ISSN:
1539-431X
July 15, 2004
A Sense of Community
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John
Cali
As some of you know, I live in the northern
Rocky Mountains of northwestern Wyoming in the USA.
Wyoming is a huge state, ninth in size among the
50 United States. It’s a vast, sprawling land of rolling prairies stretching
beyond the distant horizons, and high rugged mountains reaching far up into the
big blue skies.
Wyoming is mostly empty. Despite its size, it
has less than half a million people, the smallest population of all 50 states.
Which is one of the reasons I love it here. I’m not antisocial. I just don’t
like crowded places.
Wyoming people are unique, as unique as their
land. They still have that fiercely independent frontier spirit. The spirit that
carried the pioneers onward back in the days of the Old West.
You couldn’t ask for better neighbors than you
get in Wyoming. They’re friendly folks. They have strong beliefs and values.
But they also have a live-and-let-live attitude. They’ll accept you, whether
or not you believe or live the same way they do. Good folks, really good folks.
There’s a strong sense of community here. I
never realized how strong until now. And I don’t mean just in the local
communities, but state-wide.
I recently had some legal questions about my
business. None of the local authorities could help me. So I called the Wyoming
Attorney General’s office. It was lunchtime, and I got the voice mail system.
I was slightly shocked to hear the voice of the
Attorney General himself on the recording. It was warm and friendly. Definitely
not something I was used to, having lived many years in the Washington, DC
suburbs.
I left a message. And, again to my great
surprise, the head of the department I needed called me back shortly. He was an
attorney (a very friendly one, at that!) and he answered all my questions.
Then we started chatting on a personal level,
something I’d never experienced before with a high government bureaucrat. It
was a warm and wide-ranging conversation, as if we’d been friends and
neighbors for many years.
After we said goodbye, I realized, more than
ever, why I love this place so much. People truly care about each other here.
Poor folks, average folks, rich folks, men, women, politicians, high government
officials, it doesn’t matter what your status is.
Wyoming is known not only for its cowboys and
cowgirls. It’s also known as the Equality State, and was the first state to
give women the vote. All are equal here.
I don’t know exactly why that is. We certainly
have most of the problems, albeit on a smaller scale, more crowded places have.
So perhaps it’s because there are so few of us. Or because we have so much
space and don’t crowd each other into madness. Or it’s the frontier spirit
still alive in us.
I don’t really know. But this I do know:
There’s a sense of community.
Here’s Joseph.
Chief Joseph
You’ve heard it said your world is
shrinking–you live in an increasingly global community. Obviously, the planet
is not literally shrinking, physically. But your modern technology has made it
possible for you to communicate instantly among yourselves, no matter where in
the world you are.
That capability has truly cast all of you into
the "global community." A community where you are all closely bonded
to one another. As you say in some of your marriage rituals, "for better,
for worse; for richer, for poorer; in sickness and in health; until death do us
part."
Whether you like it or not, you are all
connected to one another. As our dear Chief Seattle said, "Man did not
weave the web of life. He is merely a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web,
he does to himself."
You are more closely connected in "the web
of life" than ever before in human history. And therefore, now–more than
ever before–what even a single individual among you does affects every other
human on the planet.
That, of course, has always been true. But today
your technology makes that fact far more obvious to all of you than ever before.
And often painfully obvious. Especially in the midst of your so-called
war on terror.
We do not wish to discuss the war on terror
today. But we do wish to stress the obvious–you are all connected in this
global community.
However, there is little sense of community in
your global lives–that sense John described exists in his home state of
Wyoming.
There is, instead, a fractured sense of discord,
disharmony, distrust. This is not a bad thing, for it will ultimately bring all
of you to the realization that you are truly all one.
Yes, you can have your differences, your
individualities, if you will–among individuals, groups, churches, governments,
nations, etc. But you must ultimately come to the conclusion that the good of
one is the good of all. The willingness to allow the differences while
compassionately working toward the common good is the goal here.
Fighting against the differences will only
ensure more divisiveness. Accepting the differences while sincerely wanting the
highest good for all is the only way you will ever ensure a truly
connected world.
A world where all are equal, all are accepted. A
world where there truly is a sense of community.
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
Private readings with Chief Joseph are available here: http://www.greatwesternpublishing.org/readings.html
=====================================================================
Copyright © 2004 by John Cali. All rights reserved.
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