Saturday, May 28, 2016


History "Re-Visited"

-By Jim Culp



As we approach Memorial Day this year, I am once again on memory lane, and will speak of the fallen this coming Monday. But I also revisit my studies of our own history, the last 240 years, the amount of time our young nation has prospered on this North American continent.

One anniversary of a historic event passed just two days ago.

Buried in the embarrassing pages of history, under the woes of the American Indian, the anniversary of the signing of the Indian Removal Act was just two days ago.

It was 1830, and the War between the States had not happened yet, but the sorrow and bloodshed of that great tragedy simply overshadowed what had been happening to the American Indian for years.

Andrew Jackson was President of the United States, and the nation was growing, and growing fast. Bankers were promising big change, and plantation owners were expanding, opening greater trade deals and larger bank accounts near and abroad.

 The North American Indian was promised equitable land near places where he was removed, and told that his new land was to be his forever. It sounded good, but after all, he was owed this, because the white man had taken land that was his in the first place. The Indians had lived highly civilized and often peaceful lives, in organized cities, in these southern states, for over 1300 years.

Men that respected the Indian and his culture fought against this outrage, including Congressman Day Crockett.

The Five Civilized Tribes....the Cherokee, the Choctaw, the Muscogee (Creek), the Chickasaw, and the Seminole...were the tribes so described because of their willingness to accept European customs, at least some of them, and willingly be assimilated into the White Man's culture, and his strange religion that told of an angry God that wiped out enemies and offered unconditional love.

Other Indian tribes, less noted in history, would include the Wyandot, the Kickapoo, the Potowatomi, the Shawnee, and the Lenape.

Thousands of persons of all of these would be lost on events such as the Trail of Tears, a 2,200 mile "relocation" of the Cherokee, where between 4,000 and 6,000 people lost their lives due to freezing temperatures, starvation, and dysentery.

What some history pages do not tell you is that "Americans" participated in the ethnic cleansing of an entire culture of people, across 60 tribes, over a period of a hundred years, practically erasing those cultures from the face of our planet.

I've told you that story to make something clear. Sometimes an idea, religion, or concept seems right popular to a vast majority of people. Sometimes they are good ones; but sometimes they are huge mistakes that can never be reconciled.



 My next blog will be a continuation of this one. It will cover the plight of the American Bison.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016


"Of Passing On"

2016 is a young year. It's just now the middle of the Season that we pagans call
Beltane, a season where the ancients believe that the God and Goddess were united for
a time of bringing in new life to the year.
2016 for allot of us has brought death, several of them very recently, of people young and old, famous and common, some close, and some very far away.
"Death" is defined in dictionaries as "the act of dying; the end of life; the total and permanent cessation of all the vital functions of an organism." 1
That description of the noun we so commonly use today is a crude, modern definition of a process that everyone goes through at some point in their existence on this plane, and some like my father, my nephew, my brother, and two of my Army brothers; way too soon for our preference.
Other families witness/experience this event much too early in their lives, or in the passing person's life. Like the detective that was shot trying to stop a crime yesterday in Kansas City, or the five year old girl in Detroit that accidentally shot herself eleven hours ago, or the thousands of innocent people in Syria that have died and will die because of a senseless war kept alive in the name of God.
But that, dear friends, is only the beginning. Death of the physical body is the crude part of the eternal process of the path of the soul, spirit, chakra, of whatever term you choose to call the life essence of a human being.
Death as an entity is signified in ancient beliefs as a ghastly figure wearing a tattered cloak and carrying a scythe, and that being was charged with carrying the soul or the spirit to where it was headed; some eternal place. Several ancient beliefs personalized this character as the boatman, and two coins were place (on each) on the eye lids of thedead, so that the boatman received his pay for the task of ferrying the dead across the "river."
The spirit of a human being is the energy that makes up their life essence; it is neither good or evil, it is pure energy. The body and mind of that person chooses or is made to choose how that energy is directed. When a person "dies" or "passes" physically, that energy instantly leaves this plane and goes to the Source, a great pool of energy, at an unknown place. That place may be in space, on another plane, in an other dimension, or simply out of our sight. When a new human is created inside it's mother, a "soul" or "spirit" leaves the Source and takes up residence in that body for it's natural life. The Source is inhabited by trillions of spirits, because it is the energy pool for hundreds of worlds in thousands of galaxies across the mega-verse, the greater expansion of our universe. That's my belief. Death is a gate-way, not an end, although we are typically saddened when someone passes, because their time with us on this plane is ended.
Modern religions describe various ways that they soul passes from this plane to the next. Some are pleasant, some are awkward and downright scary as Hell, if you pardon the pun.
Whatever you believe, however you feel, take care not to judge the dead. There is way too much of that going around today. The people that were here yesterday and "gone" tomorrow are just passing on. They will live again.

-Jim Culp, 2016

  { 1 Dictionary.com }