ISSN:
1539-431X
March 27, 2003
How Do I Count the Years?
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John
Cali
My son John and I have a close bond, and I feel we’re
soulmates. We’re
both single and somewhat "footloose and fancy-free." Since we live
near each other, we get together regularly.
He was over for dinner the other night. As usual, our conversation
occasionally drifted to reminiscences of our rather colorful Sicilian immigrant
family.
After John left I got to thinking about my mother’s side of this
fascinating family. Including her, there were eight brothers and sisters, plus
uncountable children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren. Their lives and
personalities were as wildly varied as you could possibly imagine.
Some were gentle family folks who lived out their lives peacefully and
quietly. Others lived on the wild side of life, engaged in the questionable
activities often associated with Sicilian Americans. But, one and all, they were
a colorful lot. They loved one another and us, their children, unconditionally.
As I was mulling over all this that night, my thoughts drifted back to years
gone by. First, to the oldest of my mother’s siblings, and the first to die.
And then to the last to die.
The last to die was my aunt, nearly 100 years old. She’d led a mostly
unhappy life. Nothing was ever right in her world. I loved her dearly, and was
close to her. But she lived a long and pretty sad life.
The first to die was one of my uncles. He was on the other end of the
spectrum from his sister. A colorful character who could have come straight out
of the Godfather. He died fairly young, at just barely half the age of his
sister, when I was not quite a teenager.
My uncle lived a short, but joyful life. As a kid, I loved being around him.
He was so full of energy and the joy of life. It was pure fun being with him.
And it was fun just being in his house. Even if he wasn’t there, I could feel
his energy all about me.
While some questioned and criticized his lifestyle, he really knew how to
live joyfully. He had fun, and he died with no regrets. That was over 50 years
ago, and I still have clear, fond memories of him.
Which brings us, in a roundabout and long-winded way, to the subject of today’s
newsletter.
Our modern society often judges human life by its length and not by the
quality of that life. And "quality," for Joseph and me, means JOY. It’s
the old "quantity versus quality" thing.
If someone dies young, that is nearly always seen as a tragedy. If someone
dies after many long years, that is acceptable, even if they lived all those
years in total misery.
IMHO, that perspective is flawed because it equates success with quantity
(the number of years) and not with quality (the joy of those years).
Among the most frequent questions Joseph and I get in private readings (if
not the most frequent) are these: Why am I here? What’s my purpose in this
life?
Our answer: Joy. Pure and simple, that’s it. Our only purpose in coming to
this life is to experience joy.
Here are Joseph’s thoughts on all this.
Chief Joseph
There is so much–so
very much–to be joyful about in your world today. Oh, we are aware your United
States are at war with Iraq. And we are aware of the many other human conflicts
and dramas dotting your globe.
But, even in that world you are now
living in, there is far, far more to be joyful about than you can possibly
imagine. In fact, there is far, far more good in your world today than that
which you would call "bad" or "evil."
Yes, you live in tumultuous and,
from a human perspective, traumatic times. But that is part of the grandness and
wonder of your lives–you get to choose, from that vast sea of diversity, what
you want to experience in your personal lives, what you want to create in your
personal experiences. You get to choose, and no one can "preempt" your
choice.
Your individual choices and
experiences have absolutely no causal connection with the mass consciousness.
Let us repeat that: What is happening in the world today has no effect, positive
or negative, in your lives. EXCEPT for what you give your attention to.
And that is the key. You’ve heard
us say this many times: What you give most of your attention to is what you
manifest in your lives. If you vividly imagine going to war and being killed in
battle, you’ll likely be killed in battle. If you imagine prospering mightily
in the midst of what your economists call a faltering economy, you’ll likely
be prospering mightily.
You get the idea. You get to choose
what to create in your lives. It doesn’t matter one whit what the rest of the
world is choosing. If you were the one single, solitary human on the planet
choosing to be joyful–while every one of the others was choosing
otherwise–you would be joyful.
Do you get it? Do you
sense, understand, or at least have an inkling of, what we’re talking about?
Do not ever measure your own
personal success by comparing yourselves to any other. You do not need to live
under that dark cloud.
The only true measure of success,
from your soul’s perspective, is the amount of joy you’ve experienced in
your life–not the number of years, the number of dollars, the number of
victories.
None of that matters. All that
matters is the joy you feel.
For more of our articles, go
here.
This article was originally published
here.
=====================================================================
Since 1992, John Cali has been communicating with a
non-physical entity called Joseph. In one of his many physical lifetimes, this
spirit was incarnated as the legendary Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce tribe in
what is now the state of Oregon in the northwestern USA. These messages are a
blend of information from Joseph, other spirits in the "Joseph group,"
and John.
John can be reached by email here
or through their website (http://www.greatwesternpublishing.org).
Private readings with Chief Joseph are available here: http://www.greatwesternpublishing.org/readings.html
=====================================================================
Copyright © 2003 by John Cali. All rights reserved.
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