Industrial
Civilization’s Psychotic Break
By
Carolyn Baker
4
August, 2013
The
most deadly criticism one could make of modern civilization is that
apart from its man-made crises and catastrophes, [it] is not humanly
interesting. . . . In the end, such a civilization can produce only a
mass man: incapable of spontaneous, self-directed activities: at best
patient, docile, disciplined to monotonous work to an almost pathetic
degree. . . . Ultimately such a society produces only two groups of
men: the conditioners and the conditioned, the active and passive
barbarians.
~Lewis
Mumford, 1951~
Until
you can ‘see’ yourself, you can’t be yourself. Or perhaps
more accurately, once you can ‘see’ yourself, you can’t any
longer be somebody else, the person you’ve pretended to be, that
you thought you were, that others want you to be, somebody you’re
not.
This
past week I have been intrigued by several articles that have
surfaced across the Internet which appear to substantiate what many
of us have known for more than a decade, namely, that industrial
civilization is in a rapid downward spiral of demise. In his August 2
article on Alternet, Noam Chomsky argues that “America’s
Imperial Power Is Showing Signs Of Real Decline,”
in which he cites an international terrorist campaign by the United
States as the reason that countries around the world are viewing it
with increased suspicion in general and that in particular, the US
has destroyed the notion of Latin America as its reliable back yard.
Earlier
this week, psychologist Bruce Levine argued in “Why
Life In America Can Literally Drive You Insane,”
that mental illness in our culture is now epidemic for a number of
reasons, including the over-diagnosis of it by mental health
professionals. Levine succinctly summarizes the pathology of
modernity in this way:
Underlying
many of psychiatry’s nearly 400 diagnoses is the experience of
helplessness, hopelessness, passivity, boredom, fear, isolation, and
dehumanization—culminating in a loss of autonomy and
community-connectedness. Do our societal institutions promote:
Enthusiasm—or
passivity?
Respectful
personal relationships—or manipulative impersonal ones?
Community,
trust, and confidence—or isolation, fear and paranoia?
Empowerment—or
helplessness?
Autonomy
(self-direction)—or heteronomy (institutional-direction)?
Participatory
democracy—or authoritarian hierarchies?
Diversity
and stimulation—or homogeneity and boredom?
Similarly,
in her BBC investigative video report, Reeta Chakrabarti asks, “Is
Modern Life Killing Us?”
which highlights the maddening pace of modern life and the toll that
it takes on our bodies and souls. But as Levine points out, it is
more than just the tempo of modernity that deadens us. It is also a
lack of aliveness, passion, community, and autonomy.
What
the scions of the Industrial Revolution and the Enlightenment
philosophers before them were unable to grasp was that a society
established on the principles of separation from itself and the earth
community; a society that reveres the accumulation of wealth and
status as its raison d’ĂȘtre; that pompously assumes that the
earth’s resources are here for our use only and that they are
infinite; that esteems rugged individualism as a hallmark of
holiness; and that assumes that reason and intellect should be the
fundamental guiding principles of relationships with all beings—a
society based on these tenets is destined to fail miserably. Why?
Because these assumptions are inherently emotionally and spiritually
toxic for humans and all life forms within their purview.
Whereas
in her The
End Of The Suburbs: Where The American Dream Is Moving,
Leigh Gallagher highlights the failed experiment called suburbia,
arguing principally in terms of economic factors, Greg Greene’s
2004 documentary “The
End of Suburbia,”
demonstrated the irrefutable impact of peak oil on the suburban
project and brilliantly connected the dots between energy and
economics in a manner unprecedented since perhaps the publication of
M.
King Hubbert’s
original peak oil thesis. Indeed, the end of suburbia is upon us, as
is the collapse of industrial civilization at large.
During
and after the collapse of nations and empires, the incidence of
mental illness surges, almost without exception. We are currently
witnessing this in Greece
as did many individuals in Eastern Europe after
the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Yet
the collapse of industrial civilization, while now well underway, is
in its early stages. And yes, the logical question is: If this is
what a societal psychotic break looks like now, what will it look
like in ten or twenty years? As if that question weren’t ominous
enough, this past week we learned
that shifts in climate have historically been associated with violent
conflicts. Yes, when people are “hot under the collar” and other
places, they tend to become more aggressive and violent. Thus, as
climate change intensifies, it is not difficult to imagine the
psychological hell that may lie ahead in a society where epidemic
mental illness and violence are about to fly off the charts. This
study also reveals that the violence may escalate collectively into
endless
wars
and not merely remain personal between individuals.
What
Is To Be Done?
Certainly
nothing can be done to stop the collapse of industrial civilization,
but much can be done to hasten its demise. I will leave that topic,
however, to my friends Derrick Jensen, Keith Farnish, and Guy
McPherson. Nevertheless, as I have written before, if you choose to
invest your time and energy in expediting the unraveling, by all
means do so, but giving industrial civilization a swift kick off the
cliff, while temporarily exhilarating, is not sufficient to protect
you from your own psychotic break or the precariousness of living in
a world where violence escalates on a daily basis. In order to forge
that kind of stability and enhance your safety, much more will be
required of you.
Now
is the time to hone your emotional literacy and communication skills.
Those who believe that a cache of weapons and a truckload of barter
items will suffice for navigating a world in severe trauma are
tragically short-sighted. So are those who assume that since humans
have the capacity to reason, reason will trump all hostility,
reactivity, depression, rage, or passive-aggression—in oneself or
the other.
My
work is replete with a plethora of toolkits for fortifying yourself
psychologically and refining your ability to listen and speak with
others skillfully and respectfully. Additionally, working with your
own personal shadow material (parts of yourself that you have
disowned as “not me”—see “Our
Collective Psychosis”)
is critical in navigating the culture’s emotional breakdown and
enhancing your own wholeness. Just as cultures of industrial
civilization will ultimately be compelled to own their shadow
collectively, so individuals in collapse will be challenged mightily
to own theirs because our collective and individual “innocence”
are likely to be pummeled in the gauntlet of collapse. (For an
in-depth study of America’s collective shadow projection, I
recommend Madness
At The Gates Of The City: The Myth Of American Innocence,
by Barry Spector.)
Amid
the losses of a collapsing society, citizens in those societies who
cannot accept what is actually happening to the collective and take
responsibility for their part in it are more likely to become
mentally ill, depressed, violent, and take their own lives. And while
on the one hand, the intensity of suffering around oneself may become
unbearable to the point of wanting to die to escape from it, we
should not assume that suicide is inevitable or the only option. Nor
should we assume that life in every region on earth will become
unlivable. Furthermore, even if our fate includes death or suicide,
is not awakening to the previously-untapped resources of one’s own
psyche preferable to sinking into comatose madness or leaving the
planet in a state of abject meaninglessness? Whatever the
circumstances, death must be honored as the momentous, sacred rite of
passage that it is.
Where
Are We?
I’m
often asked where we are in the timetable of collapse. The truest
answer is that I do not know—nor does anyone else, but my intention
is to read the signs that blaze across my awareness daily. Unlike
five years ago, it is no longer unthinkable to use the “C” word.
America is losing its imperial power; people are increasingly
acknowledging that life in industrial civilization is untenable and
unlivable; and as the climate warms, humans are likely to become even
more violent and aggressive than they already are.
Unlike
Lewis Mumford, I do not believe that humans are destined to become
“passive or active barbarians.” What we must finally recognize is
that our physical survival is far less important than the meaning we
make from collapse and what we discover about ourselves and the other
members of the earth community as humanity’s self-induced madness
continues to engulf the planet. Society’s psychotic break does not
have to become our own personal psychotic break. Rather, it can
become a path to meaning, purpose, and a quality of heartfelt
communion with others that we could only dream of while the wheels of
industrial civilization were being greased by delusions of power and
control. In order for that to happen, however, we must be willing to
do the work that a transformative breakthrough, rather than a tragic
breakdown invariably entails.
Robin, another one extremely well written and referenced article on our collective predicament:
ReplyDeleteThe Planetary Emergency
Alex