Zulu Sangoma (healer) Vusamazulu Credo Mutwa calls on all human beings to awaken the mother mind, that part of human consciousness that feels what is happening in the world.
(2:21)
Laboratory scientist Dean Radin discusses the possibility of a global mind and questions whether that global mind could wake up?
(3:03)
Sufi teacher and dreamworker Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee tells us that, for an individual, the spiritual path begins once there has been an experience of oneness through grace.
(2:16)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti describes how in the development of human consciousness, there comes a shift from a sense of a separate self toward the experience of unity.
(24:41)
Laboratory scientist Dean Radin describes how children growing up in this time of global environmental crisis may, out of necessity, behave in a radically different way and make a significant difference.
(2:33)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti describes the process of letting go of collective consciousness and the fear that causes us to cling to it.
(4:03)
Spoken word poet and activist Drew Dellinger points to an emerging global justice movement that connects social justice, economic justice and ecological justice issues.
(1:30)
A retrospective of our journey offering a picture of what is being born during this time of global transformation.
(4:42)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti points out the difference between being motivated by fear, which keeps us operating with the same old state of consciousness, and by love, which comes through us as we face our fears.
(3:06)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti acknowledges that we are all made of the same substance, though we express the One in individual manifestations.
(1:48)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti describes the illusory sense of a separate self as part of the natural development of human consciousness.
(3:23)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti describes the inclusiveness of love and how actions motivated by love have the power to unite and to change consciousness.
(3:46)
Laboratory scientist Dean Radin believes that humankind will be able to change its behavior rapidly enough to avoid its total destruction, because necessity will drive us to do it.
(3:01)
In this talk, Father Keating discusses the dynamic nature of God and the paradox implicit in experiencing divine oneness.
(34:41)
L.A.-based community activist Orland Bishop explains how the American economic system that assigns value to competition and scarcity of resources undermines oneness, which is inherently relational and abundant.
(5:15)
Actor Cliff Curtis explains how, from his perspective, storytelling is a form of activism.
(1:40)
Orland Bishop describes the unique blend of mentoring, peacemaking, and community leadership that takes place at his L.A.-based Shade Tree Multicultural Foundation.
(2:52)
Sufi teacher and dreamworker Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee believes the greatest mistake made by the various proponents of global oneness is to think that human beings can do it by themselves.
(2:06)
Environmentalist and artist Juan Manuel Carrion describes the role of art as rousing humanity from its collective amnesia and guiding it toward its purpose in the world.
(2:17)
Peaceworker Sami Awad describes the potential of an emerging understanding of peaceful coexistence to create a new reality.
(1:33)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti describes how reaching a point of crisis can lead to a shift in consciousness, both individually and collectively, and acknowledges the pressure on humanity to awaken before time runs out.
(3:47)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti suggests that our desire for change has to transcend our personal concerns. Only then, he says, can we access the infinite transformative power we need.
(3:50)
Tibetan Buddhist nun Ven. Tenzin Palmo explains that, although we desperately want happiness, we are undermined by a society that rewards greed, aggression and egotism.
(3:34)
Tibetan Buddhist leader His Holiness the Seventeenth Gyalwang Karmapa explains how exile has given Tibetans a heightened experience of oneness.
(3:20)
Spiritual teacher Adyashanti describes spirituality as not being separate from existence; although, he suggests, much of what we call spirituality primarily serves the dream state.
(1:51)
What if the world embodied our highest potential? What would it look like? As the structures of modern society crumble, is it enough to respond with the same tired solutions?
(25:14)
Actor Cliff Curtis asks, If a small group of English could change the world through colonization, what would happen if humanity as a whole decided to choose a different course?
(0:51)
Tibetan Buddhist leader His Holiness the Seventeenth Gyalwang Karmapa describes how oneness begins as an internal experience.
(5:28)