The Daily Evolver
Jeff Salzman
A Post-Progressive Look at Politics and Culture
Episodes
Mentioned books
Jan 30, 2016 • 42min
Bernie Sanders: Catalyzing the politics of Green
Bernie Sanders started his campaign to be the Democratic nominee for president back in April, “as a 74-year old rumpled, grumpy, self-described old school democratic socialist,” says Jeff. “Today he has included and transcended those qualities to transform himself into a sleek political populist taking on a system that he sees as rigged against the people.”
Jeff puts Bernie’s extraordinary rise into a larger evolutionary context that includes culture, politics and economics. He draws on the work of integral economist Said Dawlabani to describe the way value systems of different developmental stages oscillate between a focus on the individual and a focus on the collective. “The polarity is indestructible,” says Jeff, “but as the clock moves forward, these values are expressed in newly emerging ways.”
Sanders is an authentic, committed expression of the green, postmodern value system. With its emphasis on the collective, green is a proponent for a strong safety net, highly subsidized or even centralized health care, and education. “It’s just generally a move to a social contract that distributes more of the pie to more people,” Jeff says.
Whether he wins or not, Sanders has already served a purpose. He has succeeded at moving the ball in installing a green, progressive worldview into the American political scene. ~Jeff Salzman
Is it our destiny in the U.S. to move toward democratic socialism á la Northern Europe? Should we get behind the true believer and take our chances on Bernie’s crusade? Or ought we opt for Hillary Clinton’s incremental approach, which she describes as “sensible and achievable”? And how about the perennial Republican model of private enterprise, smaller government and lower taxes? Is there an integral approach that might honor the best of what each of these worldviews has to offer?
Also in the podcast: A viral video of a wedding in Auckland, New Zealand, where a newlywed husband and wife watch their family members perform the Haka, a dance from the Maori tradition. “This is an example of the power of integrating developmental levels in a healthy way, as a work of creative expression and performance art,” says Jeff.
Plus, Jeff recommends a new series on PBS called “First Peoples”, which hits two bullseyes for integralists. First, it unfolds a beautiful narrative of the evolution of early humanity, showing how we arose out of Africa 200,000 years ago to take over the world. Second, it reveals how contemporary scientists are incorporating non-rational ways of knowing, featuring Arturo Gonzales, the celebrated Mexican paleontologist, who discovered Eva de Navarone, the oldest skeleton ever found in the Americas, with the aid of a shaman and a psychedelic drug made from the glands of a Mexican toad.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button to the right.
Transcript
Jan 22, 2016 • 58min
The soul of jazz part 2: A conversation with integral music critic Greg Thomas
This is part two of a two-part series. Find part one here.
As we see with integral theory, art is often the leading edge of cultural and consciousness evolution, and jazz today continues to lead the way. In this two-part series, “The soul of jazz”, Greg takes us through the history of jazz from its roots in the magic, mythic and traditional interiors of African Americans at the turn of the last century, through the modern and postmodern strains of the mid and late 20th Century, to the more wild wooly contemporary scene. He points out the evolutionarily potent and ultimately integral qualities jazz conveys as it confronts enduring human polarities such as the individual vs the group, tragedy vs comedy, competition vs cooperation, and structure vs freedom.
Greg Thomas is one of the nation’s leading experts on jazz. For several years Greg was a jazz columnist for the New York Daily News. He’s a consultant with the National Jazz Museum in Harlem and with Jazz at Lincoln Center, the largest organization in the world dedicated to the preservation and perpetuation of jazz.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button to the right.
Jan 18, 2016 • 0sec
Political correctness and the evolution of culture
Green sensitivity makes us worthy of becoming integral. ~Clare Graves
Obama’s integral manifesto
Jeff begins the podcast with a few observations about Obama’s final State of the Union address, where the President invited us to look not just at the next year, but further “to the next ten years and beyond.” And to see that the key feature of our journey is change, change which is influenced by the actions we take.
Obama then sets up America’s challenges, as he sees them, in a series of polarities: how do we broaden opportunity and not widen inequality? How do we stay safe and not become the policeman of the world?
He explicitly pushed back on the Republican “apocalypse narrative” that has our economy collapsing and the world on fire, by pointing out that we have the strongest economy in the world and no existential threats.
The idea of change as a fundamental feature of reality—the potency of polarities … a challenge to move beyond fear—these are all markers of integral thinking. Obama’s last year in office is going to be fun to watch.
“I don’t want to debate. I want to talk about my pain”
Moving on to the main story, Jeff starts by sharing a question from a listener about an exquisitely complex and contentious topic in the culture: political correctness.
Chris in San Francisco writes:
I’ve been fascinated and a bit confused by the recent activity at Yale University. There’s a lot going on there regarding race, discrimination, free speech, developmental stages, safety, vilification of those who disagree, entitlement technology, et cetera, and I would love to hear your thoughts.
The current Green, postmodern wave of political correctness, speech codes and cultural sensitivity is part of a long history of words and ideas declared acceptable or anathema in any given time, place, and culture. Jeff takes us on a tour of how speech has been regulated and codified for hundreds of years. There is political correctness, it turns out, at every stage of development, from the capitol crime of blasphemy at the traditional/amber stage to the prejudices and microaggressions you may not even know you’ve inflicted at the postmodern/green stage.
When we encounter green warriors for social justice we can bear witness to their pain, which goes some distance toward healing it, as well as healing the larger, karmic pain of human history. ~Jeff Salzman
Green is the nicest of the fightin’ first tier memes
“Trigger warnings” and “safe spaces” have become a regular part of our vocabulary in the last decade, and easy to deride. Many see the young student protesters on college campuses from Yale to Mizzou as coddled and effete—the entitled offspring of a generation of narcissistic baby boomers—demanding their feelings be taken into account by the wider world. And no doubt the green warriors of political correctness can be strident and self-righteous (as can people at all first tier memes). Yet Jeff shows how they are pushing humanity into new, ever more humane and compassionate territory.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button on DailyEvolver.com.
Transcript
Jan 5, 2016 • 0sec
The soul of jazz part 1: A conversation with integral music critic Greg Thomas
This is part one of a two-part series. Find part two here.
I’ve long enjoyed music critic Greg Thomas’s insightful posts on Integral Life, where he writes about jazz.
Not that I like jazz music. Truth is, I’ve always found jazz to be annoying. I can’t tap my foot to it. I can’t sing it in the shower. Like a lot of artforms, when we don’t understand them, jazz has shown up to me as noise.
Of course like all good integral practitioners, I want to turn toward the object of my annoyance. I know it’s not the fault of jazz that I don’t get it. Millions of people are ecstatic over it, and I want to have what they’re having. So I was thrilled when Greg came to one of my programs at the Integral Center last summer, and I invited him to stay with me. During downtimes we had some great one-on-ones where Greg did his best to initiate me into the jazz idiom. He explained how jazz expresses American culture. He told stories of various artists and songs. He played some of his favorite pieces and schooled me in what was going on. He turned out to be just the teacher I was looking for, and I began to get the beat.
Greg Thomas
Greg’s mastery is obvious, and he is indeed one of the nation’s leading experts on jazz. For several years Greg was a jazz columnist for the New York Daily News. He’s a consultant with the National Jazz Museum in Harlem and with Jazz at Lincoln Center, the largest organization in the world dedicated to the preservation and perpetuation of jazz.
As we see with integral theory, art is often the leading edge of cultural and consciousness evolution, and jazz today continues to lead the way. In this two-part series, “The soul of jazz”, Greg takes us through the history of jazz from its roots in the magic, mythic and traditional interiors of African Americans at the turn of the last century, through the modern and postmodern strains of the mid and late 20th Century, to the more wild wooly contemporary scene. He points out the evolutionarily potent and ultimately integral qualities jazz conveys as it confronts enduring human polarities such as the individual vs the group, tragedy vs comedy, competition vs cooperation, and structure vs freedom.
Check out this page to hear the songs that Greg and Jeff discuss in this part of the podcast in their entirety.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button to the right.
Dec 24, 2015 • 10min
The practice of miracles: A brief holiday message from Jeff
One of the blessings of an integral consciousness is the ability to embrace the gifts of earlier stages of development. In this short holiday message, Jeff encourages us to practice being enchanted, once again, by the beauty and goodness of the world.
All Life asks of us is that we wake up, become who we are, and express our wisdom and virtue into the world. ~Jeff Salzman
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button on DailyEvolver.com.
Dec 20, 2015 • 56min
From midlife crisis to a deeper sense of self, with Dr. Keith Witt
The popular picture of the midlife crisis is the man in his 40’s or 50’s who’s lost his job, his wife or his health. He’s dyed his hair, bought a Porsche and is dating a much younger woman. We feel sorry for him, maybe in the same way we would feel sorry for an active alcoholic, a mentally ill person or anyone who is out of touch with reality.
Losing your job or your partner, having major health issues or just the general feeling of existential ennui can be terrible and even traumatic, but they are not necessarily unique to midlife. The midlife crisis has a flavor all its own. It kicks in with the realization that you’ve crossed the halfway point of your life and are on the downward slope. To make it worse, you may discover that the things most important to you — your relationships, your career, your purpose in life — have begun fraying around the edges if you haven’t put in the effort to sustain them.
I want to emphasize the relational aspect of this. The way through is going to be getting more connected to yourself and to other people.
~Dr. Keith Witt
We negotiate one transformation after another during our lifetimes, beginning with birth and extending into old age and finally death. How we learn to handle them is what shapes us as people and fashions our fate. “The difference between a crisis that makes us stronger or one that makes us weaker and diminishes us is how we resolve it,” says Dr. Keith.
In the podcast, Jeff and Dr. Keith discuss:
The history of the midlife crisis, from Freud and Jung to our current integral understanding that takes into account adult development
The feelings of loneliness and separation that can characterize this time for people, and how healing it will need to be accomplished in relationship
The resolution of the crisis at a mature age is likely not quantitative (doing more of this or less of that) but instead will require a qualitative shift, a shift in consciousness
How to get the support you need to cultivate resilience and find out how you can be of better service to the world
Find more episodes of The Shrink & The Pundit here.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button to the right.
Dec 13, 2015 • 51min
Terror and backlash in America: The San Bernardino attack and its effect on US politics
In a world in which there are no mess-free options, says Jeff, “I’m so happy to have an evolutionary view” when trying to make sense of things like the killings in San Bernardino, the first terror attack on American soil with the fingerprints of ISIS. While it’s objectively true that violent deaths in the U.S. (and the world) are declining steadily, public shootings have become horrifyingly common here (26 mass shootings just during Obama’s two terms in office). These create a special kind of anxiety and terror, one that we are evolutionarily programmed to pay outsized attention to.
In this podcast Jeff looks at the range of responses that we’ve seen in the weeks following this most recent attack–responses that tell us a lot about our country, our candidates and ourselves. A predictable (and evolutionarily potent) controversy is underway as to what the U.S. role should be in responding to ISIS, and how we should fight back militarily, culturally, even in cyberspace.
Donald Trump called for a halt to Muslims entering the country, apparently determined to keep anyone from getting to the right of him on issues of national security. He taps a long history of xenophobia when Americans have felt threatened, from the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to the Japanese internments during WW2, to Operation Wetback in the 1950’s. But America was a center-of-gravity traditional (amber altitude) country then; we are a center-of-gravity modern (orange altitude) country now. Those of us in the modern majority look back on these historical acts with regret. But the minority of people who are traditionalists feel little misgiving and believe that tough times call for tough measures. These folks now have an unambiguous, unapologetic, tough-guy champion in Donald Trump, to whom they can hitch their wagon…and ride with him to abject defeat. Which will create more modernists (defeated people usually grow). Isn’t cultural evolution wonderful?
Speaking of which, President Obama has taken a lot of criticism for his nuanced, Jeff argues integral approach to dealing with ISIS. Jeff offers his analysis of Obama’s style.
The perennial foreign policy question facing integralists is how to help guide premodern cultures into modernity—a crucially important fulcrum, as violence drops dramatically at this developmental milestone. Jeff advocates an approach similar to that of a parent. “I wish I could think of a better analogy than parenting,” he says. “It feels like it’s condescending. It makes my green alarms go off that one country could presume to be a parent to another. But from an integral perspective, it’s literally true.” He explains in the podcast.
Jeff also touches on gun control, the polarity between security and freedom, and how it is we allow ISIS to use the most powerful tool conceived by modernity: the internet.
Plus, a seasonal message of love and renewal.
“Here’s a thought and heart experiment: assume that we are living in a world where there is a loving intelligence leading us to ever-new unfoldings of goodness, truth and beauty. And that while we are living our lives, we are also being lived by life. Let this experiment be your practice as we enter this beautiful season of love and renewal.” ~Jeff Salzman
Have a wonderful holiday and we look forward to seeing you when the Daily Evolver live returns January 5th.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button to the right.
Transcript
Dec 8, 2015 • 1h 4min
The integral guide to divorce, with Dr. Keith Witt
In the previous episode of The Shrink & The Pundit, Dr. Keith and Jeff talk about the history of marriage, what questions to ask as you consider marriage, and above all the challenge of supporting each other’s mutual development—what Dr. Keith calls the marital love affair.
But for half of all couples the love affair will end, and so will the marriage. A higher divorce rate doesn’t necessarily mean there is something wrong with our society. It more likely indicates our changing expectations of a primary partnership, says Dr. Keith. “We’re living twice as long as we did a hundred years ago,” he tells Jeff, “Women have more power, and the standard of marriage is a fulfillment standard now more than a stability standard.”
A fulfillment standard is much more demanding, and people are likely to adopt it without a commitment to the practices that maintain it (see The practice of the marital love affair).
“People feel a moral responsibility to be great parents without the same responsibility to be a great spouse. I think that’s backward and crazy.” ~Dr. Keith Witt
When one person makes the decision “I don’t want to live with you anymore,” from that point on everything is different. For the couple sitting in Dr. Keith’s office, the therapy is no longer about resolving marital issues; instead, it’s about helping the couple separate with as little pain and expense as possible, says Dr. Keith.
Divorce, like marriage, has evolved. No fault divorce is a relatively new option and quite a leap forward from the ritual humiliation of earlier versions of legal separation, when one partner had to prove the other was inadequate or defective in some way. And recently the phrase “conscious uncoupling” entered the popular lexicon when Gwyneth Paltrow and her husband, Chris Martin of Coldplay, decided to separate earlier this year.
Despite how far we’ve come, it’s still generally painful and expensive, and it’s a huge life transition. But with some work and a little help from an integral therapist, it can be less painful and less expensive.
Here are some of the things that Dr. Keith and Jeff talk about in the podcast:
The very real difference in the psychology of the person leaving and the person being left
Divorce as a signature event in a child’s life. Should you consider staying together for your kids?
Is there such a thing as an integral divorce, and what would it look like?
The archetype for intimate relationships that was created in our infancy and the lessons it teaches us about how to stay connected to another person
How to use divorce to help your own development and be ready for your next relationship
Thanks for listening! Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button on DailyEvolver.com.
Nov 29, 2015 • 59min
The practice of the marital love affair, with Dr. Keith Witt
The opportunity to cultivate a transformational partnership is not what people have traditionally expected from marriage. But as we evolve, so does this robust yet still somehow fragile institution.
Dr. Keith and Jeff begin this podcast with a brief history of marriage, from the days when it was concerned mainly with power, property and family lineage, up to the present where we can choose to experience a conscious, lifelong love affair, a practice that Dr. Keith refers to as “American Tantra”.
All relationships start in the “as long as” phase. Meaning, “I’ll stay with this person as long as…” some need or condition is met. But marriages based on such conditions can be unstable, and 50-60% of marriages end in divorce (though 80% of divorced people try again!).
As Dr. Keith points out, the true gifts of marriage, and the work, begin to show up when each partner commits to the next stage of intimate bonding: “I’ll do what it takes to stay with this person …” If you and your partner are both willing to do what it takes to get back to love, again and again, then your marriage becomes a path of transformation.
“You should be fulfilled in your marital love affair at least 80% of the time. If it’s less than that you have some work to do.” ~Dr. Keith Witt
Dr. Keith also describes how attachment styles that are formed very early in our lives — some more healthy than others — determine how we will respond to the conflict in a marriage. The good news is that we are evolving beings and a positive intimate relationship can shift our attachment style from insecure to secure.
Having worked with literally thousands of couples as a psychotherapist — and as part of a 40+ year marriage himself — Dr Keith has extensive knowledge on what it takes to practice a marital love affair. In this conversation he shares intimate insights on topics such as what questions to ask as you consider marriage, how to deal with conflict and infidelity, progressive bonding, passion and friendship, and above all, the challenge of supporting each other’s mutual development.
Send your questions and comments for the show to jeff@dailyevolver.com. Record a voice memo on your smartphone or use the Speakpipe button on DailyEvolver.com.
Nov 22, 2015 • 59min
The holy war on modernity: An integral analysis of the Paris attacks
The recent terror attacks in Paris brought to light, once again, the difficulty in reconciling the values of modern, secular societies like France and premodern societies such as those in much of the Arab world.This relationship is complicated by the past sins of the West, from the Crusades all the way up to the wars after 9/11, which, Jeff explains, “took the lid off Iraq, which has put the Muslim world in arrested development and even in a functional regression since”.
It may be tricky to claim the moral high ground when you’ve been alternately toppling and propping up regimes to further your own ends for decades, but between the attacks on Paris and the stream of refugees into Europe, the West cannot ignore what’s happening. Jeff sorts out the cacophony of voices and gives us some perspective.
The practice that’s available to us is to put ourselves in the shoes of “the other,” the hawks and the doves, the refugees and the terrorists. ISIS is not just a pack of psychopaths that want to see the world burn, (dubious consolation). They have a strict set of beliefs and they’re recruiting young people who feel like second-class citizens in their host countries, says Jeff. “There’s no place for them or their God, the animating principle of their lives.” This call to wake up and fight is very alluring, even romantic to young men at this stage of development. Jeff offers some insight into how modern and postmodern societies might offer them a path forward that is meaningful and healthy.
We could wipe ISIS off the face of the earth by the end of next week. The way we would do it is the same way we did it when we were fighting the Nazis and the Japanese. We’d fire bomb. We’d strafe. We could even nuke if necessary. Remember, it was only 70 years ago that we dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But you notice that in our modern world, there’s not one credible voice arguing for this. It’s simply out of the question. That represents astonishing moral progress. ~Jeff Salzman
The media is worked up into a frenzy, as usual, (“I wonder how CNN would’ve covered D-Day” Jeff says). But welcome to modernity, where ever smaller dangers trigger ever greater responses. While it’s progress, to be sure, Jeff qualifies his optimism and reveals the one thing that would completely change the game … and not for the better.
Also in the episode, Jeff answers a question from a listener regarding our recent podcast on soul. “If you believe in the unity of everything since the Big Bang, why do you still speak of soul as if it were a separate entity?”
Transcript


