Back to the future, part 2 - On consciousness, unconsciousness and intuition

Time varies according to one's perception of it and how one is perceiving it.

It bends, warps, slows down and speeds up.

I remember being involved in a motorcycle accident a long time ago. A car pulled out in front of me when I was travelling at about 40 miles per hour. It was just feet away, I had no time to think, no time to apply the brakes. My motorcycle struck the car square on between the front and rear doors, and I was sent flying through the air. My body continued to travel at the same speed as the bike through the air. Perhaps it was two or three seconds in time, perhaps it was less than that before I came crashing to the ground. In whatever brief time it was, I saw whole passages of my life – it felt like minutes of film footage. I was totally conscious of what was happening too, and seemed to have time to prepare myself to land in a way that caused me the least physical damage. My mind would have just shut down and probably done denial of the event had it been in control. But it wasn't anymore. I believe that what happened is that my intuition had taken over completely, it created my time, and its perceptions saved my life. Hitting the ground at 40 mph is not something I would recommend. It really hurts! But intuitively I landed in a way that did me the least physical damage.

I was very fortunate. I had some very bad bruises, grazed knees, and I had chipped a tiny piece of bone from one of my knees. After the shock, I stood up much to the amazement of two policemen whose car had been travelling too close behind me and had collided with a lamp-post at the roadside to avoid hitting the car that blocked their way.

So here in my flight through the air was a sense of not only time slowing down, but also of time almost stopping; of my intuition showing me that my life was valuable in its moments of my life's reflections and having "time" to prepare myself to land.

Some sportsmen, I have heard said and Lungold also makes this point, see their games whether soccer or basketball in slow motion as they fly over the ground at high speed. This is also how intuition works. Our mind has its cycling time a little like a camera operating slowly. Our intuition varies perceptions of time to suit our consciousness and intent.

On the mind: It's said to operate at approximately twenty four frames per second. It is worth noting that one twenty fourth of a second is too slow to take a photograph with a camera without some artificial support, like a tripod. Handholding a camera using that speed would usually cause camera shake and distort the image. That is how slow it is and how slow our mind works at its fastest.

In part 1 of this piece, I felt that I was not really clear about the importance of consciousness, that it is consciousness, both individually and collectively that upholds our social worlds.

It is shifts in consciousness, not technology, consumption, money markets or any aspect of our physical environment or social, political and economic systems that causes change. Back in 1962, when Kuhn wrote about "paradigm shifts", he talked about scientific revolutions occurring when a body of beliefs, what we are calling consciousness, could no longer uphold the reality they created.

There are conflicting realities in science too that co-exist, and one may embrace one or the other or synthesise or combine them in a new form of consciousness.

It is consciousness that governs our perceptions of the world that in turn creates our realities. How and what we perceive is our reality, to that extent a philosopher might say that truth is relative. I am not that sure that discussions of absolute or relative truth are that helpful in a world that is governed by consciousness and our perceptions of that world.

Consciousness also produces ideologies that uphold the status quo. Ideo is from the Greek word meaning ideas and logos to the systematic organisation of ideas and doctrines. What is really fascinating are the many different ways we have chosen to translate logos to suit the context. Logos is translated in the bible to mean the 'word of god'; it also gives us the word logic meaning rational or scientific reasoning, so even an ideology has different realities. They are man-made and upheld by our consciousness. They are often contradictory and conflicting.

Being conscious of consciousness frees us to perceive and feel deeper within ourselves and within our world. It gives us the power to question our knowing and where it comes from.

Consciousness is very powerful and empowering. There are many in the world who would wish us to be neither conscious or intuitive, since both states of being liberate us into the freedom by which we might see their realities for what they are. Turn on your TV and tune into Fox. They have a reality in which I would rather not believe. But the media bombards us with ideas about reality, the urge to consume and to uphold repugnant values. Perhaps it's the reason I don't enjoy much TV. Its mental and feelings blancmange; bland tasteless food for the mind that keeps us in a state of unconsciousness where we exist and survive and do not live at all.

But I want to talk about the unconscious here too for a moment. The unconscious is the last resort of the mind. I don't trust mind. I recognise it serves my sense of survival well and I would not be without it, but that is as far as it goes. The unconscious is that place where we push down all the muck, slime, hurt, pain, anger and all those other things that are too difficult for us to face and to look at about ourselves. It's the stuff that we repress in our unconscious that frequently comes back to bite us. We project these "shadow" parts of ourselves onto others often to justify doing hurt and violence towards them. It's these dark parts of our unconscious that we turn outwards to do hate, violence, racism and prejudice, or else we turn it inwards to do addictions, depression, suicides and other crippling behaviour.

One last point about consciousness, unconsciousness and control: Here's a question. How much media coverage have you seen of ordinary Iraqi families doing the things that ordinary people do – of laughing, crying, kissing, hugging, caressing, mourning, feeling sad or frightened, sometimes happy, enjoying meals together, going about their normal daily work, joking and having fun? Have you seen any? Anything at all?

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I have every cause to believe that Iraqis are normal people too, just like the rest of us. So what do they show us then? Images of violence and hatred, our dark shadow projection onto them. Keeping us in a state of unconsciousness is what justifies our going and bombing the shit out of them. So where were the weapons of mass destruction (WMD)? Where are the national ties to terrorist groups like Al Qaeda? There may be terrorists there, at least US Marine General Conway tells me they are there. But how many terrorists are living in the USA? How many mindless murders take place there each and every week? How many Columbine High School massacres will it take before we learn? And Oh! I forgot that naughty man, Saddam, spirited the WMD away by magic. He waved his wand and abracadabra, alacazam, they were gone. Oh yeah! As I might say to Marine General Conway, "Tell that one to the marines!"

Enough of that. Just a final word on intuition: Intuition might be thought so powerful that over the centuries, people holding power have discouraged us from, even killed us, for believing in it. I don't think it's that scary myself and it's never done me any harm, only the opposite. David Beckham, the footballer, does it very well too.

Powerful people know about intuition very well; after all it is their own intuition that keeps them in power. But intuition contradicts our rational scientific thinking, it is knowing without proof and it's not the same as religion either. Lungold talks about women, witchcraft, intuition and the inquisition. During the inquisition and beyond, hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of women were put to death for so-called witchcraft. To be a witch was to have a "heretical" belief either good or bad that could not be substantiated by rational proof. That's intuition. I'm not sure about the heresy either. The Catholic Church was probably the biggest murderer of women in the inquisition. Of course, the only heretical belief one was allowed to hold was that proselytised by the Catholic Church itself. I have every reason to believe that the Church has rewritten its particular story to suit its own purposes too. A knowledge of basic Greek and the bible shows how much we have distorted that story.

There are many things I have written about here that might inflame anger amongst some people. I don't believe that being conscious or intuitive is harmful. I do believe that it might carry with it the choice of profound emotions that I talk about elsewhere here: Emotions like forgiveness, understanding, forbearance and compassion.

Consciousness and intuition have nothing to do with hate. Hate has everything to do with remaining in the dark place of unconsciousness.
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Back to the Future, part 1 - Where is it?


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Two things recently inspired me to write this blog. The first was a work project that I had undertaken recently; the second was a video by the late Ian Xel Lungold on the Mayan calendar that I watched recently with great fascination.

The Mayan calendar, that can be interpreted in hindsight to have portended many of the great events and changes in our history, runs out in 2012. Many have interpreted this to be something of a watershed, a turning point for mankind; a time of some massive and fundamental changes in the world. Not the end of the world by any means, but perhaps the beginning of some different sort of world. I can believe that and feel some optimism about it too. I hope…

Economists predict that very soon the world's manufacturing capacity will outstrip its ability of consumption. Simply put that means soon we will be able to make more than we need or can ever hope to use. So what happens then? What happens to our economic, social and political systems that are already beginning to creak under the strain of change? What happens to stock exchanges and money? If you have a career in the financial services industry and are looking to change, now might be a good time to consider that move.

The speed of technology change has accelerated beyond belief. I started my career in computing long ago. What took years at the outset of my career can now happen in minutes, even seconds. At the beginning of this piece I talked about a recent work project of mine. Without wishing to mention my client's name, it was one of the world's largest mobile phone manufacturers. This company now launches a new mobile phone handset at the rate of one a month. Yes, one new mobile phone each and every month. What this means is that they have decided that the life of an average mobile phone to be just a year; from product launch to obsolescence in a year! They don't even call some of them mobile phones anymore; they are "multi-media communications computers!" Even my own phone takes photographs, keeps a calendar, has an MP3 player…what else…? Oh yes! Then there's an FM radio in it as well. But predominantly I use it to make phone calls and send text messages. It's well-made, well-designed and reliable so why would I wish to change it in a year? I have kept my last couple of mobile phones for a good few years and see no reason to consume more for consumption's sake.

But speed of change has accelerated beyond our conception of what was possible just a few years back, and it is accelerating exponentially all the time. Our knowledge, belief, economic and manufacturing systems are moving at a speed far faster than our social and political systems can keep pace. It's no small wonder that our social structures are beginning to creak and that our political systems seem to be holding on by a thread. It's no romantic illusion either. If you don't believe it then go make yourself a very strong cup of coffee and wake up!

What implications does this have for us ordinary mortals? Do you remember that idea about having a career? I am reminded of a couple of conversations recently one with a law and psychology graduate friend turned farmer, now turned national training expert, and the guy who moved me into my home, the removal guy was an Oxford-educated, ex stockbroker. Then there's me, I call myself a management consultant to cover a variety of sins! So what am I? Well, I'm a change, transformation and transition specialist, a programme director, a turnaround person, an expert in information technology and telecommunications, a venture capital appraiser, a psychologist, an ex-chairman of a large mental health project, an ex-chief executive of a software company, a general manager, a communications specialist, a facilitator, a strategic planner and a strategic marketing expert…and sometimes a writer…done a bit of broadcasting, some futures consulting…Okay so how many was that? More than ten for sure! Get the picture?

There are no single careers anymore. Every single knowledge-based discipline with which mankind is involved is moving at the speed of light or else it's moving fast towards obsolescence, like my mobile phone and that's just six months old now!

Take another example…a safe profession; let's be a doctor, a physician. That's an interesting trade, one that I might suggest controversially is more regulated and controlled by the economic interests of the pharmaceutical industry than the social needs of mankind. It's those guys who currently dictate the speed of medical developments and progress, but even that world is about to be busted apart. We have the genome now, a map of our physical bodily universe – a means of understanding our physical condition and potentially the knowledge to be able to cure its ills, we have the means to manufacture chromosomes, and last year it was announced that a scientist had manufactured a living organism synthetically in a laboratory (Guardian newspaper, 6 September 2007). So what will a doctor's profession be in future? If a doctor is to keep pace with developments in medicine and our world of physical knowledge then it is conceivable that she might have to undergo continuous training and education for her entire working life. Or else she might choose to just carry on writing those prescriptions that keep the pharmaceutical industry plump and happy. Somehow I doubt that will happen.

Our world is changing. It's getting better too. As Lungold points out we are transcending an age of ethics in corporate responsibility: one where the bad guys are being weeded out and held to account. I'll just run a quick internet search on recent corporate scandals and see who we can come up with. The list on Wikipedia, mainly for those qualifying as prize-winners in "imaginary arithmetic", include Enron, Barings Bank, Merrill Lynch, AIG, WorldCom, Kmart and there's even a couple of very big pharmaceutical companies in there too. It's a long list now. But I simply want to make the point that businesses who dishonestly exploit their customers or their shareholders for their own financial benefit or power interests are going to fail in a world where ethics, social and personal responsibility are coming to be recognised as universal values. It's not before time and I'll say more about time itself here too.

Some people may find this speed of change frightening; certainly it is awe-inspiring. It's no wonder that we feel that change is running past us; that we feel we can't keep up with it any more.

Lungold talks about this very well, about the limitations of mind. He says rightly that the mind is man's survival equipment. It works slowly and it's like a pattern recognition engine detecting similarities and differences to build a picture of our world. It does construct knowledge as pictures too, pictures taking the form of all our senses: sight, sound, taste, smell and physical experience. It works at about the speed of twenty-four frames per second, that means we can take twenty-four decisions a second in a world where billions of decisions are being taken each and every second. Lungold cleverly points out that the mind is limited in speed and easily deceived, that the guys who do special effects in the movies already know this well. I believe Lungold was on the right track.

So what do we use instead? Lungold and I believe the same thing here and it's called intuition. Intuition is our own sense of the world, and repository of inner personal knowledge, it's our ability to sense and know immediately without reasoning. It's what the very best sportsmen know and use all the time. Just think of David Beckham playing soccer, do you think that he's using his mind like "click-decide, click-decide, click-decide"? No, he has very high speed intuition and that combined with his enormous and well coordinated physical abilities makes him one of the greatest footballers there is; the same goes for great, basketball players and lots of other sportsmen too. I'll write more later about intuition and my current sense of it later. Important questions for me are how one gets in touch and stays in touch with intuition. I'm working on it and I am already very intuitive!

So what's going to happen and why 2012? Frankly, I don't know. I'm not a futurist or a soothsayer. I'm not that sure about 2012 either, but big change will happen and happen soon enough. It will be to coin that overused phrase and now hackneyed cliché, first used by Thomas Kuhn to describe the revolutions that occurred in the world of science, a massive paradigm shift in our entire world. (Brother, can you spare me a paradigm?) It will be an entire shift, not an evolution, but a revolution in our consciousness. It may be a whole series of shifts, who can tell? But one thing is for sure, this post-industrial world we inhabit will go through some big changes and it will be soon and it will be fast.

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Finally a few words about time itself: Those Mayans were very clever, that's for sure, their concept of time was driven by personal intent and social purpose. Whilst man has always had some concept of time since the ancient Greeks and Egyptians and probably before that, the ubiquity of timepieces and of clocks did not really happen until the industrial revolution. It's no surprise that the cuckoo clock was invented at sometime around 1730 at the beginning of that revolution. Cuckoo!

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Time as a universal accurate concept itself took hold then because it was what was used to control and regulate the workforce. Perhaps in a post-industrial age, our concept of time may change. The best I would hope for is that time will be used no longer to oppress our daily existence, but perhaps it might embrace those Mayan concepts too in a new and better world.





NB The video "The Mayan Calendar comes North parts 1 and 2" presented by the late Ian Xel Lungold is available to view for free on Google.
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