Compassion

~How Wisdom Grows- Educating Hearts and Minds~

Creative Systems Thinking

Christopher Chase

What is wisdom and is it something that can be taught or learned? Philosophers have debated this for thousands of years. Aristotle said that “educating the mind without educating the heart is no education at all.” Put another way, intelligence that is not informed by our hearts- by compassion- is not really intelligent at all.

Looking around at our world today the human family is at a crisis point. Young people spending more time playing video games and texting then reading books, learning crafts or communicating with members of their family. Investment bankers and corporations seeking wealth and profit without concern for the health, happiness and well being of those who purchase their products or work for them. Consumers everywhere buying and throwing away materials in such a way that our planet is being treated like an all-you-can-eat buffet table and a garbage dump, simultaneously.

How did we get to this point in our “evolution” as the dominant species on the planet? Can humanity change course, solve the complicated problems we’ve created and become wiser? There’s no simple answer to this, but I will share a few thoughts on what I see as a primary cause of the problem and a possible solution.

In short, I think that we need to bridge the gaps that exist within many of us – between our hearts (compassion), our imagination (visual thinking) and the complex yet disconnected bits of knowledge we hold in our heads. Bridging those gaps is how greater wisdom arises, in my opinion.

Compassion means to care, to feel empathy and sympathy for fellow beings. That’s pretty straight forward. Knowledge is the complex information we teach our children and consider to be important as a culture. But what is imagination, and why is that so essential?

Most of us think of the imagination as something active only in creative people and artists, a tool for making ideas and things that do not yet exist. That is indeed one of it’s primary functions, but even more importantly, the imagination is the means by which we do visual thinking, how we mentally represent and understand the world around us. When used this way the imagination provides a kind of virtual landscape for organizing information and knowledge.

Our world view- our understanding of everything around us- makes use of mental models and visual representations of the world. We build these up over time, based on the information that comes in – from teachers, the internet, television, books, movies, friends- work, school, entertainment and play – all realms of human experience.

What is sometimes called “systems thinking” is a mind building such visual models so that they represent the complexity and interdependence of reality accurately, and then becoming skilled at using these understandings effectively.

In many tribal traditions the imagination seems to be used in this way, where visual thinking informed by the heart is the primary mode of reasoning, the basis by which wisdom is generated and shared. Unfortunately, in modern societies much of the information we have been taught in schools has been separated and divided up, compartmentalized.

As such our visual understandings do not accurately represent the connections between phenomena. People’s minds have become ignorant- they ignore- the interdependent nature of reality as it actually exists.

The psychologist Ellen Langer talks about this in terms of mindfulness and mindlessness. Mindfulness is thinking that stays open to input from our surroundings and generates a clearer representation of what is really going on. Mindlessness, as she uses the term, is thinking based on received knowledge from the past that does not accurately reflect the current situation.

Langer has written about how it’s a common trap of “experts” in all fields, who have been “well educated” and think they understand what they are doing, where in reality they don’t have a complete or clear picture of the situations they are dealing with.

In Eastern traditions such as Buddhism the term mindfulness is used in a related way. The term means nonjudgemental observation, carefully observing what is going on without conceptual ideas and judgements. There methods such as meditation are used to help a person train their awareness, to master a way of observing the world that is open to sensory input and free from the bias of dualistic and compartmentalized beliefs. As Zen teacher Shunryu Suzuki put it, “in the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, in the experts mind there are few.”

Wisdom, in my opinion, arises when we bring together compassion, mindfulness, imagination and knowledge synergistically, so that we are developing more accurate understandings about the world around us, and then making decisions guided by all of these faculties together.

It’s what has given birth to the deeper forms of art, literature, myth, science, movies, poetry and music that people have created; and its what leads to wise decision-making by leaders in all fields of human activity. The imagination’s accurate representations of knowledge help us to understand the nature of situations, what is really going on. Feelings of compassion help us make wise choices, aware of (and caring about) how actions will affect others. Mindfulness allows us to stay in touch with what is really happening, to update our knowledge representations, and to become more skillful in our actions.

On the other hand, the meaningless, destructive, selfish and manipulative activities of humanity represent people’s imaginations cut off from deeper wisdom and accurate understanding. Knowledge and imagination that is not grounded by mindfulness and rooted in wisdom creates fantasy worlds that can quickly become nightmares. Without basic common sense and wisdom we have been unable to solve our problems and continuously create new ones.

This is the “modern” world we live in, a world we have created together. It is the result of minds that have been compartmentalized, where different areas of society and the brain are not communicating with one another. To bridge these gaps we all need to grow more connections between the various areas of our bodies and brains, and in society as a whole. We need to listen to our hearts, re-learn what we think we know, and encourage our children to think and behave differently, to live more in synch with Nature.

If we do this successfully we can become wiser as a species, more “eco-logical.” We and the planet that gave birth to us can be happier and healthier, healed and transformed.

~Christopher Chase
The Art of Learning/Creative Systems Thinking
Feb. 20, 2013

Creative Systems Thinking


This is Binti Jua, a western lowland female gorilla who resides at the Brookfield Zoo in Illinois. On August 16th, 1996 a three year old boy climbed the wall around her enclosure and fell in, slamming his head on the concrete 18 feet below. The blow rendered him unconscious, caused his head to bleed extensively and broke his hand. Binti approached the boy and growled when another female attempted to inspect him. She cradled him as she would a gorilla infant and carried him to the enclosure entrance 60 feet away, enabling the zoo staff to retrieve him. Her own infant clutched on to her back throughout the incident.The child spent four days in hospital and recovered fully.It’s been debated amongst primatologists as to whether this behaviour was a result of training or behaviour. Binti was specially trained to care for her infant, and so it’s possible that this behaviour was simply an extension of that. Other experts cite her as an example of empathy in animals.

Similar situations have occurred before – male gorilla Jambo, of Jersey Zoo, protected and cared for a five year old child who fell into his enclosure.

More information on empathy in apes: http://bit.ly/10IBJwm

The boy spent four days in the hospital and recovered fully.”

Pictures of the day: 26 March 2013 – Telegraph.

A man risked his own life to stop a little boy with his head stuck in a window grid from suffocating before help could arrive. According to Zhou Bo, he went outside after hearing a commotion out of the street. 'I went there, and saw a boy dangling in the air, as his head was stuck in between the window grid.' Zhou dashed inside and raced up to the flat but found the door locked. He then went one floor below but discovered that the gap between that window and the dangling boy was too great. Zhou said: 'Without help, the boy would suffocate soon, or he has the danger of dropping down'. So Zhou found a chair and balanced it precariously on the window ledge before standing on it and supporting the trapped boy from underneath.  'I felt time froze, and my arms went numb but firemen still didn't arrive,' said Zhou. Finally, firefighters arrived 40 minutes later and were able to break into the apartment and pull the boy, who had been left at home alone, to safety.

A man risked his own life to stop a little boy with his head stuck in a window grid from suffocating before help could arrive. According to Zhou Bo, he went outside after hearing a commotion out of the street. I went there, and saw a boy dangling in the air, as his head was stuck in between the window grid. Zhou dashed inside and raced up to the flat but found the door locked. He then went one floor below but discovered that the gap between that window and the dangling boy was too great. Zhou said: Without help, the boy would suffocate soon, or he has the danger of dropping down. So Zhou found a chair and balanced it precariously on the window ledge before standing on it and supporting the trapped boy from underneath. I felt time froze, and my arms went numb but firemen still didn’t arrive, said Zhou. Finally, firefighters arrived 40 minutes later and were able to break into the apartment and pull the boy, who had been left at home alone, to safety.

Picture: Quirky China News/Rex Features

DO U HATE SOMEONE???A Nice story with a good moral. Please go through. A kindergarten teacher decided to let her class play a game. The teacher told each child in the class to bring along a plastic bag containing a few potatoes. Each potato will be given a name of a person that the child hates. So the number of potatoes that a child will put in his/her plastic bag will depend on the number of people he/she hates. So when the day came, each child brought some potatoes with the name of the people he/she hated. Some had 2 potatoes; some 3 while some up to 5 potatoes. The teacher then told the children to carry with them the potatoes in the plastic bag wherever they go (even to the toilet) for 1 week.Days after days passed by, and the children started to complain due to the unpleasant smell let out by the rotten potatoes. Besides, those having 5 potatoes also had to carry heavier bags. After 1 week, the children were relieved because the game had finally ended...The teacher asked: "How did you feel while carrying the potatoes with you for 1 week?". The children let out their frustrations and started complaining of the trouble that they had to go through having to carry the heavy and smelly potatoes wherever they go.Then the teacher told them the hidden meaning behind the game. The teacher said: "This is exactly the situation when you carry your hatred for somebody inside your heart. The stench of hatred will contaminate your heart and you will carry it with you wherever you go. If you cannot tolerate the smell of rotten potatoes for just 1 week, can you imagine what is it like to have the stench of hatred in your heart for your lifetime???"Moral of the story:Throw away any hatred for anyone from your heart so that you will not carry sins for a lifetime.Forgiving others is the best attitude to take!Love Everyone & Be Loved
Do you hate someone ? A Nice story with a good moral. Please go through.

A kindergarten teacher decided to let her class play a game.

The teacher told each child in the class to bring along a plastic bag containing a few potatoes.

Each potato will be given a name of a person that the child hates.

So the number of potatoes that a child will put in his/her plastic bag will depend on the number of people he/she hates.

So when the day came, each child brought some potatoes with the name of the people he/she hated. Some had 2 potatoes; some 3 while some up to 5 potatoes. The teacher then told the children to carry with them the potatoes in the plastic bag wherever they go (even to the toilet) for 1 week.

Days after days passed by, and the children started to complain due to the unpleasant smell let out by the rotten potatoes. Besides, those having 5 potatoes also had to carry heavier bags. After 1 week, the children were relieved because the game had finally ended…
The teacher asked: “How did you feel while carrying the potatoes with you for 1 week?”. The children let out their frustrations and started complaining of the trouble that they had to go through having to carry the heavy and smelly potatoes wherever they go.

Then the teacher told them the hidden meaning behind the game. The teacher said: “This is exactly the situation when you carry your hatred for somebody inside your heart. The stench of hatred will contaminate your heart and you will carry it with you wherever you go. If you cannot tolerate the smell of rotten potatoes for just 1 week, can you imagine what is it like to have the stench of hatred in your heart for your lifetime???”

Moral of the story:
Throw away any hatred for anyone from your heart so that you will not carry sins for a lifetime.
Forgiving others is the best attitude to take!

Love Everyone & Be Loved

Children Full of Life (1 of 5) – YouTube.

“In the award-winning documentary Children Full of Life, a fourth-grade class in a primary school in Kanazawa, northwest of Tokyo, learn lessons about compassion from their homeroom teacher, Toshiro Kanamori. He instructs each to write their true inner feelings in a letter, and read it aloud in front of the class. By sharing their lives, the children begin to realize the importance of caring for their classmates.”