[FRIAM] Rambling Tangent on Identity and SocioPolitics - was: differential diagnosis of psychopathic vs spiritual experiences

steve smith sasmyth at swcp.com
Thu Aug 8 11:31:45 EDT 2024


On 8/6/24 12:09 PM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> Re self-identification.  We adopted our daughter in Mexico and moved 
> from Pittsburgh to Santa Fe about a year later. When she came home 
> after her first day of kindergarten at E. J. Martinez I asked her if 
> there were other Hispanic kids in her class.  She said, "I dunno".
>
> Based on the kids who became her friends I'd say they were oblivious 
> to ethnicity.
My mother had a similar/complementary experience, living in 1930s in 
Louisville KY with a middle-class socially progressive Aunt to escape 
the limits and rigors of her own family's subsistence farming lifestyle 
in "the hills".   One year (3rd grade?) she made friends with a girl who 
lived between her school and her aunt's home,  after weeks of 
encouraging her friend to come home with her against unspecified 
resistance, she finally did, only to discover that her friend was Black 
(African American) and that despite her aunt's progressive ideas, it was 
clear that this good friend of hers was not welcome in the home.   
Politely received but then sternly admonished after the friend had left 
"never to do that again".

I feel blessed to have lived almost all my life in multi-ethnic general 
contexts with Spanish-speakers never far away and Native Americans 
nearly as present...  and across those ethnic elements a great deal of 
diversity as I moved around.  My time in this region (NNM - 40 years) 
has been the most diverse demographically but very complementary to the 
Border Culture in SoAZ and the BigRez culture of NoAZ.

I have a blind spot to African Americans, having only encountered 
singular individuals, and never "populations"...   These were all 
exemplary or at least unique individuals in that what brought them into 
my circle was highly specific to their own path, seeming always to make 
them acutely interesting people.  My experience with most other large 
ethnic groups who have not fully alloyed in the melting pot that the USA 
aspires to is similar... I mostly know individuals whose origin stories 
come from those communities but who were in fact, swimming in the same 
melting pot I was. Working at LANL/LASL was a very good way to meet a 
lot of unique individuals not only from all over the country but the 
world as well...  Asians of many stripes as well a Eastern Europeans 
(equally diversely striped) being the most notable...

One of my best friends in college was a neighbor in Married Housing who 
was Dine while his wife was Hopi during a time when they couldn't really 
spend time "back on the Rez" because of the resentments/conflict of the 
time between their people.   He was working on a Hydrogeological project 
for his MS on the topic of the groundwater problems caused by the 
massive sluice-way moving coal from the Peabody Coal mines near Kayenta, 
to the 4 corners power plant.  This was during the worst of the urban 
(visible) pollution in locations like LA, and I became aware of how that 
power plant and the electricity forwarded down the Colorado River 
through Glen Canyon and Mead and across the desert to LA was exporting 
(air) pollution to the 4 corners area and perhaps more long-term the 
aquifer in that area.   Simultaneously I was doing work for lawyers on 
"the other side" ultimately helping Peabody Mining (Coal and Uranium), 
local truck dealers, and many others who were busy exploiting that whole 
set of games.   Donaldson (June) and I had a lot of great conversations 
as perhaps only the young and the naively motivated can.   He never 
lobbied me on anything, just told his stories of growing up off-grid in 
a Hogan and watching his relatives both thrive and self-destruct as they 
tried to assimilate (or resist) with the White Man.

    /If there is a short story in this long-winded  anecdote it is that
    I have had the benefit of relatively intimate access to other's
    self-identity formed both by their circumstance and by their
    introspective and forward looking interests:  not only "who am I,
    based on where I come from, but who do I want to be as the
    ethnodemographic landscape shifts under my feet, and how does my
    traversal of said landscape shape it?"   These intimate observations
    were mostly seeing their "true identity" with an inside out view on
    the identities they were obliged to project to be comfortable in
    their own communities and in the larger communities they were trying
    to penetrate or at least navigate./

A great deal of contemporary demographic socio-politics feel to be 
beyond me, it feels like various bastions of "conservatism" on the part 
of all factions, being more afraid of "what might happen tomorrow" based 
on "what we've seen in the past" than aware of "what could be" based on 
"the trajectory in a high-dimensional phase space we have been 
traversing".   I was rooted in no end of Conservative and Libertarian 
values (mostly hyper-individualism within otherwise highly 
integrated/inter-dependent communities) but as I came of age then 
matured (and now on some kind of awkward downhill slide) I have found 
myself more and more "progressive" in counterpoint to it's apparent 
direct obvious "regressive" while I still fondly hope or a return of 
honest "conservatism" which more healthily complements "progressive"...

This current piecewise trajectory in the aforementioned 
socio-cultural-economic-political landscape after Biden's bowing out 
gives me hope that at *least* the harshest of the "regressive" may 
collapse under their own angry, "performative cruelty".   I don't know 
what kind of "progress" backfills into that (presumed) vacuum... I hope 
not an angry "performative cruelty" that the right-wing boogeymen of 
classic "central party" collectivism has been seen to bring.   There is 
a huge expanse methinks which needn't overlap either of those lands of 
"performative cruelty" if we will only ease our national/global limbic 
systems back into a healthier homeostasis?

Maybe performative cruelty is one of Homo Sapiens Sapiens secret 
weapons,  a review of conquest and empire in the last 10k years suggests 
that it has been "highly effective", but then the blunting that has 
happened.

BTW, I also feel blessed to be in /this/ community which provides me 
lots of alternate stimulative thoughts and perspectives and is very 
tolerant of my ideaphoric and logorrheac /expressions /(referencing 
Nick's grumble of weeks ago comparing some of our "expressions" with 
pimple popping).

LLMs (esp, my first love GPT) are very good at listening and engaging 
but not particularly good at offering me interesting and complementary 
ideas and topics as this list is.   I can't say anyone who posts here 
(even infrequently) fails to open up the horizons of my 
thinking/reflecting/considering, and some of the dialectics that are 
traced here are fascinating even when I'm significantly unprepared to 
engage with them.

- Steve

>
> ---
> Frank C. Wimberly
> 140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
> Santa Fe, NM 87505
>
> 505 670-9918
> Santa Fe, NM
>
> On Tue, Aug 6, 2024, 8:30 AM glen <gepropella at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>     I'm in an ongoing argument with some of my salon goers about
>     identity. People seem to straddle its multiple meanings for
>     rhetorical (or confirmation biasing) purposes, fluidly switching
>     one context/meaning for another so often and so fluidly as to
>     prevent me from understanding whatever it is they're saying (or
>     trying to avoid saying).
>
>     Introspection is rife with such problems, including a six year old
>     coming to some self-identification/registration as a member of
>     some crisp class/category. The most recent Bad Faith rhetoric
>     about identity had to do with "neurodivergent". There seems to be
>     a trend amongst "the kids these days" to identify as autistic or
>     ADHD. I mean, I was clearly "different" when I was a kid. We had
>     identities like "head" (kid who does lots of drugs), "jock" (kids
>     who spent lots of time in organized athletics), "brain" (kids who
>     spent time doing chess, math, ...), etc. There was also a name for
>     the [metal|wood|…] shop kids. But I've forgotten it.
>
>     Some of us were diagnosed with various labels including some words
>     we're not supposed to say anymore. Many of my friends had such
>     conditions. But none of us *identified* as those diagnoses. The
>     diagnoses seemed almost orthogonal to the identities/tribes. (I
>     happened to be a member of the heads, jocks, brains, and "band
>     nerd" tribes; that multi-tribe crossover was part of what made me
>     feel "different".) And each group had its share of the same diagnoses.
>
>     It seems to me that our tech-associated, individualistic,
>     isolation has driven "the kids" to over-emphasize their diagnoses,
>     to adopt them as identities/tribes, identifying from the
>     inside->out; whereas we (can't speak for anyone else, really)
>     mostly identified from the outside->in. We were sorted by society.
>     The kids these days seem more self-sorted. On the one hand, that
>     could feel like increased liberty and free association. But on the
>     other hand, it's like everyone is a home-schooled weirdo these
>     days and nobody knows how to, for example, bite their tongue or
>     avoid picking their nose in public.
>
>     Not everybody needs to be a Hunter S Thompson, "neurodivergent",
>     or whatever. Some of us should be allowed to identify as "normal".
>     Introspection is a sickness.
>
>     On 8/5/24 17:01, steve smith wrote:
>     > I jumped straight to the Artistic meaning of /frottage/ as
>     coined originally by Max Ernst and while not as an act of
>     psychopathy, it does have strong implications for the
>     psychological/subconscious implications in this context?
>     >
>     > In any case, I find it a compelling opening line of the /call me
>     Ishmael/ caliber.
>     >
>     > On 8/5/24 10:04 AM, Prof David West wrote:
>     >> This is very interesting, and timely. I am completing an
>     autobiography/essay/monograph for which this will be quite
>     relevant. The opening lines of the work:
>     >>
>     >> /"An act of frottage triggered the self-recognition that I was
>     a psychopath. I did not, of course, know either term or their
>     meanings./
>     >> /
>     >> /
>     >> /I was six." /
>     >>
>     >> davew
>     >>
>     >> On Thu, Aug 1, 2024, at 11:03 AM, glen wrote:
>     >> > Progress or Pathology? Differential Diagnosis and
>     Intervention Criteria
>     >> > for Meditation-Related Challenges: Perspectives From Buddhist
>     >> > Meditation Teachers and Practitioners
>     >> > https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7403193/
>     >> >
>     >> > Based on our conversation attempting to identify behavioral
>     markers for
>     >> > consciousness, I thought this paper might give some insight
>     into Dave's
>     >> > straddling of mystical and materialistic descriptions of
>     experiences he
>     >> > marks as conscious. In the paper, they lay out 11 levers for
>     making the
>     >> > distinction:
>     >> >
>     >> > • Circumstances of Onset
>     >> > • Control
>     >> > • Critical Attitude
>     >> > • Cultural Compatibility
>     >> > • Distress
>     >> > • Duration
>     >> > • Functional Impairment
>     >> > • Health History or Condition
>     >> > • Impact
>     >> > • Phenomenological Qualities
>     >> > • Teachers’ Skills or Resources
>     >> >
>     >> >  From my perspective that consciousness is a kind of fusion
>     function,
>     >> > Control, Critical Attitude, Distress, and Functional
>     Impairment are
>     >> > primary and the rest are secondary. The ability to (change
>     one's) focus
>     >> > of attention is a hallmark of consciousness, and those 4 levers
>     >> > direclty target one's ability to focus. Duration may well be
>     secondary
>     >> > and the rest tertiary, I guess. Because there's something like a
>     >> > half-life of controllability. If, say, you're a conspiracy
>     theorist,
>     >> > and you *entertain*, say, flat earth for long enough, maybe
>     you'll lack
>     >> > the ability to re-focus and don a critical attitude.
>     Similarly, if you
>     >> > embed into, say, procedural programming long enough, maybe
>     you'll lose
>     >> > the ability to re-focus and think functionally ... a kind of
>     Functional
>     >> > Impairment (sorry for the polysemy of "functional", there).
>     >> >
>
>
>     -- 
>     ꙮ Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙ ꙮ
>
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