Lightworkers, Darkworkers, And The Other Kind

January 28th, 2009           Email this article to a friend Email this article to a friend

Lightworker and darkworker

At well over 5,000 words, this post is an absolute monster. I’ll hold off on posting for a while, to give you enough time to absorb it. And I hope you will, because this is definitely an issue where you want to know where you stand.

Are you a lightworker or a darkworker? You’d better know the answer. After all, it’s one of the most important decisions you could ever make. It affects everything about you, from how you see the world, to how you treat people, to how you make a living, to possibly what awaits you in the afterlife.

But are lightworker and darkworker the only two options? Could you simply be unpolarized, not having chosen one or the other? Or could you be a third type that hasn’t been mentioned yet?

OK, let me slow down here, because I know I’ve lost some people already.

The terms lightworker and darkworker have different definitions depending on who you ask, and I think it can be helpful to look at the distinction from multiple angles. For example, if someone with a lightworker personality resorts to doing a darkworker job because they need the money, what is their real type?

Anyway, lightworker and darkworker are roughly synonymous with good and evil. They reflect the orientation of your morality, and therefore how you live your life. (I sometimes call them whitelighters and darklighters, but I’ll stick to the more common terms here.)

While these terms are sometimes used with spiritual connotations (i.e., “you have a lightworker soul”), I’ll be talking about them from a more down to earth perspective, mainly in terms of how we make a living. (If you’re interested in the spiritual side of this, I can refer you to Akemi Gaines. Start with her recent post Soul Shifting And the Light Ascension Of Maybe 2012. While it’s not exactly about lightworkers and darkworkers, it’s relevant enough, and it’s certainly drawing lots of attention.)

We’re all here on this earth to do something. Everyone is different, but we all want to do our work, or fulfill a purpose, or create value, or if nothing else, then at least live our life. And while it’s important to figure out the specifics of what you want to do, it’s even more important to determine your intentions that set the stage.

In whatever shape or form, lightworkers are here to serve the greater good, though they also want to take care of themselves. On the other hand, darkworkers are here only to serve themselves, and have no problem with sacrificing the greater good if it gets in their way.

The concept of polarization refers to how far you lean to either side. Most people have both lightworker and darkworker tendencies, but they don’t mix well together. If you try to be both a good lightworker and a good darkworker, you’ll be terrible at both.

A mass can be positively charged, negatively charged, or neutral. Whether it’s positive or negative, it can only become stronger by polarizing further in that direction. If it mixes with some of the opposite polarity, its charge weakens. Too much of the opposite polarity, and it becomes inert and powerless.

Many people are quick to call themselves lightworkers, but they’re not really polarized in that direction. Someone who’s just a little bit lightworker is no lightworker at all. That doesn’t mean they’re a darkworker; they’re just unpolarized.

So that’s how it goes, according to most people: you’re either a lightworker, or a darkworker, or unpolarized.

I’d like to propose another type. This kind of person is halfway between lightworker and darkworker. And they aren’t unpolarized; this is actually a third direction you can polarize in.

For lack of a better word, I’ll call these people neutralworkers. Yeah, it’s not catchy, but it will do. Zombieworker sounds insulting. Grayworker sounds cheesy, and also sounds like it means “a little dark,” which isn’t the case. Clearworker sounds good, but it’s confusing because it implies mental clarity, not to mention that clear technically means transparent, not colorless (cherry jello is clear, even though it’s red). Transparentworker and colorlessworker both sound ridiculous. Plainworker isn’t bad, but it sounds like someone who works on planes. So I’ll go with neutralworker for now, but feel free to suggest another word.

It’s easy to understand the difference between these types when you look at how they make a living.

  • Lightworkers focus on earning money.
  • Darkworkers focus on taking money.
  • Neutralworkers focus on getting money.

Said another way,

  • Lightworkers focus on creating value.
  • Darkworkers focus on stealing value.
  • Neutralworkers focus on hacking value.

Simple enough, right? Let’s take a closer look at these types.

Lightworkers

“In this life we cannot do great things. We can only do small things with great love.”

- Mother Teresa

Lightworkers love creating value. While they want to benefit from their work, they want to feel that they earned their money by doing something good for the world.

If somebody gets a paycheck, then they must have created value. Otherwise, what is the other person paying them for? However, to a lightworker, it’s not enough to just do what their boss considers to have value. Their work needs to be meaningful to them.

Lightworkers aren’t so “holier than thou” that every single thing they do has to have an earth shattering grand purpose, but they’re generally focused on making the world a better place. What exactly does that mean? We’ll see later that this is very subjective, but what matters is the lightworker’s intention.

Being a lightworker doesn’t have to mean being a martyr. If you want to make everyone better off, remember that “everyone” includes you. Lightworkers should strive to meet their own needs as well as society’s.

Darkworkers

“Success is the sole earthly judge of right and wrong.”

- Adolf Hitler

Darkworkers are always looking out for themselves, so they don’t care about creating value. If they happen to create value, so be it, but they’re just as willing to mooch it or steal it as they are to create it.

They’re not necessarily set on destroying society, but their only desire is to serve themselves. Whatever gets them what they want, that’s what they’ll do. If innocent people get hurt, that’s perfectly acceptable.

Think of it this way. Most people think it’s perfectly fine to eat animals. We’re at the top of the food chain, so we’re supposed to eat lower forms of life. But darkworkers take this concept and apply it to other people. They see everyone else as lower forms of life, available for their consumption.

To some extent, I can agree with that. Just now, while I’m typing this, I got an email from a reader. This person had opted into my newsletter, so of course he automatically got an email asking him to confirm his request. You know, the usual double opt-in deal. But instead of clicking the link to confirm, he replied with this:

GO **** YOURSELF *****

Yes, it was large bold red font in all caps, only his version didn’t have any asterisks. What a perfectly reasonable response to an opt-in confirmation. Do I think people like this are a lower form of life? You know, I might even put them below snakes. It would be justifiable to become a darkworker who targets people like this, but I wouldn’t do it. I’ll explain why later, when I give an argument against darkworking.

Neutralworkers

“Another day, another dollar.”

- The Neutralworker’s Motto

This is a term I’m just making up, but it’s hard to deny that these people exist. They don’t feel the need to create value, and they won’t resort to stealing it. Instead, they’ll just hack it, playing the system and taking the path of least resistance.

This is based on the idea that the value you provide is judged by other people, not by you. If someone hires you to do something, it has value to them, so they’ll pay you for it. It doesn’t matter if you think it has value. A neutralworker does a job just for a paycheck.

One example of this is often seen in the “make money online” crowd. Lots of people want to make money online by doing whatever works best. So instead of doing something they think is valuable, they find a high-paying keyword like mesothelioma, and base their life’s work on that. They set up a site that looks like my funny quotes pages. They make the site as ugly as possible so visitors will want to leave immediately, hopefully by clicking on an obnoxiously placed ad. (Incidentally, I created my quotes pages long before AdSense existed, so this isn’t a pure example of neutralworking.)

Is creating spam niche sites useful to society? No, but it works, and no one was hurt. No one did anything wrong or illegal. Why do you need to be a hero, when an easier way is available? In fact, the neutralworker path is the easiest way to make money, as long as you have the emotional deadness required to avoid wanting to do something useful with your life.

“If you don’t monetize a visitor one way, convert her into dollars another way!”

- Affiliate Masters Course

Years ago, someone I worked with was trying to get a top secret clearance, thinking that it was the best way to get ahead. But you can’t just go out and get a top secret clearance; you have to find an employer who (1) will hire you without one, and (2) will pay to get you one. Not easy to do.

This guy was staying in contact with his friend, an accountant who was close to getting his top secret clearance. One day this friend called. He had just gotten his clearance, and his salary had gone from $80,000 to $140,000, literally overnight.

These results aren’t typical, but to a neutralworker, this shows that clearly the best career move you can make is to get a top secret clearance. So you do whatever puts you in the path of one, accepting jobs based on their likelihood of ultimately leading to it. Forget about learning how to do your job better. Anything you do that you think makes you a more valuable employee has a negligible effect compared to being in the right place at the right time.

Another example of a neutralworker is the husband in Rosemary’s Baby. In exchange for a much-needed boost to his acting career, he agreed to let Satan impregnate his wife with the Antichrist, on the condition that she wouldn’t be hurt. Lovely.

Counting cards in blackjack, day trading, black hat SEO techniques, moving piles of money around–this is all about finding a way that works. No real value created, but none taken away. They’re just exploiting gaps in the system.

“Stop going for the easy buck and start producing something with your life. Create, instead of living off the buying and selling of others.”

- Carl Fox, Wall Street

It’s all about intentions

Sometimes it’s obvious whether someone is a lightworker, darkworker, or neutralworker. But many times it’s not. Where exactly do you draw the line?

“It’s not our abilities that show what we truly are, Harry. It’s our choices.”

- Albus Dumbledore

Paul Piotrowski at Inspired Money Maker has thought a lot about the difference between lightworkers and darkworkers, and concluded that it comes down to the intention you hold. In other words, there’s not an official list of lightworker jobs and one of darkworker jobs, because it depends on your perception of your work.

That seems right to me. For one thing, it explains why two people can perform the same job and see it completely differently.

You may have heard this story before. There are different versions of it floating around, and sometimes the moral of the story is different. But here’s the first version I heard 12 years ago, from Randy Pausch:

A gentleman walked past two guys who were laying bricks. He approached the first bricklayer and asked “What are you doing?”

The first bricklayer said, “Well, I pick up bricks from here, and take them over there. I get cement from over there, mix it with sand and water to make mortar, and use it to hold the bricks together. Then I come back here to get more bricks.”

He then asked the second bricklayer the same question.

The second bricklayer said, “I’m building a cathedral.”

Both were doing the exact same thing, but their intentions were different. The first was a neutralworker, doing the job to make a living. The second was a lightworker, doing what he could to create value. A third bricklayer could potentially have been building a fortress from which to launch a war against all living things, and that would make him a darkworker.

So bricklaying or any other job isn’t inherently light, dark, or neutral. It’s up to the intentions of the person doing the work.

The stock market is mainly used for neutralworking. People put money in, let it sit there, and make a profit (hopefully). It’s not good or bad, it just is. And yet it provided perfect opportunities for both lightworker Warren Buffett and darkworker David Schirmer. It all comes down to intentions.

(Intentions are sometimes a fuzzy measure because evil people often don’t think they’re evil, and because sometimes it’s necessary to kill for what is arguably the greater good. Were the Jedi evil for attempting to dethrone the Republic’s democratically elected leader without cause? What about someone who assassinated George W. Bush to end the war in Iraq? What about the European settlers wiping out the native Americans? The American colonies seceding from Britain? America dropping the bomb on Japan? What is the greater good? It’s hard to say, but let’s try to keep it simple here. (He says in a 5,000 word post with nested parentheses!))

Splitting your polarization

Good and evil
This picture is sending mixed signals, an example of split polarization.

People are often tempted to mix lightworking and darkworking. This is really dangerous. You’re much better off making a choice and sticking with it.

“Daniel-san, must talk. Walk on road, hmm? Walk right side, safe. Walk left side, safe. Walk middle, sooner or later, get squished just like grape. Here, karate, same thing. Either you karate do ‘yes’ or karate do ‘no.’ You karate do ‘guess so,’ squish, just like grape. Understand?”

- Mr. Miyagi

You can’t build homeless shelters by day, and kidnap billionaire heiresses by night. It doesn’t work that way. You can’t shift your intentions from one extreme to the other and expect to do well at either end. Splitting your polarization that much will cause you to suck at both lightworking and darkworking.

Good and Evil Homer

One of the most unpolarized people of all time is Homer Simpson (son of Abraham Simpson). And because he was all over the place, he was horrendously ineffective. He started his own security company because he saw it as “a way to combine my love of helping people with my love of hurting people.” It was no surprise that he got mixed results, making lots of friends as well as lots of enemies, being good enough to replace the police force but greatly overstepping his bounds, and receiving lavish praise as well as death threats from the mob.

OK, but what about being mainly a lightworker, and just doing a little harmless darkworking on the side? Maybe you’re generally a good person, but now and then you see an easy opportunity to break the rules for your own gain, without really hurting anyone. Should you do it?

The real damage is not in the act itself, but in the effect it has on your intentions. A lightworker can’t act as a darkworker “just this once,” then go back to how they were before. Once you cross the line, you’ve become unpolarized. You can repolarize in time, but now there’s a risk that you might not.

“You can look the other way once, and it’s no big deal, except it makes it easier for you to compromise the next time, and pretty soon that’s all you’re doing; compromising, because that’s the way you think things are done.

You know those guys I busted? You think they were the bad guys? Because they weren’t, they weren’t bad guys, they were just like you and me. Except they compromised…once.”

- Jack Bauer

An argument against darkworking

Let’s say you’re trying to decide whether to become a lightworker or a darkworker. Your sense of ethics is very flexible, so you think you could go either way. And you decide to become a darkworker. Specifically, a car thief. You think you’d be good at it.

But deep down, you’re really not fully polarized as a darkworker. You can rationalize stealing cars by saying that it mainly just hurts the insurance companies. Occasionally someone catches you stealing their car, so you have to pull a gun on them to scare them off. And while you don’t like doing that, you figure that it’s not really that bad.

But what happens when the cops come after you one day? Are you going to kill them? Because that’s what you’d have to do. But no, you couldn’t possibly bring yourself to do that. And that’s the problem. Because to be an effective darkworker, you need to act like a darkworker all the time.

Tony Montana and Darth Vader were both highly effective darkworkers because they were highly polarized. They never hesitated to do what a darkworker would do in any situation. And they were both brought down because they slipped up once, by acting like a lightworker.

If you think it would be cool to be Al Capone, before doing anything, first ask yourself if you’re capable of being that polarized as a darkworker. Are you willing to do whatever it takes to help yourself, no matter who it hurts? Because that’s what you’d have to do.

Society and its laws are highly biased against darkworkers. You can only go so far down the darkworker path without breaking the law, because the law is meant to protect the society you’re trying to abuse.

There are some exceptions. A darkworker can be very successful as a politician, if they can learn to gain a lot of power within the confines of the law. But generally, the law will greatly hinder your darkworking efforts.

When you go partway down the darkworker path, and you reach a point where you can’t proceed legally, you have a choice to make. You can either stay there and accept the limitations, or you can keep going. But if you decide to keep going, you can’t ever change your mind and expect society to welcome you back with open arms.

Here’s a spoiler alert, as I’m about to reveal the ending of The Fatal Equilibrium, a 1985 murder mystery novel by Marshall Jevons. (And as a side note, it’s a very interesting book. Marshall Jevons is the pen name of economics professors William Breit and Kenneth Elzinga, and this entertaining but educational murder mystery is actually used in college economics classes.)

In this book, a professor of anthropology decides he needs to write a terrific book to become famous. When he finds he no longer has the time or the dedication to do the necessary research, he decides to just fabricate his data, figuring no one would have any way of knowing. Thus, he commits a single act of darkworking.

Except it doesn’t stop there. A whiz kid in the economics department reads the book and figures out that the data doesn’t make sense, so he decides to blackmail the professor. The professor is thereby forced to commit more and more acts of darkworking to maintain his cover. At last he realizes that he just can’t polarize himself enough to be a good darkworker, so he jumps off a ship into the cold, dark ocean, having left this confession letter behind:

“…The terror of being exposed as a fraud outweighed the terror of murdering others to keep from being discovered. Once the decision was made to protect myself, my career, and all that had any meaning to me, I went about the business of murder in the most systematic and disciplined manner. Killing another was not pleasant. It was simply necessary. As I saw it then, and as I see it now, there was no other recourse.

I had, of course, hoped Dennis Gossen’s dispatch would end the matter…But I was not yet totally secure…I had to put Bell out of the way quickly…Barrett had to go too…Your party provided the opportunity for me to steal Melissa Shannon’s gloves in order to implicate her…After Melissa Shannon was convicted, I thought the danger to me was over.

…[But] I noticed you reading and I saw you suddenly sit bolt upright. When you left the Reading Room, I looked at the book you left behind and realized you were reading the same pages in my book that had aroused Gossen’s suspicions. I still do not understand how economics could uncover the fact that I had falsified my data, but I knew you were onto me.

…I thought briefly of killing you, Henry, to protect my reputation. But sooner or later my duplicity would be discovered again by another Spearman or Dennis Gossen who happens upon my book. So I have come to an end. Once again there is only one clear alternative.”

So instead of doing a lot of harm as a darkworker, only to quit that path after you finally admit that you don’t have it in you, do yourself and everyone else a favor, and resolve never to start down the darkworker path. If you have any sense of ethics, this should be easy.

Choosing between lightworking and neutralworking

OK, if darkworking is off the table, what are your choices? Being polarized as a lightworker will make you the best lightworker you can be. Being polarized as a neutralworker will make you the best neutralworker you can be. And being unpolarized will let you freely drift between them, experiencing some benefits of each, but without becoming optimal at either.

While it’s potentially dangerous for a darkworker to do some lightworking, and it’s extremely dangerous for a lightworker to do any darkworking at all, it’s much safer to do some neutralworking. Both lightworkers and darkworkers are free to dump their money into an index fund, passively collecting money without jeopardizing their polarity. Your polarization simply indicates your overall focus, rather than dictating every single action.

Being unpolarized offers the most flexibility, so that might seem appealing. However, choosing to be either a lightworker or a neutralworker would let you direct your efforts consistently, and would theoretically lead to better results and life satisfaction. Still, it’s hard to choose one, because they both have significant downsides.

The downside of being a lightworker

Although it’s easy to think that lightworking is the best path, it has a very definite downside. That downside was shown quite well by Mary Ulrich (no URL given), in her comment on Leo Babauta’s The Culture of Free, and The Power of Less. Leo said he was a proponent of free information, but he meant free from copyright, not free of charge. For example, he sold an ebook, but gave his customers the right to distribute, copy, and reuse it.

Many readers, including Mary, misunderstood him, and thought he was saying that people should work for free. But while this comment was based on a misunderstanding, it demonstrates a common plight of lightworkers:

“Sorry Leo, but I still don’t understand your concept of FREE.

I’ve been a volunteer most of my life because my oldest son with the label of autism needed me to do the things I did.

Now as I am approaching 60 years old, I have lots of plaques and awards of appreciation, but no retirement income. If I am lucky, I might manage enough social security quarters to get the minimum payment and be able to afford some health insurance.

I am often in a room of professionals who are all paid to be at the meeting, and I am the only parent–the non-paid person. I know what I do is important, I know I have made a difference in people’s lives, but I can’t seem to be able to make a salary to save my life. There are advantages, I can say things that need to be said and not worry about my boss censuring what I say. Because of that I have made significant change. Fortunately, my husband supports my ‘volunteer habit’ and we are doing OK, it’s not like we are living on the street. We recently went to visit my youngest son’s new in-laws in another country and saw poverty like I have never seen before. I know I have many things to be thankful for.

I understand Mother Theresa, the joy of service, and have heard all the platitudes about being rewarded in the next life…. But, If I am going to write a book, this one time I want to get paid. Our society measures success with dollars. Somehow, I have to figure out how to support my oldest son after we die. So, even if it is just once, so I can know that my life work has had value in the traditional sense, I would like to be able to get a paycheck.

Another parent friend always kids me, ‘Even prostitutes get paid.’ and then I always feel like a doormat because I know the professionals are using me.

Leo, I am benefiting from your ‘free’ advice, so I thank you, and I am thrilled it is working for you, but my perspective must be upside down or something, because I can’t figure it out.

Thanks for any suggestions. Mary”

- Mary E. Ulrich

Wow! I don’t fully understand her situation, but clearly she resents some aspects of being a lightworker. Although her work has value to her and some other people, it’s not received well by society overall. Let’s look at what she said, and see the pros and cons she’s experiencing as a lightworker.

Pros:

  • Doing what her autistic son needs her to do
  • Knows she’s making a difference in people’s lives
  • Can say things that need to be said
  • Has made significant change

Cons:

  • Can’t seem to be able to make a salary
  • No retirement income
  • Might not be able to afford health insurance
  • The only one in the room who’s not being paid
  • Resents that society measures success in dollars
  • Resents that her work has not had value in the traditional sense
  • Doesn’t know how to support her autistic son after she dies
  • Even prostitutes get paid
  • Feels like a doormat because she’s being used

Unfortunately, just because your work is valuable in your eyes, that doesn’t mean society will agree. Lightworkers are generally the most underpaid group, from their perspective, because other people don’t necessarily share their values.

The downside of being a neutralworker

By being a neutralworker, you’re optimizing your life around what society wants. Although your work has no particular value to you, apparently it’s really valuable to some people, and they’re the ones who write the checks. Neutralworkers are generally the most overpaid group, from their perspective. After all, if they don’t think their work has value, they’re lucky that some people disagree.

Still, if you have a need to actually do something with your life besides just getting a paycheck, neutralworking will really wear you down. If your job is just a machine for converting time into money, you’re living like a robot. Or like a bank robber, where the plan is to get in, get the money, and get out (the only difference from a real robbery is that you’ve been invited to rob the bank). Maybe one day you’ll wake up and wonder, “Is this really all there is to life?”

So, what’s it gonna be?

It would theoretically be best to polarize as either a lightworker or a neutralworker. There are disadvantages to both, but if you commit to one direction, you’ll do a much better job of following it. A lightworker can’t be such a great lightworker if they’re constantly distracted with learning the money-making secrets of neutralworkers. And a neutralworker can’t be such a great neutralworker if they always feel guilty about not doing enough with their life. Both of them need to tune out any impulses that would weaken their polarity, or they’ll end up chasing two rabbits, both of which will escape.

But so far, I haven’t been able to polarize as either a lightworker or a neutralworker, because when I think about how they’ll play out, neither one is acceptable. Consider this hypothetical tombstone:

“Here lies neutralworker Hunter. He did a satisfactory job writing software. Good attendance record. Slight attitude problem.”

Gee, that was worth incarnating for! On the other hand, it could look like this:

“Here lies lightworker Hunter. He did what he thought was important, but it wasn’t valued by society. Still, he was one of the nicest homeless people you’ve ever met.”

Now that’s even worse. I’m not going to be a martyr.

And while I’ve ruled out darkworking, the corresponding tombstone might look something like this:

“Here lies darkworker Hunter. He showed promise at first, but eventually he found that he didn’t have the resolve to follow through, and he was brought down by his own people. P.S. We don’t like darkworkers anyway.”

Steve Pavlina says to do what you love, even if you end up homeless. Sorry, but that’s not an option for me. Some “make money online” types say that links are what matter, and nothing else. Maybe they mean that’s all that matters for making money, or maybe they mean that’s all that matters in life. Anyway, it’s better than being homeless, but it’s a shame to waste your life on something so shallow.

If there’s a readily available job that lets you do your lightworker work, great. But there might not be. I bounce back and forth between lightworker and neutralworker, trying to do what I can with both. But constantly shifting your focus between creating value and getting money is extremely disruptive. It’s hard being a double agent.

The most direct solution would be to make money as a lightworker, but that’s easier said than done. However, these resources will help:

Tim Ferriss found a different way to solve the problem. I’m not a mind reader, so I can’t be sure about this, but it seems that he automated his paid neutralworking to free up time for his unpaid lightworking.

He created an automated system for running a nutritional supplement business in a way that would provide passive income. I’m guessing he would see this as neutralworking. Not having to trade his time for money, he’s now free to do what he would probably consider lightworking; conducting experiments in lifestyle design and sharing them with the world.

If you want to learn how he did it, he has a great book called The 4-Hour Workweek. But be warned that it’s much harder to do this than it seems. Before you get your hopes up, read Why We’re Failing The 4-Hour Workweek!

Here’s the part where I’m supposed to wrap things up with a neat conclusion, but I don’t have one. As Ashley Brilliant said, “I don’t have any solution, but I certainly admire the problem.”

At least I can clearly see why I feel torn between different things; it’s because I have a mix of lightworker, neutralworker, and even some darkworker tendencies, and I haven’t been able to polarize.

What is your polarity?

This post is part of Jeremy Day’s group writing project on creating value.

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33 Responses to “Lightworkers, Darkworkers, And The Other Kind”

  1. Ari Herzog Says:

    Damn, Hunter, how long does it take you to write these posts??

    If I understood it correctly, the advantage is with the neutralworker?

    Ari Herzog´s last blog post..How to Thank Your Critics Online

  2. Bengt Says:

    Thanks for a very interesting post, long but well worth reading all the way. I like your addition of a third option, it makes sense to me too.

    I share your split view between being a lightworker and a neutralworker, I have mixed (or switched) in the past but is now heading toward lightworker since that is where I feel comfortable.

  3. Betsy Wuebker Says:

    Hi Hunter – In reading this, I felt your struggle long before you articulated it. I agree that most of us migrate between types depending on the day, or the journey, and how we perceive our circumstances.

    I think it’s really easy for folks who make a comfortable living to advise that we should do what we love and the money will follow. They rarely follow-up with “but…it may be far less than you’re currently used to.” I related to Mary’s comment about a lifetime of passionate commitment in volunteering. There are many, myself included at one point, who fit her profile.

    So it would seem neutral-working might suffice to make up the financial deficit, and we all could simply move on. But . . . the idealist in us strives for the magic combination of light-working and significant financial reward. The disruption arising out of shifting that you mentioned might be addressed by disassociating. For instance, if paid work is a means to enable us to indulge our passion (the bartender who paints, or the cubicle pilot who writes), it should be okay. With ourselves and those who matter to us.

    Of course the older I get, the more I’m inclined to think all of it (whatever it might be) is just not that big a deal. :D

    Betsy Wuebker´s last blog post..FINDING VALUE IN UNCERTAINTY

  4. Tamara Says:

    I’ve written an article myself on polarization. Not sure if you are interested in looking at it or not. Its from a different perspective than the 3D reality that some people are still experiencing.
    As it says in the article, its not a perfect explaination as that would take up much more space to get in every point and I wanted to keep the article shorter rather than longer but it might help someone.
    If you want to take a look, it is here http://www.tamarahawk.com/Psychic_Articles/Is_it_Necessary_to_Polarize.htm
    Here’s a quote from the article “Polarization is a game, created by the mind and ego to try to put things in their place. To label them as light/dark, good/bad, fear/love.”

  5. Akemi - Yes to Me Says:

    Hi Hunter,
    Thank you for the mention. That post you linked is a VIP post.
    Now, I just scanned this post (I will read it in full in a minute), but I want to report something about darkworkers and what you call neutralworkers.

    There is a huge shift affecting those who have been taking energy from others rather than the Source. Many of them are returning to the Light. I just found this in the last few days and yet to collect my thoughts, but if someone relates to this, stay on the right track!

    Akemi – Yes to Me´s last blog post..7 Questions On Soul Shifting And the Light Ascension

  6. Annie Binns Says:

    Yowsers. You almost lost me with the parenthetical nesting.

    My preference for what you’re describing would simply be “worker”. I am not neutral by any means, but I certainly don’t create enough value to be considered a lightworker. Lightwork is my goal, and creating a close circle of friends who are lightworkers is another goal.

    But let’s face it – right now I’m just a worker. (And not a very good one at that, considering that I don’t have any income!)

    BTW, I’ve been reading Akemi’s recent posts and I really do think she’s onto something. I’ve felt a shift in the last 60 days, I just don’t know what it’s about yet.

    Thanks for taking the time and thought for such a wonderful post, Hunter!

    Annie Binns´s last blog post..Why I Smell Like Bleach

  7. Vered - MomGrind Says:

    I would assume most people are a mix, even if they claim to be just one of the options. So while Steve Pavlina, for example, says “do what you love even if you end up homeless,” he’s in fact making good money from doing what he loves, and I doubt he would actually choose homelessness over “selling out.”

    I’m a mix too.

  8. Ben Howden Says:

    Hey Hunter,

    Enjoying your writing as usual, but I feel like you’re holding on to unclarity by use of strange and arbitrary generalizations like:

    *
    “Here lies lightworker Hunter. He did what he thought was important, but it wasn’t valued by society. Still, he was one of the nicest homeless people you’ve ever met.”

    Now that’s even worse. I’m not going to be a martyr.
    *

    In my understanding of lightworkerness, not being valued, not making money, being homeless, being a martyr (def’n needed here) are nowhere noway essential.

    Because money, social approval and selfish gain are extremely low values for a lightworker, such conditions as poverty and ostracization may be more common than in other polarizations, but a true lightworker is not too especially troubled by them if they do arise.

    I’m also not sure about framing the whole -worker issue around job/career/money. The latter should be considered an aspect of the former.

    Love the massiveness and detail of your post, man. You dig ideas and I dig that. Keep writing.

    wishing well,

    Ben

    Ben Howden´s last blog post..Virtue of the Year: Authenticity

  9. Davina Says:

    Hi Hunter. I have to admit that I’ve only scanned this, cause I have to run out in 10 min. I’ll come back to finish… But, a friend just told me the other day, that if we can look at our “enemies” and know that they too have families or people in their lives that they love, then we can see them in a different “light”. I thought that was a brilliant statement.

    Davina´s last blog post..This Is Me, Then and Now

  10. Hunter Nuttall Says:

    @ Ari, it took 3 days. I don’t know how many hours. I figured I could just get my thoughts out in one post, and then I can always link back here when necessary. As for which type has the advantage, it’s really up to each person to decide.

    @ Bengt, I’m glad you feel comfortable with heading towards lightworker. Maybe I’ll join you there one day!

    @ Betsy,

    “the idealist in us strives for the magic combination of light-working and significant financial reward”

    Yes, me too. I guess the “bartender who paints, or the cubicle pilot who writes” option is the best way to get there.

    @ Tamara, I’ll definitely check out your post tomorrow, thanks.

    @ Akemi, yes, I thought your post was a VIP post. I know you posted more about the shift today, and I’ll check that out later tonight.

    @ Annie, worker is a good word, as long as people recognize it’s in the context of lightworkers and darkworkers. If you just go up to a coworker and say “I’m a worker,” they’ll say “Duh, of course you are!”

    Somebody told me she first thought lightworker meant the opposite of heavyworker, like not a serious worker. I hadn’t thought of it that way, but I guess the terms will always be confusing. Besides, this isn’t just about work anyway. I’d want to be a lightliver even if I was retired.

    I hope to join your lightworkers club one day!

    @ Vered, yeah, the mix is probably the most popular option. Before Steve made a good income, he went bankrupt at one point, and I know he and his wife got kicked out of their apartment. I don’t know if they were ever homeless, but I do think he has more willingness to be homeless than most people.

    You’re a mix? Oh, I thought you were a darkworker. :) No, you seem like a lightworker to me, but if you say you’re a mix then that’s what you are.

    @ Ben, not being valued, not making money, being homeless, and being a martyr are absolutely not necessary for being a lightworker, but these are likely side effects (see Betsy’s comment, and the reference to Mary in my post).

    Sometimes it’s easy to avoid this. Like if your intended lightworking is to be a teacher, then just be a teacher. They might not make a lot of money, but like you said, this won’t matter so much to them. If your intended lightworking doesn’t involve a job, then it’s a lot harder to make a living from it.

    @ Davina, take your time to read it. You’ll have several days before I post again. I really like what your friend said. Are they a blogger? Is there a post about this?

  11. Akemi - Yes to Me Says:

    Okay, I read the whole thing. Whew.

    Hunter, I know you use the term lightworker / darkworker in a way different way from the way I use them. That is fine, but let me share my definition because it might help you adjust your thoughts.

    First, there is no substance called darkness. Darkness is the lack of light. So the options are in one line, on one end there are those who are fully aligned with Light, on the opposite those completely shut down from light, and then there are middle grounds of varying degrees.

    However, because light is actually our energy source, those on the far end who are not getting their energy from light must resort to some other way to get their energy. And that is to suck up energy from others. That, I call darkworkers.

    Those in the middle are confused and/or underdeveloped souls. So I don’t think you can “polarize” in neutral. (An advanced soul just won’t be able to become underdeveloped)

    And there is a big misunderstanding about lightworkers. They don’t need to live in “clean poverty”. On the contrary, I think lightwork is the best way to make money because lightworkers are creating value and money follows value.

    If a lightworker is not making money, like the example you used, there are other reasons. Like deep set belief that money is dirty. That surely gets them outside the flow of abundance.

    Also, I think it is important to notice that there are darkworkers (okay, my definition darkworkers) in what is usually considered lightworks, such as charity. They use negativity such as guilt and shame to suck up your live blood — I mean, your energy. When a lightworker buys into that kind of BS, they lose their energy and — they’d have problem creating abundance.

    Okay, enough theory. Let’s get practical. Like that “Mary” She seems to be one of those who bought into the BS of darkwork in charity. But I think there are many ways she can make money doing lightwork. Why not write a book or eBook sharing her experience and insight about autism? I think they’d sell well to other parents with similar situations. That is value creation followed by money. Create toys and creative learning materials for autism kids (I heard they respond to visuals better than to words). Just a few examples that came to my mind — there are other ways, too, for sure.

    Akemi – Yes to Me´s last blog post..7 Questions On Soul Shifting And the Light Ascension

  12. Hunter Nuttall Says:

    @ Akemi, thanks for your comment. This is really helpful. A couple questions:

    1. Can an advanced soul be a darkworker? You say the ones in the middle are confused and/or underdeveloped. Are darkworkers even more confused/underdeveloped than the ones in the middle? Or are they choosing the dark even though they’re developed?

    2. What is light? You’re not talking about actual light like from the sun or a flashlight, are you? You say it’s our energy source; is this something we can’t see, that exists on a higher plane?

    BTW, I agree that a lightworker doesn’t have to live in poverty. In fact, I think the rich lightworkers are the best ones. But while money follows value, other people are the ones who judge what value something has. Drug dealers make a lot of money because drugs have high value to some people, but I wouldn’t call drug dealers lightworkers.

    Mary could do a book/ebook/toys/learning materials/etc, but people fail in business all the time. It’s up to whether enough other people consider these products to be valuable enough. It’s certainly possible that it could work, but it’s not easy or guaranteed. That’s all I meant about lightworkers and money–not that it can’t happen, just that it’s a lot harder than getting any random job.

  13. Akemi - Yes to Me Says:

    1) I guess there are well developed darkworkers, who are really good at manipulating others. But I’m not interested in helping darkworkers in their darkworks — my interest is first to help lightworkers (including the underdeveloped / confused ones, of course), and second, if they wish, to help darkworkers come back to light. So I don’t know all that much about darkworkers and I don’t intend to do research in this area.

    2) That is another excellent questions. I think the physical light we see is part of the bigger light that lights up all dimensions.
    Many after-death episodes describe brilliant white light in that spiritual plane.

    There are certainly practical side of business, like marketing. This is why great marketing pros like Naomi are so valuable. But before we get to that, there needs be the intention to make money by creating and delivering value.

    And I think the time when mindless paycheck jobs were easy to fine and secure is ending. . .

    Akemi – Yes to Me´s last blog post..7 Questions On Soul Shifting And the Light Ascension

  14. Akemi - Yes to Me Says:

    Annie,
    Thank you for your kind words about my blog.

    BTW it took me a long time to figure out what that “This picture is sending mixed signals, an example of split polarization.” meant. First I thought the GOOD included heart marks. . . I guess I just can’t see evil any more.

    Akemi – Yes to Me´s last blog post..Soul Shifting And the Light Ascension Of Maybe 2012

  15. What The Heaven Is Value? | Yes to Me Says:

    [...] we call life, started.  This is a critical knowledge to understand the lightwork and darkwork, or lightworkers and darkworkers. (Second link love to Hunter.  Think abundance.)  This leads to our discussion of what value is, [...]

  16. The Value Project Finale | Insight Writer Says:

    [...] Lightworkers, Darkworkers, and the Other Kind by Hunter Nuttall. This is a great article by the man who inspired this group project. It has me thinking even deeper about how some people create value and how others steal value. Defintely food for thought. [...]

  17. Spiritual Self Protection And Clearing | Yes to Me Says:

    [...] Someone who are stuck in the middle of light and darkness, or what Hunter Nuttall calls neutralworker [...]

  18. Lori Delene Says:

    I think lightworking is the only thing that would make me happy & I can’t choose money over my nature, so that’s my choice.

  19. Hunter Nuttall Says:

    @ Lori, it’s wonderful that the choice is easy for you! This will spare you from a lot of confusion and frustration.

  20. john Says:

    Hi,hunter that was a fantastic post and I know exactly what you are saying but I have a HUGE problem! My fiance is a definate lightworker and has been confirmed as such but I am not. I am a neautral bordering on darkworker, I have apparently done both and am a great source of conflict with my fiance. I am a libra and know that I am a person who loves to help but I can commit actions that cause great distress to individuals and not deem them to be serious! At my late wifes funeral I was the only one who managed to cope easily and the only one out of the family to recover easily. I was with her for 19 years and loved her very much. Due to situations concerning the above I ended up having to cut out all of the family from my life that I had previously known for 19 years.This was easy for me to do. Now I know why!! Have you any advice I could use as my fiance is moving in a direction that, as yet seems unatainable to me. Look forward to hearing from you, John.

  21. Hunter Nuttall Says:

    @ John, this is a hard issue to tackle in the comments! Does your finance agree that you’re neutral, bordering on dark? Is that a problem for her? You didn’t really indicate any problems from your perspective except that your fiance is moving in a different direction.

    If she’s OK with the direction you’re moving in, then what specifically is the issue? If she’s not OK with the direction you’re moving in, then why do you need her to be?

  22. john Says:

    Hi, my fiance has told me that I have great negative energy which draws energy from her. She has had enough of ” mr. negative” and so have I. I have experienced the light side of this and I work within the care industry. The people I look after think that I am one of the nicest carers there. I want to erase the darkworker energies from me and replace them with light to enable me to continue a happy life with my fiance.. We both know and have had confirmed that we are soul mates and twin flames. I will not allow myself to let my dark energies to continue to influence our lives as they have been. I have felt wonderful when caring for others and seeing how I have made them happy but at home I seem to turn off and become negative again. I do not want to feel this way and want to be positive all the time! My fiance says the house is full of negative energy but we will be moving soon. Any advice will be greatly appreciated. many thanks,john….

  23. Hunter Nuttall Says:

    @ John, OK, I didn’t realize that you didn’t want to be a darkworker. In that case, you know what you need to do. Do less dark stuff and more light stuff! It might take some time to retrain yourself, but just start making the effort and it will become easier in time. A really good lightworker blog is Yes to Me, so check it out.

  24. john Says:

    many thanks for your time, I will try to do that and keep you posted, hopefully I can change and become what I should be ,john.

  25. Lienaj Says:

    So, I’m a young adult. Actually just really graduated high school so i’m a little new to all of this. I have been searching the internet for real information on light working and all that, but non of the sites (even though they seemed interesting) really gave me anything that really stuck to me. However, from reading this lovely & long post i really feel like i finally got something. My ultimate goal in life is to really make my mark in this world and do as much as i can for people. But for now (besides college) im really just trying to figure out who i am and my purpose here and how to fulfill it. I would honestly consider myself a Light worker but i have yet to, as you say “polarized”, into that direction fully. I’m (as of right now) in between Light and Neutral, but i know in my heart one day i will grow into my own and develop into something bigger and better.

    In other words, i am just giving thanks for such information and personal insight on all of this. Some people don’t even want to believe these things but i do, and i am glad there are others that are into this stuff too.

    So, thanks again and i will look forward to more posts from you mi lady.

    PS: Neutral worker sounds fine to me. lol

    -Lienaj

  26. Hunter Nuttall Says:

    @ Lienaj, I think it’s fine to be a butterfly who wants to stay in the cocoon a bit longer! You’re way ahead of the game to be thinking about this now, and you have time to change your direction when it makes sense for you.

  27. Schizo:) Says:

    I’m just very emotional about this. More precise: Very angry.
    I see myself a lightworker. Definitely!
    BUT: A DARKWORKER IS NOT A BAD PERSON.
    DARKWORKING IS NOT ABOUT ABUSING PEOPLE.
    DARKWORKING IS A METHOD – NOT THE GOAL.
    I had to write that in all caps.

    I find that this post actually clouds people’s minds about a very important decision.

    You have to read this, if you are plan in deciding what side (Dark or Light) you will be on:

    Ultimately (see Steve Pavlina) the darkworker and the lightworker will come down to doing the same things: They will become happy, and because of that, they give back to humanity. BOTH OF THEM.
    Why?
    Both ways need to overcome obstacles, the exact opposite obstacles, in order to really become a happy person. Because the goal is to become happy – just with different methods.

    A Lightworker who’s idea is that service to humanity is life’s purpose, needs to learn that improving himself, personal growth, is necessary to not be abused by others and to not be !
    A Darkworker, who’s idea is that service to himself is life’s purpose (or to be clear: finding divinity in yourself) – NOT STEALING, ABUSING, MANIPULATING – those are methods, but please THINK!!!!! – on the long term, the darkworker’s goal, service to himself, finding the divine in himself, WILL NOT WORK WITH THESE METHODS. Because – it will fire back on him. In real life, Stealing leads to arrest, manipulating/abusing can be busted, or cause people to dislike him / do the same to him, and all these things will be in the way of the darkworker.

    I hope I have made a difference with this post. Many people probably have read this article, so I found that this opinion was missing, and seems to be missing from many Lightworker-Websites. Please discuss this, if I have severe misconceptions in this, tell me.

    But please. Lightworker are made to heighten the consciousness of other people. And if you heighten the consciousness of a darkworker (instead of trying to make him a lightworker – you can’t change a person’s nature), they will finally reward you for that in some way or the other, and you will fight for the same things, united.
    Yeah.
    It’s not that easy, but if you work on yourself first, then come back and try the same thing again…it’ll be way easier.

    For further reading, I found a website by a darkworker, an advanced darkworker who also talks about beginning darkworkers that apply “bad” tools (stealing etc.). A good read is, enter into google “darkworker”, then click on “What is a darkworker”.
    And of course, on stevepavlina.com, the darkworker vs lightworker article.

  28. My History « What Do I Believe In? Says:

    [...] to find this information.  Akemi’s site lead me to an article by Hunter Nuttal, called Lightworkers, Darkworkers, And The Other Kind, and I think his article, in particular, really made me rethink the direction my life is heading, [...]

  29. Spiritual Self Protection And Clearing | Real Life Spirituality Says:

    [...] Someone who are stuck in the middle of light and darkness, or what Hunter Nuttall calls neutralworker [...]

  30. Creating and Delivering Value as Lightworker | Real Life Spirituality Says:

    [...] we call life, started.  This is a critical knowledge to understand the lightwork and darkwork, or lightworkers and darkworkers. (Second link love to Hunter.  Think abundance.)  This leads to our discussion of what value is, [...]

  31. Genevieve Says:

    I really think you may have misunderstood darkworkers.
    From what i have see, they are people who value themselves over everyone else. This does not mean that they will end up dragging others down, but will more likely try to lift themselves up. Of course, this will all depend on your personality.
    I just find myself agreeing very much with Mary in the negatives of lightworking – why create things that society may not value? It does not motivate me at all.
    The thought of growing and improving as a person means that i find motivation selfishly.
    Now, stealing and manipulating other people is fine as long as they are not hurt by it. If they are, then they will not like me, and since i want to make myself happy above all else, i will not hurt people.. see?
    I think lightworking and darkworking are just methods for motivation. Do you want to create for others or youself?

  32. Personal Growth Says:

    its in nice way you have presented the concept. Since i cover job hacks as one of main category in my own blog……..all i can say is truth is not always as clear as we want it to be. you can be a darkworker in one face but truly opposite gets reflected if you change you angle a bit. life is all about survival where ethics does plays an important role. And by the way who decide what is ethical and what is not………..I am not sure …………

  33. hermes handbags Says:

    its in nice way you have presented the concept. Since i cover job hacks as one of main category in my own blog……..all i can say is truth is not always as clear as we want it to be. you can be a darkworker in one face but truly opposite gets reflected if you change you angle a bit. life is all about survival where ethics does plays an important role. And by the way who decide what is ethical and what is not………..I am not sure …………

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