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Eternal Life Through Facebook
By Alan Cohen
I was surprised to receive a Facebook friend invitation from Eric Butterworth, a
respected author and minister who introduced me to the new thought movement many
years ago. The astounding element of Dr. Butterworth’s invitation…he is dead. He
passed away eight years ago. How he found his way onto Facebook is a matter of
great interest to me.
The Internet and Facebook bear huge metaphysical lessons. In truth, no one ever
dies and we are capable of communicating inter-dimensionally. In the movie, “The
Last Starfighter”, a young Jedi-like disciple grows sad when he learns that one
of his heroes has been killed. His mentor tells him, “He is not dead. He is just
battling evil on another dimension.” On a more earthly plane, a friend of mine
told me that his mother had just passed away. When I offered him my condolences,
he explained, “She really just changed addresses.”
Just as the essence of a person never dies, neither do relationships. All real
relationships are eternal. You might break up, get divorced, move away from each
other, or one of you might pass on. None of these logistical shifts diminishes
the relationship. Only the love is real. Everything else is just a story line. A
Course in Miracles tells us, “Nothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal
exists.”
One of my favorite John Denver songs is “Annie’s Song”. When I attended one of
John’s concerts, he mentioned that Annie’s Song is the most popular of all of
his compositions. “When I went to India, people would stop me on the street and
sing to me, ‘You fill up my senses…’” he recounted. When I read John’s
autobiography, Take Me Home, I learned that he wrote the song for his wife
Annie, from whom he later got divorced. Initially I felt sad that such an
exhilarating romantic song yielded to divorce. Then I realized that the love
John expressed when he wrote the song was genuine. What happened after that is
less important than the passion that flowed through him at that moment. Though
the marriage ended, the passion that inspired the song is eternal and available
to anyone choosing love at any time. Forms of relationship may change, but the
energy that joins people in their finest moments cannot be destroyed.
I met John Denver when I was walking along a remote road on Maui. Driving a
rental car, he pulled over and asked me if I wanted a ride. I was enjoying my
walk, and as much I would have liked to ride with him, I told him thanks but I
would continue walking. I took John’s hand and told him how much his music had
inspired me over many years. He smiled, told me, “Thank you,” and continued on
his way. A few years later I learned that John had died in a small plane crash.
Upon hearing that news I was so grateful I had that moment to touch him and say
thank you. Like John’s music, that moment is mine forever.
If you have gone through a breakup or divorce; or parted ways with a friend; or
experienced the death of a loved one, take heart. The precious elements of the
relationship are yours…always. People and circumstances come and go, but your
connection in Spirit is inseparable.
That’s why and how dead people can friend us on Facebook. They don’t really go
very far from…just behind a curtain. We can’t touch them with our fingers, but
we can touch them with our mind and heart. That’s why I’m establishing an
alternative to Facebook. I’m calling it Faithbook. We’re making a movie about it
called, “The Spiritual Network”. On Faithbook we are connected to everyone
everywhere all the time and we don’t need a computer to communicate. There are
no annoying ads or silly games, and the organizers don’t keep changing the
rules. We make friends only by the Law of Attraction, and messages that we would
have to block on Facebook never get to you on Faithbook because they don’t match
you. You can easily communicate with departed loved ones because on Faithbook no
one ever dies.
All relationships offer us the opportunity to discern between reality and
illusion. We make up all kinds of stories in relationships that cause us pain
and sorrow. The relationship journey evolves from the stories we made up to
stories that are true. Contrary to what soap operas, romance novels, and movies
tell us about relationships, the only real purpose of relationships is to
experience deeper love. That love does not depend on what our bodies are doing.
It depends solely on what our heart and minds are doing.
When Facebook be-came popular, I resisted joining because I did not want to
spend any more time on the computer. Now I like it. Where else can you get
messages from dead people you love? In the old days you would have to go to a
medium to get messages from the departed. Now you go to social media. It’s kind
of cool when you think about it: No one ever dies. They just move to Faithbook.

Alan Cohen is 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 in September 1, 2011. For more information visit
www.AlanCohen.com or phone 1‑808‑572-0001.
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