Curating Content To Support Learning About Humanity's Transition

This content was posted on  5 Jun 20  by   Ken Wilber  on  Facebook Page
Have we as a society ever been so divided? From partisan polarization to the politicization

Have we as a society ever been so divided? From partisan polarization to the politicization of the Coronavirus, to rampant unemployment and the #BlackLivesMatter protests erupting all over America, it seems increasingly clear that we are arriving at some important inflection point in our culture.

We are living in a time when many of our deeply-embedded intersubjective biases and blind spots are more and more becoming objects of awareness, and we seem to be witnessing an entire nation that is struggling to confront its own history so that it can take the next critical steps toward growing up, waking up, and cleaning up as a society.

In the meantime, the gaps continue to widen between us, and virtually all of our attempts to create new shared realities get lost in those dark spaces. How can we begin to cross those divides and heal as a community, as a nation, and as a single human family?

This is why we are so fortunate to have awakened leaders like Diane Musho Hamilton who are helping to train an entire new generation of healers, mediators, and peacekeepers in order to carry the promise of a more compassionate (and more integral) world into the future.

Listen as Diane talks to Ken Wilber about her new book, Compassionate Conversations, which takes an intimate look at many of these cultural fault lines — power, privilege, identity, systemic racism, political correctness, collective shadows, etc. — and suggests a more skillful, artful, and heartful way to facilitate these conversations, to honor our unique differences, and to reaffirm our underlying unity.

https://integrallife.com/the-heart-of-conversation/

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integrallife.com

Diane talks to Ken Wilber about her new book, Compassionate Conversations, which takes an intimate look at many of these cultural fault lines — power, privilege, identity, systemic racism, political correctness, collective shadows, etc. — and suggests a more skillful, artful, and heartful way to…


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