Hundredth Monkey | Allting

AllTing
Hot-housing global issues
A 1995 article by Palden Jenkins
We can fundamentally change many of our world problems if we so wish. This involves entering into wholesome and one-minded thought, moved by deeply-felt feelings. The 'power of the presence' locks on to us when sufficient people clearly focus together on a common purpose. The challenge ahead is thus to evolve sound ways of doing this. Here, we're talking about morphic fields and the Hundredth Monkey principle - aspects of the collective unconscious in which we all participate. Our future is looking pretty bleak, and the evolutionary clock is ticking: so it's necessary, I believe, to act on this frontier of possibility, to work at it.
This matter has preoccupied me since I was an LSE student during the 'Troubles' around 1970: we students met the challenges of the time with innocent disarray and ineptitude - even though our message was sincere and genuine. This stirred me deeply, and since that time I have sought ways to bring people together into larger-scale social process. It took until 1983 to develop a prototype, which was then explored over the years in many circles involving hundreds of people. Now with some experience, we're re- applying 'circle-working' to world-healing, in the Hundredth Monkeying inner aid project (M100), started in 1995.
Here, I wish to share a little about using the talking-stick. This is one valuable means by which such social process can be activated. In my experience, this procedure moves far beyond the constraints of awakening-by-recipe, charismatic teachers and potted transformation trainings. It brings us to an edge, to a point where sensitivity, danger and genius meet. It also goes beyond democratic process.

Use of the talking-stick is archetypal, as old as the hills. It is inherently remembered - indigenous to many cultures. I learned it from Maoist China, though many know of it from the native Americans. To my knowledge, it was not seriously practised in Britain until the now-fairytale Glastonbury Camps of 1984-86. It was then carried over to other camps and moots from 1987 onwards. We then called it pow-wow. At first it worked well - deep truths emerged, bonds were forged and frontiers crossed. However, from 1987 it went into a slow decline, much because of misunderstanding, disrespect and trust-breakdown, glared at by the self-interested miasma of Thatcherism, looming around us.
Everyone assumed they knew what the procedures entailed. This was not so. Consequently, pow-wow soon became a forum for gripes, projections and arguments - procedures became bent and eroded. It lost energy, hurting some people, invoking a genie of judgmentalism, manipulation and muddle, splintering the movement. From this I eventually learned that the atmosphere of such circles needed careful re-cultivation in the 1990s. In M100, an inner aid project dedicated to alleviating world crises, I instituted revised procedures and safety-valves, changing the name to AllTing - a Viking term meaning both 'open moot' and 'everything'. It paid off.
The talking-stick can be used by any number of people, though it gets really interesting when numbers top twenty. In our aid retreats, we 'work the circle' each day with some eighty people. I find this is a current maximum - larger numbers take too long. This will one day change.

The circle closes whenever one round is completed, or when an agreed ending-time is up, or when a contributor proposes and obtains unreserved agreement to end - it may go round more than once, as required. Essentially, that's it. There are some further nuances for dealing with awkward situations, but the procedure is simple and straightforward. This simplicity is important - procedural changes can rapidly undermine the circle's energy, creating confusion or partisanship. This is because the power of the circle arises primarily from hearing, not from speaking, and simple procedures optimise such hearing.
Unless agreed otherwise, no theme is necessary. At M100 retreats, we do use themes: in 1995 we worked with Bosnia, Israel, Nigeria, China and with French nuclear testing. Contributors may spontaneously raise whatever moves them - the nowness of the moment is crucial. It's important to give the process plenty of time, sometimes many hours - yet it is compensatingly riveting. However, participants must learn to get to the heart of the matter quickly. Use of a talking-stick is not for reaching decisions or achieving specific outcomes - a chaired meeting is good for this. However, deeply defining outcomes do arise - often not what is expected. Neither does it work for the stick to be returned to the centre, for people to take it when they wish - it sets everyone back into the customary struggle to compete for air-space and prove one's point. As a tool of collective social resolution, this method only works if people clearly receive everyone's attention, without judgement or a point-scoring mentality.
This forum can become super-charged, magnifying bottom-line truths. History is made: it feels as if all of humanity is present. It is a space for quantum social evolution, which ripples out far and wide. If participants are all clear about why they're there, if they're willing to 'sit with spirit' for as long as it takes, this becomes a meditative miracle-council, a focused circle of power which allows complementary diplomacy - the sorting out of issues by ordinary people at people-level. It's also free: if fees exceeding organisational costs are charged, it loses potency, and someone is abusing the situation.

At stage three people start empathising with each other, experiencing transpersonal commonalities and tribal bonding, awarely standing 'on the edge'. Yet we also grate against our attachment to individuality: things can get touchy - people feel their boundaries rubbed, their sovereignty infringed. A circle can get stuck here, since unconscious resistances cause people either to break apart or to believe they have 'got there' - yet, they are experiencing expanded individuality only, the beginning of society.
Breakthrough comes when enough people realise this brink is just the beginning: to go forward, they must take charge, come together and emerge out of hiding. This involves overcoming fears of being singled out, judged, exposed before their peers or banished from the circle. It becomes necessary to entrust oneself to others, crossing boundaries and sitting with the process until completion. No protective authority- figure shows the way or provides neat answers. No longer a talk-shop, the process becomes a living meditation demanding sharp awareness, as well as 'second awareness' of underlying threads and symbolism, as well as a sense of real virtual reality.
Then comes a big shift. In stage four, things get archetypal and transpersonal - 'fourth dimensional'. People find others speaking their message, and a magic flow intensifies, reaching far beyond selfhood and opinion. Time warps, people start seeing things, feeling compassion and deep understanding, digging to the roots of the human condition, even loving their enemies. This can go anywhere, yet every moment is meaningful. The circle is setting itself free, beginning to fly as one being. It's deeply moving, and it comes to completion in its own time. By now, no one wishes to break the circle - it becomes compelling, electric.
Insights abound and doors open: at M100 we have seen a Jew, a Muslim and a Christian hugging and humming together in our midst, blessing each other. We have seen a white man bow down to and dance with a black man. We have seen a bottled-up woman find her voice and speak out giant truths - she thought she was 'processing her stuff', yet the theme concerned women in China whom she, in that moment, represented! She glowed thereafter, changed.

Every nuance, every microsecond, every puff of wind becomes significant. We find ourselves at a gravity-centre, a cosmic telephone-exchange, connected to all times of history and points in the universe. We stand at the 'heart of the world' which the Kogi Mamas speak of, holding and working with universal unfoldment itself. We have by now crossed an unforgettable threshold, beyond words. Many people describe this as: "this is what I'm alive for" - a close encounter of the ultimate kind. This stage takes time, 'hard sitting' and perseverance to reach. It isn't guaranteed.
The sixth stage in this process is a form of loaded no-form silence. Within this space, universal evolution is contained. Accelerated evolution grows from it: 'God' is here. In twelve years, I've experienced this only several times - unforgettably. The seventh stage involves going 'home' to the 'real' world! That's the hardest bit.
It has been an honour and a gift to participate in circle-working. I say this even though I have been a key instigator of it! The power of the circle grows in exponential proportion to participants' genuine commitment and to the clarity by which the process is set up. In our week-long retreats we work the circle daily, starting with a meditation connecting with a world crisis-zone. We also have smaller groups and sub-projects exploring wider techniques and nuances of inner aid, from drama and debate to psychic work. Everyone teaches and learns together - there are no authorities in this field.
On 27th August 1995, we were given a daunting lesson: at the exact time we worked with Bosnia, Bosnian Serb soldiers bombed Sarajevo, killing many people. This led within days to NATO intervention and to massive changes. Our intent had been to facilitate progress in Bosnia - not specifically peace, since this can impose on free-will - but here we had a 'direct hit'! It was rather sobering. No one can responsibly say 'we did it', but the synchronicity was shockingly precise. Mature attitudes are needed!
There's a responsibility and gravitas in all this. In AllTing at M100 I have set clearly-stated procedures and established the role of a moderator, who sets the starting-tone and then remains silent, holding group energy until the group can hold energy itself. After a time, the group starts becoming increasingly self- regulating, as people learn how to operate in this context by attending to group dynamics as well as their own contributions. The moderator may intervene on three counts only: broken procedures, timings (if necessary) or deadlock situations - never on content, opinion or things said. The moderator stabilises the circle and stops it falling into disarray at tricky moments.
The joy of circle-work arises from its laborious intensity, the risks involved and the potency unveiled when people break through into greater mutual understanding and multilogue. It is hard work, yet it's exceptionally rewarding - people frequently report that they move further than they have been before. It's like re-joining humanity and reawakening to our planetary purpose, interweaving spiritual and mundane realities. However, here are a few health warnings: leave all expectations at the door, never undertake this lightly or with unclarity, keep procedures simple and unbent, don't get over-excited when you stand on the edge, forget the unhelpful judgements of light-dark and right-wrong and keep faith in humanity at all costs! If these are observed, the light of the spirit falls upon everyone, radiating outwards to exert a benign homeopathic effect on humanity as a whole, through the collective unconscious.
The Archive of Palden Jenkins
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