Self-Regulation and the Egg Diagram
by Molly Young Brown
In September 2006, I had the privilege of presenting workshops in
Sweden and Finland to teachers and advanced students of
psychosynthesis - a two-day workshop in Stockholm and two three-day
workshops on Nagu Island in the archipelago off the southwest coast
of Finland. I considered it a privilege because the people attending
participated so fully - immersing themselves in the exercises,
asking keen questions, and offering their own ideas in the dialogue
that ensued.
In the second Nagu Island workshop, as we explored the relationship
between systems thinking and psychosynthesis, we discovered we could
use the classic "Egg Diagram" of psychosynthesis to map a key
concept of systems thinking: "self-regulation" through "negative
feedback." I found this new model very exciting and would like to
share it here.
I’ll begin with a little background on the relevant concepts of
systems thinking. To self-regulate, systems respond in ways that
counteract any deviation from their established patterns of
interaction. Systems thinkers call this interchange between system
and environment "negative feedback" because it reduces deviation.
Such responses change the system’s relationship to the environment
to restore conditions to a tolerable range. When someone becomes
overheated, for example, negative feedback loops within the body
stimulate perspiration, the evaporation of which helps cool the body
to within an optimal temperature range, reducing the deviation from
this norm. Negative feedback regulates every aspect of systemic
functioning; it essentially defines and delimits every system, in
complex and interpenetrating webs.
Sometimes a response that formerly reduced deviation fails to do so
under the new conditions; the deviation goes unchecked and even
amplifies, becomes greater. Systems theorists call this process
"positive feedback." If this amplification continues long enough, it
becomes "runaway positive feedback" which eventually - or quickly -
destroys the system. For the system to survive, it must quickly
establish new response patterns adapted to the new demands of the
environment (the larger system) and supported by negative feedback
once again. This process is called adaptation, self-organization, or
learning.
It’s difficult to give examples of positive feedback loops in living
systems, because they are usually very short-lived. Some systems
thinkers resist associating learning with positive feedback for this
reason. They would say that learning is essentially the creation of
new negative feedback loops. And indeed it is. It may be that
positive feedback only delivers the "kick" that moves a system into
new patterns of response.
In living systems, positive and negative feedback operate together.
If a system only maintained itself according to established patterns
(as most mechanical systems do), it would be unable to adapt to
changing conditions in the environment and eventually wear out, or
blow up, or collapse. This is why we humans must constantly tinker
with our machines to keep them functioning. If a system only
experienced positive feedback, it would have no "integrity"; it
would maintain no pattern and instantly cease to exist as a coherent
whole. So while adapting to changing conditions when incited by
positive feedback, all living systems maintain themselves through
negative feedback, and reduce deviation around new response patterns
as soon as possible.
Living systems have internal "codes" that determine how each system
responds to its environment through negative feedback - these are
the "established patterns of interaction" mentioned above. But what
are these "codes" and where do they come from? At the most basic
level, they are genetic - prompting plants to grow towards the light,
birds to migrate, and humans to shiver when cold. In the Nagu
workshop, we proposed that these hard-wired codes - or instincts -
belong in the lower or basic unconscious on the Egg Diagram.
As we have seen, living systems also learn new patterns of response
to their environment through positive feedback. Much of this
learning occurs unconsciously, through conditioning, and all too
often occurs as the result of trauma. Such conditioned responses may
prove dysfunctional in other life circumstances. A child who has
been abused grows up fearful of displeasing anyone, and thus
succumbs to more abuse from her spouse. This conditioned response
operates as an unconscious "code" and prevents her from standing up
for herself. The Nagu group also assigned these conditioned
responses to the lower or basic unconscious on the Egg Diagram.
As social beings, however, humans’ codes of response are not limited
to genetic instincts and conditioning. Families, tribes, communities,
and nations establish laws and rules to govern collective behavior.
People also have unwritten norms that modulate everything from
dress, to table manners, to ways of greeting one another - a huge
array of social interactions. The Nagu workshop group assigned these
to the "middle unconscious" on the Egg Diagram, because most people
can readily bring these rules and norms to consciousness.
What codes would reside in the higher unconscious or superconscious?
The Nagu group thought that morals and values would come from that
level. A person’s values are often unconscious, although a person
might experience a sense of discomfort or even anger when faced with
a situation that violates those values. "Values clarification"
attempts to bring values into consciousness so they can be more
readily used in decision-making.
Since the Nagu workshops, I have continued to reflect on this model
and want to share my further thoughts.
In making these distinctions among levels of the unconscious and the
codes that guide negative feedback loops, I do not mean to imply
that codes from the higher unconscious are "better" than conditioned
responses or social norms. In many situations, these are essential
to our survival and well-being. When our physical bodies are
suddenly threatened with real and immediate danger, we need the
instantaneous response of instinct and conditioned response to
protect ourselves. When working within a community, we are far more
effective if we keep our behaviors within reasonable norms for that
group of people - and it’s useful if that process can be largely
unconscious, so we can focus on the task at hand. If I have a
so-called "higher value" of freedom and try to impose that on my
driving behavior, I am likely to end up with a ticket at best. Many
laws, rules, and norms do help us to live together, at least at our
current level of social development. At the same time, many other
laws, rules, and norms clearly perpetuate dysfunctional patterns of
relationship.
This is where the "higher" codes of values, morals, intuition, and
inner guidance come into play - when our norms and rules no longer
work, or are actually creating problems for all concerned. (And in
our interconnected universe, anything that creates a problem for one
living system - or person - creates a problem for all.)
In addition to the feedback loops within the individual or the
society, we are collectively involved in negative, self-regulatory,
feedback loops within the larger system of which our society is a
part. The larger ecological system attempts to maintain itself
according to its established patterns by bringing an errant
subsystem into line. Perhaps the larger system is the source of
inner guidance or intuition. It seems to me that when we go deeply
within, we connect more completely with the world around us - not so
much the human world as the whole enchilada: the human world and the
natural world that contains the human. We become part of the
internal feedback loops of the whole ecosystem.
We might experience the negative, self-regulatory feedback circuits
of the larger system as "positive" (deviation-amplifying) at the
individual level, because individual and social codes must change in
order for the larger system to find balance.
Gregory Bateson (1967) speaks to this dynamic in one of my all-time
favorite quotations: "Mere purposive rationality unaided by such
phenomena as art, religion, dream and the like, is necessarily
pathogenic and destructive of life." This is because "life depends
upon interlocking circuits of contingency, while consciousness can
see only such short arcs of such circuits as human purpose may
direct" (p.146). The "short arcs" may be our individual patterns of
response (negative feedback loops) that do not take into account the
larger interlocking circuits of contingency that make up the web of
life on Earth.
What I am suggesting is that our "higher unconscious" codes actually
arise from the interconnected web of life, from the collective
unconscious of life itself. So when we are working with issues such
as global climate change, poverty, or social justice, we need to
call upon something beyond even our personal values. Missionaries
have done terrible damage to indigenous cultures throughout history
by failing to do this. We need to open ourselves to guidance from
the most encompassing metasystem we can access to avoid doing more
harm than good.
I believe that we are all deeply attuned to the whole as systems
within a larger system; we receive and send information constantly
along the strands of the living web that holds us all. If we can
quiet the noise of our daily lives, if we can suspend for a short
time our conditioned responses and unconscious adherence to social
norms, we can better receive that guidance. Moment to moment as
circumstances change and evolve, feedback from the larger system
will help us respond powerfully and harmoniously, in ways that
benefit not only ourselves, but also the larger whole.
References
G. Bateson (1967). Style, grace and information in primitive
art. Steps to an ecology of mind. New York: Ballentine.
Molly Y. Brown (2004). Unfolding Self: The practice of
psychosynthesis. New York: Helios/Allworth.
J. Marcy & M. Brown (1998). Coming back to life: Practices to
recconnect our lives, our world. Gabriola Island. BC: New
Society.
Gjengitt med tillatelse.
© Molly Young Brown 2007
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