Tag Archives: Flyer

A Peaceful World Is Possible

Richard Flyer’s Preface provides a compelling description of his exciting new book, Birthing the Symbiotic Age. Yes, people CAN work together across our many divides to create a peaceful world.

https://open.substack.com/pub/richardflyer/p/living-between-worlds-with-audio?r=1ift4&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

Love or die!

Love or die; that’s a James Bond movie I’d really like to see. I wonder what Big Entertainment would do with that theme. The human condition is looking to be ever more tenuous amid increasing numbers and intensity of natural disasters, warnings about new microbes and diseases, economic crises, social and political unrest, and “wars and rumors of wars”—all of it hyped to the max by the mainstream legacy media with one evident intent, to persuade you to be fearful, trust “the system” to tell you the truth, and accept the solutions, cures, and dictates that come to you from the top of the entrenched  human hierarchy.

Meanwhile, those same elite few are preparing for the worst, which they see as inevitable. That story is intelligently told in this recent post by Jamie Wheal on Substack, Doomsday Prep for the Rest of Us. This quote is a spoiler but I just can’t resist sharing it: “…a fractional minority of humanity has seized the wheel of our collective future. And your “redemption” means everyone else’s likely annihilation.” If that sounds to you like conspiracy theory, you really need to read the article.

And if you’re seeking a more promising means of surviving and a better future for everyone, pay attention to those who down through the ages have tried to show us what Richard Flyer is now calling “the Ancient Blueprint” which can lead us toward a “Symbiotic Culture.”

For a brief 10 minute introduction, see Richard’s video, Heart of the Matter is the Matter of the Heart.

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Coping, caring, and building community

As the financial and economic ground continues to shift beneath our feet, it becomes ever more imperative that we reduce our dependence upon the institutions and structures that we have come to depend upon and take for granted. The financial tsunami of 2008 and the continuing aftershocks should be a wakeup call. The sock markets may be up (for now), but that should not be taken as comforting evidence that everything is “getting back to normal.” As billionaire financier George Soros said in his recent book, “This crisis …has brought the entire [financial] system to the brink of a breakdown, and it is being contained only with the greatest difficulty. This will have far reaching consequences. It is not business as usual but the end of an era.” (The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Crash of 2008 and What it Means. p. 81).

The total outstanding credit for all sectors in the U.S. economy was 160% GDP in 1929, 260% in 1932. By comparison, we entered the 2008 crash at 365%, and Soros believes this will rise to about 500% of GDP within the next few years.

What seems to be in prospects for the foreseeable future for the vast majority of people in the developed world, especially the United States, is diminished purchasing power. This the result of simultaneous trends of underemployment or unemployment, rising prices of basic necessities due to currency debasement (inflation), and systematic attacks on the middle-class by the political establishment.

How do we cope with all of that? It is, of course, as the proverb says, both a challenge and an opportunity. I have suggested before that society is on the verge of metamorphic change that offers the promise of a more peaceful and harmonious world in which basic needs are met and everyone has the opportunity to realize their fullest potential. But it will take the right kind of action to make that vision a reality. It will require that we take sharing and cooperation to new levels, and that we create new structures that can serve the common good. An essential part of that is building community.

On that score, I take inspiration from Richard Flyer and the Conscious Community Network. Richard recently posted a list of 37 ways to build community. No Act is Too Small! You can click on that link to learn more, but I have extracted the 37 ways here for your convenience. I’m sure Richard won’t mind.—t.h.g.

1. A smile and a wave will go a long way.

2. Each morning, ask where you can make a difference.

3. Find the good in others instead of their faults – start in your home and on your street.

4. Become aware of hidden needs on your street – isolated seniors;

youth needing mentors, single parents; etc.

5. Start a community garden.

6. Practice forgiveness.

7. Surprise a new neighbor by making a favorite dinner – and include the recipe.

8. Slow down and enjoy the present moment.

9. Don’t gossip.

10. Start a monthly tea group.

11. Play cards with friends and neighbors.

11. Start a babysitting cooperative.

12. Form a group of neighbors to walk their dogs together.

13. Seek to understand.

14. Start a carpool.

15. Have family dinners and read to your children.

16. If you grow tomatoes, plant extra for a lonely elder who lives nearby – better yet, ask him/her to teach you and others to can the extras.

17. Turn off the TV, Play Station, PSP, and talk with family, friends, and neighbors.

18. Bless your food with gratitude.

19. Know that love is not a feeling but a courageous choice.

20. Ask neighbors for help and reciprocate.

21. Talk to your children or parents about how their day went.

22. Say hello to strangers.

23. Create a neighborhood newsletter.

24. Organize a neighborhood clean-up.

25. Be a model and demonstrate the virtues you want to see in the world.

26. Be a peacemaker.

27. Talk to the mail carrier.

28. Shoot some ‘hoops with neighbor children.

29. Support local merchants.

30. Speak kindly and listen carefully

31. Hire young people for odd jobs.

32. Form a tool cooperative with neighbors and share ladders, rakes, snow blowers, etc.

33. Grow your own food.

34. Be real. Be humble. Be respectful.

35. Offer to watch your neighbor’s home or apartment while they are away

36. Be of service to all.

37. Go to http://www.consciouscommunity-reno.org/ to share your stories.

Adapted from http://bettertogether.org.