Copyright listed in YouTube video description.
Unity
Day Forty-Eight – April 5, 2010
I woke up feeling the sudden urge to drive to my hometown to see my family, but I talked myself out of it. I wanted the timing perfect, so I had to be very patient.
Upon checking my email, I received a message from Lee in Palm Springs stating that everyone was okay. His email read, “Strangely, I was standing by Sam and a few other friends when the earthquake hit. Everyone is okay.” I was happy to know that everyone was safe.
After I started my morning, I drove to a nearby restaurant for breakfast. I had this strange craving for a big bowl of grits. I couldn’t remember the last time I had grits. They were so delicious that I ordered a second helping. After I had my fill, I returned to my campground to pay for another night and to do some much-needed laundry. I removed everything from my truck and cleaned it from top to bottom.
While my clothes were washing, I asked one of the campground attendants if he knew of any nearby bike trails. He directed me to the Raccoon Mountain Pumped-Storage Plant, which was on top of Raccoon Mountain, just a mile up the road.
I finished my laundry and set out for a bike ride. When I reached Raccoon Mountain’s top, I looked out over the Tennessee River Gorge. It was pretty impressive.
I then made a soul connection with one of the volunteers at the visitors center, and we talked for at least thirty minutes. I asked her if there was a way that I could perhaps volunteer for a day while I was in the area. She said I had to go through orientation and some extensive training, so it would take more than just a day or two.
I then set off on my bike ride around the reservoir. The temperature was probably around 85 degrees, if not warmer.
At one point, while I was biking on the road around the reservoir, a butterfly came up and flew beside me for at least fifty yards. Luckily, I was able to take the following photo.
Butterfly offers the following medicine:
- The power of the whirlwind
- Reincarnation
- Transformation
- Transmutation
- Magic
In addition to the paved road, there was a ten-mile dirt trail around the mountain. I rode this trail for a while before returning to the paved road.
At one point, I came to this beautiful spot overlooking downtown Chattanooga.
And with that, I finished my bike ride and returned to my campsite.
Later that evening, I drove into Chattanooga to explore and decided to take another bike ride through the downtown area the following morning.
Before I went to bed, I did my daily meditation for the second time. As I completed day forty-eight, I realized I had finished two-thirds of my journey. I was now on the home stretch.
An atheist friend of mine had sent me an email with the following tagline as his signature: “Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?” –Epicurus
Until this point, I had lived my life believing that this spiritual presence was guiding my life and watching over me. I still could not figure out why this God would watch over me and not everyone else. After all, we’re all the same and equal, or are we? I had to realize that we were all walking different paths and experiencing God in various ways.
Since I had gotten so wrapped up in my mother’s memories, I had neglected to truly focus on meditation number forty-five. Before I set out on the last twenty-four days of my journey, I took a moment to focus on this meditation with my heart and soul.
72 Days of God Copyright Notice
The following rights are protected by copyright:
- Reproduction of the written work: In any form
- Distributed copies of written work: Only the copyright holder may sell, lease, or give away copies.
- Adaptation of written work into a new form, Including digitizing print or visual.
- Performance of written work: This includes musical presentations, pantomimes, movies, audiovisual formats, pictures and graphs, recitations, dances, plays, and television and radio broadcasts.
- Public displays of written work: The public showing of a copyrighted work either directly or using a film, slide, television image, or other device or process before the sale of the work.
- Derivative works of written work: Examples of derivative works include making a novel into a motion picture, digitizing an image or text, a teacher’s manual, recording a musical composition, an abridgment or translation, and turning a story into a ballet.
By clicking on the “Next” button below, you acknowledge that the author’s written portion (story) of this site and the photographs have been copyrighted and cannot be duplicated or transferred into a different medium without written consent.