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Intergenerational
Co-creation
© 2007 by Gordon Davidson
One of the areas of social change that I have become very excited
about is the realm of intergenerational cooperation and co-creation
to build the new civilization and culture emerging all around us. I
have been drawn into this work as the result of my experiences with
many members of generations younger than myself--in courses I’ve
taught, groups I’ve worked with and one-to-one mentoring and
coaching. They have inspired me with their vision, enthusiasm,
mental brilliance, and with their deep, heartfelt commitment to
solving the core problems in our world. I also love that they remind
me of the passion for change I felt when I was in my twenties!
I have perceived how each generation seems to talk primarily to other
members of their own meme or tribe, and how intergenerational sharing
seems to need to be carefully sought out and facilitated to really occur
in any depth. Part of the reason for this is that each generation seems to
have its own language and way of thinking, which can be quite unique.
For example, for the 60s generation, the idea of creating alternative
communities, or meeting places where people could be supported to grow and
explore new paradigms was usually called “dropping out” --going to
“centers of Light” or “liberated zones” where people could free themselves
from the unhealthy patterns of the current paradigm and find new ways of
being and relating. These unhealthy patterns include identifying ourselves
by the roles we play, the money or possessions we display, distorted
relationships between men and women and with the earth, to name but a few.
By contrast, the current 20 to 30 year olds, heavily influenced by
technological and scientific language, call this process entering a
“pattern interrupt,” and finding a “receptor site” you can plug into. Here
is how some of my younger friends describe it:
“A pattern
interrupt is taking a step back from our normal habits and seeing what
is really happening. When there is an old ingrained pattern that doesn't
serve – you actually have to hang out in the pattern interrupt – in
between receptor sites – and hover there, and then organize around the
vitality – which looks like our values, our embodied senses/awarenesses
and our needs.
A person enters a pattern interrupt because they are no longer able to
function in the normal pattern with their heightened awareness. You
cannot really go back because you know more now. If you return it would
be painful. What you have been able to integrate during the pattern
interrupt, you can apply when you connect up with a new receptor site.”
For some of the older generation, this might sound like a foreign
language, just as my generation’s did to my parents. This highlights
another key issue between the generations--the relationship between the
idealism and passion of youth and the experience and sometimes world
weariness of their elders. It often happens that creative members of the
younger generation break away from their parents’ world and values (unless
they happen to coincide, which they sometimes do) and establish their own
generational “tribe” or “meme,” aka an affinity group. This process is
necessary for individuals to establish a generational identity, as well as
to establish their own personal values and identity.
This can be quite a wrenching and challenging process, especially for
parents. Yet one of the functions of each new generation is to hold
parents accountable for what they say they stand for, and point out where
they are not “walking their talk.” The current younger generation has a
great sensitivity to the actual quality of the energies people are
emanating from all levels of their being. When they see people stating
who they are, but then not embodying it in their being, they are quick to
point this out. This can be challenging for all concerned. The younger
generation can also indicate where an older one has lost some of its
values, been co-opted, or made compromises that have made it difficult to
live up to their values. Here is a statement from another member of the
younger generation on this issue:
“Mainstream culture has expanded and extended itself in all directions,
insidiously co-opting and trivializing much of the imagery, vocabulary,
and iconography of the spiritual revolutionary/activist via media
domination - taking over the music business, film ,television, and even
the wild frontiers of the internet. And the people are hooked:
imaginations ensnared, attentions enslaved; ingesting the toxic
medications and poisonous foods; continuously absorbing the mind-numbing
memes. Brain-damaging stress is broadly cultivated through the
insufferable hardship of meaningless overwork, the fixation on material
acquisition, the health issues and addictions borne of the whole sick
system - all tirelessly broadcasted through our so-called
’entertainment’".
This illustrates one of the questions that often arises from the younger
generations: “What happened to the vision of the 60’s and all the people
involved with the revolutionary idealism of those times? Did they all get
co-opted?” Has their attention to the core issues of our times, building
peace, economic fairness and a sustainable society been distracted into
the quest for a comfortable or even opulent life with power to rule the
world? A partial answer to this is that the people causing harm to others
in the world today never had the 60’s values of peace, sharing, and love
for all life, as not every boomer was a radical in their youth.
However, those of us in the older generation who care about other
people and the future of life on earth have been busily engaged for the
past 40 years in creating alternatives to the current mainstream paradigm.
These include the thousands of ethical and sustainable enterprises listed
in Coop America’s National Green pages, conflict resolution
initiatives in place all over the world, the women’s movement, the
environmental movement, the wholistic health movement, organic
agriculture, soul-oriented education, cooperatives of all kinds,
alternative energy, technology for poverty alleviation, and a new
spirituality that honors all traditions.
The infrastructure of the new paradigm is already in place in prototypes
created all over the world by millions of groups highlighted by Paul
Hawken in Blessed Unrest. Although ignored by the media, they are
nonetheless successful and filled with new life, and they are generating
hope and vision for millions of people. This infrastructure, and the ideas
and principles behind it, is the true legacy of the 60s generation.
We can see that a key dimension of the intergenerational relationship
is discovering what each generation can give to the others. Many (but not
all) of this older generation have already made their contribution to
society in various ways, including creating gradual change within the
system, which the younger generation does not always see or acknowledge.
They have established economic security and yet are still planning to
contribute building the new civilization for the remainder of their lives.
Younger people, on the other hand, are fired with a passion to add their
energies to creating and transforming an obviously decaying civilization
and culture, and yet they often struggle with finding the resources to do
so. They bring intensity, brilliance, and wildly creative and innovative
approaches to everything. They also bring a greater affinity and savvy
with electronic media such as the internet and know how to use it
innovatively for social change.
They can fire the older generation with renewed energy and passion to
continue transforming our troubled world, and the older generation can
share their experience and resources to help the younger members actualize
their visions. It is in the co-creation of this shared vision of a just,
peaceful and sustainable world where spirit is honored, that all
generations can meet and work together.
I have also found in relating with the younger generation that they are
hungry for older people to listen to them and take them seriously, to give
them the benefit of their experience, and provide mentoring, resources and
support for their visions. They are eager to learn and willing to serve.
Thus there are many opportunities to co-create this partnership,
friendship and creative power between all generations. The older
generations know how to work “the system,” how to bring things into being
in this world, and the younger generations have thousands of visions of
what they want to create. If we trust Spirit and the living soul presence
within each being, we can help the highest within everyone come into
expression, as these will be the building blocks of the new civilization
and culture.
But there are also challenges to this partnership, based in the
stereotypes each generation holds of the other. Those of us in the older
generation may fear being surpassed or supplanted by the rising
generation, and may envy or resent the youth and vitality of the younger
generation. The older generation may have an unwillingness to acknowledge
their own eventual passing from this world. This can lead to a reluctance
to plan for who will succeed us in the great work of building a
civilization of joy and love on our planet. It takes greatness of heart to
love, honor and respect the next generation enough to give them the
opportunities and assistance they need to make their contribution to the
world.
The younger generation may have anger or wounding from relating to the
older generation, which needs to be healed. They may feel trapped by the
“Matrix”—the system and its control—and feel afraid of being co-opted and
contributing to an old paradigm that is destroying life. This causes them
to remain outside of the system and stay in their own tribe, often
ineffective and marginalized. As one young friend said to me, “When you
have no money or possessions, all you have is your integrity, and you
guard it very carefully.”
Yet this attitude can lead to separation from those who are ready and
willing to help and support them. The idealism of the younger generation
can also lead to a refusal to adjust or adapt and work with the system, so
“the perfect becomes the enemy of the good.”
One way to evaluate the greatness of a leader of any generation is what
I call the “oak tree theory of leadership.” Simply observe, in the shade
of the mighty oak that is the leader, how many young oaks or future
leaders, are growing under his/her protection and nurturing. It takes a
careful balance of masculine and feminine energies to provide this type of
mentoring and coaching, and many leaders of my generation today are able
and willing to provide this.
The times require an unprecedented partnership between the generations,
for the crisis today within humanity and the biosphere of all life on
earth is of such magnitude that only the united heart-inspired efforts of
all generations - including those still arriving - can set causes in
motion to that will offset the current dangerous course we are on.
The challenges we face together of dealing with a system designed for
profit, power and control are formidable. We as humanity, united across
all generations, need to go to a deeper place of intuition/meditative
decision-making together. We need a spiritual revolution/evolution of how
we are perceiving reality, as just about everything in the current system
needs a deep overhaul. And we will succeed because there is no force more
powerful than human hearts and minds moving in co-creation with the world
of Spirit and the world of nature.
Our shared intergenerational goal is nothing less than building a new,
spiritual civilization and culture on earth. To achieve this, we need the
synergized, co-creative engagement of every willing and able soul from
every generation. Our purpose is to share and clarify our vision of the
new world we are building, and develop a process for maximizing
collaboration, co-creation and synergy between generations to make this
dream real on earth. It is this unified power, love and co-creativity that
can resolve our current crisis and move us into the world humanity has
dreamed of and worked for centuries.
CVL co-founder Gordon Davidson is helping organize and facilitate an
intergenerational gathering at Meditation Mount in Ojai, California from
December 7-9th. For more information or to register go to
www.meditation.com/intergen.) |