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	<title>Mythos for Creatives™ Blog &#187; mythology</title>
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	<description>The formula for impacting the world is simple:  Activate the creative culture and  they’ll take care of the rest. This blog supports Mythos for Creatives™, a program that facilitates connection with the empowering information, experience, and techniques necessary for creative people to step fully into purpose as the primary healing force on this planet. Unleash your creative genius...</description>
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		<title>TO ARTISTS</title>
		<link>http://www.mythosforcreatives.com/blog/2011/03/07/to-artists/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Mar 2011 17:04:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Manny Otto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The essay that follows addresses the need our species and this planet  has for creative people to evoke a spirit of sacred service within the  arts. In doing so, I explore principles many highly accomplished artists  draw upon as they embrace their vital roles as prime functionaries of  an emerging global [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The essay that follows addresses the need our species and this planet  has for creative people to evoke a spirit of sacred service within the  arts. In doing so, I explore principles many highly accomplished artists  draw upon as they embrace their vital roles as prime functionaries of  an emerging global <em>mythos </em>— a term that refers to the overarching  worldview or story a culture accepts about itself and its place in the  universe. The content of this essay is heavily informed by the work of  mythologist Joseph Campbell.</p>
<p>Manny Otto</p>
<p>* * *</p>
<p>TO ARTISTS</p>
<p>I believe filmmakers, writers, musicians, poets, dancers, painters,  actors — generally creatives and innovators of every type (including scientists and engineers) — serve as a  kind of adhesive that binds human society, culture, and spirit together.  In this context, the creative community possesses the power not simply  to render an image of a &#8220;positive&#8221; future, but to serve as the actual  architects of our future civilization.</p>
<p>We currently stand on the threshold of an important transition for  our planet. It is perhaps as important as the emergence of life itself!  That the essence of this shift is inner development and how  artists can enable this for our species en masse will be one of my  primary points.</p>
<p>My first goal is to awaken a compelling context within you; a knowing  of your purpose as a &#8220;creative&#8221; (if that isn&#8217;t alive and strong in you  already). The goal following that is to effectively initiate an  exploration in your life of the empowering information, experience, and  techniques by which you can fulfill your distinct purpose intentionally  and skillfully.</p>
<p>Furthermore, I&#8217;ll be placing an emphasis on understanding the greater  system we live within on our planet, as well as on achieving a  personally relevant understanding of humanity’s mythological heritage —  i.e. the structuring narratives humans have devised to come into  alignment with the natural order of the world. These fundamental areas  of focus play an important role in supporting contemporary creatives’  natural mandate to optimize and heed our inner awareness and vision,  leading ultimately to us radiating a clarified form of our insights  towards the general global populace through the medium of film, music,  books, interactive multi-media experiences, etc.</p>
<p>To illustrate what I mean by this idea of the relationship between  the creative individual and inner awareness, I quote here from one of  the last books the American mythologist Joseph Campbell wrote before he  passed away in 1987. The book is <em>The Inner Reaches of Outer Space:  Metaphor as Myth and as Religion</em>. In Chapter 3, “The Way of Art,”  Campbell writes, “My wife, Jean Erdman, who is a dancer, discussing one  day the relevance of an appreciation of the psychological connotations  of myth to the practice of an art, remarked: ‘The way of the mystic and  the way of the artist are related, except that the mystic doesn’t have a  craft.’”</p>
<p>This concept of the artist as a mystic with a craft is central to what follows&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;Gaia&#8221; — our planet as a living organism</strong></p>
<p>The perspective from which I write is fundamentally grounded in the  idea that the earth is a living, self-regulating organism in its own  right. As most of us know, the ancient Greek goddess of the earth…that  is the earth, is called Gaia. In his classic video <em>The Global Brain</em>,  Peter Russell states:</p>
<p>&#8220;We might then consider our days and nights to be like the heartbeat  of Gaia; the seasons to be her breaths; the tropical rainforests  resemble her lungs; the oceans act like the circulatory system. So, if  the whole planet does behave as a huge living system, what then, might  we ask, are we doing here? What is humanity’s function in this system?&#8221;</p>
<p>Exploring humanity’s function is certainly a large task, but Peter  Russell makes a very compelling case that we might regard the whole of  humanity to function as a crucial element of a planetary nervous system,  an element that is capable of either being occupied by malignant or  benign activities in relationship to the health of the entire organism,  known mythopoetically as “Gaia.”</p>
<p><strong>The obligation of artists to the entire species and ecosphere</strong></p>
<p>A secure future for humanity requires a BIG shift, and the essence of  this shift is inner spiritual development. Artists possess the  responsibility and the means to enable this for our species. According  to Joseph Campbell, speaking in <em>The Power of Myth</em>: “Myth must be kept  alive.  The people who can keep it alive are artists of one kind or  another.  The function of the artist is the mythologization of the  environment and the world.”</p>
<p>When I first heard Joseph Campbell speak this definitive  statement related to the role of art and artists within the context of  humanity&#8217;s purpose on the planet, I was struck by the resolute tone in  his voice. It was 1992, I was 22, and my life&#8217;s course was delivered a  mandate that I would serve to embody and perpetuate the spirit of this  statement. It clearly requires qualification, but once understood, I  believe it leads to an irrevocable realization that the creative  community can have a profoundly consequential influence on the  development and course of the human spirit.</p>
<p>Myths are the structuring narratives humans have devised to come into  alignment with the natural order of the world.  They are the device we  use to connect with our purpose within a greater system — i.e. Gaia, et  al. They encode insights into the mystery of existence in ways that  language, at its surface, could never render. They employ metaphors, the  building blocks of poetic analogy, to communicate, as Ananda K.  Coomaraswamy would say: &#8220;the representation of a reality on a certain  level of reference by a corresponding reality on another.&#8221;</p>
<p>Perhaps, however, a more appropriate term for artists to consider is <em>mythos</em> — similar in meaning to <em>myth</em>, but conjuring less archaic and  irrelevant connotations. A mythos is the overarching worldview or story a  culture accepts about itself and its place in the universe.  It is  similar to an ideology with a very important distinction in that  ideologies, coming exclusively from the brain and not integrating the wisdom of the heart, reject the underlying and supportive dimension of  mystery that serves as the foundation of all religions and contemplative  philosophies.  In that sense, these ideologies are rootless in a  context that transcends the narrow human experience of life in this  universe.</p>
<p>In the sense that a mythos is a story we are telling ourselves,  consider the artists, scientists, and innovators of all types to be the  storytellers, regardless of the medium of expression.</p>
<p>What story do we want to tell ourselves as a species? Are we telling that story now?</p>
<p><strong>What is our mythos prognosis?</strong></p>
<p>Joseph Campbell often referred to the mythological state of our  current times as being surrounded by a “terminal moraine” of mythic  forms.  Terminal moraine is the crushed rock and debris left in the wake  of the movement of a glacier.  Campbell noted that many cultures  throughout history have known relatively harmonious periods of time  characterized by a deep relationship to the particular mythological  system that governed every aspect of their existence. He furthermore  insisted throughout his work that a living, effective mythological  system functions by putting the subject culture in accord with nature —  when an individual or a group is living in accord with nature, nature  yields its bounty (so the theory goes). In our current era, however, our  experience is of one culture bubble after another crashing and  colliding into each other and now we live with the mythic forms of these  cultures scattered like so much rubble at our feet.  Looking at our  planet today, the mythos by which we live on a collective, global level  is not placing us in accord with nature (let alone with each other).  &#8220;Dysfunctional&#8221; or &#8220;ineffective&#8221; are arguably much more accurate  descriptions of our current state of environmental harmony.</p>
<p>What are the factors involved in transforming an ineffective mythos  into one that is effective? That begins by regarding our biological  lives, that series of events beginning with birth and ending with death.  Throughout life, cycles of sleeping and waking occur. Joseph Campbell  asserted that our dreams, fantasies, and visions — derived from the  energetic dynamics of the organs in our bodies in conflict with one  another — connect the unconscious wisdom experienced in sleeping or  deeper brain wave states with the limited consciousness of our ordinary  waking states. These dreams, fantasies, and visions are the primary  source of the most elementary and universal themes of our myths. This  realm of consciousness may also be proactively accessed by participating  in meditation and contemplation practices, as well as more immersed  shamanic states of consciousness. Furthermore, we can turn with  confidence to these perennial themes of myth for solutions to some very  difficult challenges in this time of global dysfunction — this time of  being out of &#8220;accord with nature.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>&#8230;and what might be the healing factor?</strong></p>
<p>Reflecting further on the concept of our planet as a living organism  introduced earlier, consider the metaphor of creative and spiritually-inclined people to be our planet’s white blood cells. I was introduced  to this simple but potent analogy by a teacher called Eric Pepin. I’ve found it to be very  helpful in understanding the role of people who feel called to a higher  purpose in a world where most people are inclined to pray to the dieties  of “health, wealth, and progeny” — what Campbell believed was the most  common religion despite its many distinct names and forms.  These  typically common human priorities are often considered by creative  people to be somewhat secondary to the pursuit of Self-realization and  Self-expression. As we all know, white blood cells are functionaries of  the immune system — they are the body&#8217;s healers — while red blood cells  contribute to maintaining general homeostasis.  In a similar manner,  certain types of creative people (including scientists and engineers)  find themselves inclined to consider themselves &#8220;in service&#8221; to others  while surrounded on all sides by an &#8220;every man for himself&#8221; ideology.  This analogy is not intended to perpetuate an elitist perspective on the  part of artists, but to assist us in connecting more meaningfully to  our roles as healers on this planetary being.</p>
<p>Artists, however, are a special kind of healer; a healer of errors in  thinking and being. They serve a role that has always been served by  individuals specifically selected and trained to steward the welfare,  not necessarily of the body, but of the spirit and soul of the  community.</p>
<p><strong>Creatives play a shamanic role in the community</strong></p>
<p>To understand how artists can contribute to the well-being of the  spiritual and soul life of our global community, it is important to have  an understanding of the variety of purposes myth has served for  humanity in the past. In most of his lectures, Joseph Campbell would  often present his Four Functions of Myth discourse on how myth connects  us in a meaningful way to the developmental cycles and growth  opportunities in life. In understanding how myth has served humanity in  the past, we can turn to creating relevant relationships between  humanity and our collective spirit on the contemporary scene.</p>
<p>The first “Psychological Function” of mythology is concerned with  guiding the individual through the key stages of life beginning with  birth and ending with death. The second “Sociological Function” concerns  itself with preserving a social order that includes moral principles,  civil discourse, social obligations, etc. The third “Cosmological  Function” paints a broader stroke of the influence of a cultural mythos  outward, as it seeks to saturate every element of the current  cosmological image with mythological references. Finally, it is with the  fourth “Mystical Function” that the individual is called to awaken to  and maintain a sense of wonder and participation in the ultimate mystery  of being.</p>
<p>Joseph Campbell often pointed out that throughout history it has been  the duty of the great seers to perform the work of the Cosmological and  the Mystical functions of mythology. In India they are known as  &#8220;Rishis.&#8221; In Biblical terms they are known as &#8220;Prophets.&#8221; In primary  cultures they are known as &#8220;Shamans.&#8221; In contemporary society they are  known as &#8220;Poets&#8221; and &#8220;Artists.&#8221; Campbell also included scientists and  engineers.</p>
<p>Our western culture has been largely preoccupied by a dominant  mythos, a literal interpretation of Judeo-Christian forms, that does not  respond appropriately to the real environment we are currently  occupying. As Campbell says in <em>The Power of Myth</em>, this worldview:  “…comes from somewhere else, from the first millennium B.C.  It has not  assimilated the qualities of our modern culture and the new things that  are possible and the new vision of the universe.”</p>
<p>A few exchanges after the one just above, Campbell states: “The  mythmakers of earlier days were the counterparts of our artists.” In one  of my favorite exchanges, Bill Moyers asks: “In these elementary  cultures, as you call them, who would have been the equivalent of the  poets today?” With barely a pause, Joseph Campbell responds: “The  shamans. The shaman is the person, male or female, who in his late  childhood or early youth has an overwhelming psychological experience  that turns him totally inward.  It’s a kind of schizophrenic crack-up.   The whole unconscious opens up, and the shaman falls into it.”</p>
<p>Although perhaps in a form not quite so dramatic for some of us, and  perhaps even more so for others, I’m sure many of us who consider  ourselves to be artists and creatives have had the sense from early on  that our lives were to be unique and expressive of deep healing. In  connecting with and maintaining this idea that creatives serve as  shamans — as healing and change agents for our culture — exactly what  culture are we serving and what mythos are we creating?</p>
<p><strong>The path before us</strong></p>
<p>“&#8230;if a person has had a sense of the Call — the feeling that  there&#8217;s an adventure for him — and if he doesn&#8217;t follow that, but  remains in society because it&#8217;s safe and secure, then life dries up.”<br />
—Joseph Campbell</p>
<p>Joseph Campbell did not believe we could predict or create a myth any  more than we can predict or create the content of our dreams.  We can,  however, engage in a way of life that enables us to be, like shamans,  “hollow bones” through which pass deeper wisdom of a transcendent source  to which we — supported by the techniques of our mystical craft —  provide a temporal voice. In aligning ourselves with the greater  energies of the earth and the universe, we can serve the emergence of a  mythos for a global culture and community. In Campbell’s words from <em>The  Power of Myth</em>:</p>
<p>“And what it will have to deal with will be exactly what all myths  have dealt with — the maturation of the individual, from dependency  through adulthood, through maturity, and then to the exit; and then how  to relate to this society and how to relate this society to the world of  nature and the cosmos. That’s what the myths have all talked about, and  what this one’s got to talk about. But the society that it’s got to  talk about is the society of the planet. And until that gets going, you  don’t have anything.”</p>
<p>“…this is the ground of what the myth is to be. It’s already here:  the eye of reason, not of my nationality; the eye of reason, not my  religious community; the eye of reason, not my linguistic community.   And this would be the philosophy for the planet, not for this group,  that group, or the other group.”</p>
<p>“When you see the earth from the moon, you don’t see any divisions  there of nations or states.  This might be the symbol, really, for the  new mythology to come. That is the country that we are going to be  celebrating. And those are the people that we are one with.”</p>
<p>If you, the contemporary artist, poet, scientist or other such  visionary, choose to embrace your role as a vehicle through which pours  the current mythos for our global community, then I submit it is your  responsibility to study the mythological foundations of your being: to  come to a personally relevant understanding of the myths of the past; to  deeply regard your dreams, visions, and interior messages, and take  personal guidance from them; and to share your insights with others  through the medium most appropriate to your experience.</p>
<p>In what way might we creatives be contributing to the next major leap  in the evolution of our species? This is a question to which we’ll  never know the answers through mere speculation alone. Action is  required. We have but to dream big enough and know that we are not  alone.</p>
<p>“…For the heroes of all time have gone before us; the labyrinth is  thoroughly known; we have only to follow the thread of the hero-path.  And where we had thought to find an abomination, we shall find a god;  where we had thought to slay another, we shall slay ourselves; where we  had thought to travel outward, we shall come to the center of our own  existence; where we had thought to be alone, we shall be with all the  world.”<br />
—Joseph Campbell, <em>The Hero with a Thousand Faces</em></p>
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