Wetiko Inside And Outside: A Remarkable Teaching Moment, By Carolyn Baker
This thing of darkness, I acknowledge mine.
“The
Tempest,” William Shakespeare
26
August, 2017
In
this time of extinction—whatever that means and whenever it may
occur, we owe a huge debt to Paul Levy for giving us Dispelling
Wetiko.
In that extraordinary book, Levy writes thatwetiko isn’t
just a Native American term for evil, it is, in fact, malignant
egophrenia (M.E.),
or as Levy cleverly names it, the “ME disease.”
I
challenge anyone reading these words to state that they are
ME-disease-free. No one raised in an industrial growth society is
free of malignant egophrenia. Now let’s be clear. Everyoneneeds an
ego. To those who tout the New Age nausea of being “free of my
ego,” I would only ask: Who’s got the car keys, and how did you
last find your way to the bathroom? Every human being needs an
ego, and children should be supported in developing one, but at a
certain juncture in our development, ego diminishment
needs to begin and ego developmentwane
so that our inner wisdom or what I call the Sacred Self, can surpass
the limits and distortions of our ego development. A pivotal aspect
of developing our inner wisdom is becoming aware of and creating a
relationship with the shadow.
No,
the shadow is not yet another aspect of New Age psychobabble. Drawing
from millennia of wisdom traditions, as well as his own experience,
Carl Jung inserted the term into modern psychology and in my opinion,
literally changed everything by doing so. Quite simply, the shadow is
any aspect of oneself that does not fit into one’s ego image of
oneself, and ME disease is literally the shadow gone nuclear. Unless
we know that we have a shadow and have employed specific tools to
develop a relationship with it, it will run
our lives. Need I also mention that as well as the personal shadow,
nations, cultures, and communities have a collective shadow? And—none
of us is immune. In fact, the shadow is now running the world—not
Donald Trump, not Kim Jong Un, not the military industrial complex or
the deep state.
Whether
we like it or not, the ME disease, made even more virulent by the
shadow, is not only running the world but threatens to run our
individual lives. How not, since we cannot escape the toxicity of
this culture? How easy it is to rant about wetiko—out
there, and how difficult it is to encounter, explore, examine,
struggle with, and heal the wetiko inside
ourselves. To clarify, there is no permanent healing of wetiko or
the personal or cultural shadow, but owning that it exists and
committing to shadow work markedly diminishes its influence whereas
ignoring or denying it guarantees that it will consume our lives,
compel us to hurt other living beings, and drive us unconsciously to
manufacture horrific messes that in most cases, other people will
have to clean up.
When
shadow behavior erupts or is exposed in the life of someone we highly
regard, we have choices about how to respond. We can immediately
engage in our own malignant egophrenia and point the finger, as if we
have no shadow and are not capable of exactly the same thing. Or
because we regard the person so highly, we can discount or minimize
the seriousness of their behavior and ignore the shadow. Or, we can
own our own shadow, and in so doing, recognize that we are capable of
the same or worse behavior. Invariably, this causes us to feel
compassion as well as perhaps experience a chilling shudder as we
realize the capacity we all have to harm others and ourselves. None
of the latter means that we turn a blind eye or continue relating to
the person if that does not feel safe or comfortable. But most
importantly, when we see the shadow writ large in our midst—whether
it is being written by Donald Trump, climate science deniers, human
traffickers, trophy hunters, or fossil fuel tycoons, we must stop,
take many deep breaths, and humbly acknowledge the event(s) as a
teaching moment. The most important question we can ask at that time
is: What does this tell me about the personal and collective shadow?
And most importantly, what does this tell me about my
own shadow?
As
we awaken to the horrors of industrial civilization, we must
carefully examine the ways in which we have been colonized by it in a
manner similar to the ways in which native peoples have been
colonized by it. Derrick Jensen has written extensively about
de-colonizing ourselves, and I have written a great deal about it as
well because I have experienced that it is foolish to rail against
industrial civilization if we are not committed to healing within
ourselves the traumatic marks that it has left in the personal shadow
of our psyches.
When
someone we highly regard—a leader in our community or a respected
thought leader betrays us by betraying other human beings, the most
obtuse response we can employ is to begin arguing about who is right
and who is wrong or whether that person’s betrayal means that we
should disregard their research or body of work. Such a response
engenders an orgy of ME disease, completely overlooks shadow
awareness and shadow healing, and misses the stellar teaching moment
that that person’s betrayal has presented us with.
I
unashamedly submit that if we are not doing deep, intentional shadow
work, our activist/resistance efforts are essentially useless because
we are not actively de-colonizing ourselves and in fact are opening
ourselves to the possibility of damaging, rather than protecting or
healing the Earth community.
I
do not these write words lightly with disregard of my own shadow. I
have been deceived, and I have defended betrayers in the name of
“having faith in humanity” or “wanting to believe the best
about a person.” To anyone who has been harmed by my shadow denial,
I sincerely apologize. What I choose to do in the present moment is
dis-associate myself with the betrayer forever and go back into my
spiritual cave to do more work on my own shadow. In fact, I would
argue that that is where we should all be right now because whether
extinction or anything else removes us from this planet next week,
next month, next year, or five minutes from now, no question on Earth
is more important than: Who do I want to be in the face of
unprecedented global and personal cataclysm? As Paul Levy writes:
If
ever there was a time when the turning inward of self-reflection was
of critical importance, it is now, in our present catastrophic era…In
the moment of self-reflection, the psychospiritual necessity for
evolutionary growth overrules the biological compulsion of
unreflective animal instinct…Self-reflection is a genuinely
spiritual act, which is, essentially, the act of becoming
conscious…The attitude of self-reflection returns us to the ground
of our deepest being, connects us with our destiny, and it begins a
cure for the pervasive psychological and spiritual blindness which
reigns at the present hour. (193)
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