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One Man's Thoughts
on September 11, 2001

"I Have Learned"©, by Mark Gregory Adams
Published with the Authors Permission on September 3, 2002
I spent my life running from myself.
I ran so hard and so fast that I didn’t even realize I was running.
I’ve learned a lot of things through the years, though.
I have learned that the only true unconditional love
a person receives in their lifetime, other than from the man upstairs, most often comes from their mother.
I have
learned that two people can tear each other apart and still sleep next to each other in the same bed. I’ve learned that
these same two people can love each other, on very deep levels, and still not be meant to remain together, even though both
know how much it’s going to hurt to leave.
I have learned that tiny pieces of real wisdom can be found in music.
I’ve found other things in music, as well, such as my lost passions and even my own heart.
I have learned that
no matter how much you search for forgiveness from God, you will never find it until you have forgiven yourself first.
I
have learned that before you can let someone else love you, you have to learn to love yourself—for how can you believe
in the love that someone is offering, if you don’t believe yourself to be worthy of love?
I have learned that
no matter how hard you try, you can never completely undo the harm that is created when you say or do something hurtful to
someone you love.
But the truth be told, these are all things that I have only learned, or have come to understand,
on some levels. I have found myself constantly relearning lessons because I ran from the shame or reality of what they taught
me the first time.
I have learned that God eludes those who aren’t true to themselves.
I have learned
that no matter how much you love someone, you cannot protect them from themselves. I’ve learned that you cannot save
someone who doesn’t want to be saved. It is best to love them the way they are and leave the rest to God.
I
have learned that fears can ruin lives. They can cause you to spend so much energy protecting yourself against them that the
price you pay is ultimately much higher than the original cost of facing them to begin with. I’ve seen people ruin relationships
because of fear—not simply romantic relationships, but every kind of relationship that is possible to have.
I
have learned that fear will eventually trick you into believing that you have convictions about things you don’t, in
order to protect the peacefulness of your false self-perceptions. This becomes a problem when you finally stop running from
your own truth and begin the journey back to honesty. Honesty about who you are, what you believe in, what kind of a person
you are, what you bring to the world to compensate for what you take, and, yes, about whether you can truly stand behind your
self-declared convictions.
In the scheme of things, what good are we to anyone if we can’t be honest with the
only person we came into this world with and the only person we will leave it with?
I’ve watched people rip
each other apart and sacrifice the only hope that mankind has for a better tomorrow. The kind of tomorrow that can only be
realized through the efforts of individuals who have been nurtured with the stability, support, love and guidance of an intact
family unit. This familial sacrifice is made, of course, for numerous reasons, none of which are ever good enough. Perhaps
the most tragic reason people walk away from love is because, even though they truly love each other, they are unable to admit
fault, let go of petty grudges, be more selfless and see the truth about how precious love and time really are.
Strange
creatures, we are... we can put a man on the moon, utilize the ozone layer to take x-rays of mountains and caves, create super-computers
no bigger than a book, create any reality we want using high-tech morphing and computer graphics, but we can’t seem
to create a reality for our children that is free of fear and contains a promise of peace.
I think it is interesting
that we have now learned to create clones of ourselves when we haven’t learned how to truly take responsibility for
the actions of the original. It’s called integrity and it is something that very few people can say they have, without
experiencing inner-turmoil, should they be willing to be completely truthful with themselves, about themselves.
When
was the last time you stood up for something you really believe in? When was the last time you volunteered time to help those
who know what suffering is about on a very intimate level? As much as I wish I could say that I do these things, I, like most
people, cannot. I know I would like to believe that I care, but my actions speak differently and ultimately reveal to me,
regardless of how difficult it is to admit, that I have let myself down when it comes to my so-called convictions.
With
this in mind, would the world be a better place if there were less people like me in it? I can say, unequivocally, yes.
So
just what would Moses, Jesus, Muhammad or Buddha say to us? I’m sure they would all say that hatred is not the way to
solve a problem. I’m sure they would say that before we reach so far beyond our grasps, we should understand, and learn
how to be responsible for that which we are already holding in our hands.
Does this mean that we should turn away
from technology and discontinue all scientific growth in the future until we have mastered the basics of being human? No,
it simply means that we need to teach our children about integrity, character, tolerance and human nature before we try to
teach them about DNA, or of the massive destructive forces generated by the anti-matter of a black-hole. When was the last
time your child caused you to become upset because he or she came home from school with a report card reflecting a C-minus
in Personal Character, a D-plus in Respecting Others or an F in Philanthropy? Is an A in Algebra or Quantum-Physics more important?
I have learned that I am afraid of growing old in the greatest country on the planet Earth, because I have seen how
disposable our elderly have become. I have learned that instead of relishing their wisdom, we have discarded them and have
allowed them to become intimately familiar with loneliness.
I have learned that it is easy to become self-absorbed
and knowingly ignore the whispering needs of someone I love, because it is not convenient or because I am not ready to deal
with the reality of their circumstances.
If the world is a stressful place to live, one that seldom offers any true
sense of security, comfort and personal fulfillment, then we must accept the responsibility for the fact that such a reality
only exists because we created it.
The East can blame the West for being immoral, but would it not be wiser to first
look within and resolve the problems of their own society? Is it not immoral to oppress women and children and permit them
to be beaten because the essence of manhood is so fragile that it is dependant upon the humiliation and oppression of those
who are physically weaker?
Americans can’t blame the poor and the minorities for high crime rates when we, as
a people, don’t stop long enough to really see, listen to and understand what these groups have to say about why they
are poor, what their life experiences have been and what is causing the cycles of poverty and violence to perpetuate themselves.
We can’t preach equality and justice when we, as a country, continue to oppress minorities and sit idly by watching
as the results of this oppression causes them to commit suicide, to gun each other down on the streets of our own cities,
or to taint their genetic lineage with the legacy of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, because their entire tribe is set on drowning
the sorrow of their lost dreams, and stolen land, with intoxicating liquids that we introduced into their culture.
We cannot stand as innocents, painfully holding up the blood from thousands of our loved ones as a reminder of the
treacherous victimization we have been unjustly subjected to while we, at the same time, have the blood of thousands of our
tiny citizens on our own hands.
I have learned that man can justify murder by minimizing it as a simple protection
of choice.
I have learned that religious leaders are capable of condemning intolerance and hostility while they, in
the same breath, blindly nurture it by blaming the homosexual minority for the woes caused by something they had absolutely
nothing to do with.
As a society, we have lost focus of what life is really all about. We have stood by and done nothing
while our careers and greed have allowed the average workday to increase from eight, to nine, to ten, to eleven hours. Yet,
we seem to not understand why our latchkey children are murdering each other on the playgrounds of our nation’s schools.
Indeed, we are offering the future of our children as a sacrifice to the gods of our own materialism.
As a culture,
we feed pills to the multitudes in order to alleviate depression, instead of rectifying the very mistakes that have generated
an atmosphere which nurtures our unhappiness and has caused us to overflow with emptiness.
As a people, we are pointing
our fingers at each other and blaming everyone else for our unhappiness instead of realizing that the deep, lasting peace
and security we search for can only be realized when he have freed ourselves from the dishonesty of our own hypocrisy.
As
a world, we do not respect the very planet that sustains our existence. Instead, we have created a planet of people that have
to keep track of whether the air we breathe on a daily basis is flagged as green, yellow, orange or red.
As a species,
we are failing.
If we wish to rid our world of terrorism and oppression, then we cannot continue to raise children
of intolerance or children who don’t have the ability to put someone else’s needs before their own. We cannot
continue to look away from the very problems that are causing us to raise children who will only perpetuate our current misery
because they are doomed to creating new problems that are exactly the same as the ones we have today—the kind of problems
that prevent us from loving one another and reconciling our differences with other cultures and peoples without killing them.
I have learned that the word universe, when subdivided, stands for one-song... something that the ancients, who named
it, must have understood long ago, yet has been forgotten by our more “advanced” civilizations.
I have
learned that today is tomorrow’s legacy.
I have learned that I can talk about what I have learned, but it means
nothing if I am unable to stand firmly in my own convictions and act upon them. I have learned that a difference will never
be made, unless people like myself commit to making one.
I have learned that I ache, deep within me, for a gentler
time. For a time when we, as a whole, can stand as one, and say with conviction, “We have learned.”
Copyright © 2002 - Mark G Adams
- All rights reserved.
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