Thursday, November 22, 2012

Student Suspended for Refusing to Wear a School-Issued RFID Tracker


  • BY DAVID KRAVETS
  • 1:22 PM
  • Student body ID cards with RFID-embedded chips. Image: Northside Independent School District
    2:30 p.m. PST UPDATEA local Texas judge on Wednesday tentatively blocked the suspension, pending further hearings next week.
    A Texas high school student is being suspended for refusing to wear a student ID card implanted with a radio-frequency identification chip.
    Northside Independent School District in San Antonio began issuing the RFID-chip-laden student-body cards when the semester began in the fall. The ID badge has a bar code associated with a student’s Social Security number, and the RFID chip monitors pupils’ movements on campus, from when they arrive until when they leave.
    Radio-frequency identification devices are a daily part of the electronic age — found in passports, and library and payment cards. Eventually they’re expected to replace bar-code labels on consumer goods. Now schools across the nation are slowly adopting them as well.
    The suspended student, sophomore Andrea Hernandez, was notified by the Northside Independent School District in San Antonio that she won’t be able to continue attending John Jay High School unless she wears the badge around her neck, which she has been refusing to do. The district said the girl, who objects on privacy and religious grounds, beginning Monday would have to attend another high school in the district that does not yet employ the RFID tags.
    The Rutherford Institute said it would go to court and try to nullify the district’s decision. The institute said that the district’s stated purpose for the program — to enhance their coffers — is “fundamentally disturbing.”
    “There is something fundamentally disturbing about this school district’s insistence on steamrolling students into complying with programs that have nothing whatsoever to do with academic priorities and everything to do with fattening school coffers,” said John Whitehead, the institute’s president.
    Like most state-financed schools, the district’s budget is tied to average daily attendance. If a student is not in his seat during morning roll call, the district doesn’t receive daily funding for that pupil because the school has no way of knowing for sure if the student is there.
    But with the RFID tracking, students not at their desk but tracked on campus are counted as being in school that day, and the district receives its daily allotment for that student.
    Tagging school children with RFID chips is uncommon, but not new. A federally funded preschool in Richmond, California, began embedding RFID chips in students’ clothing in 2010. And an elementary school outside of Sacramento, California, scrubbed a plan in 2005 amid a parental uproar. And a Houston, Texas, school district began using the chips to monitor students on 13 campuses in 2004 for the same reasons the Northside Independent School District implemented the program. Northside is mulling adopting the program for its other 110 schools.
    The Hernandez family, which is Christian, told InfoWars that the sophomore is declining to wear the badge because it signifies Satan, or the Mark of the Beast warning in Revelations 13: 16-18.
    The district, in a letter last week to the family, said it would allow her to continue attending the magnet school with “the battery and chip removed.” But the girl’s father, Steve Hernandez, said the district told him that the offer came on the condition that he must “agree to stop criticizing the program and publicly support it,” a proposition the father told WND Education that he could not stomach.
    The district was not immediately available to comment.

    For Fourth Straight Year, Obama's Thanksgiving Message Doesn't Thank God



    Posted: Thu, 22 Nov 2012 08:37:00 -0800
    Yet again, President Obama’s Thanksgiving message eschewed any direct reference to thanking God, making this the fourth straight year in which the President of the United States has ignored the central message of the holiday in favor of political grandstanding.
    This year, Obama’s central message was that now that he’s been re-elected, Americans should agree with all of his policies. His unity routine sounds strangely empty after a campaign in which he focused on dividing Americans:
    But most of all, it’s a time to give thanks for each other, and for the incredible bounty we enjoy.
    That’s especially important this year.  As a nation, we’ve just emerged from a campaign season that was passionate, noisy, and vital to our democracy.  But it also required us to make choices – and sometimes those choices led us to focus on what sets us apart instead of what ties us together; on what candidate we support instead of what country we belong to ….
    We’re also grateful that this country has always been home to Americans who see these blessings not simply as gifts to enjoy, but as opportunities to give back.  Americans who believe we have a responsibility to look out for those less fortunate – to pull each other up and move forward together.
    How are we supposed to move forward together, you ask? Why, with greater government spending, of course!
    As for God, here was the only mention – as a throwaway line in a hackneyed aphorism, used constantly by this president for communitarian sloganeering:
    As Americans, we are a bold, generous, big-hearted people.  When our brothers and sisters are in need, we roll up our sleeves and get to work – not for the recognition or the reward, but because it’s the right thing to do.  Because there but for the grace of God go I.  And because here in America, we rise or fall together, as one nation and one people.
    No mention of thanking God. None.
    But, of course, we’re used to this. In 2011, there was no mention of God at all. In 2010, Obama was closer, but still missed the mark (“we’ll spend some time taking stock of what we’re thankful for: the God-given bounty of America, and the blessings of one another”). In 2009, Obama didn’t thank God, either.
    Compare that to Obama’s Thanksgiving Day proclamations, which he does not read or speak. Those are filled with God – at least for the last three years. In his first year, filled with the vim and vigor of his original election, Obama preferred to eschew any direct thanking of God even in his proclamation.
    2012: “On Thanksgiving Day, individuals from all walks of life come together to celebrate this most American tradition, grateful for the blessings of family, community, and country. Let us spend this day by lifting up those we love, mindful of the grace bestowed upon us by God and by all who have made our lives richer with their presence.”
    2011: “As we gather in our communities and in our homes, around the table or near the hearth, we give thanks to each other and to God for the many kindnesses and comforts that grace our lives.  Let us pause to recount the simple gifts that sustain us, and resolve to pay them forward in the year to come.”
    2010: “As Americans gather for the time-honored Thanksgiving Day meal, let us rejoice in the abundance that graces our tables, in the simple gifts that mark our days, in the loved ones who enrich our lives, and in the gifts of a gracious God.”
    Of course, nobody sees these proclamations, so Obama doesn’t have to be embarrassed about them.
    It’s no wonder that this President’s Democratic National Committee platform tried to remove God. He’s not a big fan of the Big Guy. Even on Thanksgiving. After all, what need do you have for God when you’ve got the state?

    The Letting Go Ritual: Learning to forgive




  • FORGIVENESS
  • OCTOBER 19, 2010
  • BY: 

  • I believe we are not humans having a spiritual experience; we are spiritual beings having a human experience. The key to having a happy, productive human life is to realize we are here to love and learn, forgive, set good examples for others, try to spread peace and happiness. When Jesus told his followers if someone slaps you to turn the other cheek, I believe he was telling us to learn to forgive the slap and then give the slappper another chance by showing forgiveness. The Buddha said the same thing, just in different words. Forgiveness and love feeds the soul; and when you set an example of being forgiving, others notice.
    Happily, there are many resources to help us along our way in this earthly life. The Fetzer Institute's Campaign for Love and Forgiveness, for example, is an absolutely fantastic website chock full of spiritual resources. One of the most delightful areas on the website is the Letting Go Ritual, which you can take right now online. Beautifully illustrated, it helps you understand your feelings and, importantly, the feelings of others. You begin to discover why you are holding on to negativity and are given suggestions on how to let it go.

    Spiritual ecstasy is a trance state


    Spiritual ecstasy is a trance state that can be deliberately induced through the use of a variety of techniques:
    • Prayer
    • Meditation
    • Dance
    • Fasting
    • Contemplation of transformative art
    • Psychotropic drugs
    • Hypnosis

    Extra-normal Capabilities Within a Trance State


    A person's extra-normal capabilities within a trance state include:
    • Amnesia: selective repression of memory
    • Hypermnesia: selective recall of former experiences
    • Post-hypnotic suggestion: "the execution, at some later time, of instructions and suggestions given in a trance and intended to become a part, either interpolated or integrated, of a later activity" Erickson
    • Dissociation of awareness: “a selective constriction of awareness which excludes all but the hypnotist as a source of stimulation" Andre M. Weitzenhoffer, General Techniques of Hypnotism
    • Marquis de Puysegur Anesthesia/analgesia: loss of sensation (of pain or pleasure) while conscious
    • Positive and negative hallucinations: seeing objects which are not physically present; not seeing objects which are physically present
    • Telepathy: communication from one mind to another by extrasensory means
    • Clairvoyance/clairaudience: the ability to discern (see and hear) entities not present to the senses
    • Telekinesis: the ability to move objects without contact or other physical means
    • Mind projection: focusing of awareness on current, previous or future time periods and living during those time periods
    • Physiological effect (selected):
      • causing a blister when told under hypnosis that they experience a burn
      • correcting eye defects
      • shutting off pain

         All these seemingly unbelievable capabilities of the subliminal mind have been attested to by reputable and trustworthy researchers, starting with a French commission in the nineteenth century, and by independent researchers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries as well.




    "You must conceive of possibilities beyond your present state if you are to be able to find the capacity to reach towards them."

    Idries Shah, A Perfumed Scorpion

    5 LEVELS OF CONSCIOUSNESS Defined


    There are five main parts of our total psyche: Higher consciousness - that which is aware of being aware; Normal consciousness - awareness in the everyday world - being, perceiving, relating; and of the inner world - of thoughts, concepts, attitudes, decisions, images, memories emotions, sensations and feelings. And the domains which lie below normal consciousness: the Pre-conscious - an interface of the conscious mind which, when it is evoked by interest and emotional commitment, goes searching for relevant data in the sub-conscious; the Sub-conscious - contains the powerful drives of love and fear, and the programmes by which motives are decided and actions are carried out; and the Unconscious - the core Self which contains a record of everything one has felt and sensed since conception and of the evolutionary genetic-line before that. It also consists of genetic programming, which empowers the deepest drives for survival, attachment and expression common to mankind, which transmits the energy of emotions, which controls the stream of libido energies and the efforts involved in moving and perceiving with the physical body.
    • Higher consciousness is the essential self, the Higher Self. It is our personal centre of awareness, which is developed through self-knowledge. The Higher Self is the "awareness of awareness" of which the mental (ego) "I" is a pale reflection. There has been an acknowledgement throughout human history that a higher awareness, beyond the normal conscious experience, is possible for the individual, recognised through dreams, religious and psychic experience, insights and creativity of every kind. It is usually frustratingly brief and infrequent but it is clear that with appropriate efforts and study, people can change and grow in awareness, whereby the field of consciousness becomes more and more observed by the Higher Self who is no longer asleep; then behaviour is no longer determined only by conditioning. The Being is aware of the difference between his own motivation and that which is learned, acquired or installed in him, genetically or by conditioning; he knows what he is doing as he does it. The energy and attention tied up in the knots of unconsciousness becomes conscious and freely available, as truth is validated and the false discarded.
    • The second aspect of the psyche, Normal consciousness, is our everyday reality, internally and externally - the incessant flow of sensations, images, thoughts, feelings, desires and impulses which we can observe, analyse and judge. The less aware a person is, the smaller this field of awareness will be and the more automatic his functioning. The majority of people drift on the surface of this "mind stream" and identify themselves with its successive waves, with the changing contents of their consciousness. So consciousness is often unreflective, not consciously noticed, determined by the many personal and social forces which have formed us, the cultural programming that moulds us into a "consensus trance" of automatic, robotised behaviour. In this hypnotised, half-asleep state, possessed by the conditioning of our background, we seem almost entirely the product of our genetic heritage, our personal environment and the society we live in - in the grip of forces stronger than ourselves and which we don't understand, be they biological, psychological or social.


    • The conscious mind contains all that one knows that is readily accessible. This information is well organised and interconnected on a logical basis. The characteristics of this "analytical" mind are invaluable for learning, putting things in order and testing ideas. On the other hand the conscious mind tends to be inhibited by the very quality that makes it so powerfully useful: it seeks to be right.

      This part of the personality, the subject of cognitive and behavioural psychology, could easily, without reflection, be regarded as the whole, but the development of depth-psychology and the rediscovery of transpersonal psychology in this century has made it clear that this level of consciousness is only a part of the whole.

    • The third part, the Pre-conscious, is the ante-room of consciousness, where our various experiences are assimilated, our mental and imaginative activities are elaborated and developed in a sort of psychological gestation and interaction, before their birth into the light of consciousness. If consciousness is likened to a spotlight, the pre-conscious is everything within its range, but not illuminated at this moment. It is real to the person and accessible. It includes material from the sub-conscious that has been restimulated (made active due to a similarity or relevance of present circumstances or thoughts). The pre-conscious mind is like a problem-oriented and independent file-clerk. It looks over the shoulder of the conscious mind: when a problem is being considered, it conducts a search into the sub-conscious mind for clues that it considers relevant.Its criteria for relevance do not always seem logical to the conscious mind, and therefore the ego learns to censor certain kinds of information from the sub-conscious, preventing them from rising higher into full consciousness. This is the mechanism of repression and the "censor" then functions below consciousness; consequently you cannot open-up your mind to the sub-conscious simply by resolving not to block its signals; the defences have first to be recognised, the reasons for them discovered and the pre-conscious censor re-programmed, before this is possible. This requires a procedure of concentrated introspection.

      Interest, emotional commitment and the desire to solve a problem, cause the pre-conscious to work with the contents of the sub-conscious (and also through the sub-conscious to the unconscious) and the results eventually filter back into consciousness, if they are not censored. Intuition is an early recognition, below the conscious level, that one is on the right track - this causes a felt signal or increase of arousal which causes the conscious mind to pay attention to its periphery of consciousness, to dig a little and pull out the information. Because of the energy of this signal, it may also be registered on biofeedback devices such as a held pendulum or skin resistance galvanometer, which can be used to help the person recognise his intuition. (See the article Biofeedback Monitor.)

    • The Sub-conscious is that part of his mind a person is unaware of, or which is out of his control - what Jung called the Shadow. The subconscious functions include vital background psychological activities such as the integration of new data and re-programming where necessary - a function which dreaming reflects - and this co-ordinates the carrying out of set patterns of behaviour which can be safely left "on automatic" by the conscious mind, freeing it to concentrate on the task in hand.

    • The sub-conscious contains all of the emotional and cognitive experience of a lifetime, whether pleasurable, ordinary or traumatic. Its contents are drawn upon by the pre-conscious when they seem relevant. It is a reservoir of information so vast and rich that it seems quite incredible to the conscious mind. Its contents are nevertheless consciously reachable by methods of psychological analysis (especially with the aid of biofeedback devices) which serves to resolve the defensive censorship of the preconscious.

      The "Shadow" aspect of the sub-conscious mind includes the roots of phobias, obsessions, compulsions and delusions and many complexes charged with intense emotion. These are developed in response to circumstances in the past and used in present time when re-stimulated by a similarity of circumstances; this occurs without conscious control, irrationally and without inspection - a "reactive" mental process. Memory of the original, often dramatic circumstance and the accompanying fears and decisions is normally repressed, as it is unconfrontable and too painful to re-examine.

    • The Unconscious contains the fundamental survival drives and primitive urges (including genetic and race memories) that empower the functioning of the mind as a whole. It contains the entire kinaesthetic recordings of the body (all of its feelings, sensations and pains) and is integrally linked with the body (which it co-ordinates and controls) - it is the "body-mind". It also contains the deepest level of Self: the fundamental (primal) experiences, imprints and decisions of this lifetime, from the womb onwards. These only normally surface consciously in symbolic form, in the context of dreams and behaviour patterns recognised in retrospect. The deepest forms of psycho-analytic work aim to uncover their content to the light of consciousness. Jung's work on dreams and mythological symbology was instrumental in opening up the incredible world of the unconscious, and the existence of "archetypes" - ways of being that are inherently programmed in the unconscious, making up the substance of the core Self - all the aspects of living that the individual works throughout his life to "actualise," or bring into existence at their fullest potential. His work also exposed the transpersonal dimension which lays beyond the racial stereotypes, but also the necessity of working through the primal and archetypal material, to differentiate and individuate the Higher Self - the spiritual, non-genetic, meta-self.

    • Both the primary-trauma of the unconscious and the secondary-trauma of the sub-conscious are connected with the "body-mind", whereby defensive "armour" in the form of chronic muscular tension, holds the bodily stress-reaction of "fight or flight", continually in place. This occurs when an experience becomes too painful to view or is too uncomfortably repeated and then awareness of it is repressed - thoughts, emotions and bodily tensions. Unviewed, it then festers and persists. Though the tension may once have been appropriate, it is now a hindrance, and its perpetual nature holds the original trauma in re-stimulation (though the feeling or awareness of it may be repressed).

      And though the repressed cognitive and emotional reactions may have been rational in the past circumstance (in the effort to survive or overcome), if they are reactively dramatised in the present situation, and if they are not accompanied by a fresh appraisal of the current reality, they are the underlying cause of irrational or aberrated behaviour, negative emotion and illness, and therefore have been a primary target of psychotherapy.

      Because the body-mind functions inter-actively, work in Transformational Psychology may sometimes require a range of techniques to handle the problems. Physical symptoms (high blood pressure, ulcers, lack of energy, etc.) arise from stress, muscular tension, restimulated trauma, over-work, anxiety about social competence, threat or insecurity at work, rigid attitudes of perfectionism and fears of failure - based on low self-esteem, due to not having been "good enough" for parents and other dominant figures. Such neurotic dependencies on others conflict with the drive for independency and self-fulfilment. Psycotherapeutic massage may be prescribed, to develop awareness of faulty attitudes and repressed feelings, and to help relax and de-traumatise the body.

      The following illustrates the structure of the mind in terms of levels of consciousness:


    Descriptive Phrases of Enneagram Types and Levels of Consciousness




    Levels of Color Consciousness


    Purple Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Magistrate. Enneagram Type One, the Judge, at
    the Purple level functions as the Magistrate. The Judge at the earliest stage
    of evolution is consumed with keeping the rules of the group and providing
    indoctrination for the group members. The primary focus of the Magistrate
    is to ensure the group maintains cohesive structure that ensures the safety of
    all. The Judge at this level of awareness is the keeper of the tribal rituals,
    handing these rituals down through the narrative traditions (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Martyr. At this level of consciousness, Type Two,
    the Provider, shows up as a Martyr who makes the home/hearth safe for all.
    The Martyr will sacrifice self on many levels in order to ensure the safety and
    continuation of the group (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Three: The Doer/ The Magician.
     At the Purple level, Type Three, the
    Doer, shows up as the Magician, ready to defend the group through any magical
    means required. The Magician works by interfacing tirelessly with the spirits in
    an effort to maintain a bridge between harsh reality and the magic of the natural
    world, the universe (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Keeper of Mysteries. Type 4, The Idealist at this
    level becomes the Keeper of Mysteries and communes with the magic of nature
    to solidify the safety of the group. The Keeper of the Mysteries holds the oral or
    narrative traditions of the properties of healing and the secrets of nature. Type
    Four communes with the mysterious aspects of nature, which brings about the
    information needed to protect the group (Ooten, Unpublished).
    Type Five: The Sage/The Ascetic. In the Purple level, Type Five, the Sage,
    becomes the Ascetic and serves as the shaman, the holder of the wisdom that the
    universe imparts in nature’s mystery. The Ascetic is the seer of the group, tapping
    into universal wisdom (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Vizier. In the Purple level of awareness, Type
    Six, the Questioner, takes on the role of the Vizier, becoming an advisor to the
    authorities of the group. The Vizier rigidly obeys the magical beliefs in order to
    keep the group safe, secure, clothed, and fed. The Vizier uses her intuitive powers
    to forestall or forewarn of dangers that may compromise the group, advising the
    authorities how to remain in power (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Pixie or Jester. Type Seven, the Adventurer,
    acts as the Pixie or Jester in the Purple Level. His role in the group is the bearer
    of levity and has a chauvinistic flavor. He brings fun, laughter, and spontaneity
    to keep the group together and soften the harshness of reality. The sprite-like
    nature of Type Seven ensures that humor is injected into daily life, bringing an
    ability to make fun of ourselves (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Eight: The Defender/Priest or Priestess. At this level, Type Eight, the
    Defender, operates as the Priest or Priestess, interacting directly with the deities
    to defend, control, and represent the needs of the group. The Priest or Priestess
    uses him/herself as a protective force between members of the group and the
    forces of nature (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Dreamer. In the Purple level, Type Nine, the
    Moderator, functions as the Dreamer. She lives in a dream-like state, maintaining
    the trance that bridges the gap between the magical world and the “real” world.
    Type Nine holds the group rituals and daily life repetitions in place as the
    Dreamer, bringing the physical and spiritual worlds into alignment (Ooten,
    Unpublished).

    Red Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Vindicator. Type One, the Judge, at this stage of
    evolution is the Vindicator, concerned with black or white, right or wrong,
    justice or injustice as proscribed by their own internal values. At this level the
    Vindicator manages to maintain a predatory position held in place by a belief
    structure that says those who criticize, question or doubt my authority or power,
    deserve to die (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Profane Prostitute. Type Two, the Provider, at this
    level performs as the Profane Prostitute and controls through indispensability,
    operating from either a position of power or as the liaison to the power gods
    or as the lieutenant in the gang. The Profane Prostitute is not about sex, but is
    about offering self to obtain a position of power. At this level of consciousness,
    power is obtained by being the liaison to power brokers, gang leaders or the gods.
    The Profane Prostitute is represented in the masculine form by being the second
    in command to the most powerful leader (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Three: The Doer/The Warrior. At this level, Type Three, the Doer,
    shows up as the Warrior, ready to fight for whatever she believes will make her
    successful and gain her recognition. She will not give up her freedom to meet
    another’s expectations. At this level Type Three is likely to be in the perpetrator,
    not the victim, role, because it is still imperative that she be viewed as the leader,
    the one in control. The Doer at this level tends to move against others in an
    effort to position herself on top. Her run for success is at all costs, because there
    is no conscience to hold her back. Power brings acclaim (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Hysteric. Type Four, the Idealist, operates as the
    Hysteric at this level of awareness from the position of being extremely rebellious
    and “pissed off”. He finds himself more often in the role of victim than
    perpetrator, because he is controlled by his emotions and sees things happening
    to him, rather than taking responsibility for creating his own life. The Hysteric
    allows his emotions to spontaneously run free, creating that fine line between
    genius and insanity. The Hysteric either finds himself leading from a position of
    passion or following from a position of suffering (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Five: The Sage/The Wizard. For Type 5, the Sage, or the Wizard at this
    level, it is good to be close to the king but not the king. This allows for a position
    of power from a safe distance. At this level, the Wizard maintains a foothold in
    the previous level of consciousness and brings forth the elements of the magical
    in a way that represents artful genius. From a Wizard platform, they maintain
    a position of intellectual power and distance from the perpetrators. Depending
    on their intellectual prowess they can either move into the perpetrator or prey
    position (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Conniver. Type Six, the Questioner, is the
    Conniver at the Red level. The Conniver has the ability to move into the phobic
    prey space or the counterphobic perpetrator space. The paranoia is in full
    swing with the mentality that “I’ll get them before they get me” and “better
    you than me”. The phobic Conniver uses her intellectual faculties to move
    towards those more powerful to be protected. The counterphobic moves into a
    position of perpetrator, defending their hedonistic desires intellectually (Ooten,
    Unpublished).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Addict. At this level, Type Seven, the
    Adventurer, functions as the Addict. The Addict lives for today, indulging all
    hedonistic sensual and sexual pleasures, because tomorrow may not come. For
    the Addict, planning is engaged in day by day by day, having the most pleasure
    possible each moment. The Addict soothes the pain by whatever means possible.
    Type Seven at this level holds a position of power through the illusion of “smoke
    and mirrors” (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Eight: The Defender/The Amazon/The War Lord. At this level of adult
    psycho-social behavior, Type Eight, the Defender, is the perpetrator, excessively
    controlling and dominating from a position of totality and fear as the Amazon
    or War Lord. The Red Type Eight holds the “power” and provides protection to
    those who bend totally to his/her will. The Eight operates as a protector for a
    price. Since guilt is not present at this level of development, nothing reigns in
    Type Eight’s insatiable proclivities for power and control (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Imploder. At this stage of development, Type
    Nine, the Moderator, is the Imploder and has a greater capacity for being in
    touch with his own needs, rather than the needs of others, than at other levels in
    the first tier. He is driven by the internalized or imploded anger that gives him
    permission to indulge narcissistically in his own desires and pleasures. At this
    level of development, the Nine’s desire to avoid conflict recedes, giving way to
    a sense of power over others that is not dampened by guilt or conscience. The
    imploding of anger is likely to move the Nine into a position of isolation (Ooten,
    Unpublished).

    Blue Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Crusader. At this level, Type One, the Judge,
    manifests as the Crusader for “the right and the good”, and judging self and
    others from a place of nonadaptability and adherence to his chosen authority’s
    fundamental rules and laws. The Crusader uses the belief in “the one right way”
    to bring order to the chaos experienced at the Red level when the individual
    supersedes the group (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Servant. At this level of awareness Type Two, the
    Provider, places herself in the Servant role to the authority, the organization, or
    the cause, dedicating herself to a life of service and sacrifice for all. At this level
    Type Two uses guilt as a primary source to motivate self and manipulate others
    to obey the group authorities and rules for future gains (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Three: The Doer/The King/The Queen. Type Three, the Doer, takes on
    the role of the leader or the King/Queen of the group, organization or family, the
    authority to be obeyed at this level of awareness. The Three sets the ideals and
    values which they believe will maximize everyone’s potential and bring about
    success for the group. The Three believes that a strict adherence to the game plan
    will win great rewards in the future. Hard work, dedication and perseverance are
    expected and are reward enough for the present moment. Guilt can creep in if
    the Three allows for slacking of self or others in the group (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Living Sacrifice. The Four, the Idealist, at this
    level is concerned with an inner code of conduct that inflicts internal suffering.
    The Four serves as the Living Sacrifice for the good of all. S/he can become the
    monk/nun/monastic, taking on a solitary life to observe the guilt rooted in the
    preoccupation with self, rather than the group. This introspection can be used to
    create, condemn or destroy, depending on the attentional focus of the individual
    Four (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Five: The Sage/The Gnostic. Type Five, the Sage, operates as the Gnostic
    at this level by being the keeper of the knowledge. There is a certain safety in
    knowing that they “know.” This knowledge is used to keep the group adhering
    to the values that will ensure a place of good standing with the perceived divine
    powers (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Obligationist. Type Six, the Questioner becomes
    the Obligationist at the Blue level, as duty calls the righteous to battle for the
    good of all. Type Six understands that sacrifice is necessary to ensure safety
    and security for the group. The Six sacrifices self and is subsumed in the group,
    believing that this is the only way to attain salvation. Doubt and questions are
    permitted to recede in the mind of a true believer, and this allows the Questioner
    to have the desired certainty of “the authority”, sacrificing the “inner authority”
    (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Imaginer. Type Seven, the Adventurer,
    performs as the Imaginer at the Blue level. The Adventurer is willing to do
    whatever is necessary inside his/her own mind to bend to the “beliefs” of the
    authority in charge. Since “reality” is subjective, the Seven is able to live within
    the constriction of the values that are present, always able to create an alternative
    imagined reality to avoid the limitations that sacrifice requires. The cause is
    what is important, truth is relative (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Eight: The Defender/The Enforcer. Type Eight, the Defender, appears
    at the Blue level as the Enforcer. Someone must lead the Crusade/Jihad, and
    the Eight is capable of defending and enforcing the group’s beliefs and values,
    providing the security that the group believes will lead to ultimate salvation.
    Type Eight at this level of consciousness is prepared to die for the group and
    the cause, knowing that this alone brings about absolute salvation, the ultimate
    power (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Compliant. For Type Nine, the Moderator,
    achieving everlasting peace of mind is easy when one adheres to the “one true
    way” as the Compliant. Harmony is assured if one accepts his/her position in
    life and maintains comfort and stability through current relational patterns.
    There is no need for guilt when inequality is a given, and disharmony comes only
    when one does not accept the truth. Type Nine at this level finds safety in not
    rocking the boat; compliance is easy when everything is prescriptive and choice
    is virtually eliminated (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Orange Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Auditor. At the Orange Level, Type One, the Judge,
    pursues self-perfection. Type One believes that his way is the right way; he
    applies high standards of integrity and attention to detail to succeed through
    continual self-improvement. Ones at this level are concerned with rules,
    codification, how things are being allotted, and who is right and who is wrong.
    The Auditor audits himself more than anyone else (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Executive Assistant. Indispensability in
    organizations as the Executive Assistant, whether business, familial or social, is
    the key means of maintaining and achieving success for Type Two, the Executive
    Assistant at the Orange level. Type Two at this level often appears as the “power
    behind the throne”, giving to those in power as a means to attain power and
    material success for self. Executive Assistants often put themselves into the
    position of “gatekeeper” to the highest executive, controlling who has access to
    what and whom. The Provider wants his giving to be recognized, appreciated
    and rewarded (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Three: The Doer/The CEO. Type Three, the Doer, develops and maintains
    a pristine image of competency and efficiency in the climb to the top. Operating
    as the CEO role in the Orange level, achievement is more important than
    anything else. The chameleon-like abilities of Type Three are applied to creating
    a waterproof image that instills trust and confidence in those with whom they
    relate. At the Orange level, the CEO wants others to think that she knows what
    she is doing, and that she will lead others where they want to go. The sky is
    the limit, the mountaintop is the requirement, and failure is not an option.
    Every person and every event is an opportunity to achieve success (Ooten,
    Unpublished).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Manipulator. Envy drives competition and
    an emphasis on having material possessions for Type Four, the Idealist, who
    operates at the Orange level as the Manipulator. Individualism emphasizes the
    uniqueness and elitism of Type Four, who manipulates the system for what is
    “deserved.” Entitlement is the rationalization for doing whatever he wants, in
    the quest to quench the thirst of envy and desire. Image is applied to “dressing
    for success” or creating the “look.” Presentation of self and the surrounding
    environment is highly emphasized to create a feeling of material luxury and
    wealth (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Five: The Sage/The Investigator. Type Five, the Sage, works at the Orange
    level as the Investigator, containing and preserving energy to direct it into
    seeking rational answers and best results. Intellectual learning, analyzing, and
    thinking drive the pursuit of knowledge for scientific and personal gain. Deep
    level, niche knowledge and research are applied to create material wealth and/or
    gains. Rationality is elevated as the best philosophic and scientific approach
    to life. Type Five at the Orange level attempts to be devoid of feelings, which
    cannot be quantified and qualitatively measured and lives from a state of superrationality
    (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Frenetic. The independent mindset at the
    Orange level reduces the ability to trust in an outside authority and Type Six,
    The Questioner, must look inward for authority. Yet, Type Six still questions and
    doubts her inner authority. Questioning the inner authority, combined with
    needing external scientific proof, leads Type Six to become the Frenetic. Faith
    in an external authority is mistrusted. There is also a drive for material security,
    which can be procured only through one’s own actions. This drive can create
    courageous action through risk taking to seek ways to advance, forcing through
    fears and questions (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Innovator. At this level, Type Seven, the
    Adventurer, sees the world as full of opportunity. As the Innovator, he or she is
    resourceful, using patterns of possibility-seeking and interconnecting ideas to
    envision and create, charming others to get for self. Type Seven has an inferior/
    superior dichotomy, and to avoid the painful feelings of inferiority, will “level the
    playing field” with authority in his mind. This leads to an indirect challenge of
    authority, which is also used to “climb the ladder” (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten,
    2010).

    Type Eight: The Defender/The Boss. Type Eight, the Defender, shows up as
    the Boss at the Orange level, motivated by materialism and avoiding the fear of
    being controlled at all costs. At this level, the Boss works to ensure that he or she
    maintains positions of authority, imposing his own version of truth on situations
    and others. Intensity and lust are channeled into empire building. The Boss can
    only follow a very strong leader, and if one is not present, will quickly take over
    the group consciously or unconsciously. Type Eight at the Orange level believes
    that being an island is a protection from vulnerability (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Consistent Self. Type Nine, the Moderator, will
    go along with others to attain the fulfillment of her own desires—it is beneficial
    to go along with the group when the group is going in the same direction. The
    Consistent Self operates at a slow, steady, plodding, consistent pace of progress
    for material gain and advancement. Passive aggressiveness aids in maintaining
    her autonomy to reach her own goals when her goals are different from the
    group, partner, family or workplace. (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Green Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Objector. Type One, the Judge, acts as the Objector
    in the Green level and objects to the “normal way” of being because he or she
    believes in a more idealistic “right way.” Ones become the chaos engine—they
    shake things up at the Green level. The Objector looks to uphold a cause that
    reflects Green level values like diversity, justice, and preserving the environment.
    Conflict within the chosen community must be avoided to maintain group
    harmony, and the internal anger of Type One is turned to those outside the
    group’s acceptable range of differences of opinions and ways of being (Ooten,
    Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Earth Mother/Father. Type Two, the Provider,
    expresses the “need to be needed” in the Green level as sympathizing and giving
    self away to take care of the needs of all, serving as the Earth Mother/Father.
    The belief is that everyone needs care and sympathy, the Earth Mother/Father’s
    version of compassion. The Earth Mother/Father believes that he or she has
    a big enough heart to give the love he or she perceives the world needs. This
    sacrifice of self is exhausting and diminishes the impact the Provider could make
    on the world (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Three: The Doer/The Politician. The exploration of feelings becomes
    acceptable at the Green level, and for Type Three doing is combined with an
    image of caring. As Type Three, the Doer turns her interest into serving the
    “common good” with her work as the Politician. Energy is applied to make the
    world a better place through serving groups and populations that match her
    ideas of a better world. Consensus-seeking often mires down progress (Ooten,
    Unpublished).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Connector. Type 4, The Idealist, at the Green
    Level, acts as the Connector, connecting to the community and other individuals.
    He values the need to connect and serve the community over connecting with
    self, which perpetuates an illusion of abandonment. Much time and energy is
    spent processing the range of feelings of others and sometimes of self. He shares
    what is in his heart that he perceives will be valued by the community, while
    keeping the darkness still locked inside (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Five: The Sage/The Professor. As Type Five, the Sage, becomes more
    aware of others and develops a need for community, he becomes more accepting
    of different ways of operating and being in the world, developing a “live and
    let live” attitude and acting as the Professor. At this level, Type Five can begin
    to recognize the presence of emotions and needs. The heart is considered,
    pondered, and reflected upon (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Champion. As Type Six, the Questioner
    becomes aware that “going it alone” doesn’t bring security, she turns to trusting
    others. In allowing herself to trust others, she begins to learn to trust herself. She
    finds connection with others through serving as the Champion for underdog
    causes, the downtrodden, and the disenfranchised. In the egalitarian mindset of
    Type Six in the Green level, she still does not trust authority figures, and she does
    not trust herself as an authority (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Conceptualizer. Type Seven, the Adventurer,
    in the Green level is the Conceptualizer who sees that pain not only limits self
    but others as well. He envisions an egalitarian society where limitations in life
    are eliminated for all. The Conceptualizer turns attention about limitations
    outward and sympathizes with others, to avoid his own pain. There is a high
    tolerance for many ways of being as long as those ways don’t enforce limitations
    on the Adventurer’s way of life (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Eight: The Defender/The Protector. Recognizing that a solitary existence
    doesn’t bring happiness, feelings of needing connection with others arise for
    Type 8, the Defender. Connecting with others requires vulnerability. Energy
    to avoid this inner vulnerability is channeled into being the Protector by
    leading causes, protecting the weak and fighting for the disadvantaged (Ooten,
    Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Communalist. The Green level for Type Nine,
    the Moderator, becomes a spiritual bypass where time is wasted in spiritual-like
    pursuits that bring no real change. The Communalist will look like a part of the
    community to avoid conflict yet doesn’t really connect or become involved. She
    will appear to be moving along in life but is merely “narced out” on the spiritual
    message of the day. Type Nine can become very comfortable in the consensusseeking
    and status quo of the Green meme. The ego for Type Nine most wants
    a communal existence with others that is conflict-free and easy to maintain,
    yet avoidance of conflict can never bring true harmony (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Yellow Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Idealistic Self. In the momentous shift into the
    Second Tier, Type One, the Judge, finds connection with her heart and embodies
    compassion. Instead of projecting the ideal, the Idealist Self becomes the ideal.
    From the acceptance of the Yellow level, the Judge is able to relax judgment and
    criticism of self and others. Judgment is transformed as the boundaries of good
    and bad dissolve into grays, and the Idealist Self can allow herself to be who
    she is, visioning from the understanding that all is good (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Facilitator. Type Two, the Provider, recognizes
    in the Second Tier that because he is part of the whole of existence, his own
    needs are equally important as the needs of others. Manipulation turns into
    resourcefulness as Type Two operates as the Facilitator, able to match needs and
    resources for the benefit of all, including himself. “Giving to get” is transformed
    into true altruism, and knowledge is as valued as feelings (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Type Three: The Doer/The Teacher. By seeing the value of all the ways of being
    in the world, Type Three, the Doer, can allow herself to be authentic. When
    energy is no longer spent in creating different images for different audiences,
    it can instead be effectively channeled into what she has to offer the world as
    she spreads hope as the Teacher. Rather than losing time in frenetic doing to
    compensate for a deep sense of valuelessness, the illusion of having to do to be
    loved is transformed into being able to make the best use of her time for serving
    the world (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Intuitive Self. Realizing that everything
    is interwoven, Type Four, the Idealist, relies on intuition and knows that
    nothing can be missing from the interconnected whole, and that everything
    is love. Loosening his image of uniqueness, he experiences the simultaneous
    individuality and homogeneity of existence, which allows him to tap into his
    Intuitive Self. From accessing intuition, his deep sense of abandonment becomes
    transformed into the knowing that he is love and a lightness of heart emerges.
    Knowing who he is empowers him to make intense change in the world (Ooten,
    Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Five: The Sage/The Quantum Healer. Through the awareness that energy
    is never created nor destroyed, Type Five, the Sage, no longer has to conserve, and
    through non-attachment, can step forward energetically into interactions and
    interconnections with others. Through accessing her heart, knowledge becomes
    understanding, and she is empowered as the Quantum Healer to bring healing to
    the world (Esposito, 2008; Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Trusting Self. In the Yellow level of
    consciousness, Type Six, the Questioner, is able to trust himself for the first time.
    The Trusting Self transforms rigidity and inconsistency into solidity as faith is
    embodied. From an understanding of the need for adaptive, flexible systems, the
    Trusting Self can operate under external authority when needed, or can serve as
    the authority. “Authority can be authorities because I’m the authority too, and I
    trust myself” (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Unified Self. At this stage of evolution, Type
    Seven, the Unified Self, recognizes that pain is an integral aspect of existence, and
    that pleasure is possible only when contrasted with the pain. This realization
    brings freedom of heart, and the Unified Self can turn his mental abilities to
    integrating complex concepts that address existential issues and world problems
    (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Eight: The Defender/The Coach. Seeing that true strength lies in softness
    and openness, Type Eight, the Defender, can relax into her vulnerability and
    innocence, which gives her true power. From the empowerment that comes
    in accepting her own vulnerability, the Coach empowers others and facilitates
    change in organizations and systems (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Ambassador Self. In the interconnected web
    of life, everything has importance and value. This recognition allows Type 9, the
    Moderator, to be clear in expressing his own priorities while also collaborating
    with others to create change in the world. In loosening the illusion of separation,
    he sees the importance of himself and his work in the world where he serves as
    the Ambassador Self for all people (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Turquoise Level of Consciousness

    Type One: The Judge/The Unifier. Evolving to the Turquoise level, Type One,
    the Judge, understands that everything that occurs is perfect “as it is because it is”
    and lives from a positionof unity consciousness and serenity. There is no right
    or wrong, no good or bad. From this non-dual perspective, Type One serves the
    universe as the Unifier, and this wisdom is applied to defining ways of life that
    benefit the whole and ensure the continuation of existence (Ooten, Unpublished;
    Ooten, 2010).

    Type Two: The Provider/The Social Servant. Type Two, the Provider, emerges
    in the Turquoise level recognizing that we all have needs, are all loveable, and
    are all free. There is no separation between the needs of an individual and the
    collective needs of the whole. At this level Type Two serves with true humility in
    the role of Social Servant, working within the universe to provide for the whole.
    She is truly free because she operates with surrender to the flow of the universal
    direction and will. She doesn’t need anyone, and doesn’t need to be anything for
    anyone (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Three: The Doer/The Benefactor. At this level, Type Three, the Doer, no
    longer sees himself as a separate entity, competing for accolades as “the high
    note.” The Benefactor knows that we are all precious notes in the complex
    symphony of life and that the Universe acts “through us, as us.” Each note is
    required to create life, and Type Three works to accomplish for the benefit of all
    beings (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Four: The Idealist/The Inclusive Self. Type Four, the Idealist, understands
    that we can never be separate because there is no time and space. We are one
    with all as an integral aspect of the unfolding of reality and never apart from the
    Source, Origin. Embodying this oneness, Type Four serves as the Inclusive Self,
    knowing that all are part of the overwhelming beauty of existence, and fiercely
    defends the continued existence of life (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).
    Type Four knows that “we are waves in the Ocean of Being” (Esposito, 2008).

    Type Five: The Sage/The Integrative Self. In seeing the individual reflection of
    the whole and the whole reflecting the individual, Type Five, the Sage, lives from
    omniscience as the Integrative Self, knowing that even the unknown is part of
    the whole. Knowledge is combined with action to become true understanding
    for the collective consciousness of all beings (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).
    “The Universe knows Itself through us” (Esposito, 2008). Enlightenment comes
    through the experience of direct knowing and intuitive direct connection to
    consciousness. In listening directly to unity consciousness through mindfulness
    and meditation, doubts and fear dissolve (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Six: The Questioner/The Faithful Self. Type Six, the Questioner,
    understands at the Turquoise level that fear is simply one aspect of the multitude
    of experiences, and it has no more meaning than any other experience (Ooten,
    Unpublished). Realizing that life and death are merely energy states, the Faithful
    Self understands that security is always present and trusts in reality as it unfolds.
    Faith and trust in the unknowing brings courage to act spontaneously and allows
    Type Six to lead the continuation of life (Esposito, 2008; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Seven: The Adventurer/The Renaissance Self. Knowing that nothing
    exists outside the eternal now, including the self, Type Seven, the Adventurer,
    allows the universe to reveal itself while playing a part in its unfolding.
    Understanding how all the intricate parts are merely representations of
    the whole, the Renaissance Self envisions new ways of being for all, and by
    transcending illusions of limitations of space and time, has constancy to lead
    others right here, right now (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten, 2010).

    Type Eight: The Defender/The Way Shower. All ways of being are components
    of the greater whole. Able to see the truth in all perspectives, the energy,
    intensity and drive of Type Eight, the Defender, is used magnanimously as the
    Way Shower to evolve the collective consciousness for the benefit of all. Relaxing
    into vulnerability allows innocence to be expressed (Ooten, Unpublished; Ooten,
    2010). When innocence emerges, desires, fear, separation, alienation and anger
    dissolve into “the peace that surpasses understanding” (Esposito, 2008). Leading
    from innocence, the Way Showers are wisdom teachers and empowerers of
    others who embody the understanding that “All is One” (Ooten, 2010).

    Type Nine: The Moderator/The Psychic. The entirety of existence cannot be
    without each requisite part, and the parts cannot exist outside the whole. Type
    Nine, the Moderator, knows at this level that All is Love, and nothing can be
    separate from love. There is no separation of self and the Divine, and he knows
    he is worthy of being seen (Ooten, Unpublished). He remembers that he is “one
    with the Divine Love that creates and sustains the Universe” (Esposito, 2008),
    and from this direct knowing, he serves as the Psychic, understanding all things
    from the embodiment of love (Ooten, Unpublished).

    Colors of CONSCIOUSNESS


    Beige
    The first level is the Beige level of existence. The Beige level of consciousness
    is concerned with instinctual drives of survival of the species and immediate
    gratification of the very basic needs of food, water, safety, and sex. This level is
    sensory-driven and has no concept of individuated self, no temporal concept
    beyond immediate needs, nor spatial concept beyond the occupied space.
    Individuals can decreasingly still be found existing primarily at this level in
    remote areas, living off the land in loose, small bands with no leadership. It is
    also expressed as the primary level of operation in newborn infants, late stage
    Alzheimer’s patients, and after extreme trauma and shock (Graves, 2002; Graves,
    2005; Beck, 2006). Managing survival is completely integrated into the genetic
    code and social operations for most individuals today. Survival is rarely an issue
    and if so, then usually for only brief amounts of time. However, when survival
    is again an issue, this level rises to the forefront as during extreme events like
    the Indian Ocean Tsunami in 2004 and Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Since the
    Beige level is inherent and fully integrated in 99.9 percent of all humans, it is not
    separately evaluated in the Values Test (Ooten, Unpublished).
    As additional energy becomes available to humans, observation of cause
    and effect emerges, and when competition and threats endanger satisfactory
    survival, the Beige level shifts to the next level. At this point, new neurological
    connections create an awareness of a distinct self as well as awareness that group
    efforts are needed to ensure continued existence (Beck, 2006).

    Purple
    The Purple level is magical and animistic, and the core motivations are about
    keeping the spirits happy, the tribe safe, and ensuring continued gratification
    of basic needs. In this stage, the core belief is that the world is mysterious and
    frightening, and in order to survive, the tribe must band together to placate or
    appease the gods, spirits, deities, and authorities. The needs of the individual are
    subsumed in the group. In an animistic worldview, everything has meaning and
    is living, including the rocks, trees, and earth (Graves, 2005; Beck, 2006). This
    level is highly motivated by assurance of safety and survival, which is achieved
    through traditionalism and adherence to the tribal order (Graves, 1974).
    If and when the rituals, taboos, and tribal order become too constrictive or do
    not assure survival, some individuals will evolve to the next level, which focuses
    on expression of self for self-gratification (Ooten, Unpublished).
    Red
    The Red level of consciousness is impulsive and egocentric. The core
    motivation is about doing what you want and being who you are, regardless
    of the consequences (Ooten, Unpublished). Neurotransmitters related to guilt
    are not physiologically present in individuals at this level, thus guilt is not
    expressed (Graves, 2005). The world is seen as rough and harsh; the mentality
    is about fighting to survive. At this level of consciousness, the needs of the
    individual outweigh the needs of the group. The individual expresses himself
    in an egocentric, exploitive, impulsive, control-driven manner. There are two
    categories of individuals at this level: the victim and the perpetrator, or a few
    “haves” and many “have nots” (Beck, 2006). Hedonism, immediate sensory
    gratification, power impulses and displays, and spontaneous guilt-free actions
    drive the individual. Individuals at this level are most motivated by survival
    fears, using any means of exploitation to attain power (Graves, 1974). When
    individuals begin to question why they must die and impulsive living takes its
    toll, some people will shift into the next wave of development (Graves, 1974).
    Blue
    From the chaotic and usually short-lived lifestyle of the Red level, arises the Blue
    level of consciousness, wherein the individual becomes concerned with the world
    being divine, controlled and purposeful. There is obedience to authority and, for
    the first time in the developmental stages of humanity, the sense of guilt becomes
    present, thereby creating a desire at this level to do right, to do good, and to
    sacrifice now in order to obtain rewards in the afterlife (Ooten, Unpublished).
    At this level of consciousness, individuals are likely to find purpose in causes
    and to dedicate themselves to crusades or jihad. Fundamentalism predominates
    (Graves, 2002; Beck, 2006). “At this level man accepts his position in life.
    Inequality is a fact of life. He believes that the task of living is to strive for
    perfection in his assigned role—absolute perfection, regardless of how high or
    low his assigned station” (Graves, 2005, p. 254). Individuals operating at this
    level seek security of salvation through sacrifice. Tired of sacrificing for future
    gains, the Orange level arises, seeking immediate rewards (Graves, 1974).

    Orange
    The ego becomes fully individuated at the Orange level of consciousness in a
    world view where independence, logic, competition, success, optimism and
    progress are highly valued (Ooten, Unpublished). Orange level thinking
    rationalizes the means to reach the ends. The scientific method is highly valued,
    yet learning is often through self-experimentation and observing what has 
    worked for select others. Authority, however, is not highly respected. At this level,
    individuals are capable of seeing many ways to solve a problem; yet, they also
    believe there is always one best way. They are highly self-motivated and often
    shrewdly, subtly and strategically manipulate others to reach their goals (Graves,
    2002). Paradoxically, individuals at the Orange level see themselves as highly
    objective, yet the ego is most subjective at this stage (Ooten, Unpublished).
    This level of consciousness is instrumental in raising quality of life through
    technological advances for the entire world and is also responsible for heavy
    depletion of natural resources (Graves, 2005; Beck, 2006). From the Orange
    level, people are motivated by independence and use scientism to achieve
    materialism (Graves, 1974).
    Green
    From recognizing the intense pain that arises from ego individuation,
    independence and competition in the Orange level of thinking, the individual
    may realize that he or she has separated from fellow humans (Ooten,
    Unpublished). A need to connect and join in community with others develops
    in the transition into the Green level of consciousness where the valued group,
    inner peace and unity are valued over materialism. Thinking at the Green level is
    more expanded and open to more solutions than previous levels. Individuals at
    this level turn their attention to their fellow man and creating equality of rights,
    opportunities and resources (Graves, 2005). Yet paradoxically, this level becomes
    lost in self-contemplation and uses massive resources with little production.
    Acceptance and harmony within the valued group are key to the individual
    at this stage. Feelings and spirituality become more important than rational
    thought and materialism (Graves, 2005). This level of consciousness is highly
    idealistic and believes that all humans are equal and, as such, equal opportunity
    will allow all individuals to flourish. There is discrepancy when both freedom
    of expression and adherence to the group are equally valued. Consensus rules
    while change and action occur slowly in an attempt to maintain group harmony,
    consider all options, and maintain the status quo. This level also naively believes
    that all humans are loving, good, and can learn to appreciate one another
    (Graves, 2005; Beck, 2006). Individuals are motivated by affiliation and use
    sociocentricity to achieve a sense of community (Graves, 1974).
    Yellow
    The transition from the First Tier of Consciousness to the Yellow level of the 
    Second Tier is a “momentous leap” according to Clare Graves (1974, 2005), when 
    the individual realizes that equally distributing resources among all people and 
    expecting that all humans are equally good and loving creates more problems 
    than it solves. This leap may occur when life conditions change to seriously 
    threaten survival, and the individual/species has to relearn survival (Graves,2002).
    There are currently a small number of individuals who operate from the
    Second Tier of existence, but the species as a whole has not yet evolved to this
    level (Ooten, 2010).
    Adherence to the favored group in the Green level is transformed into acceptance
    of all people for who they are, where they are in the Second Tier. This acceptance
    allows individuals at the Yellow level of consciousness to speak to the listening
    of others, regardless of their level. Chaos is seen as part of the natural order
    and imperative for change (Graves, 2005). These individuals are highly flexible
    in their thinking and are able to see from a perspective that is larger than all
    the levels of the First Tier combined (Graves, 2005). The reality of existence is
    emphasized and interconnected with spirituality. The individual transcends
    self-centered, instinctual and emotional drives to a way of being that expresses
    self to the benefit of self and others (Ooten, Unpublished). Individuals at this
    level live from the knowing of the interconnectivity of all of humanity, and that
    what affects the individual, affects the whole. The focus becomes the continued
    existence of all of life (not just humanity), using whatever means are appropriate
    given place and time (Beck, 2006). Methods and thinking are fluid, adapting
    to conditions. If democracy is appropriate, democracy is used. If consensus
    is appropriate, consensus is used. Technology is highly utilized for self and all
    of humanity to rapidly network and interconnect with others at all levels of
    development, as well as to quickly produce solutions and resources for existential
    problems. People at this level can also express a level of arrogance about their
    broader perspectives and understandings (Graves, 2005; Beck, 2006). Individuals
    at the Yellow level of consciousness are motivated by the continuation of
    existence and use acceptance to ensure the continuation of life (Graves, 1974).
    Turquoise

    The Turquoise level arises when the interconnecting technology of the Yellow
    level creates chaos and new global problems. In the Turquoise level, a sense of
    order is understood within the chaos of the universe, and spirituality and physics
    are combined for a deeper understanding of how the universe and multiverses
    operate (Graves, 2005). The idea of the holon is embodied (that the microcosm
    reflects the macrocosm and the macrocosm reflects the microcosm; or as above,
    below and as below, above). The individual is seen as a part of the larger cosmos,
    a conscious collective, which serves the whole and the one as the same, because
    they are not separate (Ooten, Unpublished). In the understanding of that
    Oneness, individuals at the Turquoise level are aware that all actions and nonactions
    impact all beings, all planetary bodies, the entire cosmos (Graves, 2005;
    Graves, 2002; Beck, 2006). Individuals at this level see the earth and all living
    beings that inhabit the earth as one organism and understand that sacrifices
    are necessary by all for life to continue. These individuals learn intuitively and
    experientially, are deeply grounded in the metaphysical, and live minimalistically
    to create more for all (Graves, 2005). With such a broad awareness, there may
    be difficulty with creating direct and focused action. Paradox is embraced and
    known as essential (Graves, 2005; Beck, 2006). Individuals who operate from
    the Turquoise level value experience and through experiencing, they create
    communion with all that is (Graves, 1974).
    Enneagram Archetypes within Levels of Consciousness
    Spiral Dynamics is a model that describes phylogenetics, the evolution of the
    species. The Enneagram of Personality is a tool that details the fixated aspects
    of the individual and describes ontogentics, the development of the individual
    of the species. Pairing these two systems provides a map for the evolution of
    individuals through levels of consciousness. Through properly comprehending
    and applying these two systems, we can develop deep compassion and
    understanding for our fellow human beings and can be more effective in all
    endeavors (Ooten, Unpublished).