Monday, April 24, 2017

“Our lives are not our own.”


I finally saw Cloud Atlas (with Halle Berry and Tom Hanks) the other day, and was so struck by the classic, epic nature of the story that I ended up taking notes.

The key characters, who were all tied together in stories that went back and forth from their past lives to future ones, said some profound things – key concepts that embody the human experience, and, to me, seem to reveal the moral behind the stories we call life.

We first heard, “There’s a natural order that must be protected at any cost,” while turn of the century white aristocracy walked through the fields where black slaves labored all day. They comforted themselves with the thought that the slaves “didn’t feel the heat like civilized folk.”

This “natural order” idea was also used to destroy the life of a brilliant, gay musician, who ended up taking his life.  The man-made "natural order" made slaves of some, while exalting others over them throughout the past and future. 

 The only hope I could see in escaping that cycle seems to have apocalyptic implications.  Toward the end of the movie, the natural order of Tom Hanks' primitive life was destroyed by painted barbarians,  After his family was murdered and his home destroyed, he went off with a futuristic Halle Berry -- where they lived happily ever after, telling stories to their grand kids. Still, escaping corruption and destruction is not the same as healing the world and the souls that are intertwined in our lives in hidden ways.

Concept #1: “There is a natural order that must be protected.”
Without order, there can be no peace. So, order must be protected. Unfortunately, this order has always been protected by corrupt humans -- people who focus on their position of authority, while ignoring their unity with those less fortunate than themselves.

This class struggle was identified in great detail in the movie, even using quotes from Solzhenitsyn.
However, for me, the powerful quote was the one that recurred on several occasions in the various scenes from the past, present and future, where people’s rights were ignored and abused. At these times, a key character would always say: “I will not be subjected to criminal abuse.”

The central plot involved an oriental slave woman, who worked 18 hours a day. That phrase, which she discovered in an old movie, became the seed thought for the wisdom she espoused throughout the movie, until she was executed at the end. (Spoiler, sorry.)

Concept #2: The natural order, after getting corrupted by humans, leads to the marginalizing of much of the population and the compromising of human dignity, to put it mildly. In fact, many die because of the selfish goals of the elite. Seeing this, those in power rationalize that the death and intolerable conditions of the underclass must be part of the “natural order.”

Some, like our brilliant musician, will even take their own life because of the unbearable situation they find themselves in as a result of the corrupted values of their civilization. However, others will stand up and threaten the elite by pointing out their “criminal abuse.”  

This gives us hope for change. However, in reviewing this movie and world history, the most any individual has ever done is to inspire hope. This corruption of the elite, which disenfranchises the masses in order to maintain their own position, ties all the characters in the story together with karma that continues long after all the individuals pass on, bringing us to the last major precept.

Concept #3: “Our lives are not our own. From the womb to the tomb, we are bound to others, past, present and future.”
We each have control over our own lives, but only to a point.
While discovery of those limits may be disheartening for who are dismayed, it's also is the realization that holds the power to perfect our creator's natural order on earth!

IF the elite, who try so hard to isolate themselves from the rest of us, realized that their past and future is connected to how they treat others in their current life, they may try a little harder to relate to the plight of the common man.

The world could meet it’s end waiting for that miracle. Still, unless we can fly off like Tom Hanks did with Halle Berry, it is our only hope.






Sunday, April 2, 2017

The Gaming Problem



 I had a wild dream last night.  I went up some stairs that got wider and more elegant the further I went.  I was finally faced with two large double doors that opened to a very different place than I had come from a couple floors below.  It was unfamiliar, and the people were so harried that I quickly went back down. 

However, once I was back where I started at the base of the stairs, people from that other floor started showing up.  They were all in a hurry, and something was definitely wrong, but they were very vague about the problem.  All I could get out of them was there was a "a gaming problem," which I eventually decided meant some sort of system failure.

I met a funny little guy with a rainbow shirt that finally explained things to me a little. He said people are going places they aren't supposed to, and it was causing a problem that didn't seem to have a solution. He said we're all in serious trouble, and then ran off.  It seemed we were in meltdown.

Meanwhile, others had discovered those stairs too, and were headed up.  A couple of the people from that world told me that if those people go up, they won't come back --even if I go with them.  I'll come back, but they won't be able to.

I explained it to them, but most went anyway.  They guy in the rainbow T-shirt said that I explained it really well,  but they were lost and the meltdown was still in effect.  Then, he rushed off again.

I've been pondering what the "gaming problem" might be.  Yesterday, I was coming to the conclusion that any life would be okay if I could just get what I need while I play my part.  I think that thought resulted from the feeling yesterday that I'm not really getting what I need, and that's not likely to change. I probably went to sleep with that on my mind, and it evidently triggered the dream.

If there's some sort of universal message here, perhaps it's that the big problem with the world is that people aren't getting what they need to go about their lives and have the experiences they came here to have.  Instead they/we  just react to not having enough, and the world is going into melt-down as a result.

Maybe the newly founded Economic Democracy Advocates can help.  The Brand New Congress group may also be able to reverse things.  But I think the little people in my dream may have been panicked because Trump has sacrificed the needs of the people in his quest for business profits. If less and less people get what they need to play the game of life, things will quickly spiral out of control.

By "out of control," I mean we could suddenly be faced with problems that are pulling us down so fast that there is no pulling out.  Things have to evolve one way or another.  When the weight of devolution becomes too great, we have a serious "gaming problem" -- and then...endgame!

I think we're probably circling the porcelain basin right now.  We simply have to do SOMETHING before that final flush.