For things to soar and I mean consistently soar year after year, you need a community who believes in what you originally set out to do and hopefully continue to do. I‘ve been going to Wisdom 2.0 for nearly a decade and what initially brought me there was bringing consciousness to the technology industry and other sectors. Their commitment is to address the overlap between living connected to one another through technology and consciousness. In other words, doing so in ways that are beneficial to our own well-being, effective in our work, and useful to the world.
Last year, they had OPENAI CEO, Sam Altman on stage, but also people like Jack Kornfeld, Yung Pueblo, trauma expert Gabor Maté, Byron Katie, Dr. Lyla June Johnston, Rhonda Magee, Alex Senegal, Mohammed Mohammed, Chip Conley, MAPS founder Rick Doblin and more.
This Year’s Wisdom 2.0
This year, Deepak Chopra, meditation master Jon Kabat-Zinn, #MeToo movement founder Tarana Burke, V (formally Eve Ensler), Roshi Joan Halifax, and founder of internal family systems (IFS) Dr.Richard Schwartz were among the speakers on the main stage. V. Pappas also addressed social media and its impact on people, especially the youth. She shared lessons learned from Tik Tok as the former COO and how we can manage it for ourselves and our kids.
Alanis Morrissette also joined us for a conversation in a fireside chat style format with Wisdom 2.0 host Soren Gordhamer. As much as I had hoped for a song or two as well as her insights, music wasn’t on the table at this year’s event. She shared her wisdom and also her own best practices for personal growth and healing, which included how to stay grounded as a singer, but also as a mother. I loved her authentic voice.
She shared that as an empath, navigating the landscape can be challenging, but realizing it is a great start to know what to do to take care of yourself along the way, rather than shove the hiccups under the carpet as so many do. It’s hard to be a changemaker and a leader but making the commitment to show up is a big part of it and her showing up on a very different stage like Wisdom 2.0 demonstrated that to all of us.
I’m not new to Deepak Chopra‘s work or voice. Not only have I heard him speak a couple dozen times over the years at live events, but I‘ve read over half of his books. Sometimes his talks have been a bit heady or dense for me; however, clarity hit me in all directions when he graced the stage with his presence this year. The focus? Similarities and overlapping paradigms between science and spirituality, one of my favorite topics.
Without getting too technical or going down the quantum physics rabbit hole, he made some interesting parallel observations between Quantum Mechanics and what he referred to as Quantum Consciousness in his talk. The most interesting one he raised was The Superposition Principle, which suggests that the “system can be in a state that is a combination of two or more other states.” On the side of Quantum Consciousness, he says that “all mental events exist in superposition and entanglement with sensations, images, feelings and thoughts. Potential mental events exist in multiple states until actualized as experience.”
He also explained how each side starts with fundamental assumptions. For example, science starts with matter is the “ontological primitive of existence, where as consciousness is the starting point” for those who turn to spirituality for understanding our existence.
“All mental events exist in superposition and entanglement with sensations, images, feelings and thoughts. Potential mental events exist in multiple states until actualized as experience.” —Deepak Chopra (April 2024)
For those who share the materialist view, then matter produces mind, but from the world of spirituality, then mind and matter (brain, body and world) are actually “complementary activities of awareness.” He asserts that “awareness modifies itself as cognition and perception.” Despite the fact that I grew up respecting science over spirituality, at least when it comes to understanding humanity’s very existence, his references to Advaita Vedanta/Shaivism made much more sense to me, intuitively that is.
Science looks for consistent proof—repeated proof—over and over again. It only takes into account experience in that repeated context, although for those of us who have had repeated experiences that we can’t explain—and nor can science explain—it feels, tastes and sounds more true than what data often points to. Ultimately this leads us to something that masters across traditions often come to at the end of the day, and that Deepak brought up on one of his slides: “The theater of spacetime and causality is an illusion/simulation in non-local awareness (Maya).” I’d argue that this perceived illusion is what keeps separateness in play and so has Ram Das and many other spiritual masters.
It seemed like a great overview given how diverse the Wisdom 2.0 attendees were, some coming in from other continents as well as other parts of the U.S. We need to continue this dialogue, as mind-bending it as it may be for some. There’s far too much new research pointing us toward the beautiful interconnected web of life (as energy) that we all share, something many of our indigenous ancestors have known for millennia and beyond.
Although Gabor didn’t speak this year, the trauma discussion continued. Iya Affo, who we interviewed for our video series on Trauma (not yet live) was on-stage and continued the dialogue at a Q&A later in the day which I attended. She reminds us that if we don’t understand how trauma impacts the physiology in the brain, we can’t learn more empowering ways to regulate the brain so we can change some of those destructive behaviors.
She also spoke of how some cultures find talk therapy taboo. So, rather than focusing on needing to do something we think of as taboo, we can look to more effective ways to regulate the brain. With awareness, comes power. In other words, the more we practice different behavior, the more that behavior becomes a new neuro-pathway.
“The more I can regulate my brain, the more I have the capacity to make choices.”—Iya Affo
Mingtong Gu also graced us with his presence. He was trained at the largest qigong hospital in China and was named Qigong Master of the Year by the 13th World Congress for Qigong and Traditional Chinese Medicine. I initially learned about his work at the SAND Conference (which sadly stopped running physical events), although he has spoken and led workshops at Wisdom 2.0 before. I wrote a piece about an event he led at Spirit Rock back in 2018 and to this day, remain a fan. He leads on and live courses and events from his Chi Center in Santa Fe. Qigong is a great re-balancing and healing modality.
Speaking of healing modalities, let’s now turn to Internal Family Systems (IFS). Many I spoke to at the conference were familiar with (and fans of) the IFS work, so the room was packed when Dr. David Schwartz arrived on stage. Schwartz led a IFS process with Soren on stage, which not only took us through the steps but showed the power of that vulnerability not just with others, but most importantly with oneself.
One part of him is the “striver,” which can get in the way when we’re doing personal growth and spiritual work and yet, don’t we all have a little striver in us, especially if we’re leading an organization, conference or company? Recognizing it allows us to make amends with that part of us, hold it in a sacred place and then balance the energy so it’s useful rather than detrimental or overpowering.