It's Not the End of the World - Book Excerpt
Hope Rules

"What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly."
- Richard Bach

A new world is emerging at warp speed, and some of us will do better than 
others adapting to it.  One laid-off programmer goes home and writes code 
that turns his iPhone into a xylophone.  In ten months he's a millionaire, 
catapulted into programmer heaven by mega-sales on Apple's innovative App 
Store.  A second laid-off programmer stresses out and spends his days 
worried, bored, and depressed.

I've always been fascinated by the differences between these two kinds of 
people. Their outer circumstances are identical, but they respond to change 
in radically different ways.  One gives up and the other takes off.  One 
clings to the past, while the other becomes the future.

Understanding that the future isn't something that happens to you, but 
something that you create is the key to surviving and thriving in changing 
times.  That's what this book is all about.

We can all recite the fearful story line of the 21st century: The global 
climate is changing for the worse.  A mass die-off of species is under way. 
Terrorists breed panic and uncertainty.  Financial worry creates chronic 
stress and threatens the survival of business as usual here and abroad.  The 
world population resembles a bacterial culture that has outgrown its petri 
dish.  Pandemics crouch in the wings, ready to pounce.  And that's just the 
beginning of the familiar litany.

But what if there's a more hopeful way to understand this postmodern 
story-this parenthesis between what used to be and the innovative, 
sustainable future that can be?  Those who will thrive and create that new 
future are the ones with enough vision and resilience to see the hope 
through the hype.

The late physicist Ilya Prigogine, who completed his distinguished career at 
the University of Texas at Austin, which now houses his Center for Complex 
Quantum Systems, won a Nobel Prize in 1977 for his theory of dissipative 
structures. Simply put, all complex systems from subatomic particles to 
human civilizations reach a point where their current level of organization 
becomes unstable.  Then they melt down.  When the old system crashes, it can 
then reconfigure in a better way, free from the determinism of the past. 
Prigogine called this daunting event an "escape to a higher order."  That's 
where we are at this moment in history, and although the changes we face are 
disconcerting in the short run, they're a prelude to great possibility.

The Chinese character for change is made up of two characters: danger and 
opportunity.  The danger lies in giving in to the fear that accompanies the 
loss of the familiar.  Fear is poisonous to creativity because when we're in 
survival mode, the tendency is to regress and hole up in some "safe haven," 
often turning to alcohol, drugs, television, or rigid ideologies.

The opportunity of change, on the other hand, lies in being ejected from our 
comfort zone.  Like a cave dweller suddenly thrust into the light, it takes 
a while to adjust.  But when we open our eyes and look around with an open 
mind and a curious heart, a whole new world of possibilities reveals itself.

My purpose in writing this book is to help you overcome fear; stress less; 
and learn how resilient, creative people think and act.  At the risk of 
sounding prophetic, I believe that in a few years, a new kind of natural 
selection will have its way with humanity.  Hopeful, stress-hardy people 
will rule the world.  And as change and uncertainty escalate, which is 
likely, those who are stress prone will be less and less able to compete. 
Read on, and take your place in the new world that's emerging.

Courtesy of Hay House
It's Not the End of The World

In celebration of the release of It's Not the End of the World by Joan 
Borysenko, Ph.D., Hay House is offering a variety of prizes, including a 
chance to see Joan LIVE! Hurry, the drawing ends on October 22.

http://evolutionezine.com/not-end-of-world/




===



 The Big Picture 
By Danny Hillis 


Let's put all this hype about change and transformation in perspective. It's 
underhyped. 

http://www.wired.com/wired/archive//6.01/hillis.html?person=danny_hillis&topic_set=wiredpeople


http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/people/danny_hillis/
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