Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
Last
week I had a fascinating chat with Mark Brady, marketing/design guru
extraordinaire, whose Alchemy model of
business elements, using the
metaphor of the periodic table of elements, is so achingly beautiful
and original that I don't really care whether it makes sense or not.
Mark's been playing with a new model that he calls The Five Elements of
Purposeful Effort: Hearts, Minds, Hands, Actions and Prizes. I'm hoping
he uses the playing-card suits metaphor for this model, so that the
strategy of "arranging and playing ones hand" can come into play.
Despite its elegance and how beautifully it's portrayed, I think Mark's
model is incomplete. It seems to me that, whether we're talking about
marketing effort or political activism, "purposeful effort" is driven
by more than our hearts and minds, and the tools at our disposal.
What's missing is our instincts, the subconscious processing that makes
most of our decisions for us long before we rationalize them
intellectually or justify them emotionally. Our instincts, our visceral
selves whose identity is coded in our ancient DNA and fluttered by
pheromones and dreams and all the things we never notice, are what
cause us to fight or flee, what shape our worldview and capacity to
accept ideas and change, what drive us to behave "irrationally" and
"immorally". A ton of studies show that "we" make up our minds before
we make up our minds, and that it is our visceral selves that make the
decision.
That's not to say that this decision can't be overridden, or stalled by
analysis paralysis. We are complex creatures, and while most of our
information processing is subconscious, our emotions are very powerful,
and our intellects, while feeble, are strategic and, in modern cultures
anyway, trusted more than either our instincts or our emotions.
I've argued before that we have multiple "selves" locked in a kind of
awkward dance inside us, and that this schizophrenia has been selected
for in nature because it serves us quite well. I've portrayed them in
the sketch above using the cute hugging salt and pepper shakers Geoff
showed me. These three "selves" are: the visceral self that
internalizes information subconsciously and draws on our genetic
programming to make sense of it; and the intellectual and emotional
"selves" that internalize information consciously and then process it
back and forth semi-consciously.
For example: When we're choosing a house to buy, we have a set of
criteria in mind, which we attempt to apply with some rigour. What
actually happens, however, is that, as we "sleep on" the decision, our
visceral selves process a ton of information that we have absorbed
subconsciously, and they will (whether we realize it or not) make the
basic decision for us -- that house, that we thought we loved and which
best meets our criteria, somehow has something not quite right that we
can't quite put our fingers on. We will justify, any way we can, not
buying that house, and putting in the offer on this house instead, even
though it was only our third choice based on our criteria. What made us
choose it, rather than our second choice, was our emotions, which
always outweigh intellect in any buying decision. In fact, the only
place our intellect really comes into play is actually negotiating the
terms of sale: once we've made our decision, we can dig up and cite to
the vendor the factors that had caused us to only rank it third on our
list, and possibly beat down the asking price. Or at least, it will
cause us to pause if we determine logically that we can't really afford
this house, and if interest rates spike we're screwed. Or so we hope,
anyway.
From all this I would like to posit this theorem on how and why we act:
The decision on an action is
rooted in instinct and driven by emotion. The actual strategy used to
carry out that action is often best guided by intellect.
But: If our instincts are stunted, blunted or untrusted, the decision
will be made almost entirely on emotion alone.
And: If we lack the time or capacity to apply intellect, the strategy
to carry out that action will also be a purely emotional one.
Another example: You are looking for a new partner. You have written a
personal classified describing what you are looking for and what you
offer. After your last disastrous relationship you are determined that
this next partner will share your interest in X. But when you actually
talk with and then meet with potential partners your body will in fact
make the decision for you, using its own, unknown criteria. You will
attempt to justify your interest in the person your body has chosen.
"The chemistry is really good," you will say. Your emotions will have a
say, but not in the same make-or-break way as your body. They will be a
tie-breaker if your body likes two candidates, unless you are poly in
which case you will attempt to make both relationships work. You will
find a way to rationalize the fact that neither candidate has the
faintest interest in X.
Once your body has decided and your emotions have weighed in, your
intellect will be encouraged to manage the relationship. You had better
wish it luck, because it's going to need it.
I am exaggerating a bit, but not much. I have seen this over and over.
The reason I care about this is that I'm beginning to understand the
knowing-doing disconnect, and how we are often paralyzed when it comes
to doing what we "know" or "think" or "feel" we should do.
Specifically, I'm interested in understanding why there are probably
millions of people who understand, at a visceral and/or intellectual
level, that our industrial civilization is disastrously unsustainable
and that we should be doing something about that, before it's too late.
Yet those millions of people do nothing, and in fact don't even behave,
in their day-to-day work and personal lives and social activities, as
if there were anything wrong with the industrial civilization that
underlies all of those activities. On the surface it would seem a form
of madness. But here's what's really happening:
We are culturally
programmed to distrust both our instincts and our emotions. Anything we
do we must socially justify to others intellectually, rationally.
It is utterly
impossible to rationally justify your instincts or your emotions.
Theirs is not a logic of words.
So while we may feel
this overwhelming, unbearable grief for Gaia, in the unspoken screams
of trillions of suffering creatures all over the world, penetrating us
to the bone, we are paralyzed, because we cannot rationalize this
feeling.
Likewise, while there
are lots of intellectual arguments about our civilization's
unsustainability, our civilization, being a social and ecological
system, is massively complex, and therefore those arguments are always
easy to cast doubt on. And once you start talking in intellectual
terms, you drain all the blood out of the discussion, and your emotions
disengage. We cannot care about something as abstract as atmospheric
gases, or "the environment" that is somehow "apart", separate from us.
We cannot.
So we shut up and
suffer. And/or we really start to want to believe those who tell us our
instincts and intellectual knowledge are wrong, to the point we leap at
any argument made by anyone with the faintest shred of credibility
(even when that person is bought and paid for) who will assure us that
everything is all right, that the market or technology or the Rapture
or some other deus ex machina
is going to fix the problem, if it even existed in the first place.
Even though we know
there is no such easy fix.
While this frailty of human social nature is easy to exploit by those
committed or addicted to our unsustainable civilization, there is no
great conspiracy going on here. We do this to ourselves, because the
"logic" in the bullet points above, that leads to this madness, is
fundamentally flawed.
Here's how we should
be thinking (and feeling, and intuiting, and then, to get back to
Mark's model, acting):
Trust your instincts.
You don't have to explain how you know that our industrial civilization
is unsustainable and is causing immense suffering all over the world.
You just know.
The fact that you cannot translate that knowledge into an intellectual
argument does not invalidate your knowledge. When someone takes an
unexpected swing at you, you just know to duck. You just know. There is
no conveying how you know in feeble human languages. There is no shame,
no intellectual failure in saying: I just know.
Of course that will not persuade anyone else. As Daniel Quinn explains
in Beyond
Civilization, that is not
your job, and would be a waste of time. Others will understand when
they're ready, and not before.
Find others who share
your instincts, by telling
others what your instincts are saying to you, period. Not why or what
to do about it, just what they're telling you. What you just know.
Read Keith's short Message for Humanity in my weekend
post or here,
as an example. If that says what you know, then Keith and I are people
who probably share your instincts. If this isn't what your instincts
are telling you, then find others who do share your instincts.
Get in touch with your
emotions. Reconnect with
them, and with the world. Our society teaches us to ignore and
suppress our emotions, but we feel emotions for a reason.
Until you give yourself permission to feel what you feel, you will not
be able to act. You will not be able to be yourself. The word emotion
comes from the Latin word meaning to move.
Let your emotions move you to action.
Using your collective
intellect to guide you, act
in collaboration with others who share your instincts and are moved to
act. To restate: The decision on an action
is rooted in instinct and driven by emotion.
The actual strategy used to carry out that action is often best guided
by intellect.
My newfound zeal for activism has come from the belated discovery of
these four simple (well, simple if you have the courage to be
nobody-but-yourself) steps. Until very recently I was paralyzed by the
vicious cycle of the five bullet-points above. Now I am moved to act.
Not to go out and blow up pipelines or SUV dealerships in a fit of
rage. But instead, to meet with people who have reached the same
understanding that I have, who just know what I know, and who have been
moved to act, and to use our imagination and creativity and ingenuity
and innovation skills and critical thinking skills and capacities and
collective wisdom and shared tools to identify ways to dismantle our
industrial civilization, cleverly and dispassionately. We should be
able to find ways to measurably do so (e.g. achieve a drop in GDP,
atmospheric CO2 and Gini ratio and a commensurate rise in indices of
well-being) without extravagant and unproductive PR stunts (our purpose
is to reduce damage to the planet, not to persuade people by getting
media coverage), without violence and without causing suffering, by
honing in on their vulnerabilities (e.g. their need for massive amounts
of low-interest investment, government subsidies, and insurance against
risks).
We can do this. We must do this. We know we must act. We just know.
And we are moved. And together, there's no limit to what we can do.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs