A Tiger in the Tank
By RAVI DYKEMA
Tired of hearing about our gloomy recession?
Environmental degradation? Endless wars? Planets lining up
ominously in the cosmos, per ancient Mayan’s predictions?
Me too.
So I will risk my reputation for level-headedness and whistle
an optimistic tune. I really think there’s LOTS to be
cheerful about.
First, my teen-aged daughter and son just this morning flew
off to South America to learn Spanish and work on organic
farms for the entire winter (summer there). Their whole adventurous
lifetimes stretch before them. How can I feel gloomy about
tomorrow with that thrilling mountain to glide down?
Second, as I alluded to in my last editorial, the masses of
folks in the USA and many other countries have suddenly woken
up to our shared stewardship of Planet Earth—at least
as regards energy and climate change. Also, Colorado’s
leadership appears to be staking the State’s future
on the new energy economy. How can you feel gloomy with that
thrilling rapids to navigate?
Third, human ingenuity and helpfulness rebound in times of
need. And our species has an extraordinary ability to create
and innovate. How can we feel gloomy when that reality show
is on?
Sure the economy looks grim, our two wars inflict immense
suffering, religious extremism sets tribe against tribe, and
human populations overrun other species’ habitats. But
look what people have done in the past: figured out how to
harness million-year-old sunshine inside metal cans (internal
combustion engines, a few of which are hurtling my kids toward
the equator), linked the world with instant communication
(hear me, kids?), and cured diseases that had been killing
millions of people.
I may have a larger measure of faith in people’s ingenuity
than do most people. But that’s because I interview
such innovators all the time. In this issue, for example,
William
Walsh and Fernando Gomez-Pinilla (see page 20) reveal
solutions they are discovering to mental health problems that
afflict a huge portion of people on Earth.
In past issues Karen
Armstrong and Marc
Ian Barasch inspired compassionate views of others, including
enemies; Stephen
Porges offered his theory of the social nervous system;
Theo Colborn
helped us avoid endocrine-disrupting chemicals, Peter Levine
taught us to heal from trauma; and Sakyong
Mipham Rinpoche, Dan
Millman and Don
Miguel Ruiz all illuminated magical present-moment-awareness
that unleashes so much potential is us all. (All these interviews
are available at NexusPub.com, click “interviews.”)
My fourth reason to be cheerful is because cheerfulness works
better. Try it out. Spend the rest of the day noticing and
ruminating on any obstacle-to-success, irritant, ominous sign,
or depressing economic news that enters your view. See how
innovative and effective you are.
Then, tomorrow, try cheerfulness and irrational devil-may-care
optimism and see how that revs your engines.
How can you feel gloomy with that tiger in your tank?
