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Atomic Contrast
By Alan Cohen
I was
invited to present a seminar in Hiroshima, Japan, the city devastated by the
atomic bomb in 1945. As I approached the Hiroshima train station via the bullet
train, I felt uneasy, wondering if the psychic shadow of the holocaust would
linger unto this day. To my surprise, Hiroshima Station felt light and airy,
passersby friendly and upbeat. At initial encounter, the place actually felt
more peaceful to me than the dozen other cities in Japan I have visited.
As my host drove me through Hiroshima’s streets, I was impressed by the
comeliness of the area. Rivers wended beneath many bridges, banks highlighted by
cherry blossom trees in full bloom. Families picnicked by the riverside as
children laughed and played. Was this the same city instantly burned to a crisp
by the world’s most dire single act of manmade destruction?
At the center
of Hiroshima resides a lovely manicured park, dedicated to the intention that
peace prevails on Earth. Manicured green commons create a soft backdrop to
fountains and a waterfall. At one end burns an eternal flame set atop a simple
altar where people from all over the world pray and leave flowers as a symbol of
their wish for peace.
There, my host told me that various seers at this
site had explained that in the wake of such massive destruction through warfare,
the desire for peace has magnified to an extraordinary degree. Hiroshima has
become a nexus for many gatherings in the name of world harmony. Recently His
Holiness, the Dalai Lama, was joined by Bishop Desmond Tutu and another Nobel
peace laureate, Betty Williams, for a conference, ceremony, and prayer to
further world peace.
As much as the name Hiroshima was once synonymous
with decimation, the name is now being associated with healing. Abraham (of
Abraham-Hicks) underscores the value of contrast. Negative events generate
intense motivation for their opposite. When you get what you don’t want, you are
more highly motivated to create what you do want. A bad marriage moves you to
have a better one. Physical illness amplifies your intention for wellness. A
business failure induces you to generate more success. When you experience what
is clearly “Not It”, the next question is “What is It?” and “How can I get It?”
A few blocks from the peace park stands a small monument indicating the
exact spot where the atomic bomb fell. That spot now has a grocery store on one
side of it and a parking lot on the other side. The street is busy and unless
you notice the stone slab you might overlook it altogether.
That night,
as I lay in bed, in my hotel room a few blocks from the monument, my mind was
spinning. I had no box in which to file such an experience. I was about to go to
sleep a few hundred yards from the hyper-center of where an atomic bomb had once
exploded. When the bomb went off, it instantly reduced to ashes practically
everything in a twenty-kilometer radius. Yet, now there stood parks, hotels,
stores, restaurants, apartments, and people in the midst of a vital, colorful
life. What was the truth about that place on the globe? How did I fit into it?
What could I learn from it?
I was slipping back and forth between
parallel realities. In one, a huge mushroom eclipsed the sky, signaling the
beginning of humanity’s ability to wipe itself off the face of the Earth with
one careless press of a button. In another reality, life was blooming in
glorious, productive ways; love was clearly present, and the greatest respect
for peace on Planet Earth prevailed.
On some level I was being prompted
to choose which reality I would live in. The more I focused on the idea of an
ominous megalithic cloud overtaking life with its evil consequences, the more
unsafe and depressed I felt. When I looked out the hotel window and saw
Hiroshima’s main promenade with people driving, walking, talking, laughing, and
listening to iPods, I felt encouraged. Then I recognized I serve far better to
focus on life rather than death.
All things change. Nothing is always one
thing or one way. Before I went to Hiroshima I spent a week in Tokyo.
Considering the radioactive pollution from the Fukushima nuclear plant, I
thought, “I’m looking forward to going to Hiroshima to get away from the
radiation.” While at first this felt like a bad joke, later I realized the
profound lesson of juxtaposition. Life rushes to replace death and healing seeks
to erase wounds. As the bumper sticker says, “Nature bats last.” Human beings
can do an act as heinous as dropping an atomic bomb on their brethren, and
horrific as that act is, life will return. With the exception of one skeleton of
a building now used as a tourist attraction, Hiroshima has been resurrected. Not
just as a city, but as a city of determined peace.
You and I too, have
had our moments of pain, destruction, and perhaps even decimation. Yet those
experiences always give way to life, and sometimes even greater life. May we all
learn from the contrast in our lives, individually and collectively, so we may
build parks of beauty over ashes of war. As A Course in Miracles tells us, “The
holiest spot on earth is where an ancient hatred has become a present love.”

Alan Cohen is the author of many inspirational books, including his
newest book of uplifting messages, A Daily Dose of Sanity. Listen to Alan’s
weekly radio show Get Real on Hay House Radio at www.hayhouseradio.com, and join
him for Life Coach Training beginning September 1, 2011. For more information
visit www.AlanCohen.com, email info@AlanCohen.com, or phone 1‑808‑572-0001.
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