Yoga as Self-Transformation (Page 1)
Joel Kramer,
Yoga Journal; May/June 1980
This is the seminal conclusion from Kramer
and Alstad's
The Guru Papers: Masks of Authoritarian Power ISBN: 1-883319-00-5
Epilogue: Where Do We Go From Here?
Behind the masks of authoritarian power is the idea that
there is some greater intelligence that knows what is best
for others. What this always amounts to is that someone
either claims to have that intelligence, or to have a direct
line into properly interpreting it. This can occur in any
realm and in differing degrees. Its most extreme forms occur
when moral superiority is linked to infallibility. The image
of the guru represents the epitome of this construction,
which is the reason for this book's title. Often included
in this is the corollary that the authority cares more about
your well-being than you do, and can do so because of being
selfless. Whether or not a state of ultimate selflessness
or infallibility is achievable by anyone can be debated.
Then too, there is the question of how anyone could be certain
someone else really is in such a state. What is clear, however,
is that obeying others because they claim to be morally
superior, or to have an inside track to the truth, not only
breeds corruption and lies, but removes people from personal
responsibility.
We use the development of the individual as a metaphor
to help describe our view of humanity's past, where it finds
itself to date, and where it needs to go. In this analogy,
prehistory is like humanity's infancy where, as with infants,
the prime need is survival. During this stage individuals'
lives were totally dependent on their immediate small band.
With the coming of agriculture, the species moved into its
childhood. As with a child, this period was marked by growth
and expansion. As the population mushroomed, small group
interdependency was replaced by ever larger authoritarian
hierarchies. It was here that the still predominant authoritarian
forms, including our current moralities, were initiated.
The industrial revolution and tapping into nature's powers
through science accelerated development and expansion, moving
us into adolescence. Youth is characterized by great self-absorption.
Adolescents play with their newly discovered powers without
much knowledge or concern for consequences--especially consequences
for others. In adolescence there is often rebellion against
adult authority, but not against authoritarianism. Teenagers
generally look to or construct new gods and idols to follow.
Or they develop a misplaced faith in their own point of
view, or that of their peers, by ignoring any information
that does not fit. This stance of unchallengeability that
is directed toward other authorities is itself authoritarian.
Adolescence is also marked by feeling and acting as if one
were immortal.
A key element of becoming an adult is facing one's mortality.
Doing so can bring a shift in the focus of life, which in
turn reorganizes basic habits. Upon seeing aging and eventually
dying as part of life, the question then becomes how to
do so with care and elegance. Adulthood is a time when acting
out of longer-term implications becomes necessary instead
of insouciant short-term gratifications. The emphasis turns
more to care and maintenance, and one must begin to get
a handle on excesses that the aging body can no longer ignore.
One realizes that although death is inevitable, one can
affect not only the length, but also the quality of life
by one's actions. Just as the movement from adolescence
to adulthood rarely occurs without some struggle, adjusting
to the reality of mortality rarely occurs without some denial.
We view humanity as a whole as likewise struggling with
the necessity of leaving its adolescence behind, because
it too is facing its mortality. That the species will someday
vanish, as will our sun go nova, is not the issue. Upon
facing the possibility of imminent extinction through self-destructiveness,
the real issue is can people shift their habits to prolong
both the length and quality of life on this planet? Similar
to the individual, this would, in the species, include a
shift in values and behavior to greater preservation and
care. As in infancy, humans are again collectively confronted
with the tenuousness of existence. The difference is that
now we are the danger; but we also have the necessary self-awareness
to realize that our survival or demise is in our own hands.
As with the individual, this confrontation with death is
part of the developmental process that forces a reexamination
of values and priorities, which must include how our actions
today impact future viability. This is essential in order
to grow up, as a person and as a species.
Another necessary element in becoming an adult is realizing
that ultimately others cannot know what's best for you.
Authoritarian power, whether political or ideological, has
been the major form of control throughout the history of
our species' childhood and youth. This includes looking
for a savior to make things right. The very idea of a savior
contains the assumption that such a person knows what's
better for you than you do, thus making whatever the presumed
savior says unchallengeable. The savior approach to problem-solving
not only keeps people childish, it is the basic mode of
the old paradigm. It has also justified the greatest violence
and abuses. The old paradigms all have some authority--be
it a leader, wise man, guru, avatar, representative of god,
or prophet--telling the rest of us what life is about and
how to lead it. How to replace this old methodology that
we are outgrowing is a major issue facing humanity.
The past by its nature has a strong pull--a weighty authority
and an implicit credibility. It is natural for solutions
that worked in the past to be given priority. This is the
power of custom, habit, and tradition, for existing paths
are easier to take. It is also natural to believe the answer
still lies in the old solutions, but that they just need
to be done better, or implemented with more forcefulness.
This is a reasonable course until it becomes clear that
trying to utilize old forms better makes things worse. That
point has been reached, and so the past no longer holds
the key. When old paths lead to a dead end, the solutions
that worked before become part of the problem. This is why
the need for a paradigm shift is in the air.
Where to go from here must come from the interacting perspectives
of living people exercising their will not only to survive,
but to create a world where there is a future. Hope lies
in the possibility that our self-destructiveness is not
our true nature, but rather that we have the intelligence
and courage to change even the deepest patterns, should
this be necessary. It is now necessary; and fortunately
change is propelled by confronting a dead end. The old systems
of belief, morality, and also of the way power has been
constructed, protected, and used have served humanity to
bring it where it is today, but are no longer serving. They
have become self-destructive. If humanity is to grow up
and develop its enormous potential for creativity, it must
also face the realities of its destructiveness.
In these papers we have painted only a partial picture
of how authoritarianism runs deep in the psyches and structures
of humanity. The larger work Control, of which
this book is a part, will examine a greater range of institutions,
issues, and beliefs, showing their authoritarian basis.
We do so because what precedes and accelerates change is
an awareness not only that change is needed, but also why
it is needed. This book does not offer programmatic solutions
in the form of specific content. It does offer a different
way of conceptualizing both problems and solutions. First
and foremost, it aims to show that if the process of change
is authoritarian, it is not change at all.
What is basically putting humanity at risk is its technologically
leveraged capacity for violence toward itself and Earth's
ecosystems. This combined with authoritarian hierarchies
structurally produces not only corruption, but the likelihood
of those on top using those below uncaringly. During humanity's
infancy when the group's well-being was linked with caring
for every individual, all children were protected and cared
for by the group. Now children, the future of the species,
get lost in the shuffle, especially if their parents are
incapable or unwilling to care for them. This points to
one final example of the dead end of our present course.
One of the greatest sources of violence on the planet is
unwanted, uncared for, unloved children. Such children as
they grow older are not only typically angry and prone to
violence, but are potential time-bombs that can capriciously
explode and destroy whatever is around them. A world is
being created that is full of people without hope, often
driven by hatred and envy, who do not care about their own
lives, let alone yours. How can such people really care
if life on this planet continues or not! The worldwide increase
in population coupled with an increasing discrepancy between
haves and have-nots creates more and more people without
hope. When a large segment of the population lives without
hope, it is dangerous for everyone. If we are to survive,
what is needed are people who have realistic hope for a
better future and who value themselves enough to care about
others and the world at large. This would involve forging
a viable morality that makes the self-worth and well-being
of all children primary. Thus society as a whole must consider
itself the parents of all its children, not leaving the
responsibility for their care only with legal parents.
The construction of such a morality is the job of all of
us. But if its basis is authoritarian, it will necessarily
breed the same old self-mistrust and callous use of people
in the name of some unchallengeable "higher" principle.
It could be argued that it's too utopian to expect ordinary
people to look to themselves as the bottom line of what's
right, and also to care sufficiently about the state of
the world. It is true that this has never occurred in history--but
then it never had to. It is not that people need to move
toward personal responsibility, mutual respect, and care
in order to become or feel morally better. It is rather
that we need to do so simply to survive.
Our hypothesis, which this book develops, is that the powerful
and pervasive nature of authoritarian programming can explain
the mystery of humanity's seeming dual nature, including
the capacity to compartmentalize expressions of violence
and care. If our perspective is accurate, it is good news
in that we are not biologically stuck, and thus at an evolutionary
dead end. On the contrary, we are stuck in outmoded beliefs
and methods that give us no idea of our potential.
Democracy, which is an idea, has spread throughout the
world in a historically short period of time because it
ignites people's aspirations to have more control over their
own lives. The ideal of democracy has moved much of the
world to where it is today. Democracy in itself, however,
cannot cope with the extraordinary challenges the world
now faces, because at best a democracy can only reflect
the values of its members. If, within democracies, authoritarian
values and beliefs are conditioned (to varying degrees)
in much of the population, this imposes serious limitations
on how democratic the democracy can actually be. Yet democracy
is an example of the power of an idea. If, as we assert,
current problems are a function of outmoded authoritarian
beliefs, this is truly a source of hope: Self-perpetuating
structures depend totally on beliefs that live in people's
minds. Although beliefs tenaciously resist reorganization,
should they change, the changes can come swiftly, with extraordinary
repercussions. Seeing more clearly the hidden nature and
pervasiveness of authoritarian beliefs can itself undermine
their power.
For us, hope lies in the possibility of moving beyond our
authoritarian past in order to build together a future that
values keeping this planet habitable for its interwoven
and interdependent forms of life. If the challenge is met,
the world will have to be a better place for those living
in it, because for the first time since the early small
bands of humanity's infancy, everyone's well-being is once
again linked with survival.
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