Connection
is why we are here, life is about relationships, it is what gives purpose
and meaning. Health is social.
Over the
last 12 years I have been researching a cultural phenomenon which Social
Psychologists have been observing for the last 100 years that there is a
significant loss in our communities of what they term “Social Capital”. Today,
people are more isolated, alienated and disconnected then ever before in
history. The fallout of human connection and the sundering of modernity in our
society continues to impact the way people relate and connect with each other.
In a book by Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone, he describes this sundering and
tearing apart of relationships as a major disconnection from ourselves and others
leading to greater divorce, depression, anxiety and suicide, etc. Even
technology has impinged on our ability to connect. In a sense we are more
globally connected by technology but even more alone. People are cynical,
resigned, and no longer trust in the institutions of church, synagogues,
ministers, clergy, etc as a way people find spiritual and relational healing.
Recent research indicate that people no longer feel safe within these
communities or sense of connection and belonging of a “tribe”. The power
message and felt experience that is projected is if you believe like me/us and
you behave like me/us, you belong. If you don’t believe like me/us and you
don’t behave like me/us you don’t belong. Our relationships should always
communicate a sense of belonging first.
In 2001,
just prior to 9/11, I had attended a week long conference hosted by the
American Psychological Association entitled, “Reconciliation: Healing Fractured
Relationships”. This week long conference touched, moved and inspired me to create
The Relationship Society and to generate programs designed to focus on creating
a “safety net” concept for individuals, couples and marriages within our
community. The “big idea” is to reach out to touch, heal and bridge the gap of
what I experienced first hand as a huge chasm “within and between” people.
Throughout the duration of the conference, psychologists, bishops and ministers
from South Africa presented and talked about the state of the nation and the
environmental conditions necessary to generate safety, emotional honesty,
integrity and forgiveness. Each side of the “great divide” had to learn and
discover how to give and receive to continue to heal the community, a nation
dismantled from the sundering of Apartheid. A conversation between a “white”
psychologist and a “black” Bishop had posed the question of what it was going
to take to heal a nation? His response was, “We have to give up
self-preservation and our right to hurt back.” This higher purpose for
reconciliation and healing fractured relationships, creating deeper, meaningful
connections, and building collective mindshare between various thought leaders
in our communities committed to transforming and healing society as a
collective has been the impetus and and passion of The Relationship Society’s
vision, mission, and purpose.
The
Relationship Society was created to connect people to community, to create a
“safety net” for people to feel safe, to heal, connect and act, move and live
more freely, more authentically, more powerfully, more fully self-expressed.
The Relationship Society is a collective of best practices within our community
of partnerships and affiliates to heal the fracture of relationships and
generate wholeness, well-being and hold out hope for a new realm of possibilities
for a brave new world.
Our
Philosophy and Our Relationship with Society:
Our
relationships with ourselves and with society are aspects of the same
relationship, and they unfold simultaneously. As we travel the road of
self-knowledge, discovering our identity, we also become conscious of the
greater human society. We come to know that our relationship with society is to
assume the responsibility we necessarily have because we participate in it.
Our
relationship with society develops in stages that correspond to our degree of
consciousness. It could be said that as long as we are enclosed within
ourselves, we expect everything from society. Later, when we understand that
our life is inseparable from humanity, we discover how to relate through
participation. We then feel a responsibility to offer the best of ourselves for
the good of all human beings.
As long as
we pay attention only to our personal world and private interests, we have a vague
and superficial idea of our relationship with society: we follow social norms
only because we fear reprisal; we obey the law because it is the law. We live
for ourselves, separating our lives and interests from those of the greater
human society. In such a self-centered relationship, we establish alliances
based on our own best interest. We turn to society only when we need it, and we
take as much as we can from it. When society protects us, we call it “our”
society.
Nevertheless, even though we call it “our” society, we don’t really
live in it. We prefer the comfortable little nest we have made for ourselves of
our daily relationships. This is what we look to for warmth and reassurance,
and this is what we really identify with.
But once we
understand that living is an art that we need to cultivate, we develop an
interest in knowing society and making it better. Yet, as we still tend to
project our selfish interests over everything, we see only selfish interests in
society, and we struggle to change at that level.
This is the
stage of ambivalence; we define society as “our” society or “that” society
according to the ups and downs of our circumstances, needs and states of mind.
When society is “our” society, we identify with it and defend it. When we want
“another” society, we attack it and rebel. We alternately defend, attack or
ignore society, as if it were something outside of ourselves.
Society can
neither be defended nor attacked. It is neither “our” society nor “that”
society. Society simply reflects the process of human relationships; to attack
or defend this process is to attack or defend ourselves. Such an attitude does
not produce good results—it is based on ignorance that neither improves
relationships nor makes us conscious of our attitudes.
Ignorance in
our relationship with society leads to more problems than those that already
exist and adds more sorrow to the tragedies that each of us endures.
It is not
enough to say that we want a just society, without evil, without suffering. We
can only build a better society by working on ourselves, making a concrete
effort that results in good works.
We create a
more harmonious society through our own transformation, because the more
advanced we are in our unfolding, the more we know ourselves. We are more conscious
and simpler in our relationship with society and better able to work for it.
Relationship
through participation expresses the awareness that we are united with the
greater human society and implies a constructive attitude toward our own
transformation and toward active work for the good of society.
There are
three basic aspects of relationship through participation:
To abandon
the illusion that we live a separate, personal life
To experience first in
ourselves the good we wish for humanity
To accept and alleviate human
suffering, creating constructive avenues of love and knowledge.
If we honestly
want a better society, we realize that our lives really don’t belong to us,
that a life is something that must be offered to all of humanity.
We begin to concretize
this offering of life by reserving our energy. By not dispersing our strength
in satisfying personal appetites, we turn that energy into the good work and
helpful ideas which are needed at each moment.
Let us
remember for a moment the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Although he and his
wife each were well educated and could have lived comfortable lives in the
relatively racially tolerant northern United States of the 1950s, they chose to
live in the South. They knew they had to live, work and participate in the
racial prejudice of segregation. Martin Luther King believed that he had to
offer his life, his time and energy, to work for racial justice for blacks and,
as his social vision expanded, for all oppressed people.
When human
beings no longer have “their” lives, “their” objectives, “their” energy for
using, they do not separate their sorrow from the sorrow of others, their
possibilities from those of others, their vicissitudes from the changes that
all human beings experience. They live what all human society lives, with all
its contingencies.
When we
desire to create a more harmonious society, we don’t criticize, complain,
escape, or look for privileges. We fulfill whatever is necessary, and when we
discover something selfish in ourselves, we make the effort to transcend it.
Therefore, we work to overcome in ourselves the separativity, indifference and
selfishness that we see outside. This interior work inevitably expands to our
surroundings and produces a chain reaction of good thoughts and good work.
We work for
the good of society by transforming ourselves into beneficial cells that work
quietly and persistently within the greater social body.
A
constructive attitude toward society leads us to work in a productive and
efficient manner.
Today there
are large numbers of people who do not have even the basics for living, much
less for unfolding their spiritual possibilities. How can we help them? By
working efficiently: doing our own particular job very well, producing what
society needs and consuming only what we really need. We learn not to waste:
neither resources nor time nor energy. We work with attention, producing what
is needed in the shortest time possible. We use the indispensable, and we do
not accumulate excessive profits.
As we work
on building our relationship with society, we will find ourselves having to
face what we all come up against at some point in our lives: the dark side of
human behavior. In society we see many manifestations of the negative side of
human nature. Our instinctive reaction before the evil that others do is to
want to defend ourselves, to attack, to try to eliminate the problem. But when
we look at history we see that neither war nor suppression nor punishments have
rid society of its evils. The only way to change society is to exchange what is
counterproductive with something better, through understanding what has
happened, through education and effort.
A
constructive attitude toward society leads to the desire to learn and teach
others. A good teacher first gets a good education. Then, as he teaches, he
learns to adapt to his pupils, having special patience with those who have or
create difficulties. The real teacher wants to educate all his students, even
the ones with troubles. Likewise, we can create a constructive relationship
with society by first changing ourselves, then working to help society,
transforming its problems into opportunities, and building a better world for
all.
We remember
that education is not the same as indoctrination. To educate is to stimulate
the process of developing consciousness. It is to teach to think, to discern,
to choose; it is to reveal what ignorance has obscured. Our society is made up
of human beings in the process of unfolding; the problems we have simply show
us the deficiencies that we must correct, and this promotes the development of
consciousness. That is to say, this is how we learn to relate with each other.
When the social body is cured, there are no longer any symptoms.
The men and
women who renounce to a personal life transform society by who they are, by
their presence. They have no expectations from society; on the contrary, they
feel indebted to humanity and offer their lives through interior and exterior
work. They teach not only from pulpits and lecture halls; they teach with their
very lives, fulfilling in themselves the ideal they wish to transmit.
Human beings who
participate interiorly deepen their relationship with society through their
reserve of energy, through work on themselves and in their active collaboration
in good works for the welfare of humanity. In this way they embody the ideal of
spiritual realization and put it within the reach of all human beings.
To experience first in ourselves the good we wish for humanity
To accept and alleviate human suffering, creating constructive avenues of love and knowledge.
If we honestly want a better society, we realize that our lives really don’t belong to us, that a life is something that must be offered to all of humanity.
We begin to concretize this offering of life by reserving our energy. By not dispersing our strength in satisfying personal appetites, we turn that energy into the good work and helpful ideas which are needed at each moment.

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