Chapter One
A Critical Mass
I drove up to the restaurant and parked, then leaned back in my seat to
think for a moment. Charlene, I knew, would already be inside, waiting
to talk with me. But why? I hadn't heard a word from her in six years.
Why would she have shown up now, just when I had sequestered myself in
the woods for a week?
I stepped out of the truck and walked toward the restaurant. Behind me,
the last glow of a sunset sank in the west and cast highlights of golden
amber across the wet parking lot. Everything had been drenched an hour
earlier by a brief thunderstorm, and now the summer evening felt cool
and renewed, and because of the fading light, almost surreal. A half
moon hung overhead.
As I walked, old images of Charlene filled my mind. Was she still
beautiful, intense? How would time have changed her? And what was I to
think of this manuscript she had mentioned-this ancient artifact found
in South America that she couldn't wait to tell me about?
"I have a two-hour layover at the airport," she had said on the
telephone. "Can you meet me for dinner? You're going to love what this
manuscript says-it's just your kind of mystery."
My kind of mystery? What did she mean by that?
Inside, the restaurant was crowded. Several couples waited for tables.
When I found the hostess, she told me Charlene had already been seated
and directed me toward a terraced area above the main dining room.
I walked up the steps and became aware of a crowd of people surrounding
one of the tables. The crowd included two policemen. Suddenly, the
policemen turned and rushed past me and down the steps. As the rest of
the people dispersed, I could see past them to the person who seemed to
have been the center of attention-a woman, still seated at the table ...
Charlene!
I quickly walked up to her. "Charlene, what's going on? Is anything
wrong?"
She tossed her head back in mock exasperation and stood up, flashing her
famous smile. I noticed that her hair was perhaps different, but her
face was exactly as I remembered: small delicate features, wide mouth,
huge blue eyes.
"You wouldn't believe it," she said, pulling me into a friendly hug. "I
went to the rest room a few minutes ago and while I was gone, someone
stole my briefcase."
"What was in it?"
"Nothing of importance, just some books and magazines I was taking along
for the trip. It's crazy. The people at the other tables told me someone
just walked in, picked it up, and walked out. They gave the police a
description and the officers said they would search the area."
"Maybe I should help them look?"
"No, no. Let's forget about it. I don't have much time and I want to
talk with you."
I nodded and Charlene suggested we sit down. A waiter approached so we
looked over the menu and gave him our order. Afterward, we spent ten or
fifteen minutes chatting in general. I tried to underplay my
self-imposed isolation but Charlene picked up on my vagueness. She
leaned over and gave me that smile again.
"So what's
really going on with you?" she asked.
I looked at her eyes, at the intense way she was looking at me. "You
want the whole story immediately, don't you?"
"Always," she said.
"Well, the truth is, I'm taking some time for myself right now and
staying at the lake. I've been working hard and I'm thinking about
changing directions in my life."
"I remember you talking about that lake. I thought you and your sister
had to sell it."
"Not yet, but the problem is property taxes. Because the land is so
close to the city, the taxes keep increasing."
She nodded. "So what are you going to do next?"
"I don't know yet. Something different."
She gave me an intriguing look. "Sounds as if you're as restless as
everyone else."
"I suppose," I said. "Why do you ask?"
"It's in the Manuscript."
There was silence as I returned her gaze.
"Tell me about this Manuscript," I said.
She leaned back in her chair as if to gather her thoughts, then looked
me in the eye again. "I mentioned on the phone, I think, that I left the
newspaper several years ago and joined a research firm that investigates
cultural and demographic changes for the U.N. My last assignment was in
Peru.
"While I was there, completing some research at the University of Lima,
I kept hearing rumors about an old manuscript that had been
discovered-only no one could give me any of the details, not even at the
departments of archeology or anthropology. And when I contacted the
government about it, they denied any knowledge whatsoever.
"One person told me that the government was actually working to suppress
this document for some reason. Although, again, he had no direct
knowledge.
"You know me," she continued. "I'm curious. When my assignment was over,
I decided to stay around for a couple of days to see what I could find
out. At first, every lead I pursued turned out to be another dead end,
but then while I was eating lunch in a cafe outside of Lima, I noticed a
priest watching me. After a few minutes, he walked over and admitted
that he had heard me inquiring about the Manuscript earlier in the day.
He wouldn't reveal his name but he agreed to answer all my questions."
She hesitated for a moment, still looking at me intensely. "He said the
Manuscript dates back to about 600 B.C. It predicts a massive
transformation in human society."
"Beginning when?" I asked.
"In the last decades of the twentieth century."
"Now?!"
"Yes, now."
"What kind of transformation is it supposed to be?" I asked.
She looked embarrassed for a moment, then with force said, "The priest
told me it's a kind of renaissance in consciousness, occurring very
slowly. It's not religious in nature, but it is spiritual. We're
discovering something new about human life on this planet, about what
our existence means, and according to the priest, this knowledge will
alter human culture dramatically."
She paused again, then added, "The priest told me the Manuscript is
divided into segments, or chapters, each devoted to a particular insight
into life. The Manuscript predicts that in this time period human beings
will begin to grasp these insights sequentially, one insight then
another, as we move from where we are now to a completely spiritual
culture on Earth."
I shook my head and raised an eyebrow cynically. "Do you really believe
all this?"
"Well," she said. "I think ...
"Look around,? I interrupted, pointing at the crowd sitting in the room
below us. "This is the real world. Do you see anything changing out
there?"
Just as I said that, an angry remark erupted from a table near the far
wall, a remark I couldn't understand, but which was loud enough to hush
the entire room. At first I thought the disturbance was another robbery,
but then I realized it was only an argument. A woman appearing to be in
her thirties was standing up and staring indignantly at a man seated
across from her.
"No," she yelled. "The problem is that this relationship is not
happening the way I wanted! Do you understand? It's not happening!" She
composed herself, tossed her napkin on the table, and walked out.
Charlene and I stared at each other, shocked that the outburst had
occurred at the very moment we were discussing the people below us.
Finally Charlene nodded toward the table where the man remained alone
and said, "It's the real world that's changing."
"How?" I asked, still off balance.
"The transformation is beginning with the First Insight, and according
to the priest, this insight always surfaces unconsciously at first, as a
profound sense of restlessness."
"Restlessness?"
"Yes."
"What are we looking for?"
"That's just it! At first we aren't sure. According to the Manuscript,
we're beginning to glimpse an alternative kind of experience ... moments
in our lives that feel different somehow, more intense and inspiring.
But we don't know what this experience is or how to make it last, and
when it ends we're left feeling dissatisfied and restless with a life
that seems ordinary again."
"You think this restlessness was behind the woman's anger?"
"Yes. She's just like the rest of us. We're all looking for more
fulfillment in our lives, and we won't put up with anything that seems
to bring us down. This restless searching is what's behind the
'me-first' attitude that has characterized recent decades, and it's
affecting everyone, from Wall Street to street gangs."
She looked directly at me. "And when it comes to relationships, we're so
demanding that we're making them near impossible."
Her remark brought back the memory of my last two relationships. Both
had begun intensely and both within a year had failed. When I focused on
Charlene again, she was waiting patiently.
"What exactly are we doing to our romantic relationships?" I asked.
"I talked with the priest a long time about this," she replied. "He said
that when both partners in a relationship are overly demanding, when
each expects the other to live in his or her world, to always be there
to join in his or her chosen activities, an ego battle inevitably
develops."
What she said struck home. My last two relationships had indeed
degenerated into power struggles. In both situations, we had found
ourselves in a conflict of agendas. The pace had been too fast. We had
too little time to coordinate our different ideas about what to do,
where to go, what interests to pursue. In the end, the issue of who
would lead, who would determine the direction for the day, had become an
irresolvable difficulty.
"Because of this control battle," Charlene continued, "the Manuscript
says we will find it very difficult to stay with the same person for any
length of time."
"That doesn't seem very spiritual," I said.
"That's exactly what I told the priest," she replied. "He said to
remember that while most of society's recent ills can be traced to this
restlessness and searching, this problem is temporary, and will come to
an end. We're finally becoming conscious of what we're actually looking
for, of what this other, more fulfilling experience really is. When we
grasp it fully, we'll have attained the First Insight."
Our dinner arrived so we paused for several minutes as the waiter poured
more wine, and to taste each other's food. When she reached across the
table to take a bite of salmon from my plate, Charlene wrinkled her nose
and giggled. I realized how easy it was to be with her.
"Okay," I said. "What is this experience we're looking for? What is the
First Insight?"
She hesitated, as though unsure how to begin.
"This is hard to explain," she said. "But the priest put it this way. He
said the First Insight occurs when we become conscious of the
coincidences in our lives."
She leaned toward me. "Have you ever had a hunch or intuition concerning
something you wanted to do? Some course you wanted to take in your life?
And wondered how it might happen? And then, after you had half forgotten
about it and focused on other things, you suddenly met someone or read
something or went somewhere that led to the very opportunity you
envisioned?
"Well," she continued, "according to the priest, these coincidences are
happening more and more frequently and that, when they do, they strike
us as beyond what would be expected by pure chance. They feel destined,
as though our lives had been guided by some unexplained force. The
experience induces a feeling of mystery and excitement and, as a result,
we feel more alive.
"The priest told me that this is the experience that we've glimpsed and
that we're now trying to manifest all the time. More people every day
are convinced that this mysterious movement is real and that it means
something, that something else is going on beneath everyday life. This
awareness is the First Insight.
She looked at me expectantly, but I said nothing.
"Don't you see?" she asked. "The First Insight is a reconsideration of
the inherent mystery that surrounds our individual lives on this planet.
We are experiencing these mysterious coincidences, and even though we
don't understand them yet, we know they are real. We are sensing again,
as in childhood, that there is another side of life that we have yet to
discover, some other process operating behind the scenes."
Charlene was leaning further toward me, gesturing with her hands as she
spoke.
"You're really into this, aren't you?" I asked.
"I can remember a time," she said, sternly, "when you talked about these
kinds of experiences."
Her comment jolted me. She was right. There had been a period in my life
when I had indeed experienced such coincidences and had even tried to
understand them psychologically. Somewhere along the way, my view had
changed. I had begun to regard such perceptions as immature and
unrealistic for some reason, and I had stopped even noticing.
I looked directly at Charlene, then said defensively, "I was probably
reading Eastern Philosophy or Christian Mysticism at that time. That's
what you remember. Anyway, what you're calling the First Insight has
been written about many times, Charlene. What's different now? How is a
perception of mysterious occurrences going to lead to a cultural
transformation?"
Charlene looked down at the table for an instant and then back at me.
"Don't misunderstand," she said. "Certainly this consciousness has been
experienced and described before. In fact, the priest made a point to
say that the first insight wasn't new. He said individuals have been
aware of these unexplained coincidences throughout history, that this
has been the perception behind many great attempts at philosophy and
religion. But the difference now lies in the numbers. According to the
priest, the transformation is occurring now because of the number of
individuals having this awareness all at the same time."
"What did he mean, exactly?" I asked.
"He told me the Manuscript says the number of people who are conscious
of such coincidences would begin to grow dramatically in the sixth
decade of the twentieth century. He said that this growth would continue
until sometime near the beginning of the following century, when we
would reach a specific level of such individuals-a level I think of as a
critical mass.
"The Manuscript predicts," she went on, "that once we reach this
critical mass, the entire culture will begin to take these coincidental
experiences seriously. We will wonder, in mass, what mysterious process
underlies human life on this planet. And it will be this question, asked
at the same time by enough people, that will allow the other insights to
also come into consciousness-because according to the Manuscript, when a
sufficient number of individuals seriously question what's going on in
life, we will begin to find out. The other insights will be revealed ...
one after the other."
She paused to take a bite of food.
"And when we grasp the other insights," I asked, "then the culture will
shift?"
"That's what the priest told me," she said.
I looked at her for a moment, contemplating the idea of a critical mass,
then said, "You know, all this sounds awfully sophisticated for a
Manuscript written in 600 B.C."
"I know," she replied. "I raised the question myself. But the priest
assured me that the scholars who first translated the Manuscript were
absolutely convinced of its authenticity. Mainly because it was written
in Aramaic, the same language in which much of the Old Testament was
written?
"Aramaic in South America? How did it get there in 600 B.C?" "The priest
didn't know."
"Does his church support the Manuscript?" I asked.
"No," she said. "He told me that most of the clergy were bitterly trying
to suppress the Manuscript. That's why he couldn't tell me his name.
Apparently talking about it at all was very dangerous for him."
"Did he say why most church officials were fighting against it?"
"Yes, because it challenges the completeness of their religion."
"How?"
"I don't know exactly. He didn't discuss it much, but apparently the
other insights extend some of the church's traditional ideas in a way
that alarms the church elders, who think things are fine the way they
are."
?I see."
"The priest did say," Charlene went on, "that he doesn't think the
Manuscript undermines any of the church's principles. If anything, it
clarifies exactly what is meant by these spiritual truths. He felt
strongly that the church leaders would see this fact if they would try
to see life as a mystery again and then proceed through the other
insights."
"Did he tell you how many insights there were?"
"No, but he did mention the Second Insight. He told me it is a more
correct interpretation of recent history, one that further clarifies the
transformation."
"Did he elaborate on that?"
"No, he didn't have time. He said he had to leave to take care of some
business. We agreed to meet back at his house that afternoon, but when I
arrived he wasn't there. I waited three hours and he still didn't show
up. Finally, I had to leave to catch my flight home."
"You mean you weren't able to talk with him any more?"
"That's right. I never saw him again."
"And you never received any confirmation about the Manuscript from the
government?"
"None."
"And how long ago did this take place?"
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "The Celestine Prophecy"
by James Redfield.
Copyright (C) 1995 by James Redfield.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.