The Oracle Institute

A week ago, my grandmother Ruby turned 92 years old. Today, I am wondering whether she is still alive. I was planning to visit her tomorrow along with my mother, sister, and daughter – four generations of women at the birthday party! But she fell a few days ago, breaking her neck and cracking her skull. As I write this, she is undergoing surgery.

Until this accident, Ruby lived on her own. Well … not totally on her own. For the past five years, Ruby has had trouble walking due to extensive nerve damage in her legs. So a helper comes in every day for two hours to bathe her, feed her a meal, and do light housekeeping – all courtesy of her government. You see, Ruby lives in Canada, where the elderly are treated with respect and where everyone’s medical needs are met.

As the debate on this issue rages in the United States, it is worthwhile to mention a few facts: (i) the World Health Organization ranks the U.S. system as 37th in overall merit, but 1st in terms of the percent of GDP expended; (ii) 46,000,000 Americans have no health insurance; and (iii) 1 in 4 children in Washington, D.C. – our nation's capitol – live below the poverty line and receive inadequate medical care.

So I ask: How big is your family?

In every other industrialized nation (and even in some third world countries), people are given universal healthcare as a basic human right – the same way we view the right to free speech and the right to practice our religion (1st Amendment), the right to bear arms (2nd Amendment), the right to privacy absent a valid search warrant (4th Amendment), and the right to assemble and protest our government (1st Amendment). 

So why do the other modern civilizations on this planet provide healthcare to all?

Is it because they are run by non-democratic governments? No. 

Is it because they are richer than we are? No. 

Or is it because they feel a greater connectedness to each other? Yes!

In sum, every other modern culture has adopted a broader definition of “family.”

What did the enlightened master Jesus say on this very point?

Here is the relevant section of the New Testament. Not coincidentally, in American Bibles this section is entitled:
“The Judgment of Nations,” Gospel of Matthew 25:31-46.

When the son of Man comes in his glory and all the angels are with him, he will sit upon his glorious throne and all the nations will be assembled before him. And he will separate them one from another, as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. He will place the sheep on h is right and the goats on his left.

Then the king will say to those on his right, “Come, you who are blessed of my Father. Inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed me, naked and you clothed me, ill and you cared for me, in prison and you visited me.” Then the righteous will answer him and say, “Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? When did we see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? When did we see you ill or in prison and visit you?” And the king will say to them in reply, “Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me.”

Then he will say to those on his left, “Depart from me, you accursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels! For I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me no drink, a stranger and you gave me no welcome, naked and you gave me no clothing, ill and in prison and you did not care for me.” Then they will answer and say, “Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or ill or in prison and not minister to your needs?” He will answer them, “Amen, I say to you, what you did not do for one of these least ones, you did not do for me.” And these people will go off to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.


Postscript: My mom just called from Canada. My grandmother is fine. Thank God.

Comments

Of grandmothers and GDPs ...

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Blessings on your grandmother and your family, Laura ... Canada and healthcare ... I am grateful beyond measure that I live in Canada. I've been quite ill for over two years, and so far, my medical needs are being met. I take care of the rest. So glad that Ruby has daily care ... and how sad that humanity's sense of family (at least in the West) has eroded to the point where we have to hire other people to give hands-on presence and care to our elders and any loved one in need of practical aid. Our culture slices the love right out of relations -- they're transmuted into deals and sales. It is also a tragic fact that we tend to work so long and hard outside our homes that we're are exhausted at the end of the "working day" -- What's left for those we live with but fast food and half-awake care? 46 million American citizens without healthcare ... That's more people than the entire population of Canada (We're about 34 million people). At the same time, there are powerful people inside and beyond our federal government who want to eradicate our healthcare system. Forgive my harsh words here but Stephen Harper, our prime minister, is sometimes referred to as "George W. Bush with a brain." I read this phrase -- "Canada's population grew by 0.19% in the fourth quarter of 2008, the fastest fourth-quarter growth rate since 1992" -- and I think: Doesn't that sound an awful lot like a corporate annual report? (Link: http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/090326/dq090326a-eng.htm)   What must come to matter to the nth degree in our culture -- a meaning that we have desecrated -- is that one beloved grandmother is injured and needs consistent, compassionate and practical tending. Every family has a "beloved grandmother" -- someone who is ill, injured or otherwise depleted; someone who needs a loving eye and a competent, merciful hand. There are many, many people who are willing to step in for family members who are too busy with other things to care for their own. People who often come from places that we call "third-world" -- judged habitually as "third-rate" -- people from the "lower classes" and from cultures that honour the value of relation above such values as wealth, power, fame, conquest ... Family is biology, yes ... and it is also a choice.  As you ask, Laura: "How big is your family?" P.S. -- I read and commented as I went ... and I see that your grandmother is holding her own!  :-)

Lern

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Great News!

Biomimicry, Biomimetrics and Bioinspiration

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Mary and I just spent a wonderful evening at Wake Forest University and participated in their 30th annual symposioum on Biology.  Many wonderful developments as we start to connect the silos of specialized knowledge and start trying to learn from and engineer solutions to, real world problems on a basis of careful observation of our "Spaceship Earth".  This as opposed to the old way of continuing to learn more and more about less and less; and viewing the natural world as something to be conquored/tamed.  We go back again tommorow and I will try and share what we learn.

Moms and Grand Moms

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Hi Laurel!

Just wanted to say how happy I am to hear that your Grandmother is fine. Sounds like a close one! My Mom would have been 90 next week on 10/15/09. She worked her whole life, the last four years of which she made payments on something she had always wanted, a 1984 Cadillac!  She was still driving it when she died two years ago at 88. She was fortunate in that, in addition to Medicare, she had good supplemental insurance from her previous employment. She was able to live in her own apartment right up until her last hospitalization where she was given excellent care in a private room by a wonderful critical care staff and she died surrounded by her loving family.

Our small family has always been grateful for our good fortune. This should be the case for All of our Big Family world wide. Our motto is "Health, not war!" May all Beings be Free from ignorance, poverty and disease. May All Beings have Peace, Be Happy, and Know the Light of their True Nature.

Truth, Love and Light,

geoff byrd

Gratefulness

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Dear Geoff:

You are the first person to answer the first Oracle blog! I am grateful and honored. And I have been reading your wife's new book, Poems from the Labyrinth. Oracle is delighted that Joyce's poem, Prayer for Mother Earth, opens our new anthology on Love. We are in the same family to be sure!  Love, Laurel. 

Visions for a Better World

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Thank you Geoff for you vision of a world where we all look out for and support each others' highest good.  Until we all step up to our individual and collective plates mustering up personal discipline and courage to make positive changes after going through a challenging events, there is the need for a density where we offer each other opportunities to evolve.  What many consider hardships by some are percieved as blessings by others.  The instant we all get it where tolerance, acceptance, understanding,  unconditional love and acceptance that we are all one, we will likely transform into high vibrating light and find ourselves in a lighter density in the 5th dimension to realize this is what we once called the Spirit World.  Thank you Geoff for reminding me of my truth for just thinking about it charges me with benevolent energy that was not with me just moments ago.  Peace be with you and all those that visit this website and read this blog.  Aho Mitakuye Oyasin!  MIke Edwards

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Ha Ho, brother! And thank you

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Ha Ho, brother! And thank you for your generous words. It has been my pleasure to expand my defintion of family by offering my land for the Lakota Sweat Lodge which Mike participates in when visiting from Florida. May we see you in the lodge soon - perhaps the Saturday after Thanksgiving?  Love and Light, Laurel

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