Why
								We Need a Training Camp
								for
								Consciousness
								
								
								By
								Beth Green
								
								
								Some
								of us have worked so hard to change our world; some of us have worked
								very hard to change ourselves. And yet, for many of us, no matter how
								hard we have worked and no matter how much we have progressed,
								something is still eluding us.
								It’s
								not an illusion. Something is still eluding us. It is the experience
								of oneness, the experience of thriving in a thriving world, the
								experience of going beyond our own narrow self-concerns and living
								from a place of inspiration and connection, from the place of safety
								that can come only from knowing that others, too, are seeking the
								highest good of all, including us. 
								
								As
								humans, we long for this experience, but the only way we will get it
								is if we change and so does our world. We can do it. We can change
								ourselves. But how? By going beyond the domination of the ego: the
								instinct that causes us to protect ourselves, promote ourselves and
								pit ourselves against others; the instinct that causes us to feel
								shame, isolation, competition and alienation; the instinct that
								causes those around us to do the same, which only gives us even more
								reason to protect “ourselves” against “them.”
								Can we
								overcome the domination of the ego? Yes, we can. But first, let me
								address the issue of disappointment. Whether through direct political
								action or through charitable work or volunteering, we may have given
								our all and still experienced disillusionment — not only about
								the results of all that work, but about the timidity or narrow
								self-interests that blocked the bold changes required. 
								
								On a
								personal level, too, we may have experienced disappointment. We may
								have committed to sobriety from one addiction, yet find ourselves
								consumed by another. We may have reaped the rewards of exercise or
								meditation, yet continue to be anxious or irritable in daily life. 
								
								We may
								have understood certain of our dynamics, yet still feel baffled about
								our underlying sense of dissatisfaction about ourselves, our
								relationships and our lives. We may have taken many chances on love,
								yet are left feeling resentful or resigned.
								All
								right. So we have been disappointed. We have been disappointed by
								ourselves, by others, by movements, even by spirituality. The
								question is: What have we done with these disappointments? Have they
								discouraged us? Have we kept using the same tactics despite
								encountering the same results? Or have we utilized the gains that we
								have already achieved and been motivated to dig deeper, to look for
								the underlying cause of our alienation from ourselves, alienation
								from others, alienation from faith?
								Those
								of us dedicated to digging into the underlying cause of our
								political, social and personal pain have frequently come to the same
								conclusion: It is the domination of the ego, the me-based perspective
								keeping us in shame, fear and alienation. Now what can we do about
								that?
								A lot.
								We can retrain ourselves and our egos, and we can open ourselves up
								to a better way of being, a way that allows us to see our interests
								as connected, rather than opposing; a way that opens us to the flood
								of divine energies that help us feel better, more whole, more
								connected and more relaxed, the divine energies that can also inspire
								us to solutions that we could not see before.
								In
								order for us to retrain our egos, to leave the “I”
								universe for the “we” universe, we need three elements:
								awareness, intention and support. Awareness: catching on to the ego’s
								games and acknowledging the needless pain it has caused us and
								others. Intention: dedicating ourselves to self-awareness and giving
								up all the excuses for engaging in behaviors that destroy our bodies,
								minds and spirits. Support: human help — a mutually supportive
								environment that helps us see ourselves and heal ourselves, so we can
								truly transform; divine help — a steady stream of divine
								energies that increase our sense of well-being and open us to higher
								consciousness.
								Overcoming
								the domination of the ego is not easy. It takes work and dedication.
								It takes engagement at the level of a boot camp, a boot camp for
								higher consciousness. Why boot camp? Because boot camps are intensive
								training experiences that allow us to respond almost instinctively to
								the challenges that confront us.
								And
								the response they encourage is that we automatically function as part
								of a mutually-supportive team, freed from the attachment to our
								individuality, so that we may achieve our goal and find ourselves in
								the oneness. For centuries, humans have used boot camps to prepare us
								for war. Why not now use boot camp to prepare us for transformation? 
								
								We
								need a boot camp for consciousness, a boot camp to help us
								instinctively respond to life’s challenges in a way that is
								self-aware, mutually supportive and inspired. And for such a boot
								camp, we need programs that challenge and enable us: to see ourselves
								clearly; to disassociate from the identification between us and the
								ego; to understand the ego and help it evolve; and to heal from the
								traumas and life patterning that have kept us enslaved by the
								unconscious drives that cause us to hurt ourselves and one another. 
								
								Let us
								dedicate our lives to transforming our bodies, minds and spirits, so
								that, together, we may feel more whole, more happy and more able to
								solve our common problems. And let us turn our discouragement
								into inspiration.
								Intuitive
								counselor and spiritual teacher Beth Green is the author of Living
								with Reality: Who We Are, What We Could Be, How We Get There,
								a 688-page handbook for achieving higher consciousness now available
								as a free e-book at www.livingwithreality.com
								She is also featured in the new book The New Science &
								Spirituality Reader, edited by Nobel Prize nominee Ervin Laszlo. This
								July she will be the closing keynote speaker for the California
								Institute for Human Science “Subtle Energy” conference,
								and she will be leading a retreat on “Creating a Collective
								Vortex of Change: Are You In?” in August. Visit:
								www.bethgreen.org