It’s not like I woke up one day wondering about why I’m
living in the 21st century, it has been a recurring question from the recesses
of my mind which surfaces frequently. Mostly at times when I am reading about
some historical event or character of the olden days, and the question is, “How
did I miss being born and live in a previous time in history? -- How did I get
here, Now?” Since there are two factors relating to this question, existence
and time, we will examine both beginning with the examination of time, before
we address the question of our existence.
TIME
Time is the measure of biological progression. Biological
life forms are the only part of creation for which time has meaning. Before
clocks were invented, time was measured in periods of night and day, orbits of
the moon, seasons, or the length of a normal life span. These measurements of
time mark the span of life for everything, both plants and animals. The
blue-print codes of all DNA collect atoms of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen,
nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur, from the nutrients of our environment to
build molecules that form all biological life, both plants and animals. This
same DNA not only builds molecules for different purposes such as, flower petals,
plant stem, finger nails, ear lobes, hair, teeth, bone, etc., according to the
blue-print code being used, but it also has a built in expiration date for when
it will begin to cease collecting atoms and building new tissue. When the life
form expires, the atoms used to create it are reabsorbed back into the
environment to be used again and again by other DNA builders.
Atoms used to create biological life forms are eternal. All
atoms are essentially eternal. They have no expiration date. The atoms used to build
granite mountains, the seas, planets, stars, galaxies, biological life forms, and
the universe were created billions of years before our planet was ever formed
and they are timeless. There is no element of time needed to mark their
existence.
EXISTENCE
Everyone at one time or another has fantasized about what it
would have been like to live during a previous or future time. Every period has
tickled our fancy from life during early cave men conditions, to futuristic
life in a space ship or on some distant planet. Some people have even expressed
how they may have been better suited for life in an earlier time. Yet, here we
are, living in the present and unsure why. How did we miss being born to live
during any previous time, or during some distant future? What has caused our
lives, our consciousness to experience existence now, instead of some other
period of time?
Anthropologists tell us mankind has lived and walked on this
planet for more than 2 million years in one form or another. Succeeding
generations of these ancient ancestors have evolved into a variety of physical
attributes and learning experiences. Some variations have succeeded in
propagating the planet while others became extinct, or were absorbed into cultures
of successful species. The races and peoples now living all over the planet
have traveled far to evolve into today’s generations.
Today, we have a broad record of knowledge that tells us
what it was like to have lived during almost any period in our past history. These
records tell us of the daily life challenges as well as the conflicts and
traditions among all people as they continued to survive, evolve and migrate
over the entire planet. Countless fictional narratives have been written with
settings in just about all of our prior history, not only entertaining us with epic
stories, but depicting daily life occurrences. Around the end of the 18th
century stories began to appear about life in the future, predicting new and yet
unknown technologies, i.e. “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,” written by
Jules Verne in 1870; “Flash Gordon,” film series, 1936, etc.
Although birth dates mark the chronological passing of time
since the proverbial stork delivered us on some doorstep, they are not the orgin
of our conscious state. The event that has produced our consciousness at this
time in history was a unique biological conception. The joining of two specific
sets of chromosomes from our parent donors with a one-of-a-kind set of genetic
traits to produce an individual so unique, that in all of the history of
mankind, there has never been, nor will there ever be another with the same combination
of our DNA structure, finger prints, neurological patterns, etc.
It has been said that snowflakes have unique structures and
that no two are alike. Snowflakes are composed of water molecules whose energy
levels have been reduced beyond the point which allows them random movement as
a vapor. Their gravity has exceeded their energy level and causes the water molecules
to stick together. The shape of each individual water molecule is identical and
dictates how and in what shape the snowflake will be constructed. Since there are
a limited number of geometric design combinations that water molecules can assume
to form snowflakes, then eventually some snowflakes will be identical. However,
there is no limit to the combinations of chromosomes that can be joined
together in conception to create another unique human being. Siblings produced
by the same chromosome donors will possess very similar DNA characteristics,
but there is enough difference between each sibling to also be a unique
entity. Even identical twins are not
identical when it comes to DNA and other physical characteristics. Although we as
a species are similar to each other, we are all unique; we are all originals.
This unique conception creates a consciousness that is born as
a blank page that genetics, learning, environmental influences, and the
consequences of personal decisions will begin to record on as we live and age. Although
we receive similar guidance and instruction from parents and schools, our unique
thoughts and feelings are produced by a set of neurological patterns in our
brain that has never existed before.
As an oak tree grows throughout its lifetime according to the
blue prints of a genetic code dictated by the DNA contributed from its parent
donors produces a slightly altered oak tree. When the tree is cut down, its
life history is revealed and will display the effects of the environment on its
growth and life. There will be some very narrow growth rings which reveal lean
years of drought; there will some wide growth bands indicating years when water
was abundant and the weather ideal; there will be scars made by broken limbs
and fires that have threatened the life of the tree. This oak tree will have
passed on to its next generations, copies of its genetic codes which have been
shaped by age, environment, and experience. This parental fusion of altered chromosomes
produces a new chain of DNA blue-prints for the construction of another generation
of unique oak trees.
We are alive today with a consciousness because of the
unique conceptional donations made by our parents whose genes have been shaped
by environmental influences (mutations made by random genetic copying errors,
cell changes by gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet rays, etc.), and the
consequences of their personal decisions. These and many more factors have
influenced the nature of the genetic material that is passed on to their
offspring. One example of a disorder that is past down from generation to
generation through defective genetic codes is hemophilia which affects
primarily male descendants. Another disorder affecting genetic codes is the disastrous
effect of such things as Thalidomide, illicit drugs, alcohol, etc., ingested by mothers immediately before or
during pregnancies.
We are now members of the current wave of living biology on
this planet. We are the unique products of not only genes from our ancestors,
but the environmental influences that have colored their lives. When we die,
the living wave will continue to evolve, discover, learn, change and adapt to
the environment in which they live. This process is the same for all life forms,
both flora and fauna. As the wave of life rolls on, it continues to contribute
to the knowledge bank of discoveries and experiences made by previous
generations as all biological species evolve to adapt and survive changing
environments. Life forms that are able to survive environmental changes of the
planet on which we live represent the fittest of the species.
Why am I here -- now? It was no accident. It is the result
of thousands of generations of very specific donor combinations of chromosomes.
“We only live once,” sounds like lyrics to a song, or the title of a movie, or an
ad theme for a product encouraging us to live with gusto and live life to the
fullest, yet, it is an axiom based on truth. In all of recorded history, there
has been only one Neanderthal named Grog (70,000 BC), one King Khufu (Cheops), (2700–2675 BC), one Socrates
(469–399 BC), one
Democritus (460–370 BC),
one Aristotle (384–322 BC),
one Leif Ericson (970–1020),
one Galileo (1564–1642),
one George Washington Carver (1864–1943),
one Nelson Mandela (1918),
and one, YOU.
Human beings, like many other species, are social animals with
herd instincts which have been nurtured by survival instincts, and have
developed cultural vehicles to meet these social needs; vehicles such as small
nomadic family groups, to larger multi family groups, to clans, to tribes, to
villages, to cities, to kingdoms, etc. With each succeeding larger group size,
new and increasing numbers of rules were required to maintain group cooperativeness
and a cultural hierarchy to keep the peace. A large percentage of the today’s world
populations live in cultures that consist of both government and religion as
one ruling entity. In many of these countries there is no separation of
religion and state interests. Examples would include most of the Middle Eastern
countries such as Israel, Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Greece, Italy, etc. and
to lesser extents, Italy, and England. Religious dissent in most of these
countries is not only discouraged, but in some cases is met with a severe
penalty of death. Only in recently developed Western countries has there been
an effort to separate the necessity for government from the interests of
religion.
An innate will to survive permeates all life forms, both
plant and animal. Without it life would not exist. It is in the very marrow of
our being. Ending life by any means is vigorously resisted and counter to the
essence of life itself. Throughout history man has tried to avoid death by the
use of magic, potions, alchemy, even animal sacrifices in the effort to extend
physical life, without any success. When rulers, wizards, shaman, witch
doctors, and priests could not conjure physical immortality for mankind, the
idea of man having a mysterious consciousness or spirit that would continue to
exist after the physical body died, was introduced as a tool to control large
numbers of ignorant and superstitious people long before the Judeo/Christian
Cannons were ever written. The philosophy that developed was that our spirits
would inherit immortality and receive either an eternal reward of bliss or
eternal torture as punishment, determined by the conduct and behavior of our
mortal existence. Cultures have created various names for places where our
immortal consciousness or spirits go when we die. Places with names like
Valhalla, Eden, Happy Hunting Ground, Spirit World, Arcadia, Canaan, Elysium,
Shangri-la, Utopia, Zion, Nirvana, Heaven, etc., all the result of
mankind seeking to know a destination for his immortal life.
In this wave of biological life rolling through time are
species of various life spans. Giant Sequoias live thousands of years; the
oldest known Giant Sequoia was 3500 years old. A colony of 47,000 Aspen trees
in the Fish Lake National Forest, located in south central Utah, share a common
root system which is estimated to be 80,000 years old. On the other end of the
spectrum is the shortest life span, the adult Mayfly, which may live from just
a few minutes to a few hours. The life span of almost all other life forms
ranges somewhere between these two extremes. Chromosomes of the parents of all
life forms produce unique individuals whose consciousness of the present exists
only once. For us who are living in the current wave of biological life, it is NOW.
"Do not do to
others what would anger you if done to you by others." – Isocrates
(436–338 BCE),
and enjoy your ride in the wave of life. It’s the only one we will experience.
o
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