Jordan Ghawi, brother of Jessica, the 24-year-old
aspiring sportscaster who died in the theater shooting, urged the public to
focus on the victims rather than the suspect. He told Don Lemon on CNN his
family chose not to go to court today. They have consciously chosen to put
their attention on Jessica and the others who died and to withhold their
attention from the accused. Jordan and his family are now focused on creating a
celebration of life ceremony for Jessica. This is the dawn. The coming of the
light. Conscious choosing. “Where your attention goes, your energy flows, and
the result shows.”* Where will we place our attention? What will we feed with our
energy? Aurora
shines light on the possibility of choosing where we place our attention.
Jordan Ghawi is modeling that possibility for us.
What is going on? Deaths from record-breaking heat.
Floods. Power outages. Euro crisis. Syrian genocide. Financial debacles (pick
one). Sandusky .
Aurora
massacre. “Things fall apart before they fall together,” said Tery Cole-Whittaker, author and metaphysical minister.
We certainly are witnessing that, not only macrocosmically, but also
microcosmically in our own personal lives. Friends and family in emergency
rooms, financial challenges, grieving lost loved ones. And more. Almost
unbearably more at times. This can leave us feeling helpless and powerless. Or,
like Theodore Roethke, we can know, “In dark times the eye begins to see.” We can
see our attention does make a difference. We can see it’s our choice how we
respond to what happens. We can see our energy creates what we want in the
world. We can be the change. We can choose love over fear. In doing so, we are
contributing to the critical mass that will shift our planet into a new paradigm
of love, light and oneness. But it takes faith. Faith that our energized intentions, as yet unseen, will take physical form.
Today my second morning glory bloomed. The first one
arrived a few days ago. There were over thirty blooms this morning on the “morning
glory fence” my neighbor Betsy and I share. The seeds she gave me for my garden
were planted later than hers. Two months ago they were small black specks. I
soaked them in water overnight to encourage germination. Placed in planters filled
with potting soil next to trellises, they were watered both morning and night
on blistering hot New Mexico
days. For sixty days. One hundred and twenty times, though there was nothing
there, I showed up with my energy, intention and faith to water them. Vines
grew and twined. Now six-feet tall, covering the garden fences, they have
finally produced two deep-purple morning glory blooms. I believed in the blooms
when none were there. I continued believing, even when something, maybe
grasshoppers, ate holes in their leaves. No matter what I am creating in my
life, a beautiful garden, a book, world peace, the process is the same. I must
believe in the unseen and continue to flow my energy, attention and love into
it until it becomes the seen. Charles Fillmore, founder of Unity, wrote, “Faith
in the reality, power and willingness of the mental and spiritual forces is
absolutely necessary to one who expects to succeed in demonstrating the higher
law.” For me, faith is an action. It opens the way to realizing our highest
good, both individually and collectively. Charles A. Beard said, “When it’s
dark enough, you can see the stars.” My deepest appreciation to all those stars
in Aurora for shining their light in the darkness in service to us all, for showing
us how to shine, for showing us “dawn begins at midnight.”
*Please note:
I’ve been unable to identify definitively the source of these quotations. Any assistance
will be greatly appreciated.
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