Consciousness Calibration of Barack Hussein Obama?

My Inauguration Day post occurred just after my post about Dr. David R. Hawkins and applied kinesiology. This stimulated a number of  interesting search engine hits for how President Barack Obama rates on Dr. Hawkins’ Map of Consciousness.

My understanding is that Dr. Hawkins himself does not publicize his findings about contemporary political figures.  However, in theory, any person with integrity and some practice using applied kinesiology would come up with approximately the same result as Dr. Hawkins.

As I indicated in my post on Dr. Hawkins, I have played with applied kinesiology, but do not practice it routinely nor do I consider myself adept at its use. There’s a skeptic in me – the presumptive value of applied kinesiology muscle testing is subject to many interpretations.

Any one individual’s kinesiologic assessment of any other living person’s “rating” on the Map of Consciousness would be influenced by so many subjectivities that the value of the rating would be limited. This limitation would probably even apply to Dr. Hawkins’ assessments – which may be one reason he does not publicize his findings.

For what it’s worth (and it’s not worth much), when I played with the self-testing version of applied kinesiology to sleuth a rating for President Barack Obama, I tested consistently strong at level 500 and weak at 510.  Further testing narrowed my rating of President Barack Obama to 507.

Dr. Hawkins defines a consciousness calibration level in the 400′s as that of Reason. Level 500 is the level of Love (spiritual lovingness rather than just interpersonal love). As one’s consciousness level ascends, he maintains knowledge and access to any lower levels, but his understanding is enhanced by any higher level of consciousness he achieves. It should be noted that Dr. Hawkins also states in several of his books that some historical figures start out fairly high on the Map of Consciousness early in life and subsequently, due to circumstances or choices, rank considerably lower later in their lives. Ascension apparently requires some vigilance for all of us.

Quoting Dr. David R. Hawkins in Transcending the Levels of Consciousness (2005):

“Reason and logic (i.e., science) are of great value within their appropriate paradigm. By level 500, via spiritual alignment, subjectivity also progressively becomes a major focus of experience that emphasizes the values of forgiveness, mercy, love, and devotion. It adds a different understanding to meaning and value that thereby influences the selection of options and choices as perceived by the intellect...

“The transition from the consciousness level of the 400s to the level of the 500s is a paradigm jump from the mental realm of linear symbols to nonlinear subjectivity. The mind is satisfied with the acquisition of knowledge but then discovers that alone it is insufficient to bring about transformation…”

Level 507 would be a great calibration for any world leader.  But you’ll have to include my subjectivities when contemplating the accuracy of my findings. In spite of being a skeptic about the interpretive accuracy of applied kinesiology, I’m a fan of Dr. Hawkins’ spiritual writing in general. I’m a also fan and supporter of Barack Obama.

It’s always wise to consider the source of information you find on the internet.

AUTHOR’S NOTE: Comments on this post are closed. In spite of super-qualifying my lack of expertise as a “calibrator of consciousness”  in the body of this post, I quickly tired of reviewing political rants by those who disagree with my findings.

To commentors who did not get their unkind remarks about President Obama posted here, I have this advice:  Start your own blog (it’s easy really).  Blog-from-a-Hermit-Dot-Com is a not-for-profit, personal blog. As such, I have no obligation to provide a forum here for anyone’s political view other than my own. Furthermore, getting nasty (whether through comments or via e-mail) only demonstrates your lack of genuine understanding of the concepts of non-judgment and non-duality.  If you like David Hawkins’ work, return to it and study a little harder.

A Collective Prayer: Quiet Reverence Mixed with Ebullient Joy and Resolve

My friend and blogging coach Steve Mays has been in Washington, DC, for several days now. He and his wife, Barb, are attendingbarack_obama what’s now being called “The Moment” - the Inauguration of Barack Obama. Steve’s Inauguration photos can be seen on Flickr here, his blog coverage here.

I’ve been a supporter of Barack Obama since before the Iowa primary, ever since curiosity drew me to read Mr. Obama’s book, The Audacity of Hope. There is, however, absolutely no way I could have been coaxed anywhere near that throng in Washington, DC.  Thanks for your courage and reports, Steve.

But not being there in no way diminishes to me the significance of The Moment – this symbolic, yet very real, paradigm shift in our nation’s direction – a shift for which I am profoundly grateful.

When George W. Bush was elected amid the controversy of those hanging chads back in 2000, I became discouraged. But perhaps Nobel Laureate Al Gore accomplished more with An Inconvenient Truth, than he ever would have as President of the United States.

When George W. Bush launched the war in Iraq with virtually no regard for the dissent of other U.N. member nations, I became embarrassed – embarrassed to be a citizen of a country that behaved like a schoolyard bully, rather than as an influential member of an esteemed organization. I am not diminishing the cruel regime of Saddam Hussein; but historically, I believe the United States’ blatant disregard for UN opinion and subsequent (2003) invasion of Iraq will be seen as almost as notorious as Saddam’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

When George W. Bush was re-elected in 2004, inspite of his blundering ineptitude, I became downright depressed. I cannot reconcile the concept of warfare being a “pro-life” option – especially if the United Nations has not reached conscensus that absolutely every diplomatic avenue has failed to curb an offending despot. Remember, no “weapons of mass destruction” were ever found in Iraq.  After Bush’s re-election, Griz and I actually re-started our previously retired dialog about expatriating.

But perhaps in the end, we should thank Mr. Bush. With his ineptitudes, warfare and policies of domestic plunder, he created the perfect political climate for the election of Barack Obama – a man embodying an absolutely different vision. The election of Barack Obama is not simply about breaking down racial barriers, it’s about looking at the world in entirely different ways.  It is unfortunate we’ve had to fall so far before agreeing to start the ascent back up.

Barack Obama represents the best of what this country is supposed to be – he’s one of the rest of us – a man with a humble background of cultural diversity (which coincidentally includes being half African-American), a hard-working man of keen intelligence and genuine benevolence  driven by a vision of inclusivity not exclusivity.  I truly believe he is a good man who’ll become a great leader.

Of course, we’ve only just begun. The proving ground starts now. But at least we can be united in hope, something we’d almost left behind. As I watch coverage of the Inauguration, I feel like I’m participating in a collective prayer – quiet reverence, mixed with ebullient joy and resolve.

May President Obama and his family remain safe. May we all maintain the energy of change and support President Obama through the tough times ahead so that our mutual dreams and goals for this nation and our global community can be realized.

Memorable Hermit Dr. David R. Hawkins & Devotional Non-Duality

A colleague of nobel laureate Linus Pauling, Dr. David R. Hawkins became a spiritual teacher by way of a couple of near-death experiences; a very successful New York psychiatric practice; a temporary retreat into atheism; and at one point seven years in seclusion – not a bad combination for acquiring some pretty advanced spiritual wisdom. The [...]

A "Called" Writer: Memorable Hermit Thomas Merton

I will generally shy away from the consecrated Catholic hermits in this blog.  My exposure to and understanding of Catholicism is so limited that it hardly seems fair to mention even one.  But Catholic mystic Thomas Merton [1915-1968] wrote so eloquently about silence and solitude that he belongs on my list. Merton’s poems, essays and autobiography have a [...]

Federally-Funded Academic-Speak: Dance Moves or Feminine Hygiene Products?

While doing a little fact check for my last post, I ran into this poetic gem in a NOAA document:

“Considerable evidence indicates that climate in the Puget Sound region is cyclical, with maxima (warm, dry periods) and minima (cold, wet periods) occurring at decadal intervals[....] Mantua et al. (1997) and Hare and Mantua (2000) evaluated relationships between interdecadal climate variability and fluctuations in the abundance and distribution of marine biota.”

Maxima?… Minima?…Biota? Can’t decide if these sound more like feminine hygiene products or dance moves. I’ll forgive the author if he speaks English as a second or third language. Just so much easier to say:

Puget Sound climate alternates between warm, dry periods and cold wet periods at about 10-year cycles. The cycles impact the abundance and distribution of marine life.

(Footnotes are always great for crediting the researchers.)

In the mid-1980′s, I worked briefly for a firm which held a large editorial contract for NOAA. The task was to clean-up and translate the written work of a number of federally-funded “principal investigators” who were out roaming the Arctic, assessing the environmental impact of developing natural resources (OIL) on Alaska’s outer continental shelf. The original intention of the editorial project was good – compile the research for public consumption and produce a readable book.

I suppose the sub-text was to demonstrate “whatever we do up there, we looked into it carefully.”

The “Reports from Principal Investigators” arrived in boxes of loose pages, some typed, some handwritten, with labeled photographs and charts and sounding a lot like the first climate paragraph I quoted above.  The  editorial task was daunting.

I actually have a lot of admiration for those scientists (principal investigators) who were out braving the elements to watch polar bears and other Arctic mammals and birds. I have even more admiration for the ones that braved the same elements to watch algae grow. However, I sincerely hope we are now producing generations of better communicators in the scientific community – presuming, of course, generations X and Y can break their acronym/abbreviation addictions.

I’ve been out of academic, environmental and editorial loops for awhile. Please – someone tell me the writing has improved! In the mid-1980′s personal computers weren’t very portable or fast, so back then; we were probably lucky to get what we got. Even now,  I suppose there’s only so much you can do electronically in sub-zero temperatures. But in our culture of rapid written communication – e-mails, text messaging, social networking – surely our connected, young scientists are getting better at using written words effectively. And if not, why not?

I departed the NOAA editorial job before the project was finished. My reasons were more idealistic than practical - based on my insider knowledge that the contracting  firm’s president quadrupled the contract costs because he was going through a divorce and needed the bucks, rather than because it was actually costing more to produce the book. (I admit my idealism was bolstered by the knowledge that Griz had a good job at the time.) But some of my colleagues who hung-in informed me later the ultimate sale-price of the book would have to be $350 per copy to cover the editorial work. (Are taken-for-granted cost overruns still written into Federal contracts? I hope not.) Don’t know if anyone ever read that book. It’s probably in a library somewhere.

I have a best buddy who’s a professor at a large university. She periodically contemplates retiring (until this year). She loves to teach, but her recurring complaint always comes down to “Sometimes I just don’t know if I can read another dissertation.” So maybe it’s too early for the better communicators to have hit grad school. Of course, the eternal trail of pedantic academic-speak may be perpetuated by older academicians. Kind of like the 72-hour hospital shifts medical students endure even though it’s been proven hazardous to students and patients. Another one of those  ”We had to do it, so they have to do it” rites of passage.

But there’s still some good news. With electronic publishing, all that bad writing can be made available to the hard-core researchers without ever producing more than one paper copy. And maybe now,  with all the government cut-backs, we just won’t have dollars available for all those unnecessary words.

Anthony Hopkins as Memorable Hermit Dr. Ethan Powell

In the 1999 movie Instinct, Anthony Hopkins plays a renowned anthropologist, Dr. Ethan Powell, who “goes ape,” vanishing for more than a year to live alone with a band of mountain gorillas.  This may not qualify him as a hermit in the truest sense, but that’s the advantage of a personal blog – if I think he’s [...]

Most Memorable Hermit J. D. Salinger. I Get It, J.D.

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J. D. Salinger will be 90-years-old on January 1, 2009. The Catcher in the Rye was first published in 1951.  Salinger’s reclusiveness has become as legendary as his literary contributions.  He seriously defends his privacy – with a high fence, occasionally with a shotgun, and persistently through legal means. A curmudgeonly, misanthrope if I ever [...]

Where Have All the Female Hermits Gone?

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Thought it was about time to include a woman on the Most Memorable Hermits list and discovered (with the exception of a few within religious orders), it’s hard to find historical records of the female of the species. I could launch into a long, feminist diatribe here, but I won’t – just the basics: Until the last [...]

China’s Han-Shan: Another Most Memorable Hermit

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Han-Shan was a curmudgeonly Zen mystic/philosopher born in the early 700′s, and is one of China’s most revered poets. His name translates to “Cold Mountain.”  Han-Shan lived in a cave at the base of Hanyen, (Cold Cliff), in Chekiang Province and wrote his poetry on stone slabs and tree trunks. Three hundred of the poems survived and are [...]

Hermit Constitution. Thank you, Mr. Einstein.

The following quotation from Albert Einstein has been integral to our family philosophy since our days living aboard S/V WaterBrother: “My passionate interest in social justice and social responsibility has always stood in curious contrast to a marked lack of desire for direct association with men and women. I am a horse for single harness, not cut out [...]