transformation that is the
       most essential characteristic of human nature.  And again
       paradoxically, this capacity is both the basic cause of war and the
       basic cure for war.
       
       Since human nature is so subtle and many-faceted, it cannot be
       captured in a single definition.
       
       This capacity we have to change--to transform--ourselves is so
       extraordinary that at other times when asked "What is human nature?"
       I facetiously respond that there is no such thing.
       
       And nowhere is our capacity for transformation more evident than
       through the successive stages of psychological growth from infancy,
       through adolescence, to adulthood.
       
       So it is not easy for us to change.  But it is possible.  And it is
       our glory as human beings.
       
       # Chapter 9, Patterns of transformation
       
       The key to community is the acceptance--in fact, the celebration--of
       our individual and cultural differences.  This does not mean,
       however, that as we struggle toward world community we need to
       consider all individuals or all cultures and societies equally good
       or mature.  It is simply not true.
       
       Thus we need labor under no compulsion to feel the same degree of
       attraction to each and everyone--or the same degree of taste for
       every culture.  So Gale Webbe wrote in his classic work on the deeper
       aspects of spiritual growth that the further one grows spiritually,
       the more and more people one loves and the fewer and fewer people one
       likes.  This is because when we have become sufficiently adept at
       recognizing our own flaws so as to cure them, we naturally become
       adept at recognizing the flaws in others.  We may not like the people
       because of these flaws or immaturities, but the further we ourselves
       grow, the more we become able to accept--to love--them, flaws and all.
       
       Over the course of a decade of practicing psychotherapy a strange
       pattern began to emerge.  If people who were religious came to me in
       pain and trouble, and if they became engaged in the therapeutic
       process so as to go the whole route, they frequently left therapy as
       atheists, agnostics, or at least skeptics.  On the other hand, if
       atheists, agnostics, or skeptics came to me in pain or difficulty and
       became fully engaged, they frequently left therapy as deeply
       religious people.  Same therapy, same therapist, successful but
       utterly different outcomes from a religious point of view.  Again it
       didn't compute--until I realized that we are not all in the same
       place spiritually.
       
       With that realization came another: there is a pattern of progression
       through identifiable stages in human spiritual life.  But here I will
       talk about those stages only in general, for individuals are unique
       and do not always fit neatly into any psychological or spiritual
       pigeonhole.
       
       With that caveat, let me list my own understanding of these stages
       and the names I have chosen to give them:
       
       * STAGE I: Chaotic, antisocial
       * STAGE II: Formal, institutional
       * STAGE III: Skeptic, individual
       * STAGE IV: Mystic, communal
       
       Most all young children and perhaps one in five adults fall into
       Stage I.  It is essentially a stage of undeveloped spirituality.  I
       call it because those adults who are in it seem generally incapable
       of loving others.  Although they may pretend to be loving (and think
       of themselves that way), their relationships with their fellow human
       beings are all essentially manipulative and self-serving.  They
       really don't give a hoot about anyone else.  I call the stage chaotic
       because these people are basically unprincipled.  Being unprincipled,
       there is nothing that governs them except their own will.  And since
       the will from moment to moment can go this way or that, there is a
       lack of integrity to their being.
       
       "Mysticism," a much-maligned word, is not an easy one to define.  It
       takes many forms.  Yet through the ages, mystics of every shade of
       religious belief have spoken of unity, of an underlying connectedness
       between things: between men and women, between us and the other
       creatures and even inanimate matter as well, a fitting together
       according to an ordinarily invisible fabric underlying the cosmos.
       
       Mysticism also obviously has to do with mystery.  Mystics acknowledge
       the enormity of the unknown, but rather than being frightened by it,
       they seek to penetrate ever deeper into it that they may understand
       more--even with the realization that the more they understand, the
       greater the mystery will become.  While Stage IV men and women will
       enter religion in order to approach mystery, people in Stage II, to a
       considerable extent, enter religion in order to escape from it.
       
       The process of spiritual development I have described is highly
       analogous to the development of community.  Stage I people are
       frequently pretenders; they pretend they are loving and pious,
       covering up their lack of principles.  The first, primitive stage of
       group formation--pseudocommunity--is similarly characterized by
       pretense.
       
       Stage II people have begun the work of submitting themselves to
       principle--the law.  But they do not yet understand the spirit of the
       law.  Consequently they are legalistic, parochial, and dogmatic.
       They are threatened by anyone who thinks differently from them, and
       so regard it as their responsibility to convert or save the other 90
       to 99 percent of humanity who are not "true believers."  It is this
       same style of functioning that characterizes the second stage of the
       community process in which the group members, rather than accepting
       one another try vehemently to fix one another.  The chaos that
       results is not unlike that existing among the various feuding
       denominations or seen within or between the world's different
       religions.
       
       Stage III, a phase of questioning, is analogous to the crucial stage
       of emptiness in community formation.  In reaching for community the
       members of a group must question themselves.  "Is my particular
       theology so certain--so true and complete--as to justify my
       conclusion that these people are not saved?" they may ask.  Or "Could
       I have swallowed the party line in thinking that all religious people
       are fanatics?"  Indeed, such questioning is the required beginning of
       the emptying process.  Conversely, individuals remain stuck in Stage
       III precisely because they do not doubt deeply enough.  They must
       begin to doubt even their own doubt.
       
       Does this mean, then, that a true community is a group of all Stage
       IV people?  Paradoxically the answer is yes and no.  It is no because
       the individual members are hardly capable of growing so rapidly as to
       totally discard their customary styles of thinking when they return
       from the group to their usual worlds.  But it is yes because in
       community the members have learned how to behave in a Stage IV manner
       in relation to one another.  In other words, out of love and
       commitment to the whole, virtually all of us are capable of
       transcending our backgrounds and limitations.  So it is that genuine
       community is so much more than the sum of its parts.  It is, in
       truth, a mystical body.
       
       Aldous Huxley labeled mysticism "the perennial philosophy" because
       the mystical way of thinking and being has existed in all cultures
       and all times since the dawn of recorded history.  Although a small
       minority, mystics of all religions the world over have demonstrated
       an amazing commonality, unity.  Unique though they might be in their
       individual personhood, they have largely escaped free
       from--transcended--those human differences that are cultural.
       
       # Chapter 10, Emptiness
       
       Meditation can probably best be defined as the process by which we
       can empty our minds.
       
       But why?  It is said that nature abhors a vacuum.  So it is that the
       moment we become empty something comes into our emptiness.  The
       virtue of meditation is that whatever comes into emptiness is beyond
       our control.  It is the unforeseen, the unexpected, the new.  And it
       is only from the unforeseen, the unexpected, the new that we learn.
       
       Throughout the ages mystics have also been known as "contemplatives."
       Contemplation and meditation are intimately related.  Contemplation
       is a process by which we think about--mull over and reflect upon--the
       unexpected things that happen to us in our moments of meditation and
       emptiness.  True contemplation, therefore, requires meditation.  It
       requires that we stop thinking before we are truly able to think with
       any originality.
       
       However, I use the word "contemplative" in the broader sense to refer
       to a life style rich in reflection, meditation, and prayer.  It is a
       life style dedicated to maximum awareness.
       
       In fact, it is not even necessary to believe in God.  For God, should
       you so choose, substitute the word "life."  If you continually ask
       questions of life and are continually willing to be open and empty
       enough to hear life's answer and to ponder the meaning, you will be a
       contemplative.
       
       True communities are invariably contemplative: they are self-aware.
       It is one of the primary characteristics of community.
       
       The ultimate purpose of emptiness, then, is to make room.  [Room for]
       the different, the unexpected, the new, the better.  Most
       important... the Stranger, the other person.  We cannot even let the
       other person into our hearts or minds unless we empty ourselves.  We
       can truly listen to him or truly hear her only out of emptiness.
       
       The unconscious is always one step ahead of the conscious mind, and
       it is therefore impossible ever to KNOW that you are doing the right
       thing (since knowing is a function of consciousness).  However, if
       your will is steadfastly to the good, and if you are willing to
       suffer FULLY when the good is ambiguous, your unconscious will always
       be one step ahead of your conscious mind in the right direction.  In
       other words, you will do the right thing even though you will not
       have the consolation of knowing at the time that it is the right
       thing.
       
       Those who seek certainty, or who claim certainty in their knowledge,
       cannot tolerate ambiguity.  The word "ambiguous" means "uncertain" or
       "doubtful," or "capable of being understood in more than one way."
       And because that means not knowing--perhaps not ever being able to
       know--we have great trouble with ambiguity in our culture.  It is not
       until we move into Stage IV of our spiritual growth that we even
       begin to become comfortable with ambiguity.  We start to realize that
       not everything is "black or white," that there are multiple
       dimensions to things, often with contradictory meanings.  So it is
       that mystics of all cultures and religions speak in terms of
       paradox--not in terms of "either/or" but in terms of "both/and."  The
       capacity to accept ambiguity and to think paradoxically is both one
       of the qualities of emptiness and one of the requirements for
       peacemaking.
       
       # Chapter 11, Vulnerability
       
       Openness requires of us vulnerability--the ability, even the
       willingness, to be wounded. ... The point is that if you were
       deliberately to put your arm into a grinding piece of machinery, you
       would be an utter idiot.  You would be damaged for naught.  But if
       you attempt to live your life without ever being hurt, you won't be
       able to live at all, except perhaps in a very softly padded cell.
       
       There is no way that we can live a rich life unless we are willing to
       suffer repeatedly, experiencing depression and despair, fear and
       anxiety, grief and sadness, anger and the agony of forgiving,
       confusion and doubt, criticism and rejection.  A life lacking these
       emotional upheavals will not only be useless to ourselves, it will be
       useless to others.  We cannot heal without being willing to be hurt.
       
       # Chapter 12, Integration and integrity
       
       We psychologists use a verb that is the opposite of the verb "to
       integrate": "to compartmentalize."  By it we refer to the remarkable
       capacity we human beings have to take matters that are properly
       related to each other and put them in separate, airtight mental
       compartments where they don't rub up against each other and cause us
       any pain.
       
       Integrity is never painless.  It requires that we let matters rub up
       against each other, that we fully experience the tension of
       conflicting needs, demands, and interests, that we even be
       emotionally torn apart by them.
       
       Since integrity is never painless, so community is never painless.
       Community continually urges both itself and its individual members
       painfully, yet joyously, into ever deeper levels of integrity.
       
       Five years later still, early in my psychiatry training, I was
       taught: "What the patient does not say is more important than what he
       or she does say."
       
       My favorite light-bulb joke is "How many Zen Buddhists does it take
       to change a light bulb?"  The answer: "Two: one to change the light
       bulb and one to NOT change the light bulb."
       
       Lest this seem silly rather than profound to the Western
       one-dimensional mind, let me say that I do not consider that this is
       simply "my" book.  I have written it only because other people have
       NOT written it: publishers, editors, booksellers, farmers,
       carpenters, and others--all of whose labor was required to enable me
       to perform this particular labor.
       
       Behavior is the key.  [Written like a true psychiatrist.]  There are
       atheists who behave like Christian saints and properly professing
       Christians who behave like criminals--who are criminals.  No one knew
       this any better than Jesus, who instructed us: "By their fruits you
       shall know them."
       
       A consequence of this reality is that, while all forms of thinking
       should be tolerated, some forms of behavior should not be.
       
       ... the attempt to exclude individuals because of their beliefs,
       however silly or primitive, is always destructive to community.
       
       # Chapter 13, Community and communication
       
       Communication takes many forms: written and oral or verbal and
       nonverbal.  Similarly, there are many standards by which we can judge
       the effectiveness of communication.  Is it clear or unclear, verbose
       or precise, thorough or limited, prosaic or poetic?  These are just a
       few of the parameters for such judgment.  There is one standard,
       however, that takes precedence over all others: does communication
       lead to greater or lesser understanding among human beings?  If
       communication improves the quality of the relationship between two or
       more people, we must judge it from an overall standpoint to be
       effective.  On the other hand, if it creates confusion,
       misunderstanding, distortions, suspicion, or antipathy in human
       relations, we must conclude it to be ineffective...
       
       The overall purpose of human communication is--or should
       be--reconciliation.  It should ultimately serve to lower or remove
       the walls and barriers of misunderstanding that unduly separate us
       human beings from one another.
       
       But the principal purpose of effective communication needs to be
       borne in mind.  If it is not, the communication becomes task-avoiding.
       
       The rules of community-making are the rules for effective
       communication.  The essence of what occurs in a community-building
       workshop, for instance, is that the participants learn these rules.
       Since communication is the bedrock of all human relationships, the
       principles of community have profound application to any situation in
       which two or more people are gathered together.
       
       Not only are there basic equations between community, communication,
       and peace but also between them and the concepts of integration and
       integrity.
       
       # Chapter 14, Dimensions of the arms race
       
       Unfortunately, the arms race is very much an institution.  It has
       buildings, bricks and mortar, and real estate aplenty.  When I was in
       the army, one of its basic training centers, Fort Leonard Wood, was
       the fourth-largest city in Missouri.  As for budget, the arms race
       has the largest in the world... to which the citizens of the United
       States contribute approximately a third.  It is not only big
       business, it is the biggest business, employing tens of millions of
       men and women.
       
       Recently I had the opportunity to reread a book written in 1961 by
       the political scientist Mulford Sibley, Unilateral Initiatives and
       Disarmament.  We speak of "future shock" and "megatrends" and bemoan
       the rapidity of social change.  Yet every word of Sibley's book is as
       appropriate to the situation today as it was when written.  As far as
       the arms race is concerned, NOTHING HAS CHANGED.  There is something
       about this lack of change that not only smacks of
       institutionalization but also inherently smells foul, even malicious.
       
       It is a quality of institutions that they tend to perpetuate
       themselves regardless of their appropriateness.  The arms race is not
       just going to go away.  If it is ever going to end, it is going to do
       so only by being ACTIVELY TORN DOWN.
       
       Peacemaking, therefore, requires a call to action.
       
       Ultimately all that is required for peace is that we overcome our
       lethargy and resistance to change.  To do that, however, we much
       encounter our first enemy: this sense of helplessness.
       
       The strongest and most insidious root of the arms race is the
       extraordinary lack of concern about it.  This apathy in response to
       gross insanity is itself multirooted, but perhaps the most
       significant factor involved is the general sense of helplessness
       among us.
       
       -----
       
       The root of helplessness that I believe to be the strongest is
       ignorance or lack of knowledge.  People feel most helpless in the
       face of the arms race, I suspect, simply because they do not
       understand it.  And because they do not understand it, they cannot
       see the way out.  It is not well understood by most psychologists and
       theologians because they lack the knowledge of politics and
       economics.  Worst of all, it is even less understood by the
       politicians and business people who are primarily "in charge" of it
       because they don't understand the psychology or theology involved.
       And, finally, none of them has much understanding because most of
       them lack the knowledge of community.  With that knowledge, combined
       with an understanding of the many interrelated factors that
       perpetuate the arms race, we need no longer feel helpless.  There is
       a way out.
       
       Narcissism is the psychological side of our survival instinct, and we
       could not survive without it.  Yet an unbridled narcissism--what
       Erich Fromm called malignant narcissism--is the principle precursor
       of either group or individual evil.
       
       How to discern between healthy and unhealthy nationalism is a
       critical task in our shrinking world.  For the reality is that there
       are some places on the globe where the development of nationalism
       needs to be encouraged while simultaneously there are others where
       further development of nationalism needs to be vigorously discouraged.
       
       The key to the discernment between healthy and unhealthy nationalism
       clearly, then, centers around this issue of identity development, in
       which the notion of the self--the "I-entity"--as a separate entity is
       an illusion.  We are all, in reality, interdependent.  Ultimately we
       are called out of a national narcissism and away from purely local
       identities toward a primary identity with humanity and a state of
       global community.  Still, one must possess something before it can be
       given up.  We cannot begin the work of forsaking our identity until
       we have developed one in the first place.  So it is that the proper
       pattern for the development of nations is, first, growth into
       nationalism, then growth out of and beyond nationalism.  The
       discernment between healthy and unhealthy nationalism, therefore,
       requires that we have an accurate sense of where a nation is in its
       historical course of development.
       
       Beyond that, the tests for healthy as opposed to unhealthy
       nationalism as much the same as those to distinguish between good and
       bad thinking: What is missing?  How integrated is it?  How much has
       the person consciously tried to include all the relative variables
       into her or his thinking?  [Basically, critical thinking skills.]
       
       # Chapter 15, The Christian church in the United States
       
       The arms race is against everything that Christianity supposedly
       stands for.  It stands for nationalism; Jesus practiced
       internationalism.  The arms race stands for hatred and enmity; Jesus
       preached forgiveness.  It stands for pride; Jesus said, "Blessed are
       the poor in spirit."  It is supported by the weapons manufacturers and
       the bellicose; Jesus said, "Blessed are the peacemakers."  Its
       central dynamic is the search for invulnerability; Jesus exemplified
       vulnerability.
       
       Why then has the Christian Church not fought against the arms race
       from the beginning?  What happened to Jesus?
       
       How could the Church so easily have lost Jesus' legacy of community
       and fallen away from his commandment that we love one another?
       
       The answer is fear.  To be a true Christian one must live
       dangerously.  The battle against evil is dangerous.
       
       By what failure of Christian doctrine did Christianity become largely
       empty ritual and no longer a way of life?
       
       But I can with certainty answer it in relation to the Church in the
       United States today.  For it has become apparent to me that the vast
       majority of churchgoing Christians in America are heretics.  The
       leading--indeed, traditional--heresy of the day I call
       pseudodocetism.  It is this predominant heresy that intellectually
       allows the Church to fail to teach its followers to follow Jesus.
       
       The majority of American Christians have had enough catechism or
       confirmation classes to know the paradoxical Christian doctrine that
       Jesus is both human and divine.  What is meant by pseudodocetism,
       however, is that they then put 99.5 percent of their money on his
       divinity and 0.5 percent on his humanity.  It is a most comfortable
       disproportion.  It puts Jesus way up there in the clouds, seated at
       the right hand of the Father, in all his glory, 99.5 percent divine,
       and it leaves us way down here on earth scratching out a very
       ordinary existence according to worldly rules, 99.5 percent human.
       Because that gulf is so great, American Christians are not seriously
       encouraged to attempt to bridge it.  When Jesus said all those things
       about being the way and that we were to take up our cross and follow
       him, and that we were to be like him and might even do greater things
       that he did, he couldn't possibly have been serious, could he?  I
       mean, he was divine, and we're just human.  So it is, through the
       large-scale ignoring of Jesus' very real humanity, that we are
       allowed to worship him in name without the obligation of following in
       his footsteps.  Pseudodocetism lets us off the hook.
       
       # Chapter 16, The United States government
       
       What politicians chiefly do in Washington, I came to learn, is fight.
       And they fight hard.  They also fight dirty.  And, finally, they
       mostly fight each other.
       
       What they fight about mainly is money in the form of budgets.  A
       budget is a concretization of priorities.  But... Most of it is to
       preserve or enlarge one's own slice of the budgetary pie at the
       expense of someone else's slice.  Deals may be cut, but I have
       otherwise never saw a budget worked out cooperatively.  Cooperation
       is not big in Washington.
       
       Nor is communication.  The very first thing I was taught on the job
       was the number-one unwritten rule: "Be very careful whom you
       communicate with..."
       
       One of the few things that keeps our government even vaguely sane is
       the practice called leaking.  One may think it generally occurs when
       a government official leaks some piece of information to the press.
       That, of course, does happen and is important, but actually the major
       part of leaking consists of leaks within the government itself--when
       an official from one department sneaks across the territorial
       boundaries to provide information to another department.  Indeed,
       there is a special name for this kind of leaking: "whistle blowing."
       Within the system it is regarded as the most serious offense and its
       commission is dangerous.  The penalties can be severe.
       
       Such is the overall pattern of communication within our government.
       As communication goes, so goes community. ... There is no community
       within the government.  It is pervaded by an atmosphere of constant
       competitiveness, hostility, and distrust.
       
       "That's just the way the world works," the so-called realists would
       proclaim.  Indeed, they would argue that it is downright
       constitutional.  They [our founders] very deliberately built conflict
       into the system.
       
       No, the Constitution does not require us to have a government totally
       at war with itself, a government devoid of cooperation, staffed by
       the mindless at the bottom and the predators at the top.
       
       ... government executives behave as if their purpose in being
       together in Washington is to fight with each other.
       
       Yet that is not their purpose.  Their task is to govern.  And it
       could be presumed that their task could better be accomplished if
       they generally worked with rather than against one another.  A group
       bogged down in a task-avoidance assumption--in this case fighting--is
       remarkably inefficient.
       
       Since the time of the Roosevelts we have developed a macho image of
       the president as a superman who can know everything, who can be
       almost everywhere at once, who can be single-handedly in total
       control of the entire ship of the state.  An image is exactly what it
       is, and it is utterly unreal.  No wonder that in 1980 we finally had
       to elect an actor to fill the role.
       
       The macho image of the president as a kind of superman has been
       created and maintained because the people have wanted it.  We have
       wanted a Big Daddy who has all the answers, who will take care of the
       bully down the block, who will not only give us a safe and secure
       home but one that is luxurious and where we will be protected from
       all hard knocks.  The American presidency is the reflection of the
       task-avoidance assumption of dependency, a creation of our own
       childhood fantasies.
       
       I look forward to the day when, asked at a press conference something
       such as "Mr. President [or Ms. President], what do you plan to do in
       El Salvador?," our Chief Executive will be able to respond: "Frankly,
       I don't yet know much about El Salvador.  I've been studying it for
       several months, but it's a complicated situation down there.  The
       people have a long history and a culture very different from our own.
       To the best of my knowledge their situation doesn't seem to be
       critical, so until we have a more complete understanding of things we
       won't plan to do anything in El Salvador."
       
       We are all confronted with the task of achieving maturity.
       
       # Chapter 17, Empowerment
       
       We know there are rules for good communication.  These rules work.
       Yet they are seldom either taught or practiced.  Consequently most
       people, including government, business, and religious leaders, do not
       know how to relate to each other.
       
       The rules of communication are best taught and only learned through
       the practice of community-making.
       
       What to do now?
       
       Start communities.
       
       Start one in your church.  Start one in your school.  Start one in
       your neighborhood.
       
       Start your own community.
       
       It won't be easy.  You'll be scared.  You will often feel that you
       don't know what you're doing.  You'll have a difficult time
       persuading people to join you.  Many initially won't want to make the
       commitment, and those who are willing to [they] will be as scared as
       you.  Once you get started it will be frustrating.  There will be
       chaos.  Most will consider dropping out, and some probably will.  But
       hang in there.  Push toward into emptiness.  It will be painful.
       There will be anger, anxiety, depression, even despair.  But keep
       going into the night.  Don't stop halfway.  It may seem like dying,
       but push on.  And then suddenly you will find yourself in the clear
       air of the mountaintop, and you'll be laughing and crying and feeling
       more alive than you have in years--maybe more alive than you've ever
       been.
       
       But don't feel you have to do anything.  Remember that being takes
       precedence over doing.
       
       But as you search for people to join you, there are two guidelines.
       One is to be wary of people who have a very big axe to grind.  All of
       us have our little axes, and it is proper that we should have pet
       causes and projects.  We do not have to give these up to form
       community, but we do have to have the capacity to lay them aside,
       "bracket" [contain] them or transcend them, when appropriate, in the
       interests of community.  A person who lacks the maturity for such
       bracketing or transcending will not make a good candidate.
       
       The other guideline is to seek out people who are different from you.
       If you are a dove, try to find at least one hawk for your community.
       You need hawks.  Since birds of a feather tend to flock together, it
       will not be easy to find women and men different from you.  Only
       remember that genuine community is inclusive and that if you are a
       wealthy white Democrat, you have the most to learn from the poor, the
       blacks and Chicanos, and the Republicans.  You need their gifts to be
       whole.
       
       Once your community is established, there is yet another guideline:
       remain inclusive.
       
       One of the things a calling to be an individual of integrity means is
       a calling to speak out, to be outspoken.  We are called to overcome a
       psychology of helplessness, of reticence.  If we see a lie, we are
       called to name it a lie.  If we see insanity, we are called to name
       it as such.  Don't avoid the subject of the arms race at a party just
       because it might be divisive.  Yes, there are some who might find it
       upsetting, but perhaps they need to be upset.  There are others who
       will respond to your outspokenness with gratitude for that leadership
       that gives them the courage to speak out in turn.
       
       author: Peck, M. Scott (Morgan Scott), 1936-2005
       LOC:    HT65 .P44
 (TXT) detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/M._Scott_Peck
       tags:   book,community,counterculture,non-fiction
       title:  The Different Drum
       
       # Tags
       
 (DIR) book
 (DIR) community
 (DIR) counterculture
 (DIR) non-fiction