Thursday, October 11, 2012

The Collective: Group Energy

"No man is an Island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the Continent, a part of the main; if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friends or of thine own were; any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankind; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee.  John Donne, Meditation XVII

Whereas, we ultimately are responsible for our own "arising", the conundrum is, it is impossible to do so without the help of others.  Almost everything is impossible without help of one sort or another from at least another being (or environment).  Although we have these amazing, efficient organisms that are designed to regenerate and renew, there is something so incredibly potent about what happens en masse, with the energetic influence of the Collective.

Gandhi would not be Gandhi the icon without his thousand-fold of followers walking diligently behind him across the many miles of Indian salt lands in their non-violent tax protest.  Martin Luther King's power was made serious by the tens of thousands of people traveling long distances to march with him, validating and supporting the cause of civil rights. Mother Teresa's strength was not only in her solidly persistent quest to provide care for the marginalized, but in the waves of others that organized in tiers to mark her vision of inalienable healthcare rights for all.  Nobel prize winners deserve the accolades they receive, but their important work is only possible with the myriad of often invisible others that perform, enhance and actualize it, and those that went before them (dead and alive) and their findings.  All of these famous figures are notable and will go down in history.  But their greatness was completely dependent on others, and in all the before mentioned cases, sometimes tens of thousands of others.

And so it is with our own individual efforts.  In the case of meditation, the energy of consciousness or that of a universal influence is minute when done singularly.  The possibilities exponentially increase when done with others.  The Collective. Would the impact be so deep if only one (instead of a dozen) black-clad Israeli grandmothers showed up at the Palestinian border to witness the behavior of the soldiers at the border-crossing? No.  The presence of many female elders standing still in silent observation is a powerful statement, a powerful prayer for peace and justice.

What energetically transpires when there are numbers of others present making similar efforts, aligned in self, together? Vibration increases, which significantly boosts and conjoins the collected energy made by the shared vibration.  This can be seen and felt in large orchestra/symphony efforts versus  (even imminent) solo artists.  This can be experienced listening to a lone ranter taking his turn on a soap box in Temple Square, Dublin versus a political speech on a fully occupied Washington Mall in DC.  The vibration is entirely of a different magnitude. And that simply is due to the numbers.  The number of resonating, vibrating body energies in close proximity that interface, join and rejoin.  The Collective. There is power in numbers. Rioters know this.  Church/temple-goers know this.  Occupy Wall Streeters know this. Flash mobs know this.  Do we who sit day after day on our meditation cushions in our quiet places know this?

We need each other.  Whatever it is that we most desire and need is not possible without the aid and support of others.  The Collective provides help in  many guises.  It might be a forest of trees in a Massachusetts wood that supports an awakening,  nature's group energy needed for the inspiration for Henry David Thoreau to write Walden (as well as Emerson's generous gift to Thoreau of a cabin in same wood which helped create the conditions). Or a time spent on a long crowded bus ride for someone with a lot on their mind to provide a clarification.  The need for mutuality and an interfacing of (sometimes silent) energies cannot be denied.  It is our human legacy to each other.

"The eye cannot say no to the hand, 'I have no need of you!'
And the hand cannot say to the feet, 'I have no need of you!'
If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; 
if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it."  Saint Paul, I Corinthians





5 comments:

  1. What you discuss relates to the property of intelligence as an emergent phenomenon; to oversimplify, ten thousand bees are more intelligent than one bee. higher intelligence emerges from the collective activity of smaller components; a principle that works at every level of the universe. As humans gather and work together, higher principles can emerge and express themselves.
    This process doesn't always work out; the psychology of the mob shows that things can go wrong. Nonetheless, the principle—which is a scientific, as well as religious one—stands.

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  2. Whereas, psychology has a relationship to this phenomenon of group "intelligence", I think there is an energetic phenomenon that gets plugged into a large universal socket when we are en masse. I see it as more energetic than intelligent in that it can take a turn to the violent in the case of mobs, or sentimentality in the case of religious-osity. It's a building energy, not grounded and rather unpredictable. The cultivation of that into something positive and meaningful, with purpose requires the intelligence you speak of, something garnered not from the mind alone, but the entire organism.

    I want to take the opportunity here to clarify what I say above about single meditation. I fail to connect in that passage the fact that singular meditators are connected with each other in the world at large as they seek an internal alignment in themselves. A lone meditator is potent and is necessary. It's a different type of energy generated, then that unifying energy when one is joined with others at a distance; one that I am not at all certain about, it being even more mysterious than the phenomenon we are speaking of. Regardless, the experience of a collective energy present in one place is an amazing occurrence.

    Thank you for your important comment and solid intelligence, Lee.

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  3. dependent origination, dependent arising in the Buddhist tradition.

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  4. Gandhi, Mother Theresa, and MLK achieved what they did (raising consciousness) by being the point of light that alighting deftly upon the lie of human cruelty, using it to increase love and compassion; the oppressors also played a valuable role in the elevation of consciousness.

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  5. What you say about these figures being a point of light rings true. It is unfortunate there were no similar figures for the heinous atrocities in Rwanda and Sikh massacres (as well as the many bloody group uprisings against injustices in Venezuela, China and other parts of the world). It appears there is an energetic (raised consciousness?) tipping point wherein a leader materializes, thus galvanizing (legitimizing in the global world view?) a cause. Unlikely leaders might have to become martyred, as in the tragic Matthew Shepard brutal slaying 14 years ago which brought homosexuality rights to the forefront or more recently, the attack on a magnetic teenager in Pakistan for her stand on the rights of females to be educated. With great interest, I watch the healthcare scene from this point of view of a tipping point. Decades of life effort by tens of thousands of people working to transform a disease management system into actual, viable mainstream healthcare. The “points of light” leadership comes in waves from Dean Ornish, to Andrew Wiel to the marketing-king himself Dr. Oz. And still the tipping point is not reached. More conscious raising work for us drones, more decades to go?

    I appreciate your thoughtful comments. Thank you.

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