Could it be that whales and dophins in captivity might be our teachers? We might think they are victims. What if we could recognize their level of evolutionary awareness? Then we might see how their captive environments allow them to serve Mother Earth and humankind on many levels - primarily as teachers and mirrors of joy and unconditional love? It's something to think about.
Are we humans getting it? How might we honor their role as they touch each soul with whom they come into contact with a spark of joy and love? How might we learn the lessons of unconditional love that they offer us?
Here's another opportunity now - in the story below.
Beluga whale carries struggling diver to surface
A DROWNING diver has a beluga whale to thank for helping to save her life after her legs were paralysed by cramps.
Yang Yun was taking part in a free-diving contest at Polar Land in Harbin, north-east China, in which participants were required to sink seven metres to the bottom of a pool and stay there for as long as possible without the aid of breathing equipment.
Ms Yun, 26, thought she was going to die amid the beluga whales she shared the arctic pool with, after struggling to move her legs while trying to kick her way to the surface.
"I began to choke and sank even lower and I thought that was it for me - I was dead,” she told The Sun.
“Until I felt this incredible force under me driving me to the surface."
That “incredible force” was Mila, a beluga whale which had noticed her distress and clamped its jaws around her leg.
Using her sensitive nose, Mila drove Ms Yun carefully to the surface, to the amazement of onlookers and an underwater photographer who captured the entire incident on film.
"Mila noticed the problem before we did,” an organiser told The Sun.
"She's a sensitive animal who works closely with humans and I think this girl owes her her life."http://www.news.com.au/


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