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by Kingsley L. Dennis
April 26, 2025
from
KingsleyLDennis Website

Something is dying,
and
something is being born.
The stakes
are high,
for the
future of humanity
and the
future of the Earth.
Richard Tarnas
To continue the thread that was started in my last essay
Our Initiation - Passing Through the
Underworld, I will again throw a passing eye upon a
part of the
New Revolutions for a Small Planet
book - this time, Chapter 3: Rites of Passage - A Collective
Near-Death Experience.
The first part of Chapter 1 deals with the theme of a 'rites of
passage,' which will be the focus of this essay (Part 2 of this
essay will deal with 'A Collective Near-Death Experience').
In this section of the book, I began to examine
how the recent rapid cultural rise towards,
'a technological state of mind' led into an
epoch of scientific technique that is 'in danger of rushing
humanity towards an irreversible abyss.'
This rush towards an 'abyss' or
transition will, I argued in 2010, involve a,
'collective ritual experience, not dissimilar
to the initiation rites of indigenous societies:
a species rite of passage.'
Further, I added that the technological shifts
that have led human civilization to this state have also
reconfigured,
'social relationships and the
temporal-spatial perceptions of the time which, in turn,
influences the way human brains perceive
their reality...'
These alterations in how humans 'perceive their
reality' have influenced an 'underlying psychological
consciousness.'
I stated that,
Our modern forms of warfare embody a
mixture of ideological consciousness (nationality, religion,
etc.) and psychological consciousness (fear of loss/scarcity,
need for security, etc.) that have only exacerbated a mental
warfare against individuals and pushed us collectively towards a
global state of psychosis.
I continued by noting that in previous historical
periods, human societies managed their time, work and social balance
by integrating their activities with seasonal time and movements,
whereas our mega-societies have now virtually abandoned these cycles
and bodies of knowledge:
With this loss of functional cosmology and
planet-solar-cosmic rhythm we have glided into a period of
technical progress divorced from a grander significance and
belonging.
The once enchanted human mind, inspired by
epiphany, revelation, intuition and cosmic connection, has
ventured into disenchantment and what for many is drudgery.
Despite having developed through various
stages of consciousness, of states of mind, and having reached
the final step in this sequence, we are now desperately in need
of leaping into a new mind.
In other words, our current psychological
consciousness may seem to be a new mind, even a radical mind,
yet I argue that it is a mindset that represents a successive
growth of the old consciousness; as such, it is the final stage
of the old sequence.
Just as the octave of the musical scale needs
an interval to 'jump' to the next pitch, so too does our present
octave of consciousness require an interval in which to jump to
a new sequence.
I stated that nothing short of a global
revelatory experience is required.
An experience that would be able to awaken a
collective human consciousness towards the grand evolutionary
journey ahead:
both for our species and for planet Earth.
I wrote that,
'we have moved into our Crisis Window
- a period for intense change whereby we are called upon to make
the leap from the octave of the old mind (characterized
by the pathology of power) to the beginning sequence of a new
integral mind.'
As mythologist
Richard Heinberg notes:
As human consciousness lost contact with its
internal, heavenly source of power, technology emerged as a
power substitute.
Its first appearance was as sympathetic magic
and as the invocation of spiritual beings to change Nature for
human benefit.
However, as human awareness became
increasingly restricted to the material world, purely mechanical
technologies appeared. 1
Similarly,
Michael Grosso echoes the words
of Russian sociologist
Pitirim Sorokin when he says
that:
...ours is a disintegrating sensate culture
on the threshold of becoming a new ideational culture, a culture
of higher consciousness.
We are, we could say, in the midst of the
near-death experience of our sensate civilization. 2
The only alternative available to us if we do not
wish to implode, I stated in 2010, is to undergo a rite of
passage...:
an initiatory experience of death and
renewal to mark our passage from species infancy to
species adolescence...:
In a play by Luigi Pirandello -
The Man with a Flower in his Mouth
- a man emerges from the doctor's office with a fatal
diagnosis; with this knowledge of impending death the man's
world suddenly changes and every small thing has
significance.
He undergoes a conversion of
consciousness:
a bleak diagnosis and shock followed
by a courageous renewal.
Similarly, humanity may be caught up in a
forced fatal diagnosis for change as our global
civilizations begin to enter their near-death throes.
Perhaps ours is 'a world with a flower in
its mouth'...
Fifteen years ago, as I intuitively looked ahead
to the incoming years, I speculated that, as a species, we may now
be engaged in a race between initiation and catastrophe.
And if we chose the path of initiation,
then this would involve an intrinsic search for meaning:
'the journey to the underworld and back is
not only an external test of fortitude, willpower and
determination, it is also a necessary journey to purge and
prepare.
The ordeal sets us up to emerge after the
trial as a matured and, hopefully, wiser being.'
It seemed to me back then, and more so now, that
humanity is teetering on the edge of the hero's journey - the
descent into the underworld and back - the initiation, rite of
passage, our dark night of the soul. 3
According to famed mythologist
Joseph Campbell there are three
phases in the rites of passage:
-
separation
-
initiation
-
return
The middle phase - the initiation - is the
transformative stage, the transitional impulse, the transfiguration
that sets up the way forward for the return...:
a return to the world as a renewed force.
As I mentioned in the previous essay, this
initiation may very well be humanity's collective 'dark
night of the soul.'
As I wrote in Chapter 3:
Our own global 'dark night of the soul' may
very well symbolize humanity's own death-rebirth ritual that
shamanistic and indigenous
cultures recognize during transitions, such as,
-
from childhood to adulthood
-
from dependence to independence
-
from innocence to maturity
By passing through a global initiation
period, a mass psychical immersion, we may be provided with the
energies and impulses to catalyze a growth in psychical
awareness and understanding
My perspective on these transitional times was/is
that we, as a sentient species, are experiencing a 'mass psychical
immersion' that has the potential to catalyze a new spurt of
evolutionary growth.
Yet not so much a growth in physicality, or in
physical limbs or biological appendages, but from a psychic
perspective.
In other words,
the outer technological revolution (as
a successor to the earlier industrial revolutions) would
itself be a precursor to humanity's true psychic revolution - an
advancement in perceptual and cognitive capacities beyond our
current range of senses.
I ended Part One of Chapter 3 with the
words:
'A shared psychological trauma combined with
a series of profound physical crises may be the necessary
requirements - the minimum price of admission - for the global
initiatory immersion towards a psychophysical
transformation of life on planet Earth.'
I wrote those words around fifteen years ago, and
I stand by them today.
What we are experiencing in these times may
appear as trauma (and to some segments of human society it
will be terribly real physical trauma), whilst this psychological
trial will also facilitate a new opening for a collective
comprehension and awakening to emerge.
It will not unfold overnight, or in ways we
expect, for the 'collective near-death experience' is multilayered.
Yet, for some, it has been previously
envisioned...
In Part Two of this essay, I will explore
how, fifteen years ago, I laid out some of the coming crises that
would trigger a collective entry into a dark night for the human
soul...
References
[1] Heinberg, R, Memories & Visions of
Paradise: Exploring the Universal Myth of a Lost Golden Age,
1990, The Aquarian Press
[2] Grosso, M, The Final Choice: Playing the Survival Game,
1985, Stillpoint Publishing, p5
[3] Dark Night of the Soul is the title of a poem and treatise
written by 16th century Spanish Roman Catholic mystic Saint John
of the Cross.
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