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So Far Away -
by Tomaca
We've gotten so far away from
where we should be. Our modern society slowly poisons our bodies and
our spirits. This is indicated by growing violence, the failure of our
educational system, the increase in diseases, etc., etc.
My mother grew up in a small
town in Virginia. She and her brothers and sister were raised by her single
parent father. Her mother died when she was two.
Nowadays we consider a single
parent dad to be a novelty. It's not the norm. And, when
divorcing a spouse, it's usually up to strangers in a court room to decide
whether or not fathers can have custody of
their children.
My grandfather never remarried
and never dated. His soul mate was gone and he chose to live the rest of his
life alone with his children. Things went reasonably well for this
single parent dad. The children held up their responsibilities of doing
chores and going to school and dad worked to sustain his family. They didn't
have a lot of material things, but they had the essentials - a home, food,
each other and love.
Free-range, organic chicken. My
mom laughs at the concept of such a thing. That's how things were in her day
naturally. They raised chickens in their yard and the animals roamed freely.
The family had fresh eggs and meat. Today it's the latest rage to buy
free-range and organic chicken and eggs. We now know chicken and meat produced by
the industrialized standards are not emotionally or physically healthy.
Chickens are
crammed into small cages (which makes them crazy) - confined for their lifetime, debeaked and declawed
to keep them from injuring each other, fed a regular diet of antibiotics and
other drugs to fatten them up, to dye their flesh a certain color to make
the meat more attractive to the consumer and to "keep them healthy" because
of the poor conditions they live in. Then they are brutally
slaughtered (which sends a rush of adrenaline through their bodies which
just happens to be toxic for the eaters), sliced and diced and put into a
neat little clear plastic wrap covered container for us to buy. Our
long-term ingestion of the bodies of such beings make us sick.
Also, there is no appreciation
on the human's part -
no gratitude for the sacrifice these animals make. Native Americans
and other people of the earth had practices that involved things like asking
the animal for their life, apologizing for taking their life, doing things
for the earth in appreciation for the life of an animal and regardless of
how they did any of these things, they always, always, always said "thank
you." There is a balanced respect and for all life on the planet.
It was recognized that everything is spirit and everything is connected.
Sure, lots of us have the
practice of saying grace before eating, but how many of us really understand
the reason for saying "thank you" to whomever we offer this gratitude
for a meal?
My mom's family never took it
for granted when another being gave up their life to feed them. There
was always gratitude, respect and appreciation.
This was also extended to the
garden of vegetables that the family grew in the yard. You planted
seeds and food would grow - and without chemical applications.
They knew which plants to grow when and where. Insects were balanced
out by growing plants that would naturally repel them. This was a
science that was not considered science to them, just how things were meant
to be.
Again, our commercialized
society grows food while applying toxic chemicals to kill insects and use
growth enhancers. Then the actual processing of food for canning and
freezing applies more of the same science by using even more chemicals to
stabilize, homogenize, and all kinds of other "izes." The result to all of
us is a slow long-term poisoning that results in cancers and other kinds of
disease creating chemical imbalances in the body.
In 1922, you went to bed shortly
after the sun went down because there were no electric lights and television
that people could distract and entertain themselves with. You could read a
little by the light of the oil lamp or the light of the fireplace. But,
because you rose with the sun and with the rooster's crow, you knew you
didn't want to stay up too late and be tired the next day. There was another
day coming where you had to go to school and the chickens needed to be fed,
the garden needed to be tended to, oil lamps filled and wood made ready for
the fireplace. The rhythm of life was so different and in tune with the
rhythm of the planet. Things were as they should be.
Our priorities and values,
though still needing to be about having the basics, have become distorted.
We pursue things of no significant spiritual value and fill our lives and
our houses up with things that we don't need. As a society, we've gotten so far away from
nature, spirit and the way things were meant to be. The good news is that we
can always go back. It's not too late.
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