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Trickster's
Time
by John E. Mack, M.D.
The New York Times | Op-Ed
November 30, 2000
In his remarkable new book, Trickster Makes This
World, Lewis Hyde shows us that many cultures know by different
names a rebellious, god-like figure that brings about fundamental
change. He is called Hermes in ancient Greece, Coyote among the Indians
of the American plains and Monkey in the Buddhist world.
Trickster is providence's representative
a kind of savior sent when a society is in crisis and no longer
serving the needs of its people.
We seem to be living in the kind of historical
moment when Trickster does his work. Perhaps he staged our political stalemate
to enable new possibilities to emerge. For behind the wrangling of lawyers,
the bickering of officials and the jockeying for advantage by the two
major parties and their candidates is this reality: Our nation's most
urgent problems have yet to be successfully addressed.
The prosperity both parties crow about is
a hollow boom in which many find no attention or caring: Children go without
adequate health care in this wealthiest of all nations; the numbers of
homeless betray our shame; the plight of struggling farmers goes largely
unattended.
The frozen moment in political time we are
witnessing now is enabling some to see that the stakes are far greater
than any differences between the two parties or their candidates. Adults
who had given up on a system that seemed to have little for them are beginning
to think about questions of governance. Children in classrooms are being
stimulated to become politically aware citizens.
Things will have to change. As the discoveries
of physics, biology and other scientific disciplines reveal the profound
interconnectedness of all life, our social institutions, as always, lag
behind. Now it seems this nation is being offered an opportunity to renew
itself, to rediscover its promise as a land where all have the chance
of living healthy, fulfilling and interesting lives.
I suspect we may be headed toward something
more collaborative, more authentically inclusive. But we cannot know what
will emerge. Uncertainty is one of Trickster's creative tools.
John E. Mack, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School, is author, most recently, of Passport to the Cosmos:
Human Transformation and Alien Encounters.
© 2000 John E. Mack, M.D.
The Trickster At Work (original draft)
by John E. Mack, M.D.
November 14, 2000
In his remarkable new book, Trickster Makes This
World, Lewis Hyde shows us that every culture knows by different names
a rebellious, god-like, figure that brings about fundamental change. He
is called Hermes in ancient Greece, Coyote among the Indians of the American
plains and Monkey in the Buddhist world. Trickster is providence's representative.
He acts as a kind of savior when a society is in crisis and is no longer
serving the needs of its people. Needless to say, the established powers
in the culture perceive the trickster as a trouble maker and try desperately
to thwart him.
The Trickster finds the vulnerable places,
shaping a new world, creating as if from scratch. Human beings themselves
cannot be tricksters, for we are dealing here with larger forces. But
Trickster works through individuals, who become instruments of transformation.
They speak of matters the old leaders would prefer to ignore. Ralph Nader
presses for social justice and a life-sustaining environment, and spoils
the election for Al Gore in Florida. Even Pat Buchanan adds to the crisis
by admitting that some who voted for him did not intend to.
We seem to be living in the kind of historical
moment when Trickster does his work. Indeed, it even seems as if he staged
our political stalemate to enable new possibilities to emerge. For behind
the wrangling of lawyers, the bickering of officials and the jockeying
for the high ground by the two major parties and their candidates is the
inescapable fact that our way of choosing those who would lead our government
has failed. A two party system that may once have stood for fundamental
differences in values and programs has become a sham in which survival
goes to the richest. Few of us have someone who truly represents viewpoints
or needs. The slogans of difference over size of government, social
programs and military preparedness have been chanted so monotonously
that we have entered the kind of trance state that Fearless Leader created
so he could take over the country until Rocky and Bulwinkle stopped him.
Just a glance at that map of the United
States, now so indelibly imprinted upon our consciousness, showing vast
stretches of red in the center and blue around the edges, reveals that
we are a country divided more by regional voting habits than substantive
differences. We crow loudly about our prosperity, but it is a hollow boom
in which many of us find no attention or caring. Children go without adequate
health care in this wealthiest of all nations; the numbers of homeless
betray our shame; and the appalling rate of suicide among failing farmers
goes virtually unnoticed.
The paralysis we have witnessed, the frozen
moment in political time, has enabled everyone to see that the stakes
here are far greater than the differences between the two parties or the
candidates themselves. Adults who had given up on a system that seemed
to have little for them have been getting involved. Children in classrooms
all over the country are being stimulated to become politically aware
citizens.
I, for one, have welcomed this stalemate,
for it has revealed the profound flaws in the way we elect our national
leaders. It does not threaten our democracy, but shows its strength. Two
years of campaign sound and fury have signified very little. The system
is broken; no tinkering by all the horses and men of the kingdom can fix
it. Things will have to change. We are daily flooded with suggestions
and predictions, but we cannot know what will emerge. I suspect it will,
eventually, be something more collaborative, more authentically inclusive.
Uncertainty is one of Trickster's creative tools.
The discoveries of physics, biology and
other scientific disciplines are revealing the profound interconnectedness
of all life. As always our social institutions lag behind. But the divisiveness
upon which our political system and the media thrive is becoming a kind
of anachronism. It seems to me that this blessed nation is being offered
a remarkable opportunity to renew itself, to rediscover its promise as
a land where all citizens have the chance of living healthy, fulfilling
and interesting lives. I hope we don't miss it.
© 2000 John E. Mack, M.D.
Note: The above editorials were written
in response to the tie Presidential election of 2000 involving
Al Gore and George W. Bush.
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