I ran into Caroline on Twitter; somebody I follow had retweeted her Tweet advising everyone to read Quantum Psychology, which she said had helped her overcome depression. I tracked down Caroline via her official website and asked if she could tell me something more about her interest in QP, and she responded by sitting down and writing the following piece. I deeply appreciate her generosity in writing this. -- The Mgt.
How Quantum Psychology changed my life
By Caroline Contillo
In
my early twenties I was, like many people in their early twenties,
teetering on the edge of nihilism. I'd been disillusioned by my
Catholic upbringing. So many questions about the nature of belief and
the human mind were squelched in Bible study classes. I'd been a
politically active teenager, but I'd even grown disillusioned with
the efficacy of direct action in the face of George W. Bush and his
war. I'd left college and was working in a freelance capacity for a
major finance website. I drank heavily and sought solace in film. I
was lucky to have a friend who was quite interested in what I'd call
cognitive liberty. It seemed like there was a thread in some modes of
thought, some philosophies, a thread of liberation from ignorance.
We'd discuss this over drinks, late into the night. And then he lent
me Robert Anton Wilson's Quantum Psychology, and everything changed
for me.
What
first interested me in RAW's nonfiction work was his take on what he
would call "creative agnosticism." Belief was almost beside the
point. In fact, why had I always taken it for granted that I should
believe my thoughts? It could be much more interesting to learn to
learn, as in mindfulness meditation, to observe them and then let
them go, with judgment-free ear for what was interesting about
them. As much as I was interested in science fiction, performance
art, mystical and shamanistic traditions, it never really sunk in
with me that my experience of reality was not the only way a person
could experience it. That my perspective was not me, and that I could
easily begin to set feedback loops into motion that would help me
shift my perspective intentionally towards a more open relationship
with things as they are.
Robert
Anton Wilson's Quantum Psychology didn't merely lay out the
principles of cognitive liberation, it provided exercises I could
easily use in order to realize these things for myself. One of the
early exercises in the book really struck me. I could take a large
number of small objects and categorize them in several different
ways. These are objects that cost more than ten dollars, and here are
the objects that cost less than ten dollars. These objects have
plastic in them, these objects don't. These objects have names that
begin with a vowel, these objects have a name that begins with
consonant. I could go beyond boundaries, too: these objects are
utilities, these ones are for play, but here's a third category for
objects that don't entirely fit into one or the other. I played
around with this idea, first using the categories proscribed in the
exercise, then making up my own, and then inviting another person to
participate. This really drove the experience home. Adding another
person showed that he might enter into the situation with an entirely
different set of cognitive filters, informed by his past experiences
and memories, and come up with categories I hadn't even thought of.
And this was all from a single exercise!
Another
key aspect of the book, for me, was RAW's use of Alfred
Korzybski's
General Semantics to point out the flaw in our notion of 'being.'
That's a very heady way of saying that removing the word "is" from
our language actually puts us more in synch with our experience of
the world. RAW asks the reader to experiment with E-Prime, a version
of the English language that excludes all versions of "to be." In
using this language, the thought "I am worthless" becomes "Today I
exhibit what might commonly be referred to as feelings of
worthlessness.” This of course forces the experiencer of the
feelings to dig deeper. Instead of identifying and objectifying the
self as a solid and static worthless being, might this curious
observer instead dig deep and find the roots of these feelings? This
new version of the though actually leaves the door open for change
and transformation. And that, my friends, is magic.
Late
in life, as I came to Buddhism, I'd notice a lot of themes from RAW's
book come up in my exploration of mindfulness meditation. I began to
see all of the various models we use to describe our experience as
just that: models. I began to see that I have agency in choosing
which model I might make use of. I can evaluate the models instead of
identifying with them. I can notice thoughts, acknowledge them, and
then let them go, really feeling the ephemerality and transience of
these thoughts. The thoughts aren't me! The models aren't the world!
There is something else, the actual naked experience of the present
moment. I might only glimpse it every so often, but it's there
beneath all my narratives, models, extrapolations, and
editorializations.
The
human mind is a story-telling machine. It's one of the beautiful
aspects of being human. This is present in RAW's science-fiction
work, which he uses artfully and with humor in an effort to
underscore some of the very heady ideas mentioned above. How does a
science – fiction author come up with a world from scratch and
populate it with fantastical scenarios and characters? I'd say the
same cognitive openness that RAW illustrates in Quantum Psychology,
the openness that allowed me to begin to emerge from a deep
depression, is the same mental flexibility that makes a fantastic
science – fiction writer. RAW wrote about, demonstrated and in fact
EMBODIED a form of mental syntax like E-Prime which puts one more in
accord with things as they are, rather than a rigid thought grammar
that solidifies and objectifies things as we wish them to be, or as
we fear they are. The mind is a beautiful storyteller but the key is
in noticing when we are mistaking the story for our experience. And
knowing that we can use some gentle intention to change the story.
RAW was a magician in that way, and his lessons of magic could
transform the mundane into a gonzo conspiracy caper, or it could
transform a person experiencing depression into an acolyte cognitive
activist. I have incredible gratitude to the man for making quantum
connections across disciplines. I am a changed person for it.
3 comments:
It's probably fair to say that the underlying message of RAW's work has the potential to save lives - it certainly has the potential to change lives, for the better. I often find a dose of RAW lifts me out of the doldrums.
And if it didn't you could be at risk of becoming a cosmic schmuck. :-)
unfortunately, the link to Caroline's mindfulness article no longer works https://www.eyla.com/intro-to-mindfulness/
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