Gaslighting

Gaslighting is the somewhat clunky gerund verb form of Gaslight -- a 1940s movie depicting a man set out to drive his wife into thinking she was going insane by means of manipulating her through the creation of a false reality. The term has slowly seeped from the psychological circles into the mainstream. It can describe any manipulation through willfully-induced disorientation. 
(It is a state depicted in the wonderful novel Catch-22  -- itself less of a coherent story than a kaleidoscope: a disorienting collection of character introductions, sleight-of-hand logic, tricks, and paradoxes all mixed together and flushed down the rabbit hole. The book was such an assault forty years ago on my own painfully linear background -- born and bred linear; at a linear time; in a linear place; with a linear education; and a (later) linear profession  -- that I recall throwing the book across the room: the reflex of a linear soul beholding a mobius world.) 
It may be applied at the wholesale level in the form of fake news. What is it that you can hold onto in the political world these days? Gaslighting would suggest an active perpetrator(s) with a private agenda and an unwary victim. Might the victim be an entire country? Of course it might. The means to do so looms large and promises to explode…

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Music's Evocative Magic

Boulder will be treated this Friday (10/27) @7:30 to a free concert at C.U.'s Grusin Music Hall which features C.U. Doctoral candidate Maria Kurchevskaya, together with Ekaterina Kotcherguina, soprano, and Maria Wietrzynska, piano, presenting "four cycles of songs for voice and piano . . . . (evoking) a variety of moods, from mysterious yearnings and sensitive feelings of love to childish innocence and sarcastic fun . . " But that's not all. The real treat is that Maria will be joining us the following Member Monday as we discuss the very subject of music's evocative power…

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Our Gun Culture

It's a mass shooting that gets all the attention, of course, as it abruptly shatters the natural order of things. It arrives like a cannibal joining the picnic and calmly starting to eat the children.

Then comes the tabloid kabuki: the images; the statistics; the "Ts&Ps"; the whys; maybe the fatuous talk of closure as the horror eases into policy discussion. And, finally, the debate. The same damn debate.

Let's don't shout but let's discuss. Why is a term like bump stocks even in our vocabulary? The whole subject will itself strain our capacity for empathy, a topic we entertained a few sessions ago. 

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Religious Fundamentalism

Brenda Lafferty and her fifteen-month-old daughter Erica were murdered on July 24, 1984. Did someone say murder? Actually it was, ahem, a "revelatory removal." Jon Krakauer's Under the Banner of Heaven chronicled a world which compelled such an act. God's human mask bared its fangs that particular day.

The Church of Latter-day Saints (Mormonism) is American-born and pretty young as religions go -- a bit more than two centuries old. That makes it far more amenable to examination. The events, the people, and even the thought processes are more open to the corroboration of eyewitness and other objective accounts than are the millennia religions, shrouded in the mists of mystical happenings and mumbo-jumbo vernacular.

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Close to Home

Owning a home — that most lyrical of American symbols — has become the great divide among citizens: some of the older have done handsomely in the housing bazaar; many of the younger are face-to-face with harsh economic realities. Yet it is through the youth that we reimagine America. 

Member Monday (10/9) will focus on the push-pull dynamics underlying housing e.g. affordability, building regulation, gentrification, sustainability and, for that matter, growth itself. So many factors so little time, perhaps like trying to solve for four unknowns with only three simultaneous equations in your algebra class. Can’t be done but we’ll go crazy just trying…

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Chasing Epicurus

His fragmented letters seem to reach across twenty-three centuries to grant a kind of forward-looking absolution i.e. granting the opportunity for individual happiness without its achievement being considered as some guilty indulgence. Our Member Monday (10/2) discussion centers around Epicurus, that most approachable yet mischaracterized Greek philosopher. 

The eponymous term epicurean delight might suggest a world of gluttony and fleshly titillation. A  five-minute peek at the man and his teachings will convince you to take a second look (link: PHILOSOPHY - Epicurus - YouTube). We will discuss and may even discover among those fragmented letters the essence of our very own Securus Locus…

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Vietnam Comes Home

“Merely an Empire” (link: Merely An Empire) reviews and captures a remarkable ten-part, $30 million Ken Burns film The Vietnam War unfolding this and next week on PBS. It’s a compelling series. It’s compelling discussion subject. 

Perhaps the psychological timelock on Vietnam has finally expired. Maybe enough heat has finally dissipated such that those old enough to have lived through our national hallucination now have the opportunity for some moral and political clarity. 

Maybe you millennials, having been spared a front row seat to the national nervous breakdown, can begin to appreciate the echoes of that experience reverberating even today — polarization, distrust of the institutional mindset, even perhaps the root of the anti-intellectual reflex. And, no, the question of humanism is not age-specific…

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Empathy

An honest discussion of empathy begins with defining the word itself. Empathy is the ability to fundamentally understand and share the feelings of others. So defined, it is far greater than (an expression of) sympathy. It suggests a feeling and not a thought. It is a transcendent quality, bordering on the sacred. 

Our own Jhana Gottlieb, through Mediation Without Borders, sees power of empathy as the basis to effect resolution, whether at the individual level or on the world stage. She will share many of the techniques and communication skills that couch the dialogue within such a world of empathy as the disputants inch toward reconciliation (see link: xxx). To what extent is empathy a learned skill, rather than an art? What would an empathic world look like?…

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Applied Mindfullness

This is the "normal" human physiological response when one, without a trained mind, confronts an imminent threat: the amygdala detects danger; the adrenal glands kick in; catecholamines constrict blood vessels and alter the firing of nerve cells; the adrenal cortex releases cortisol, invading the hippocampus, amping up fear and affecting the memory system; heart rate rises; breathing speeds up; sugar is dumped into the metabolic system; the oxygen and nutrients distribution shifts for immediate strength. You’re on afterburner and all this occurs before you can even “think.” In fact, the hormonal stress release interferes with the functioning of the neo-cortex itself….

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From Russia with Love

There is a moment in one of Vladimir Nabokov’s novels (“The Gift”) when the narrator sees a mirror being unloaded from a van on a street in Berlin. Suddenly the mirror, by a tilt of grace, becomes “a white parallelogram of sky.” Nabokov notes the sun's flash to be consciousness that is sometimes reflected in the Everyday.

Let us be open to such a tilt of grace in Member Monday (8/28)/From Russia With Love as we probe the so-called "Russian Soul" through the eyes of three extraordinary native Russian women (native defined here more in terms of cultural identity than political boundary).  Maria, Lina, and Alice will share their lives, their values, their perspectives. Their "gift" is the authenticity of their formative experience and their openness to share it….

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North Korea

Were it not for the existential implications of the unfolding North Korea drama this would make for fun game theory.

Thought experiment: despot leader, sporting a bad haircut and a massive insecurity complex, calculates that his tenuous hold over the half-starved population rests on totalitarian control and abiding fear. An even more hostile outside world is thus conjured as theater. Only the Supreme Leader, his magic bullet, and the threat of its use staves off a fate worse than the “life” currently experienced.

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Nature Calls (Biophilia)

Contemporary culture and its relationship to Nature is of a Goethean allegory. Faust (culture) seeks a pact the the Devil: grant the unlimited knowledge, power, and efficiency afforded by Technology and, in return, take our collective natural-born spirit. Nature now faces foreclosure time.

Our next Member Monday (8/7/17)/Nature Calls (Biophilia) discussion is all about the so-called biophilia hypothesis i.e. the human innate need for a (re)connection to nature and the consequences for failure to do so. Ret Taylor, fellow Highland member, has thought a lot about the subject and will co-host this session.

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Nostalgia

The enduring landscape of nostalgia was on full display in our last presidential campaign with its slogan: Make America Great Again. Americans seem wistful now for some long-ago idea of themselves -- you know, when wars were just, manners were exquisite, marriages endured, honor mattered, and people answered their own damn land-line. An element of elegy often haunts discussions of excellence, quality, and righteousness.

The campaign tapped into a sentiment as old as the ages i.e. the longing for a lost past, the past even of another country or another era. Per the subject article (click: Look Back With Danger), Nietzsche’s eighteenth century teutonic lament was “to go home” to ancient Greece. Homer’s heroic world was that of gods, not of men. One watches “Chariots of Fire” with a nostalgic pang, taken in by the pursuit of excellence and the unambiguous moral lines of 1924 England. The viewer then nods and says, “Just look around, will ya’, nothing but dreck.”

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Hallucinogens

Psilocybin -- the psychoactive compound in magic mushrooms -- s enjoying quite a rehabilitation of reputation these days. Once the subject of Timothy Leary's counterculture playground and Nixon's anti-drug vendetta, it has found its way into the research labs at Johns Hopkins, NYU, and the Imperial College in London. The subject of  this current research is of a decidedly non-recreational nature i.e. its application to substantially reduce the anxiety and depression attendant to terminal patients' impending death:

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The Uninhabitable Earth

This is not some sort of apocalyptic doom porn. However, no thinking person could deny the clear and present danger represented by our post-industrial abuse of the earth -- clear in the sense of known scientific certainties; present in the sense of a timeframe relevant to many alive today. As such, a special invitation is extended to the third-floor millennial members as we discuss climate change in terms of what is already baked into the future and the additional threats that loom without aggressive action…

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Populism

It's more of a feeling than a thought -- that America has lost the narrative, the story it tells about itself -- as the Pluribus pinwheels out of a splintered Unum. Check your politics at the door as we discuss an issue that transcends party affiliation and traditional left/right divisions. Many fervent supporters of both Trump and Sanders were driven by the very same fundamental anti-unum impulse. Our discussion article (click here: The Revolt Of The Public) has been described as an impressive think-piece about the decline of trust and the rise of populism. 

“In a healthy society, the supreme task of the elites is to elucidate the master narratives binding together the classes and ideologies that make up a modern nation. The digital age has been an extinction event for long-standing narratives. Elites have lost the ability to mediate between events and the old shared stories. The mirror in which we found ourselves reflected in the world has shattered.”

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China

A hint about the scope of China's ambition comes from the Chinese language word for the country itself -- zhong guo -- meaning "Middle Kingdom" where middle, in this case, refers to everything that lies between heaven and earth. The whole rise of the West has been largely regarded as an intervening "century of humiliation" on the way to this ultimate destiny. Thus, most everything we in the West have busied ourselves with on the geopolitical stage has been nothing more than a mere sideshow…

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Nuclear Roulette

There's a decidedly non-PC scene in that satirical slapstick Mel Brooks movie Blazing Saddles in which the witless lily-white citizens of Rock Ridge get the first glimpse of its new sheriff -- make that its new black sheriff -- whom the good white folks embrace with a call for his immediate lynching; thereupon said wiley sheriff (Cleavon Little) grabs self by throat and, pointing gun to his own head, drags self away declaring he's a hostage and warning the crowd to "stop! . . . or the (sheriff) gets it" whereupon the would-be lynch mob backs off exclaiming, "whoa, he really means it!"

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Envisioning A Post-Work World

These words by my favorite essayist, Lance Morrow, on the question What Is the Point of Working?: "When God foreclosed on Eden, he condemned Adam and Eve to go to work. Work has never recovered from that humiliation. From the beginning, the Lord's word said that work was something bad: a punishment, the great stone of mortality and toil laid upon a human spirit that might otherwise soar in the infinite, weightless playfulness of grace."

Hardly a day goes by without yet another prediction of robots or at least some manifestation of Artificial Intelligence (AI) supplanting humans in the work world. Allow ourselves to take that on as a thought experiment: would we soar or sour in a world without the element of work as a central component of a meaningful life. That is the subject of the discussion article below (click on title to open). It is largely a question addressed at the personal level.

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Ayn Rand / Atlas Shrugged

Let's wrap up the first full year of Member Mondays with a subject guaranteed to start a food fight i.e. capitalism in America. First, though, there is little question about how it powered our post-WWII economy. No, that's not the discussion.

The subject is the role of capitalism in today's reality of resource constraints, global interdependence, deepening income disparity, regulatory capture, and a distorted monetary system. Consider these words written in 1957:   

"You may know society is doomed when you see that, in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing; when you see that money is flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors; when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don't protect you against them, but protect them from you; (and) when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice." (Atlas Shrugged, 1957)….

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