Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Explaining Evolutionary Leaps - Looking Past Darwinism

One hundred seventy years ago Charles Darwin presented his Theory of Evolution, which attempts to explain how life evolved from simple one-celled organisms into more advanced species.  This theory challenged the Christian religious teachings that all life forms were directly created by God.  To this day a debate has raged between scientists who embrace Evolution, people who believe in Creationism, and another group of scientists who hypothesize that life is too complex to have evolved and, therefore, a supremely intelligent entity facilitated evolution (Intelligent Design).  A major argument used by Intelligent Design advocates is “irreducible complexity,” which suggests that certain aspects of living creatures are too complex to have developed through a natural evolutionary process.  This article, the second in a series that started with “The Emergence of Life: Abiogenesis and Intelligent Design,”  [1]  will explore how science attempts to explain irreducibly complexity and major evolutionary jumps that are not easily explained by the Theory of Evolution.

Darwinism suggests that all life forms evolved through natural selection, noting that the offspring of organisms are subtly different from one another.  If these differences result in an improvement in how the organism adapts to its environment, it will be passed on to future generations.  When genetic material was discovered early in the 20th Century, scientists proposed that genetic mutations resulted in these incremental differences.  When a mutation occurred, three things could happen: it would be lethal and not passed on, it would result in no change, or it would result in a beneficial change and be passed on to offspring.  Biologists have more recently sorted all life into classifications which show how classes of species may have evolved from simpler classes.  However, there are many unanswered questions in how life first emerged; then evolved into today’s diversity which includes Homo sapiens.

At numerous points in the evolution of life, leaps occurred that were well beyond the subtle changes suggested by Darwin.  Two prime examples go all the way back to the beginning: the emergence of the first life form from lifeless chemicals and the formation of the molecules RNA and DNA, which hold the genetic code for life forms.  Earlier, an incremental route of chemical evolution was discussed that may have resulted in the very first life form.  However, there is no generally accepted scientific theory for the formation of the first molecules of RNA and DNA.  [2]  Therefore, RNA and DNA are often cited as an example of “Irreducible Complexity,” defined by Biochemistry professor Michael Behe as “a single system composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning.”  [3]

One of the most commonly cited examples of irreducible complexity is the bacterial flagellum, the whip-like appendage that propels bacteria.  Two others are the function of blood clotting in vertebrates and the camera lens eye found in higher order vertebrates.  The claim made for both flagella and blood clotting is that too many proteins are required to have developed all at the same time to have happened by natural selection.  The sheer complexity of the eye coupled with the even more complex biochemistry required for perceiving sight are cited as being irreducibly complex.  [4]  Other examples cited include the heart, the ear, and single-celled organisms.   [5] 
Scientists have already made progress in refuting these arguments.  They have linked the development of bacterial flagella to a more elementary needle-like structure found in Salmonella.  Blood clotting has been demonstrated in fish and other organisms despite lacking some of the proteins found in Mammalian blood clotting systems.  Current evidence supports an evolutionary route for the eye stemming from very simple photoreceptor patches in primitive animals; however, biologists have not yet fully explained a path for the biochemistry of sight, which Michael Behe is quick to point out in supporting Intelligent Design.  [6]

Another area that sparks controversy is the numerous discontinuous leaps that have occurred in the evolution of more advanced life forms.  One example is the emergence of vertebrates – there is no clear evolutionary path between vertebrates and lower life forms.  [7]  Other examples of evolutionary jumps: colonization of land by plants, evolution of modern birds from dinosaurs, and the Cambrian Explosion, where 600 million years ago complex animals exploded from very simple ones such as jellyfish and sponges.   [8, 9, 10]  Quoting Zoologist Christopher McGowan: “We have so many gaps in the evolutionary history of life, gaps in such key areas as the origin of the multi-cellular organisms, the origin of the vertebrates, not to mention the origins of most invertebrate groups.”  [11]  There are also smaller evolutionary jumps evidenced by discrete appearances or increases in an organ or structure, for instance, going from two to four wings on an insect or a bacteria that learns to generate two spores as opposed to one.  These types of features can’t result from a gradual evolutionary process because an insect can’t have 2.1 wings nor can a mammal have 0.1 livers.  [12]

Scientists, however, have developed theories as to how these types of leaps may happen.  For instance, complex biological systems may be created from simpler systems that have a different function.  [13]  Philip Hunter suggests that evolutionary leaps result from changes in gene regulation as opposed to the emergence of new genes, and that the presence of a certain type of RNA in certain species facilitates these changes.  [14]  Another theory is partial penetrance, which is a genetic mutation that causes only a percentage of organisms in a species to develop a new, potentially improving feature.  [15]  Rupert Sheldrake presents a radical idea where all individual species have an external organizing field called a “morphogenetic field,” which also facilitates a collective memory within a given species.  He suggests that this field facilitates evolutionary development.  [16]  The concept of biological fields has also been broached by others and may date all the way back to the philosopher Plato.  [17,18]  Microbiologists Johnjoe McFadden and Jim Al-Khalili went a step further and showed a demonstrable link between constructive genetic mutations and quantum physics, citing the quantum theory of entanglement would link the genome with its surroundings:
“Living cells could similarly act as biological quantum computers, able to simultaneously explore multiple possible mutational states and collapse towards those states that provide the greatest advantage.”  [19]
Quantum mechanics may therefore underpin the concept of biological organizing fields, and would link the modern understanding of physics with biology.

Although science seems to be well on the way to explaining major evolutionary jumps and “irreducibly complex” organs, there appears to be one common theme: the DNA required for these developments existed BEFORE the leaps occurred.  The genes fueling the Cambrian explosion existed long before the actual event.  Molecular biologist Sean Carroll mentions that some genes date back to the early origin of life.  These so-called “immortal genes” “…are so essential that their text has been preserved for over 3 billion years.  They’re involved in very fundamental ways with the decoding of the genetic machinery shared among all organisms. Without these genes you couldn’t express your genetic information and produce the proteins you need to live.”  He further goes on to mention that this DNA had the potential to grow a variety of different appendages and features.  [20]  A related enigma that came out of the human genome project is the fact that humans have far fewer genes than were originally anticipated.  Our genome contains about the same number of base pairs, 3.3 billion, as the fruit fly, one-fortieth that of the lung fish, and only falls at the mid-point of the range found in mammals.  [21]  This goes against the concept that if humans were the most advanced life form, they would have the most complex genome.

This leads to the following questions.  Why does a fruit fly need such a complex genome?  It is hard to fathom how DNA that was capable of coding the incredible diversity of life could have evolved so quickly before the Cambrian explosion; if there is a miracle to examine, it is the existence of this pre-Cambrian DNA and “immortal genes.”  It is not known how RNA and DNA emerged from a pool of lifeless chemicals.  Biologists continue to search for answers to these questions and current research efforts continue to add pieces to the puzzle that life presents.  One thing is clear, though.  The very existence of DNA is amazing and the genetic language that it contains is even more miraculous.  One does not have to believe in Creationism or Intelligent Design to see the miracle of life.  Freeman Dyson, the author of Disturbing the Universe, states: “The more I examine the universe and study the details of its architecture, the more evidence I find that the universe in some sense must have known we were coming.” [22]

References:

1.         Gregory M. Berube, “The Emergence of Life: Abiogenesis and Intelligent Design,” http://exploringtheamazing.blogspot.com/2012/01/emergence-of-life-abiogenesis-and.html
2.         Ibid.
3.         http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/behe.html, which quotes Michael Behe from his book Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution. (1996), The Free Press.
6.         See 4.
9.         Dawkins, R, The Blind Watchmaker, W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 1996, pp. 229-230.  Via http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/quotes/mine/part1-3.html
11.       McGowan, C., In the Beginning... A Scientist Shows Why the Creationists are Wrong, Prometheus Books, 1984, p. 95.  Via http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/quotes/mine/part1-3.html
13.       See 4.
14.       See 7.
15.       See 12.
                     _intro.html
                      pdf/yjbm00349-0027.pdf
19.       McFaddan and Khalili, “A quantum mechanical model of adaptive mutation,” BioSystems Vol. 50 (1999), p 203–211
20.       See 8.
22.       Freeman Dyson, Disturbing the Universe, Harper and Row (1979).

Photo credit: http://www.robertreckmeyer.com

Monday, January 30, 2012

The More We Give...

The greatest gift we have is the ability to give to others unconditionally.  The more we give, the more we are able to give.  Unconditional giving is one way of fulfilling our purpose for living and leads to happiness and fulfillment.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

A Brighter Tomorrow

Rainy day contemplation
Walking through the gentle drops
Perceiving patterns in the mist
Seeing amazing in the gloom
Knowing that something greater
Lies beyond the clouds
Pushing us forward
Into a brighter tomorrow

Self-photo: Acadia National Park

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Imagination

Imagination…..
Painted with the artist’s brush
Carved by the sculptor’s tools
Written with the poet’s pen
Played by the musician’s instrument
The essence of everyone’s dreams
In tune with the Infinite


Photo credit: Cousin Dawn B.

Friday, January 27, 2012

The Power of Listening

Everyone wants to be heard.  It is nobler to listen to someone who needs to tell their story.  The art of compassionate and active listening has the power to heal, to soothe, to reassure, and to inspire.

Self-photo, Acadia National Park

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Anybody Can Serve

“Everybody can be great...because anybody can serve. You don't have to have a college degree to serve. You don't have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.”  ~Martin Luther King Jr.

Photo credit: City of Pittsburgh

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Opportunities

We can’t change much of what is going on around us, but we can change the way we look at things and the way we react to them.  There are learning opportunities.  Opportunities to make positive changes.  Opportunities to heal a wound.  Opportunities to share a smile or kind words.  Approaching things positively gives us a sense of control over our situations and makes them easier to manage.


Photo credit: Cousin Dawn B.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

A recipe for life

Life is for living
Every new day is a chance to evolve
Setbacks are learning opportunities
People cross our paths
Some keep walking
Others are meant to walk with us
Work where passion and purpose thrive
Enjoy every special moment
Stay connected to the energy beyond
Be amazing

Photo credit: Cousin Dawn B.

Monday, January 23, 2012

"Taking the moment and making the best of it"

“I wanted a perfect ending. Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next.   Delicious Ambiguity.”   ― Gilda Radner

Photo credit: Cousin Dawn B.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Hitting the Midpoint

Hitting the midpoint
No turning back
Hitting the midpoint
Fear the second half
Hitting the midpoint
Want to stay in place
Hitting the midpoint
Want to give up the chase

Self-doubt is destruction
Gather courage to proceed
Trust the flow that surrounds
Move ahead and succeed

And be amazing

Friday, January 20, 2012

Everyone Wants to be Heard

Everyone wants to be heard.  Say something that will make a positive impact.  On someone...on the world...on humanity...

"You're in control, is there anywhere you wanna go?
You're in control, is there anything you wanna know?
The future's for discovering
The space in which we're travelling
From the top of the first page
To the end of the last day
From the start in your own way
You just want somebody listening to what you say
It doesn't matter who you are
It doesn't matter who you are"

~Coldplay, excerpt from "Square One," Track 1 on the X&Y CD
Photo credit: space.com
 

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Wild Ride

Beautiful summer afternoon at the fair
Looked forward all week the coaster to ride
Stood in line and awaited the moment
It was our turn and we boarded side by side

Anticipation on the long climb to the top
So exhilarating was the downward trip
Everything was absolutely amazing
The colors flew by at a kaleidoscopic clip

Sensing a merging of spirits and souls
As we raced and soared around that track
Rapturous energy surrounding us
Could fly forever and never look back

Around the coaster rode a second time
Our good fortune overflowing that day
Up and down traveling faster and faster
Fireworks blossomed in sparkly rays

Then the ride slowed to a crawl and stopped
And the riders disembarked one by one
Resisting as I waited all week for that ride
Willed it not to end for it was so much fun

Finally crawled off of the roller coaster
Reality came clouds caused the sun to hide
Everything became gloomy, wet, and grey
But wasn’t the purpose to enjoy the ride?

Photo credit: science.howstuffworks.com

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Be Enthusiastic and Confident

Enthusiasm and confidence
Amplify our abilities
Increase our personal power
Energize our everyday work
Open new doors to us
Create great accomplishments
Lead to success and happiness
Bring us closer to those around us

Monday, January 16, 2012

Dreams Drive a New Tomorrow

Sun sets over the ocean
Blue water and orange fire
Stillness strikes the landscape
All stop and watch the scene
Sensing ancient mystery
Portrait for a restful night
Stars replace the pastel sky
Dreams drive a new tomorrow
Working toward a better world

Photo credit: CDD

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Living Your Purpose

"Taking action is how you give your gift and live a life of true service to yourself and others. And that doesn't mean that your life's work has to be something that seems grand and noble. The real key to being of service and living your purpose is simply to do what you love to do -- whatever it may be."
-- Rebecca Fine

Saturday, January 14, 2012

A Noble Goal

In the face of all the challenges we face today, is my optimism about the future of humanity idealistic? Perhaps it is. Is it unrealistic? Certainly not. To remain indifferent to the challenges we face is indefensible. If the goal is noble, whether or not it is realized within our lifetime is largely irrelevant. What we must do therefore is to strive and persevere and never give up.  ~The Dalai Lama

Photo credit: Belief Energy

Friday, January 13, 2012

Taking a Break

Sometimes we need to take a break just for ourselves
To lighten the stress
To clear our minds
To freshen our viewpoints
To relax our senses so that they sense greater things
To open our hearts
To allow our souls to connect with the infinite

Photo credit:  southernlabrador.com

Thursday, January 12, 2012

The Emergence of Life: Abiogenesis and Intelligent Design

One of the greatest enigmas of our existence is our very existence.  It is therefore no surprise that biologists and biochemists are researching abiogenesis, the chemistry and mechanisms that created the first life forms.  This research plays into the ongoing debate between Darwin’s Theory of Evolution, Creationism, and Intelligent Design.  Creationism represents the Christian belief that God created all forms of life.  Intelligent Design is the hypothesis that various aspects of the formation of the universe and the evolution of life are best explained by a higher intelligence, not by natural processes.  It further is an attempt to reconcile the things that science cannot explain.  This article examines science’s attempt to understand the genesis of life as compared to the Intelligent Design argument, especially with respect to DNA, the amazing and complex genetic material found in living things.

Based on the ratio of carbon isotopes in ancient rocks, life was in existence 3.85 billion years ago, when the Earth was only 700 million years old.  Charles Darwin himself did not speculate on how the first life forms emerged on early Earth as he believed it was a great mystery: “It is mere rubbish to talk about the origin of life; one might as well talk about the origin of matter.”  [1]  Since the days of Darwin, scientists have been seeking answers to the genesis of life.  The search for answers has been elusive and Intelligent Design advocates are quick to use this as support for their arguments.

One argument is the concept of “irreducible complexity,” defined by Michael Behe as “a single system which is composed of several interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, and where the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning.”  [2]  Intelligent Design advocates argue that DNA is irreducibly complex; therefore it could not have originated from a random process.  [3,4]  DNA contains four different nucleobases: A (adenine), C (cytosine), T (thymine) and G (guanine), which are purposefully arranged within the molecule in the form of genes.  These genetic instructions according to Dr. Stephen Meyer are a language similar to computer code, and he further notes that even the simplest bacteria have a complex genetic code.  [5]  Quoting Werner Gitt, professor of information systems:
"The basic flaw of all evolutionary views is the origin of the information in living beings. It has never been shown that a coding system and semantic information could originate by itself . . . The information theorems predict that this will never be possible.  A purely material origin of life is thus [ruled out].”  [6]

Abiogenesis skeptics also cite other factors.  [7]  Proteins that may spontaneously form from amino acids would break down in water due to hydrolysis and they would also be susceptible to destruction from UV radiation, which was much stronger in primordial times.  They would also be susceptible to oxidation, although scientists believe that little oxygen was present in the atmosphere at that time.  Other organic molecules would potentially suffer the same fate. 

The two defining properties that separate life from non-living matter are metabolism (processing raw materials for the purpose of sustaining the organism) and reproduction.  The challenge for science is to arrive at life the first life forms from a lifeless pool of chemicals.  Scientists have demonstrated that amino acids (precursors to proteins), nucleobases (precursors to RNA and DNA), and numerous other organic chemicals are easily formed under the conditions of early Earth.  Numerous organic compounds have additionally been discovered in outer space and it is possible that some of these compounds may have contributed to the genesis of life.  [8]

In order to form more complicated molecules, sources of energy are required.  This was not an issue in the early days of Earth: ultraviolet radiation, geothermal energy, lightning, and solar heat were readily available.  [9]  Condensation reactions (reactions that produce water) are used in order to make more complicated molecules from the simpler chemicals.  These reactions would be unfavorable in the open ocean, but could easily occur in tidal pools, where concentration would occur due to evaporation.  In addition, clays, pumices, and micropores in rocks were believed to participate in the synthesis of complex organic molecules by forming templates.  [10]  Some sort of restrictive membrane simulating the modern cell membrane would be advantageous in that it would protect more delicate molecules supporting life.  Certain proteins and other simple organic compounds will form barriers similar to cell membranes.  [11] 

A thorough and especially animated synopsis of the genesis of life is offered on the website http://www.evolutionofdna.com.  [12]  Here, the author suggests that amino acids and aromatic compounds similar to nucleobases are concentrated in tiny pools along tidal areas.  In a select few pools, the right chemicals were present and polymerized into a specific aromatic chain and a protein that could read the aromatic chain in order to replicate itself.  Through chemical evolution, other proteins resulted that were capable of reproducing themselves or their parent aromatic chains, leading to a fully “self-replicating” chemical system.  Evolution would be accelerated by the enormous number of micropools available on the shoreline.  Eventually, proteins would evolve that would manufacture proteins and aromatic chains from simple raw materials (metabolism) and structural proteins would evolve that would hold everything together.  The result would be the first life form, named “Cassius” by the author.  Cassius would develop the ability to manage energy, perhaps by employing adenosine phosphates which are used to store and deliver energy in modern life forms.  At some point in the evolutionary process, Cassius would incorporate a cell membrane in order to protect it against hostile environments. 

The elegance of this hypothesis is that the author relies on simple proteins and aromatic polymers to drive the prebiotic evolutionary process.  The author admits that it would take a considerable amount of luck for this system to develop, especially at the very beginning.  The odds for the right chemicals to all be in the same place at the same time with the right degree of polymerization would have been extremely remote, but the author believes that the enormous number of micropools and the time scales involved would improve the odds: “There are quite a few steps to the transformation, but none of them are sufficiently improbable that they would have taken billions of years.”  [13]      

Up to this point, the author had not defined the chemistry of the aromatic chains, essentially the first genes, only suggesting that they would be far simpler than modern RNA.  The author proposes that early in the evolution of Cassius, complimentary base paring develops.   Base paring would provide a major advantage in that it would facilitate enzyme production and organization of the aromatic chains.  Base paring also would make it especially easy to replicate the genetic material when the organism develops cell division.  It is speculated that through base paring, RNA would eventually evolve.  The subsequent jump from RNA to DNA is not a large jump, and may have been driven by the organism needing to preserve the molecules holding the genetic code, whereas the RNA molecules doing the actual daily work could be digested once their work was complete.  The author proposes that through evolution, the organism learned to convert the ribose molecule to deoxyribose, the sugar component of DNA.  DNA would be more stable and have stiffer chains than RNA, so they would be easier to read.  At first, DNA would be single-strand until evolution developed the famous double-helix structure.

This explanation of the emergence of DNA is vague and does not explain a step-by-step process from a pool of simple chemicals to an elaborate genetic language.  Even the simplest bacterium has DNA containing 600,000 base pairs.  [14]  Spontaneous formation of this type of a molecule is essentially impossible.  However, somewhere between 10 and 50 amino acids form modern protein based enzymes.  The very first self-replicating protein likely was in this size range.  [15]  The assembly of a specific 10 component protein from 20 different amino acids, although still infinitesimal at about one chance in ten trillion, is much more likely, especially given the trillions of available micropools and millions of years of trial and error.  Simple aromatic chains of the same length would have a comparable probability of existence.  If simple proteins and aromatic chains would evolve into the primitive life form Cassius, it is plausible that the aromatic chains could evolve into RNA with simple coding, then into DNA with a genetic language pieced together by segments of RNA.   

Admittedly this is a tortuous path to the emergence of life.  It is much easier to jump to the conclusion that God created life given that science has not presented a concrete answer.  However, the route proposed by the evolutionofdna.com author seems plausible and it is conceivable that life evolved directly from inorganic chemicals without super-intelligent influence.  As science advances, those studying abiogenesis will continue to unravel the mystery of the genesis of life and may even learn how to create a living entity out of a mixture of chemicals.  If they succeed, that in no way proves that a Higher Power does not exist.  The very fabric of the Universe is mysterious and the fact that lifeless matter may be assembled into a living being is amazing, regardless of the route.  There is room in the Universe for both science and God.  Quoting Albert Einstein:  “A knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, of the manifestations of the profoundest reason and the most radiant beauty - it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute the truly religious attitude; in this sense, and in this alone, I am a deeply religious man.”  [16]     

References:

5.         See 3.
6.         See 3.
9          Ibid.
10.       Author unknown, http://www.evolutionofdna.com/
11.       See 8.
12.       See 10.
13.       See 10.
14.       See 10.
15.       See 10.

Photo credit: wikipedia.com

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Renewal

After a forest fire burns through the woods, the forest looks bleak and dead.  All black, charred trees.  No life.  However, the forest always regenerates.  The ash left over from the fire provides the fertilizer for new growth.  And the rain hatches the seeds.  And the seeds sprout.  Eventually the foliage fleshes out.  And animal life returns in abundance.

Trying situations are often out of our control.  We can, however, view them with a renewed perspective…as a form of healing, renewal, and building strength.

Photo credit: wildnatureimages.com

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Imagination Encircles the World

“I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”
― Albert Einstein


Use your imagination to unlock an amazing world previously unknown to you.


Photo credit, Stephanie Vetter, livescience.com

Monday, January 9, 2012

Time to Adjust Our Sails


A new year has begun
Time to take inventory
Time to adjust our sails
Time to renew relationships
Time to make a change
Time to try something new
Time to do something better
Time to take a chance
Time to make the world a better place

Time to start…be amazing

Photo credit: Tim Briggs, photographyblogger.net

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Open the Gate




Walking along the wooded path
Approach the gate where I turn around
Never have ventured beyond that point
Will I have the courage to open that gate
And see what lies on the other side?
Gathering up the nerve I open the gate
Take a step…and never look back

Have the courage and strength to step beyond your comfort zone and make a positive change.

Photo credit: kimsoncom.com

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Bringing Back Spring

Shiver in the cold dark winter
Darkness with no end in sight
I just sometimes wonder how I’m
Gonna make it through the night

Shivering with ice cold tears
Go and find wood for the fire
Falling on the hidden ice
From the pain of which I tire

Back inside and stoke the flames
Feel the warmth and orange glow
Look outside and see the flakes
Beauty shines in falling snow

Nature paints the scene in whiteness
Taking in the splendid view
Refreshing both the heart and soul
Raising up my spirits new

Reaching out to share the light
Join with friends and share a smile
Sharing stories by the hearth
Bringing back spring for a while

Photo credit: Dawn Berube

Friday, January 6, 2012

Live and Love with Zeal Today


No black or white but shades of grey
And rain and sun and night and day
Let the light show us the way
Live and love with zeal today

Image courtesy of henderson-art.co.uk 

Thursday, January 5, 2012


“In the present circumstances, no one can afford to assume that someone else will solve their problems. Every individual has a responsibility to help guide our global family in the right direction. Good wishes are not sufficient; we must become actively engaged.” 
~The Dalai Lama

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Awakening


Gaze at the clear night sky
Wondering if there is more than this
Realize how small I feel
But knowing that one matters
If I can just break out of this spell

See the streak of a shooting star
A serendipitous sight from above
Wakes me into realization
That there is a greater love out there
If I could just open my heart

Sense an amazing presence from afar
Lighting a candle in my soul
Feel the warmth from the gentle flame
Stirring the creativity within
If I could just find a spark

Listen to the distant music
Singing to a familiar tune
Sharing stories by the fireside
Feeling the light from within
Awakening heart and soul

Feel the deep energy flow in
Realizing there is a purpose
Working to make a difference
Walking with vigor on the path
Sharing together the light




Photo credit nationalgeographic.com  Stephanie Vetter, photographer.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

The Eyes of a Child


Let’s look at life as though we were looking through the eyes of a child.   Enjoy the little pleasures of life.  See the amazing vistas around us.  Watch the sun rise and set.  Gaze at the night sky and bask in the vastness of it all.  Experience the mysterious beauty that is our world and universe.  Feel the “wow.” 

Monday, January 2, 2012

A New Day

"This is the beginning of a new day. You have been given this day to use as you will. You can waste it or use it for good. What you do today is important because you are exchanging a day of your life for it. When tomorrow comes, this day will be gone forever; in its place is something that you have left behind...let it be something good."

~Author unknown