Mass consciousness
a term one hears frequently these days calls for definition because in itself,
"mass" merely indicates a large quantity, number or density. It could be used in
relation to people, earth, clouds, numbers, objects and even color.
What about consciousness? The dictionary refers to
it as a state of awareness of ones own impressions and feelings. Where do outer and
inner merge? Where do large quantities of anything and personal feelings connect?
Could the principle of the Tao describe what we call
mass consciousness? The Tao can be explained in simple fashion by saying that when water
flowing downhill meets an obstacle, it simply waits until it gathers sufficient volume and
force to flow over or around the object and establish a new path.
Does mass consciousness then occur when thoughts and
feelings of individuals attract similar force from others until they flow over as a
climate, an influential whole that is greater than the sum of its parts?
Too, lets consider our God-given free will
that grants us the right to accept or reject any and all influences from an outside source
and the part it might play in our response.
THE AWAKENING WORLD
For 2000 years weve been
immersed in the age of Pisces, symbolized by two fishes with their tails hooked together
while trying to swim in opposite directions. History shows this duality swinging back and
forth, pen-dulum fashion, from darkness to renaissance; from paganism to Christianity;
from bondage to insistence upon freedom; from wars based upon religious and political
issues once popular to marches for peace. Have we understood these tides?
Not at all. Its impossible to understand
evolution or the direction of change while were moving through it. And change,
because of our need to hold on to the familiar, is something we resist. Have we resisted
from the standpoint of mass consciousness, or from personal reactions to uncertainty and
fear? These rhetorical questions could be argued forever.
In the l600th century Descartes, French philosopher
and mathematician, insisted that human existence, freedom, and even the existence of God
were matters of philosophy and science and not of religion. For the next two centuries,
humanity was over-shadowed by its pessimistic view of planet Earth as a small and
insignificant particle of sand; man an "evolutionary accident" who survived by
devouring the animals who wanted to devour him.
Through this period human beings vainly sought for
purpose and direction. With a one-sided philosophy that looked toward the external
universe and yet lacked knowledge of con-sciousness, however, wed think of it today
as trying to make sense of a jigsaw puzzle where half of the pieces were missing.
For the next 500 years, in the chilly predawn light
of the coming Aquarian age, man grew more illumined. But he still felt alone, separate and
forgotten by God. Finally yawning and stretching, he began dreaming of ways in which he
could fulfill his longing for redemption, comfort and peace. Perhaps thats when an
exodus began to the shores of the North American continent, the land that was destined to
become a melting pot, a vision of hope for all on the face of the Earth.
With this bold move, a new paradigm opened, a desire
for the freedom to want and seek more and better. Was it mass consciousness that moved
these hardy souls, or the choice of awakening individuals expressing free will?
If we are to approach this enigma and consider the
extent to which a larger influence might overshadow individual free will, it appears that
we must stretch our minds and question further. Where are we going? What do we want, and
what forces direct the masses of fellow travelers who march by our side?
EVERYBODY
WANTS SOMETHING
If it were possible to identify
one thing that human beings want, what would it be? Could there be a common denominator
for all? Lets hy-pothesize and say in the fewest possible words that what everyone
wants is simply more and better. Of course we know that in some parts of the world right
now people would be happy for any kind of food and any sort of shelter at all.
In America, however, individuals are heard to say
they want more health, peace, com-panionship, love or money; better jobs, cars,
relationships or homes. The list is endless, and so are peoples interpretations of
their desire. The person who robs a bank wants more and better but chooses an unwise way
to get it. The person who takes someone elses child wants more and better, unaware
of an inviolable karmic law that would advise against it.
We see nothing wrong with wanting more and better as
long as no one is harmed, and we gather ideas from all we see and hear. An apple tree
grows from one small seed and produces enough for people, some for the birds to eat and
even more to fall back and replenish the soil. Does the wanting come from a consciousness
of the masses or from an innate inner knowledge that the nature of the universe is to
increase?
TWENTIETH CENTURY
INFLUENCE
With each successive phase of
civilization, leaders and vis-ionaries have pulled ideas from the ethers and produced new
symbols of progress. Behind them, the broad middle segments of society all have reacted in
separate ways and then settled into patterns of adjustment. Reactionaries, the remaining
number who resist change, get dragged along, grumblingand resisting, eventually to be
absorbed into a new system.
Newcomers to the shores of America, in slightly over
100 of their first years, performed within these three separate roles. They fought for and
declared inde-pendence on American soil, then they fought between themselves until
agreement for a unity of sorts could be agreed upon so they could move ahead.
Finally, late in the 1800s with Civil War
declared to be over, reactionaries still grumbled over issues of North and South. But a
new influence entered. Victoria, Queen of England and later the Empress to India, caught
the attention and then the fancy of a young western nation weary of struggle.
Now the pendulum of Piscean duality swung from
smoke, destruction and the horrors of war. Visionaries of the day eagerly imported and
then manufactured reproductions of Her Majestys style and elegance. From ornate home
furnishings, her gowns and her hair to the carriages in which she rode, anything
"Victorian" became a demand. Ladies adopted long, high-heeled boots with dainty
buttons or laces. Ankle length dresses featured pinched-in corseted waists and
form-fitting skirts. Ornate feathered hats adorned high-piled hair; and of course such
ladies could only be courted by well-dressed gentlemanly gentlemen. Was this mass
consciousness, or was it individual relief after four devastating years of war?
Whatever it was, this era can be looked back upon as
prelude for even more and greater changes to follow in the 20th and last century of the
millennium, when new inventions, one after another, would leap into being each one
a building stone for the next.
Although Americans still tilled fields with simple
tools and pumped water from wells by 1900, many folks already had migrated to cities.
Edisons electricity had unleashed a host of other dis-coveries, and before long such
items as air conditioners and refrigerators came into use. Telephones, Gillette safety
razors and the Sears Roebuck catalog appeared. Film, invented in the 1880s by a man
named Eastman sparked Edisons interest, and moving pictures soon followed.
By 1911 Edisons work had changed the world.
Air travel, too, had caught on, and that year Theodore Roosevelt became the first U.S.
president to fly. In ballrooms all across the country the airplane waltz" that
required dancers arms to be extended like wings, became a craze.
Pisces swung again when Germans sank the Lucitania
in 1914. World War II was declared, and women started working outside their homes. Six
years later they demanded and won the right to vote. The "roaring twenties"
brought new dreams and visions of wealth and ease that mounted until the infamous stock
market crash of 1929 brought them tumbling down.
In spite of the "Great Depression" that
followed, progress in this country continued. By 1931 the Empire State Building, 125
stories high, was completed. Yet without a simple, ratchet-operated safety device already
invented to enable the safety of elevators, this "skyscraper" could not have
existed.
That year, in addition, the first Worlds Fair
opened and Henry Ford exhibited an assembly line production destined to put the world on
wheels. In rapid succession, within the area of transportation, came the opening of the
Panama Canal, completion of the Lincoln Tunnel creating a complex of five
underground roadways needed for growing urban traffic, and construction of the Golden Gate
Bridge in San Francisco. This marvel of sus-pension engineering 65 stories high, with
cables three feet in diameter, linked shores formerly separated by juncture of the Pacific
Ocean and the Golden Gate strait.
1945 brought World War II and displays of power and
weaponry that further changed the world. Only a scant eight years later the space age
began with communist technology and the chagrin of Americans whose first rocket toppled
into flames and dust. A Russian cosmonaut was first, too; but with Alan Shepards
successful flight a month later, President Kennedy inspired the nation by saying,
"Lets shoot for the moon."
This brief sketch only skims the surface of outer
changes that persons of seventy or eighty summers well remember. No mention yet has been
made of computer technology, the field of communication, nor of the con-sciousness
explosion during the decade of the 70s. The questions are, how free is free will,
and what perhaps mass consciousness, like other terms weve outgrown, no longer fills
our needs. Contem-plating the metamorphic Cosmic Destiny of Pisces and the shim-mering
future of Aquarian promise, it would appear that Cosmic Consciousness is the actual track
upon which weve run.
Every Christmas for a very long time weve sung
of peace on Earth, good will toward men. Inspired by this hope, yet scarcely daring to
believe it can happen, visionaries have gathered in prayer and meditation and performed
acts of brotherly love. The broad middle segment of society talks the talk and tries its
best to walk a better path. Those of reactionary ten-dencies sometimes surprise even
themselves by making spiritual turn arounds.
As a teaspoonful of ocean
water is all ocean water everywhere, so we are as one. The wonderful promise of Aquarius
is of civilizations expansion and reformation. What a privilege for mankind
to experience this passage from the Piscean age (with the Christ energy as the major
influence) into the Age of Aquarius (with Saint Germain as the main focus). So remember
Cosmic Consciousness is the key, a hope and our goal.
by Evelyn G. Schiff,
M.Ms.
Behavioral Therapist
gracelyn@lv.com |