Shifting Perspective

Facebook in an election year often feels like this:

A firestorm of moral outrage, us-and-them-ing, end-of-the-world-ing, rage, fear, polarization, and propaganda-driven divisiveness.

And this is nothing new, although it feels like it is escalating to a new crescendo. I wrote a blog post, On Political Divisiveness, back in 2012 and, while a few details may have changed, the gist of it remains just as true today as it was then.

You can go back and read (or re-read) that post if you like; there’s no need for me to repeat myself here, other than to reiterate the point I was making then and still hold true today, which is that we are all in this together; there is no THEM, there is only US.

So, how can we break the cycle of polarization that feels so systemic and unavoidable, especially on social media?

Maybe it starts with holding a new image in our hearts and minds.

Today, during a wonderful guided meditation and transformational experience facilitated by the amazing Aliza Bloom Robinson, I was led through a series of imagery that moved me incrementally from a place of dense woods, to an open expanse of water, to the peak of a mountain and then up into the atmosphere. At each step of the journey, my field of vision opened a bit wider until, from that soaring-above-the-world level, I could see below me the beautiful, timeless image given us from our first space explorations: that pale blue marble, set in a vast black sky, that we call Earth.

The Earth that I saw from that vantage point was aglow with a soft light and I at once felt an immense love for my home planet and everyone on it.

The sense of peace I could feel from this higher perspective overrode, at least momentarily, any anxiety or anger I had been feeling in the days and weeks before taking this experiential inner journey.

This is not to say that we aren’t facing challenging circumstances, conditions, and decisions. Nor that we all agree on how to address them. Yet the feeling I get from this higher perspective image is that if there is a battle to be fought (and I know that the word “battle” is impossibly contradictory in this context), then let it be a battle we all fight together for the good of all, rather than a battle against each other where one side wins and the other loses. Let’s find a path upon which we can all stand together for the good of us all. It feels challenging, or even impossible, from the social media level of my experience. But from that higher place, it feels not only possible but inevitable that we can and will reach that place of oneness.

I’m not going to stop speaking out about the things that feel important to me: issues of justice, women’s rights, LGBTQ+ rights, freedom, equality, democracy, and global stewardship. As I do continue to speak out, I intend to carry this image close to my heart and mind. May it both soften and strengthen my voice. May it keep me mindful that these things I hold dear are not just for me and my loved ones, but for everyone in my bigger home planet family – even, and especially, for those with whom I disagree. May that higher perspective come through with my words, whether online or in person.

There are no enemies here. There is no US and THEM. There is only one family here on this pale blue marble we all call home.

First Image: SoulCollage® card from my private deck, Community Suit, “Facebook in an Election Year”

Second Image: SoulCollage® card from my private deck, Community Suit, “Home Planet”

Time to Harness the Wind

Time to Harness the Wind

Time to Harness the Wind

In my book, Fallen, after many of the leaves in the Dreaming Tree fall into their collective dream, they wind up in the Boggy Marsh of Fear. In this blog series, I have been writing about how conditions there are reflected in our current political circumstances. Today I want to look at what this allegory says about escaping the Boggy Marsh of Fear.

Our two protagonists, Alora and Blaze, are discovering that they do not have to stay stuck in the muck. Blaze, the more adventurous of the two, decides to try and harness the wind. Alora is gobsmacked by the idea, because she has felt, until now, that she was at the mercy of the wind. It had always just blown her around on Lake Sojourn until finally it had landed her here, with the others, in this disgusting and frightening swamp where the leaves are trampled and preyed upon by Moose and Raven. Most of the leaves feel like that’s just the way things are and there’s nothing to be done about it – except to complain and wring their hands like helpless victims.

But Blaze has had enough and he’s determined to learn how to harness the wind so he and Alora, and anyone else brave enough to join them, can set out in search of a better way of living. Through much trial and error, Blaze figures out how to use his own body as a sail so he can ride the surface of Lake Sojourn, much like a wind surfer does. It doesn’t matter which way the wind is blowing; he can adjust himself to steer his own course while using the energy of the wind to propel him. He teaches Alora to do the same, while the others look on with derision and even hostility. Hand in hand, Alora and Blaze set sail for better shores.

What does this have to do with our current politics? Well, there is plenty of fear to go around and an awful lot of hand-wringing. If you want to think about our political parties and their policies as the wind, there is also a lot of blind devotion to blowhards who we often feel at the mercy of. We get all caught up in inconsequential, and often made up, scandals that spread like wildfire on social media while ignoring the very real dangers we face. If anyone dares to think differently, the immediate response is derision and hostility.

What does it mean to harness the wind and steer our own course? It means:

  • Focusing on facts rather than the latest (and possibly baseless) sensational scandal
  • Facing our real problems head on
  • Choosing the future we want and deserve
  • Taking action to create that future

What kind of action can we take?

  • Speaking out about the real threats and abuses of power we face
  • Supporting the causes and candidates who will work to address the issues most important to us
  • Working to make sure that everyone’s vote counts and is counted – today and into the future
  • Doing whatever we can to fix corrupt systems that no longer work for the good of ALL the people, but only serve the rich and the powerful
  • Voting with our children and grandchildren in mind

I don’t know about you, but I’m with Blaze and Alora. Time to quit this noxious swamp of fear and set sail into a brighter future.

Next time we’ll look at the difference between love and fear. In the meantime, here are a few Deep Ponderings for your consideration.

  1. What’s the last thing you saw on social media that got you all riled up?
  2. Do you know for sure that it was even true?
  3. Was it an existential issue? Something of life or death importance? Something that could have true impact to your well-being?
  4. What are the most important issues to you? The things that will impact your life and well-being? How might these issues effect your children and grandchildren?
  5. Which candidates or causes are working on those issues and how can you support them?

~~~

When I wrote Fallen, The Adventures of a Deep Water Leaf, I wasn’t writing about politics. Or even thinking about politics. But lately the story has been popping back into my brain and feeling very relevant to the political landscape we find ourselves in today. And not in a partisan way, but in a human experience way. I keep being prodded to write my thoughts down – and to share them. This is the fifth in an on-going series of blogs I’m writing in response to that prodding. Here are links to the earlier posts:

  1. https://claireperkins.com/stuck-in-the-muck-of-political-fear/
  2. https://claireperkins.com/helping-others-as-a-way-out-of-political-fear/
  3. https://claireperkins.com/shocking-events-in-the-boggy-marsh-of-fear/
  4. https://claireperkins.com/three-steps-toward-leaving-the-boggy-marsh-of-political-fear/

~~~

Want to know more about Alora’s journey of self-discovery and self-empowerment? Order your copy of Fallen today!

Order the Full-Color Hardback Collectors Edition here.

Also available in paperback (with black and white illustrations) and Kindle format.