During the GRA, we have been presenting a series of talks pointing
toward what we've come to call the Third Strategy. The aim of
these talks or lectures is to articulate this third strategy not
so much as something that could be or that ought to be but as
something that is already emerging in the midst of the other two
strategies. We began this series by describing our times, the
times in which we live, as the time of Earthrise Consciousness,
a time when the conviction of the interrelatedness of the whole
earth has permeated the globe. We call this new world the World
of Hope. It is a New World of Hope Beyond Hope. You have to push
that image of Hope beyond Hope very hard because the hope of the
past ages, especially the sixties, was the hope that came out
of the anxiety toward the future. The hope of the sixties was
a hope for things like a just world, a secure world, a peaceful
world. These were not sophisticated hopes. Many times, they were
very simple. I remember very clearly joining the world of the
old hope when I was about nine years old.
My family had just moved from Georgia to Chicago. One of the most
traumatic things about that move was we had to leave all our dogs
behind. We couldn't have a dog. I wanted a dog. My father would
come home and I'd say, "Please, give me a dog. We want a
dog." We wrote messages to him saying, "We want a dog."
But no dog. Finally my mother prevailed. One day my father came
home with the prettiest little puppy you've ever seen, big brown-eyed
puppy, soft fur puppy, roly-poly butterball, get excited, jump
on your leg and wet all over you puppy. Beautiful puppy. We saw
that puppy and jumped up and down and screamed, "We got a
puppy. We have a puppy." My father said, "Wait a minute.
Wait a minute. Let's sit down." He took this beautiful puppy
and held it up in his hands and said, "This dog is going
to die. It will die tomorrow if you don't feed it because I won't.
But it's going to die eventually no matter what you do. When it
dies, I don't want to hear about it. Do you understand?"
This is the context for the puppy. "When this dog dies, I
don't want all the crying and the wailing. I don't want to hear
about it. This dog is going to die. Let's just get that straight
from the beginning."
Well, my brother and I resolved that our dog was not going to
die. In fact we resolved to make that puppy immortal. We were
going to make this puppy live forever. Not just a week; not a
month; not five years or ten years; but forever. Forever, this
dog was going to live. So the first thing we decided was that
you could not let a dog out and expect him to live forever. If
he got out, somebody would poison him or run over him with a car
or throw a rock at him or hurt him. So we kept the puppy inside
all the time. We took him right onto the back porch for his daily
necessities. Then we cleaned up afterwards. But never out in the
street.
Then we decided that dog food would probably kill this puppy since
every puppy died and all puppies seemed to eat dog food, therefore
dog food was one of the causes of a puppy's death. So no dog food
for our puppy. Our puppy ate mashed potatoes. Big bowls of mashed
potatoes. Instant mashed potatoes that you add hot water to. We'd
whip up bowl after bowl for this puppy to eat. This puppy ate
corn bread. Lots and lots of corn bread scraps. On and on. This
puppy ate well because we were going to keep it alive forever.
Not going out and eating mashed potatoes combined in a year and
a half to create this grotesque thing with just a vague resemblance
to our former puppy. But it was still alive. It was so huge and
fat that it looked more like a snake than a dog. You couldn't
see the feet on it. It looked like a big slug. But it was still
alive.
One day we came home and our puppy was lying in a corner twitching.
No matter how much we talked to him or tried to convince him to
do otherwise, all he did was lie in a corner and twitch. So finally
we took the puppy to the vet. My father wanted to put it asleep
immediately. We took it to the vet who said, "This dog has
had a stroke." I never knew dogs could have a stroke before.
But that dog had a stroke. He said, "We're going to have
to put him asleep." That's when for me the old world of hope
died, or began to die. I created other hopes later on but none
of them were ever so secure as the immortal puppy. Once your puppy
can die, anything can die.
The old world of hope was just that kind of hope. It was a hope
of the immortal puppy. These hopes of immortal puppies were expressed
in protest movements that spanned the globe, in surges of nationalism,
in impatience with the old colonialism. These hopes of the old
world of hope were expressed in a radical reevaluation and ultimately
a rejection of the values, myths, images, symbols and customs
of the old world. We saw it in the counter-culture experiment
here in North America and Western Europe especially. We saw it
in something called the sexual revolutions where if all you did
was sleep with your wife, you were behind the times. We saw it
in the women's revolution, the black revolution, the red revolution,
and the youth revolution, and on and on and on. The rejection
ultimately of the values, myths and images of the old world.
At the same time this old world of hope was expressed as a resurgence
of spirit, a renewed interest in the self and its relations, and
the potential of human beings. This resurgence gave rise to what
was later to be called things like the Human Potential Movement,
by renewed interest in evangelical Christianity, renewed interest
in orthodoxy and many other faiths, and of course, in the occult.
These hopes were manifest in a fierce search for sustaining communities
which gave rise to communes, experimental communities organized
around one particular issue: sex, social service, sensitivity,
given expression by cults, and by experimentation within established
religious orders. I'm not sure what event historians in the future
will point to as the landmark event that marked the beginning
of the decline of the old world of hope. Maybe some will say the
assassination of Martin Luther King or maybe the OPEC oil embargo,
maybe Pope Paul's pronouncement on abortion and human life that
sort of put a chill on Vatican II, maybe the fall of Allende.
I think I mark the beginning of the death of the old world with
Jonestown. For those who may not be familiar, Jonestown is a place
in Guyana, Latin America, where a group of people from the United
States moved in search for a more just society, I suppose. They
were looking for some kind of new alternative to life. But what
finally happened out there was close to a thousand people annihilated
themselves one day. Close to a thousand people just killed themselves
or each other in one day. It took a couple of days for the final
collapse to happen for me. It came around the kind of shocking
discovery that the vast majority of that group of people were
black, not just black, but supposedly streetwise, con-proof, cynical,
down to earth black. It was sort of like the immortal puppy when
that kind of people can walk off into the jungle and through the
preaching of a mad visionary annihilate themselves. Then you can
see how deeply the despair had gone and how easy it was to grasp
at any hope, any ghost. I saw how fanatically local man wanted
to believe in spite of what he knew. When I saw that, I began
to see that sort of yearning everywhere.
Maybe this reading might serve to hold the broader experience
I'm talking about. It comes from Christopher Lash's book called
The Culture of Narcissism. And he writes:
"In an age of diminishing expectations, the Protestant virtues
no longer excite enthusiasm. Inflation erodes investments and
savings. Advertising undermines the horror of indebtedness exhorting
the consumer to buy now and pay later. As the future becomes menacing
and uncertain, only fools put off until tomorrow the fun they
can have today. A profound shift in our sense of time has transformed
work habits, values, and the definition of success. Self-preservation
has replaced self-improvement as the goal of earthly existence.
When a lawless, violent unpredictable society in which the normal
conditions of everyday life come to resemble those formerly confined
to the underworld, men live by their wits. They hope not so much
to profit as simply to survive. Although survival itself increasingly
demands a large income. In earlier times, the self-made man took
pride in his judgment of character and probity. Today he anxiously
scans the faces of his fellow, not so as to evaluate their credit
but in order to gauge their susceptibility to his own blandishments.
He practices the classic arts of seduction and with the same indifference
to moral niceties, hoping to win your heart while picking your
pocket. The "happy hooker" stands in place of Horatio
Alger as the prototype of personal success."'
He seems to be talking about the society largely found in the
United States, and yet it may well be far broader than that.
The lectures we have presented have come into four categories.
They were on the New World, the New Mood, the New Style and the
New Form. The lectures on the New World pointed to the Resurgent
Earth in the first lecture as the given situation and the rise
of local man in every village and local community, the local level
permeation of the wild upheaval that we know as the twentieth
century. The Third Campaign was the focus of the second lecture,
grounded in the whistlepoints, and pointed toward the new direction
for our work.
The second group of lectures focused on the New Mood. You and
I need to remember that mood is not simply your emotional tone
but that mood points to a combination of things, including your
operating image, as well as your emotional tone and most importantly
the life question you find yourself asking at any given time.
In this section on the New Mood we talked about the New World
of Hope. It is a New World. The hopes of the old world died, a
tragic death, just like an immortal puppy, just like the hopes
of people in Jonestown. This New World of Hope is a world of hope
beyond hope. It is only arrived at when every vestige of simply
patching up the old hope dies. The Corporate Life was the lecture
following. It laid out the new images, questions which were thrust
at us by the New World of Hope. In this new world of hope what
do we hope for? That is an old world question. That is a question
from the old world of hope which was simply an old world of anxiety.
Perhaps I can illustrate this way. When I joined this organization,
this order, I believed two things about what we were doing. One,
I believed that the task to be done, the task that we were doing
would be done in my children's lifetime. In fact if I'm honest
with you and with myself one of my primary hopes was to make a
better world for my children who were yet unborn at the time,
but I was convinced were soon to appear, though never in the numbers
that they finally appeared in. But the second thing I believed
was that we probably wouldn't be able to do it. I figured it was
something that could be done in my children's lifetime but in
my heart I never believed that we could actually do it. It was
too unreal, too idealistic, the thought of teaching some course
to everybody on the globe. I knew lots of people who wouldn't
sit still for that context for twenty minutes. much less forty
four hours. I just never believed it could happen.
This death of the old world, of the old hope, transformed my picture.
The picture I began to operate out of was very clearly that this
task was beyond my children's lifetime. In fact it was not even
a task that was ever going to be completed, for the decision to
answer the call of history goes on and on and on. At the same
time, the answer or the call that we experience as that particular
form that we call the rise of local man, the task to enable, deepen,
give form to that rise, I've discovered is not only do-able, but
is well along the road. That's what I mean by the New World of
Hope, hope beyond hope. This hope beyond hope is not hope for
anything. That is the old world of hope. This is hope in -- hope
in the unknown future as being shaped now, hope in local man,
hope in Those Who Care.
This brings us to the two talks today and tomorrow. These are
talks on the New Style, still under the image of getting on top
of the Third Campaign. This quarter, this whole year I was assigned
to training. But this quarter I had a unique experience. This
quarter I was in the Student House. Now the Student House is a
collection of 1113 year old, junior high age, and they are
the children of the staff of the Institute of Cultural Affairs,
the Order. This was a unique experience. I came out of being in
the Academy and being in the HDTS. I experienced it as a promotion.
I know we don't have promotions, but it was a promotion, for it
was a position of trust as I experienced it. Those students, lovable
as they are, were lewd, rude, and crude. That was sort of the
first encounter I had. It was one girl going on and on and forcing
me to ask her, "Do you eat with that mouth as well?"
But the second thing that I encountered there, more than anything
else -- well there was a song by a man called Billy Joe called
"The Stranger." That's the song I found myself humming
all quarter long up there, "The Stranger." A lot of
parents have the strange impression that they knew their children,
when, in fact, they were strangers. They were strangers because
they wore at least three faces: one face before their peers, one
before the staff, one before their parents, and maybe even a fourth
before the other adults here. They were strangers. They were strangers
to themselves because behind those personas was just an emerging
self, unformed. They were strangers. I was shocked by the strangers.
One of them who shocked me deeply was my nephew, who is sort of
a foster son. He was a stranger. I thought I knew him. He put
on a whole different self just four floors down.
The third thing I encounter is no heroes, no heroes, no one that
they looked up to. There's also a kind of frantic cool, an attempt
to tame life down to a dull ho-hum; no passion. They would not
allow themselves to be caught up in passion. Most of all I encountered
a disbelief in their own significance, a disbelief in the historicity
of their deeds. That came down mostly in the disbelief that consequences
are the natural result of decisions and actions, a profound disbelief
that if you do something over here, something over there will
result from it. Further more, that something that resulted had
something directly to do with the decisions that you had made.
I say this; I believe this to be significant. Because lest I be
accused of airing dirty linen, let me say that our whole society
is like that, and in my experience, a good portion of the whole
globe. You could tell the same sort of story with some changes
about other places I've been and other people I've encountered.
What I'm leading up to is this. The third campaign or the new
edge is focused on style, not finally on knowing, though there
will be of necessity a knowing related to it, and finally not
on doing, though of course all style has some action that gives
it form, but sheer style is the focus of the third campaign. The
image we have to point to for this style is one we've had for
a long time, but until recently I never thought of it as a description
of a style. That image is the image of primal community.
I always thought primal community was a social category that had
something to do with a social thing you were trying to bring into
being. But now I believe that primal community is a style. It
has nothing to do first and primarily with some social category.
I thought that primal community was the ultimate Human Development
Project. That is, when everything got right and all the critics
were put away or converted, when the money started to flow and
the jobs started to be there, when everybody came to the community
and participated, when the women got to sit up in the front, and
when the auxiliary could take weekends off at the beach, there
you had primal community going on. I thought that primal community
was a really good town or village meeting, where they really made
up a good song, where they even talked about actualizing some
of the proposals, where somebody actually did something like clean
up the street even if it wasn't a proposal. I thought that was
primal community.
In those moments there may have been flashes of primal community.
But, it always pointed to something, to a way in which things
were done, to the style, not to the content of the deeds themselves.
I heard people describing primal community breaking loose in a
community. It was never some thing. It was some way - some mode
of participation. It was some way that people got themselves engaged.
It is this style, I believe, that we point to as primal community.
It is not that this is some fine ideal. The Student House is a
great illustration. Or the school we had where the roof collapsed
was an illustration where primal community bubbled up.
The style that is primal community encompasses what for me was
a second revelation. That is, on the chart on the table before
you is a thing called the profound humanness chart. For a long
time, I thought that chart had something to do with becoming a
great individual, that this is what you did to become a profoundly
human individual. I don't mean a great individual as in self-aggrandizement.
I mean a genuinely great individual. I think now for me that whole
chart points to the style that is primal community. It is for
me the marks of profoundly human communities, the marks of human
community as a style.
The diagram may help you to see what I am pointing to. The categories
are somewhat rearranged. This is not a substitute for the profound
humanness chart, but I found it helpful in trying to get a hold
of what I mean by profoundly human community as a style, an aid
to seeing that. When you encounter profoundly human community,
what you encounter is presence, just presence, just presence.
This chart does not represent the ideal community? because the
ideal community is part of the old world of hope. If we haven't
learned anything in the years we've been doing Human Development
Projects and Schools, and Town Meetings, etc. we know at least
that no amount of social reconstruction will ever make these communities
ideal communities. It will never repair the fundamental fragmentation
and brokenness of human existence. No amount of jobs, no amount
of great structures, no amount of great contexts, or symbols or
tremendous celebration will finally ever render these communities
ideal. They will always be broken. They will always be struggling.
They will always be pain-filled, not because they're poor but
because they're full of human beings. Unless we want to populate
them with soulless robots, then we have to expect suffering, struggle,
pain, brokenness, broken promises, missed meetings, and people
who get up in front and don't know what they're doing and don't
care and call themselves community leaders and get government
grants. These communities are broken and will always be broken,
but profoundly human community bubbles up in the midst of broken
communities.
I'm using community here in its widest sense. I don't mean just
the village. By profoundly human community, I mean the Order.
I mean the family. I mean the guild. In the midst of the guild,
finally human community bubbles up. In the midst of the family,
profoundly human community bubbles up. Yes, in the midst of the
broken village, profoundly human community bubbles up and makes
its presence known. It is like wherever two or three are joined
together then the presence of profoundly human community can and
does bubble to the surface. Profoundly human community is at its
center -- sheer presence, sheer style, way, mode. It can not be
reduced to social structures. Profoundly human community is a
happening that happens in the midst of broken, imperfect communities.
It is not an ideal to be achieved, not a process to start a community
on the road to. This presence is always given form. It is not
some ethereal voodoo.
The presence of profoundly human community is always manifest
in its witness, its declaration. That's why I put declaration
around the outside of the circle. Declaration and action are the
expressions of profound human community. That is where the presence
has made itself known, made itself felt. The witness that profoundly
human community always makes to life is about the fact that life
is mystery, just mystery. Maybe this witness isn't formulated.
Maybe it isn't a speech. But profoundly human community, when
it is asked what life is about, when that question is put to it
by history or an individual, always says life is sheer mystery.
It is awe and wonder. Profoundly human community screams over
against the attempt to make life bland, jaded, ho-hum and humdrum,
to wrap it up. Profoundly human community knows that life is terrifying.
It is the scariest thing there is. If you've never been terrified
by life, you have never lived. Life is wild.
Profoundly human community always witnesses to the fact that life
is consciousness. It is sheer deeps. What you see is not what
you get, is not even close to what you get. What you see is a
very little of what you get. Most of what you get you never saw
and when it happens, it is a surprise. Life is deeps, deeps. An
individual man, an individual woman, an individual little preschooler
is just as much mystery as the entire universe itself. There are
not two kinds of mystery, little mystery and big mystery, medium-size
mystery and bargain basement mystery. There is mystery, unknown.
Profoundly human community is conscious about the deeps of life.
It says there are no unimportant people, no insignificant moments,
no stupid or meaningless relationships. Just sheer deeps.
Profoundly human community witnesses to care, the fact that life
is care, that people are concerned about little things and big
things and deep things and shallow things. But these things eat
up their lives no matter how small. Somebody can pour out and
have their life eaten up as much by trying to keep their mantelpiece
clean as somebody can by serving the globe. Hours tick away never
to return, whether you spent them taking back soda pop bottles
for deposit or whether you were building the new social vehicle.
Those hours are still just as gone. You're just as much older.
Life is poured out. Care eats people up. What people care about
is what they're doing, not what they're saying. I don't believe
anything about what anybody says anymore. I just watch what they
do. What they do is what they care about. That's where their lives
are eaten up. That's where the hours tick away. Life is care.
Profoundly human community witnesses to that. By witness I don't
mean talk about it. I mean celebrate it. I mean throw it out there
and encounter people with it. It becomes part and parcel of that
community's story about the way life is for that hour, for that
moment, for the time that profoundly human community is present
in its midst.
Profoundly human community witnesses to the fact that life is
fulfilled. Probably that is the thing that is most familiar to
us, to tell the truth. How many villages do we have that don't
have at least one sign saying, "XXX is a great place to live."
If you aren't witnessing to life and to the fact that life is
fulfilled, those signs have gone beyond the comic into the realm
of profound tragedy. Some of these places, most of these places
are only great places to live as life is, in fact, fulfilled.
Profoundly human community witnesses to that fact, incorporates
that fact into who it is and what it does.
Profoundly human community is manifest in its action. Profoundly
human community knows and operates and acts. Action is the other
way that a profoundly human community is exposed. It's exposed
in a community that senses that life is eventfulness. I've always
felt that the word "event" should have a "fullness"
on it. It is eventfulness, not event. Carlos Castaneda in Journey
to Ixtlan talks about eventfulness. He calls it, "stopping
the world." A community then can stop the world with its
eventfulness. In a community when world-stopping takes place,
literally, time goes timeless. It happens in celebrations. It
happens in profound moments in the village. I'll never forget
working on the foundations of the Cano Negro Community Center
and how that turned into eventfulness and how profoundly human
community was present there. Or I suppose the greatest, most recent
experience of that was after that building collapsed up there
in the school in Kenya. In fact, that event did more to transform
those young men from people who hoped that this was a job with
a salary and maybe a secretary, even a car --transformed those
guys from that kind of hope into people who saw the possibility
of laboring their whole lives in dusty remote villages. They became
colleagues. You had moments when the collapse of that building
transformed us into a profoundly human community because, for
a moment, cultural differences, religious differences, were erased
as we stood there and watched our hopes collapse. They had hoped
to live in one of those buildings and get out of those muddy tents.
Our hopes crumbled into the dust. As we rebuilt our hopes, as
we rebuilt the building, we became a profoundly human community.
For a moment, it happened for us.
Profoundly human community acts out its integrity. Profoundly
human community acts out its resolve to meet historical necessity,
to meet the demand of history. Many communities do not, finally,
make that resolve. Many families do not; many posts do not; many
centrums do not make that resolve. Making that resolve is a profound
action. We used to talk about that as the action behind the action.
We used to have other words for it. This resolve to meet historical
necessity is one of the hallmarks of the doing of a profoundly
human community.
Profoundly human community does creativity. Profoundly human community
is marked by demonstration of possibility. It is within profoundly
human community that the individual can finally "rise above."
My father lived his whole life trying to rise above. My father's
father lived his whole life trying to rise above. Their whole
lives were poured out so that in succession their children could
rise above. Do you know what? Their children never rose above
-- until they participated in profoundly human community. That
rising above was not economic, it was not status. It was simply
becoming and participating in the depth of your own creativity.
I think beyond economic, beyond political, that is what local
people want for their children and their children's children and
themselves. When they were talking about "rising above,"
what they meant was the opportunity to plumb their own creativity
to the bottom for something worthwhile. That is an option and
a necessity thrust at you in the midst of profoundly human community.
Part of human community's action is expressed in totality. A profoundly
human community is not an idea to do the globe in that place.
It becomes real. Mission to the world becomes, not a catch phrase,
but a reality. I still reel over the testimony of the village
of Woburn Lawn in Jamaica, how suddenly the village across the
mountains began to be a demand on the people of Woburn Lawn. Suddenly
the people of Woburn Lawn weren't a mission any more. They weren't
some place somebody came to help. They were mission to the world.
It made demands on their action.
Finally, human community is manifest in action's corporateness
as a community of covenant around a common task. It is a lot harder
to see with a whole village than with a discreet group. But I
still believe that profoundly human community is manifest in action
when that community for a moment or for a lifetime forges out
a covenant and around a common task they act out their covenant.
Profoundly human community is radical action in this world. It
is not an ideal. It is a happening that comes up. This year profoundly
human community has bubbled up in my family. I would witness to
the fact that that is exactly what's happened. But if that's the
case I want to warn you that profoundly human community is no
birthday party. It is not particularly a grand old time. It's
not something you would necessarily say, "Hey, let's have
profoundly human community today!" It's something you probably
learn to fear as much as you learn to seek. It makes demands and
tears out of being the old. It demands a response before the new.
The key to catalyzing profoundly human community has always been,
from the beginning of time, one thing and one thing only. There
has always been a common factor, that has gone by many names throughout
history, but always this one thing has catalyzed profoundly human
community. Sometimes we called this thing the Messiah, sometimes
the Anointed, sometimes the Mahdi, sometimes the Illuminated One,
sometimes the Avatar, sometimes the Ancestor. Today we call it
the Exemplar. These exemplars are the key to the catalyzation
of profoundly human community. These exemplars have always ultimately
seen, and always ultimately been, finally, style. They have promulgated
truths but it is not finally their truths that have broken loose
profoundly human community. They have done deeds, but their deeds
are not what have broken loose profoundly human community. It
has been their style, their mode, their way. This way of the Exemplar
is the subject of the next talk.
If I can, for a moment, I would like to conclude with just a word
about the relationship between this and the Third Campaign. I
deeply believe this exemplarhood is the key to the Third Campaign.
The Third Campaign is the breakloose of primal community throughout
the globe, not as an intensification of human development nor
of town and village meeting, but as a radical turning of them
inside out. From doing the other two campaigns we have picked
up and developed some incredible wisdom about profoundly human
community. We cannot do the Third Campaign unless we continue
the other two. But we must begin to give the globe what we know
in the form of methods of catalyzing and sustaining human community.
We must develop and push myths and rituals: no longer for our
own sustenance but in order to give them to the world. We need
to create our own comprehensive training scheme to train exemplars.
We need to document the Order experiment itself and then blow
the bottom out of it by raising the question, without arrogance
or self-depreciation, "What have we broken loose in our 28-year
experiment that every person and every village needs in order
to catalyze profoundly human community?" The world needs
more than anything else to recover the sacred. By the sacred I
do not mean the pious; I do not mean necessarily the religious
or religion. We have gone a long way in recovering the sacred
in time and in space. We have learned how to create space that
honors humanness and that itself begins to catalyze profoundly
human community. It breaks loose creativity. It demonstrates mystery.
It calls forth integrity. We have done the same thing with time
rhythm and time designs. We need now to create, in an age of casualness
and radical intimacy, in the midst of the fact there are no longer
any heroes left, the kind of distance or human relatedness that
creates heroes, that creates exemplars. It is only through distance
that heroes are created and sustained. Only with heroes or with
exemplars is profoundly human community possible.
This year I have been convinced that the truth about life is held by a television program called, "The Incredible Hulk." "The Incredible Hulk" is a story about this man who is sort of a reasonable, quiet, rational man. He's always trying to reason with these people, to convince them to do right, to turn from evil and to participate in good. He tries to convince them through logic. He tries to appeal to their emotions. He tries to appeal to their better judgment and their good nature. They beat him to death. For thirty minutes, this man is trying the same thing every week, just like us, the same thing every week, trying once again to use this method or that method and the other method; this model, that construct, this team format, to try to turn these people from the dark ways to the right. And they don't listen. Finally, thirty minutes into the show, he wakes up, once again, and this awakenment is through anger. He becomes angry. When he becomes angry he turns green, real green, like that plant is green. As he is turning green he grows these huge muscles, big, huge muscles that break apart his shirt, that break loose his pants. His shoes pop off. His hair grows on his head. He becomes this big, green, ferocious, angry thing. This big, green, ferocious angry creature comes to the same people that logic has failed, reason has failed, appeals to sympathy and good nature have failed, and he walks over to those people and just says, AAAAAAHHHHHHHH!" He turns over tables; he breaks apart things. He doesn't kill them. He doesn't actually beat them. But they think he is about to. And he transforms their entire lives. They do not feel casual with this man. They do not feel they can slap him on the back and say, "How are you doing, friend?" They do not feel intimate with him, like he's really a fine person and with a little understanding he could be his full potential. They are SCARED TO DEATH. They are TERRIFIED. And terror is a great start for profound humanness. A healthy fear of the nature of the universe itself goes a long way. The sacred is one way to remind us all that the universe is full of people who will not listen to reason, nor to logic, nor to a great construct. What they have to have happen to them is some huge, hairy, green thing that will grab them by the throat and convince them to turn around and pick up their lives. That is what has to happen. That is the role of the exemplars. The exemplars are sort of like the Incredible Hulk. They are not nice. The saint is not nice. The poet is not nice. These people are not nice. The poet writes heartrending tales about how empty and pitiful your life is. You read it and cry in the night. The sage is somebody who says, "That was a stupid decision. And if you continue to make such stupid decisions something terrible is going to happen to you." The general is one who says, "If you don't move, I'll proceed to walk all over you with these great big boots and send you to be permanent latrine duty for the rest of eternity." These are not nice people. But I think the time has come for sheer style that is awakenment to the deeps, to the terror, to the profundity of profoundly human community.