Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Change can be lasting

Transforma­tion may happen

- JUDI NEAL Judi Neal, Ph.D. is the editor of the two-volume “Handbook of Personal and Organizati­onal Transforma­tion” and the organizer of internatio­nal Transforma­tion Summits. Email her at judi@edgewalker­s.org.

Ilike to draw a distinctio­n between change and transforma­tion. I define change as “moving from one state of being to another with the ability to return to the original state.” Water has three different states — liquid, gas or solid. If you freeze water in its liquid state, it becomes solid. An ice cube at room temperatur­e returns to its liquid state.

Transforma­tion, on the other hand, is “moving from one state of being to a state of being at a higher order of complexity.” A popular metaphor for the process of transforma­tion is the butterfly. Once the caterpilla­r goes into its chrysalis, it cannot revert back to a caterpilla­r. And once it emerges as a butterfly, it cannot go back to either a chrysalis or a caterpilla­r.

The mystery of our current time is whether humanity is in the midst of transforma­tion and a collective spiritual awakening, or whether we are experienci­ng a temporary state of change. The lesson of covid-19, the Black Lives Matter movement and the climate crisis is that we are all interconne­cted. “Verily I say unto you, inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of these least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” (Matthew 25:40) Using another butterfly metaphor, drawing upon chaos theory of sensitive dependence on initial conditions, when a butterfly flaps its wings in Brazil, a tornado forms in Texas. Each of the crises we are experienci­ng started with small but cumulative actions.

We don’t know how covid-19 started, but it changed the world. We have a better idea about the roots of Black Lives Matter and the history of racism, brutality and injustice. With George Floyd’s murder, there is some collective awakening to the systemic racism non-whites have experience­d for generation­s, along with a global willingnes­s to protest in order to create new systems. When covid-19 caused travel to stop, we saw dramatic evidence of the decrease in pollution around the world. Now that so many of us have had the experience of Zoom meetings for family, education and business, there is a rethinking about how much travel we really need.

For three years I have been raising butterflie­s. I get to see the transforma­tion process up close. We have a native plant garden with lots of milkweed and other plants to attract birds, bees and butterflie­s. I look for Monarch caterpilla­rs on the milkweed and move them into butterfly cages where I feed them daily until they form a chrysalis. When they emerge, I set them free in the garden. If the caterpilla­rs are left alone, without human interventi­on, only 10% survive. With human help, 85% survive. The message is that transforma­tion of some kind will happen with or without us, but it is much more effective if we give it a helping hand.

Will our awakenings be temporary change or permanent transforma­tion? It’s up to us.

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