Do we kill because we’re afraid of death?
Death means the end, no more life – there’s nothing happening, here. Think about the reasons that human beings kill. For more land (underlying reason – scarcity). For food (scarcity). As punishment (nothing left in the person valuable enough to live).
What if human beings are truly beings? As in, always have been, always is, and always will be. Not the shell of the body, but our essence – our soul, our consciousness.
You can see the energy circle around you. A seed flourishes, helps sustains a being, the being’s body decomposes into the earth, another seed flourishes.
What if there was always enough? No exceptions. The only exceptions are the boxes our minds put over infinite abundance.
What would you do differently if you knew you were infinite? Would you bother with putting another down?
We live in a constant fight against scarcity and for power. That basically sums up our history books. We don’t know the power of being and the abundance of our light.
There are so many forgotten in the world. There are so many tragedies not publicized. What if in every war, nobody showed up?
How many soldiers fight because they just want to kill? Probably very few. So many are in the armed forces, because they think their choices are limited in obtaining the benefits the military provides – the security.
But, in the end, how are we to be truly secure by fighting? One country’s (or political party) freedom fighter is another country’s terrorist. Anyone can be “the good guy”. It’s all about perspective.
But just like the 1960’s/70’s sentiment, creating peace out of war is like boinking for virginity. Fighting for peace.
Even if fighting in a war ceases, it’s still not peace. Otherwise, from the hundreds, probably, thousands of times we know human beings have been at war, we would be at peace right now.
If every person knew internal peace, if you knew the “other” was just as much a part of this infinite energy loop as yourself, and you acted accordingly – we would live in a world of peace.
Each of us must be peace. Isn’t that worth the focus?