ISSN:
1539-431X
September 6, 2005
Lulu City
 Subscribe
to our RSS feed
What
is RSS?
John
Cali
When my son John was growing up, he, his mother Theresa, and I used to
vacation in the northern Rocky Mountains of Colorado. It’s a gorgeous area
and, to this day, I have many warm memories of our time there.
On one of our Colorado trips, we heard an intriguing story about Lulu City.
But we could find only sketchy information on it. Apparently, Lulu City had been
a gold and silver mining camp in the early 1880s, but was now a ghost town. I’ve
always been fascinated by the ghost towns of our American West. So we decided to
visit Lulu City.
We followed the sparse directions we were able to get, and finally ran out of
paved road. There was a sign pointing toward Lulu City, down a trail passable
only on foot or by horseback. The sign neglected to say how far Lulu City was.
The three of us left our car and set off down the trail. We walked a long
time. Finally, Theresa got tired and said she’d stay where she was to wait for
us on our return.
So off John and I went. And we walked and walked and walked . . . forever, it
seemed. (Later, we calculated, with a map, the one-way walk from our car to Lulu
City was about seven miles.)
We were about to give up when we saw a sign proclaiming we were entering Lulu
City. Eureka -- we’d finally reached our destination!
Or so we thought.
"Lulu City" turned out to be only several piles of hundred-year-old
logs and rubble. It bore no resemblance to the lively mining town it had once
been. We obviously had not done enough research on Lulu City.
So my son and I turned around and walked the seven-mile return trip, picking
up my wife along the way. Tired though we were, the three of us decided it had
been worth it.
That seven-mile trail wound through some of the most beautiful and pristine
parts of Colorado’s northern Rocky Mountains. We enjoyed every moment of our
time on the trail, despite the unexpectedly long trek -- and the fact Lulu City
really was a ghost.
We realized the joy was not in the destination -- it was in the journey.
Here’s Chief Joseph.
Chief Joseph
Friends, you live in an action-oriented and
goal-driven society. Your modern world has lost its ability to, as you say,
"smell the roses." It’s so busily focused on the destination, it
doesn’t even notice the roses, let alone take the time to smell them.
And so you drive yourselves relentlessly
forward, hellbent on accomplishing your objective. And when you accomplish your
objective, reach your goal, what happens?
Well, you may enjoy it for few brief moments.
And then you plunge feverishly forward again -- and again and again and again .
. . .
What have you accomplished?
Well, you’ve obviously reached your goals,
whatever they were. But you’re so driven, you enjoy your accomplishments only
briefly, if at all. And then you’re off again -- often, on an endless pursuit.
But what are you pursuing? Money? Lovers?
Healthy bodies? Nice homes? Fancy cars? Lots of friends? Prestige? Power? What?
We are not saying those goals are wrong. They
are not -- you deserve all the abundance the Universe wants to shower upon you.
We are saying the enjoyment of
those accomplished desires often eludes you. You’re so caught up in the
relentless pursuit, you forget what life is all about. And you don’t even
enjoy the pursuit, the journey.
Life, physical or nonphysical, is a journey
without destination.
Your destination is the journey. You are
on an eternal journey of growth. You will never reach the end of that journey.
For you will always be growing and evolving, whether in physical or spirit form.
It cannot be otherwise.
There are no final destinations. Lulu City is an
illusion.
So why not just enjoy the journey? Smell the
roses. Immerse yourselves in all the beauty and joy of the journey.
When you reach a goal, congratulate yourselves,
and enjoy it! Immerse yourselves in the pleasure and passion of reaching another
step along your way. But most of all, enjoy the journey!
Then, friends, all will be well.
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 © 2005 by John Cali. All rights reserved.
*************************************************************************
We want your opinion! Please give us your
feedback on this newsletter or on any other of the earlier newsletters -- your questions, suggestions, comments, criticism,
compliments, etc. Whatever you care to say to us. We'll take it all! We're
always looking for ways to improve and grow, to give you more of what you want
and need. So please help us to help you. Just send us an
email
|