In his book
The Hundredth Monkey, Ken Keyes, Jr. wrote about scientists who had been observing monkeys in the
wild for thirty years. In 1952, on the island of Koshima, when there was a serious drought &
famine, they provided monkeys with sweet potatoes which they had dropped in sand. The monkeys
liked the taste of the potatoes but found the sand unpleasant. One day, an eighteen month old
monkey washed the potatoes in a nearby stream. She taught the trick to her mother
and her playmates, who taught it to their mothers. As the story is told, perhaps
99 monkeys learned to wash their sweet potato between 1952 and 1958. One day the 100th monkey
learned to wash the potatoes. Suddenly, almost every monkey on the island began to wash their potatoes before eating them. The added energy of this 100th monkey had somehow created a behavioral breakthrough.
But,
more amazing, the scientists observed that the act of washing sweet potatoes had jumped over the sea, because the colonies of monkeys on other islands, as far as 500 miles away, began washing their sweet
potatoes.
This
phenomena is known as "critical mass." When a limited number of people know something in a new way, it remains the conscious property of only those people. However, there is a point at which
if only one more person tunes in to a new awareness, that new awareness is picked up by everyone.
Come join the campaign.
No Footpaths, No roads.