ISSN:
1539-431X
April 25, 2006
Seasons of Our Lives
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John Cali
Lately, I've been vividly reminded of the ever-changing seasons of our lives
-- changes in the lives of friends and family, and also in my own.
Eight days ago, a dear friend lost her beloved dog after 13 years together.
Late last year, my sister's husband died after nearly 30 years together.
We saw both these changes gradually coming. But that didn't make them easier.
Last week, another friend wrote me that her husband had just died suddenly,
unexpectedly.
This past weekend, here in Wyoming, we had a glorious sunny, summer-like day
Saturday. The thermometer outside my back door read 83 degrees. Sunday dawned
cold, grey, and windy, with snow covering the mountains and valleys.
So what's the point of all this?
Well, if nothing else, it clearly shows us we cannot avoid change. Some
changes come slowly, predictably. Others come swiftly, sometimes with shocking
suddenness.
Although they often don't appear so, the changing seasons of our lives are
always grand opportunities for growth.
Here’s Chief Joseph.
Chief Joseph
We'll bet many of you would absolutely love to
put an end to change in your lives. You would love it if your lives could be
stable, safe, secure -- in a word, unchanging.
Let's consider that for a moment. Because we
don't think that's what you really want.
We understand your hesitation, even fear, in
accepting change. Some of us here have experienced lifetimes in physical bodies
on your Mother Earth. So we do understand.
Change, to you humans, often represents -- or
reveals -- many of your inner insecurities. If you like where you are now,
change is a threat. You may end up, you think, where you won't like it.
If you don't like where you are now, there is
still a familiarity about it. And so, in an almost perverse way, you enjoy your
misery. It's familiar and known. Change represents the unfamiliar and the
unknown.
And yet, friends, what would happen to you if
there were no change in your lives?
Think about that for a few moments. What would really
happen?
The answer is: Nothing!
You would remain stable, safe, secure. In other
words, unchanging. And, in our view, extremely bored!
Is that what you really want?
You all chose to come to your Mother Earth
because you thought it would be fun to play in the constantly changing energies
and environments your beloved planet affords you. It would be fun, and you
wanted to play the game.
Why did you want to play the game?
Because you knew, through change, you would grow
and evolve into even brighter, more powerful beings of light and love.
Without change, you are dead -- really dead!
You'll go nowhere.
Of course, you don't have the option of choosing
no change -- either in your physical lives or in your lives in these dimensions
of spirit.
Change is an unchanging fact of life,
whether you're "dead" or "alive."
Enjoy change. Embrace it. Love it. Luxuriate in
it. Above all, accept it. And know it's always for your highest
good, no matter how your human eyes perceive it.
Without the seasons of your lives, you would not
be the wonderful beings you are today. Nor would you become the even more
beautiful beings you will be tomorrow.
It's all good, friends -- all the
changing seasons of your lives.
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 © 2006 by John Cali. All rights reserved.
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