Where Have All the Flowers Gone?

By Jim Selman | Bio


This week is the 40th anniversary of Woodstock.
Can you believe it? It seems not so long ago that we were all about “peace,
love and music”—a generation that was going to change the world. And in many
ways we did! In CBS’s Sunday Morning
retrospective on Woodstock, the theme came through that the ‘spirit’ of that
memorable event lives on in our children at outdoor rock concerts across the
land. Historians, of course, work hard to understand and explain what happened
there and why. But at the end of the day, it was just a ‘happening’—an
unexpected and largely unplanned convergence of human beings celebrating life
and the possibility of a better world.

I was not there. I was a few years older and didn’t even know
about it until  later. I was busy working and far removed from the
surge of spiritual and political energy that was sweeping across America and
the world. I was, however, focused on the deepening doubts arising out of Vietnam and
despairing of Watergate. I was fairly ‘establishment’ in those days, but took
pride as people of my generation led in bringing about long overdue civil
rights and stood resolutely against nuclear arms and environmental
exploitation.

Woodstock was something else. It seems to me that it was
more about “who we are” than taking on the world’s intractable problems. Much
of the music, to be sure, was political, but it was also about the brotherhood
of man and the possibility of a world in which just being together counts for
something. When I think about the past 40 years, I am stunned by all that has
happened (and is happening) on our ‘hyper-accelerating’ Spaceship Earth.

But with all that has changed, I wonder if we have changed…?

I think the underlying message from the “Age of Aquarius” is
that we have a choice about who we are and who we can be. This idea is very different from
the question of what we do (or what we should do). Most of our understanding of
human beings came out of the Industrial Revolution and the Cartesian notion
that we are just specialized objects in an objective world and that all
problems can be solved if we are clever enough to understand their cause.
Psychology aspires to be the operating manual for how the ‘human thing’ works. The
Aquarian message challenges all the various deterministic imperatives about our
‘human nature’ and the limits to who we are.

But in August of 1969 about 400,000 of us stood arm in arm
and rejected this determinism. We somehow looked beyond color, religion,
education, class, income and all the other things we’ve used to separate us
from each other. We let go of claiming superiority or exclusivity and attempting,
in one way or another, to dominate others or avoid domination. For a few days,
we transcended our basest survival instincts and danced and screamed and let
the music rock us.

I don’t think life is a rock concert. And I can’t imagine
the world working for long in an open field without plumbing, commerce, and adequate
housing, food and water. But I can imagine that if enough of us aspired to BE
as open and loving and tolerant
as those who were there, then we would have a foundation
upon which to design a future in which friendship, community, wisdom and peace
can exist.

© 2009 Jim Selman. All rights reserved.