On my quest to crawl inside of new spiritual leaders, I bumped into Barbara Marx Hubbard then fell off my chair. My god, she was affirming words that I had been mumbling for years! The philosophy I am developing (Janthopoyism) was too uncomfortably similar! So I quickly purchased her most famous book and held my breath, excited to be educated by a kindred soul yet fearful that my original thoughts were nothing but trodden ground.
Thanks to Barbara's extraordinary resume, I soon forgot my worries, as she presented a scientific-meets-spiritual approach while quietly boasting about how she was the first-ever female US Vice Presidency nominee. But more impressive than those badges is where she pulls upon the common thread I value most from enlightened personalities, namely the radiance of pure positivity. Referring to her viewpoint as "potentialism" (avoiding the oft-misinterpreted "optimist" term), her beliefs are not some cloud of naive fairy dust. She understands the unsustainability of many earthly pursuits that rush down a damaging direction. Yet, she recognises how we are in such an unprecedented position of awareness and technological advancement that we now have the power to control where we want to go. The collective human potential could realign the trajectory! If only enough of us join the party!
Barbara sets out various workable plans on achieving her vision. One is a governmental system that nurtures the most innovative people in very specific fields, freely collaborating their findings across nations until we merge everything into a singular win-win-win system. Another is a media channel dedicated to broadcasting positive progress. These propositions are not about undoing what society has done but building up from it, gradually influencing our growth until we reach a critical mass of forward-thinkers/doers, ultimately controlling the evolutionary wheel deliberately.
My only apprehension is Hubbard's certainty that we're currently living during some exceptional age. Every generation believes the world is either on the verge of catastrophe or awakening, and I have convinced myself that it's an ego response inherent to human genetics. Then again, this 1998 book talks about an unknown global event that could surge our evolution forward, and maybe I have some idea what that could be. It's a pity, then, that Hubbard passed away in 2019 because I'd love to hear her take on recent events.
I conclude by cheerfully addressing my friends who forever challenge my optimistic attitude, pointing towards Conscious Evolution as a validation for my confident mindset. And while Janthopoyism stands on its own (more an individual practice rather than Hubbard's social concerns), this book is the closest I've found to what I've been preaching, like sister ideologies functioning concurrently. Furthermore, it's inspired a fire in my belly, one that screams, "we can do this!" and all it would take is enough people to grasp these teachings. Hence why I regard Conscious Evolution as essential reading for everyone, especially you.