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🗓️ 2 April 2025
⏱️ 26 minutes
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This episode begins with the idea that in traditional cultures worldwide the search for wisdom would be a necessity for developing genuine leadership. It would also be a primary practice for those who would become elders. Genuine elders were considered a valuable living resource, without whose guidance entire societies could become trapped in short term thinking, mired in materialistic aims and in danger of entirely losing their way.
Traditionally, elders lead by remembering further back than others and by seeing more clearly ahead. Although growing older can involve a loss of short term memory, elders remember the essential values and the enduring truths that people keep forgetting. Thus, they are less likely to be strictly political leaders and more likely to be cultural and spiritual guides. In this archetypal sense, elders serve as seers who can see behind and beyond the politics of the day, and perceive more accurately the needs of the future.
The passing of time makes everyone older, but not necessarily wiser. The qualities needed to be a true elder involve more than physical changes. There is something metaphysical, psychological and spiritual involved. As William Blake put it, "Wisdom combines insight with experience and vision with maturity. If maturity expands vision, it leads to wisdom. And if it does not, maturity simply becomes degeneration." As someone else once said, "You are only young once, but you can stay immature indefinitely."
The archetype of the elder exists in the depths of each person’s soul where it is connected to the deepest ideals of humanity. When the world becomes dark and foreboding and even the future of life on Earth becomes uncertain, the inner elder and wise sage can awaken in each of our souls. When that kind of awakening occurs, something ancient and enduring, something visionary and creative can enter the world through us and provide the wisdom we most need.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Living Myth podcast with Michael Mead, where this shifting, changing world is looked at from a mythic perspective. |
0:17.0 | This episode begins with the idea that in traditional cultures worldwide, the |
0:23.9 | search for wisdom would be a necessity for developing genuine leadership. It would also be a |
0:30.0 | primary practice for those who would become elders. Genuine elders were considered a valuable |
0:36.8 | living resource, without whose guidance entire societies could become trapped in short-term thinking, mired in materialistic aims, and in danger of entirely losing their way. |
0:50.3 | Traditionally, elders lead by remembering further back than others and by seeing more clearly ahead. |
0:58.0 | One of the great problems found throughout the modern world is a lack of meaningful leadership |
1:17.3 | exactly when nature is rattling in human culture seems about to unravel. |
1:23.4 | Amidst an endless flood of information, a seeming increase in practical knowledge and a flood of digital technology, |
1:32.2 | there is a tragic lack of the wisdom needed to navigate a rapidly changing world. |
1:38.4 | There's an old idea that states that cultures fall apart when their young people can't find their dreams and the old |
1:46.4 | people fail to develop the genuine vision of elders. Although it may seem a thing of the distant |
1:55.3 | past, there has always been a subtle but meaningful connection between youth and elders |
2:03.4 | in which the wisdom and the vision and the courage of elders |
2:08.5 | helps open the pathways of inspiration and awakening for the younger generation. |
2:16.6 | When a culture fails to develop and support genuine elders, |
2:22.4 | the result is a lack of true leadership in critical times and also a draining of life from the |
2:31.3 | very course of life. In traditional cultures worldwide, the search for wisdom would be a |
2:38.6 | necessity for developing genuine leadership and a primary practice of those who would become elders. |
2:47.7 | In this old sense, elders were considered to be a valuable living resource, without whose guidance |
2:56.0 | entire societies could become trapped in short-term thinking, mired in materialistic aims, |
3:05.1 | and in danger of entirely losing their way. |
... |
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