This story is a long one but very much worth the read.
For I Golden Bear always look for the lesson
to be learned in a story .If you find the lesson in the things
you do in your circle of life then you will have gained much wisdom.
And please remember that our wisdom is to be shared with all
living things here on Our Mother Earth
.
The Boy Who Lived With the Bears
There was once a boy whose father and mother had died and he was
left alone in the world.
The only person he had to take care of him was his uncle, but his
uncle was not a kind man.
The uncle thought that the boy was too much trouble and fed
him only scraps from the table
and dressed him in tattered clothing and moccasins with soles
that were worn away. When the
boy slept at night, he had to sleep outside his uncle's lodge
far away from the fire. But
the boy never complained because his parents had told him
always to respect people older
than himself.
One day the uncle decided to get rid of the boy. "Come with me,"
he said. "We are going hunting.
"
The boy was very happy. His uncle had never taken him hunting before.
He followed him into
the woods. First his uncle killed a rabbit. The boy picked
it up to carry it for the uncle
and was ready to turn back to the lodge, but his uncle shook
his head. "We will go on. I am
not done hunting.
They went further and the uncle killed a fat grouse. The boy was
very happy, for
they would have so much to eat that surely his uncle would
feed him well that night
and he began to turn back, but the uncle shook his head again. "No,"
he said, "we must
go on."
Finally, they came to a place very, very far in the forest where
the boy had not been
before. There was a great cliff and at its base a cave led into
the rock. The opening
to the cave was large enough only for a small person to go into.
"There are animals hiding
in there," the uncle said. "You must crawl in and chase them
out so that I can shoot them
with my arrows."
The cave was very dark and it looked cold inside, but the boy remembered
what his parents
had taught him. He crawled into the cave. There were leaves
and stones, but there were no
animals. He reached the very end of the cave and turned back,
ashamed that he had not
fulfilled his uncle's expectations. And do you know what he
saw? He saw his uncle rolling
a great stone in front of the mouth of the cave. And then everything
was dark.
The boy tried to move the stone, but it was no use. He was trapped!
At first he was afraid,
but then he remembered what his parents had told him. The orenda
of those who are good at
heart is very strong. If you do good and have faith, good
things will come to you. This
made the boy happy and he began to sing a song. The song was
about himself, a boy who had
no parents and needed friends. As he sang, his song grew louder,
until he forgot he was
trapped in a cave. But then he heard a scratching noise outside
and stopped singing, thinking
his uncle had come back to let him out of the cave.
However, as soon as he heard the first of many voices outside his
cave, he knew that he was
wrong. That high squeaking voice was not the voice of his
uncle. "We should help this boy,"
said the high squeaking voice.
"Yes," said a very deep voice which sounded warm and loving. "He
is all alone and needs help.
There is no doubt that we should help him."
"One of us," said another voice, "will have to adopt him."
And then many other voices, voices of all kinds which seemed to
speak in many languages agreed.
The strange thing was that the boy could understand all these
voices, strange as they were.
Then the stone began to move and light streamed into the cave,
blinding the boy who had been
in the darkness for a long time. He crawled out, very stiff
and cold, and looked around him.
He was surrounded by many animals!
"Now that we have rescued you," said a small voice from near his
feet, "you must choose which
of us will be your parents now." He looked down and saw that the
one who was speaking was a
mole.
"Yes," said a great moose standing in the trees. "You must choose
one of us." "Thank you,"
said the boy. You are all so kind. But how can I choose which one
of you will be my parents?"
"I know," said the mole. "Let us all tell him what we are like and
what kind of lives we lead
and he can decide." There was general agreement on that, and
so the animals began to come up
to the boy one by one.
"I'll begin," said the mole. "I live under the earth and dig my tunnels
through the Earth Mother.
It is very dark and cozy in my tunnels and we have plenty
of worms and grubs to eat."
"That sounds very good," said the boy, "but I am afraid that I am
too big to go into your
tunnels, friend Mole."
"Come and live with me," said the beaver. "I live in a fine lodge
in the midst of a pond.
We beavers eat the best bark from the sweetest trees and we dive
under the water and sleep
in our lodge in the winter time."
"Your life is very interesting too," said the boy, "but I cannot
eat bark, and I know that
I would freeze in the cold waters of your pond."
"How about me?" said the wolf. "I run through the woods and fields
and I catch all the small
animals I want to eat. I live in a warm den and you would
do well to come with me.
"You too are very kind," said the boy, "but all of the animals have
been so kind to me I would
not feel right eating them."
"You could be my child," said the deer. "Run with us through the
forest and eat the twigs of
the trees and the grass of the fields."
"No, friend deer," the boy said, "You are beautiful and good, but
you are so fast that I would
be left far behind you."
Then an old bear-woman walked over to the boy. She looked at him
a long time before she talked
and when she spoke her voice was like a growling song.
"You can come with us and be a bear," she said. "We bears move slowly
and speak with harsh
voices, but our hearts are warm. We eat the berries and the roots
which grow in the forest and
our fur would keep you warm in the long season cold."
"Yes," said the boy, "I would like to be a bear. I will come with
you and you will be my family
." So the boy who had no family went to live with the bears. The
mother bear had two other
children and they became brothers to the boy. They would roll
and play together and soon the
boy was almost as strong as a bear.
"Be careful, though," the old bear-woman cautioned him. "Your brothers'
claws are sharp and
wherever they scratch you, you will grow hair just like them." They
lived together a long time
in the forest and the old bear-woman taught the boy many things.
One day they were all in the forest seeking berries when the bear-woman
motioned them to
silence.
"Listen," she said. "There is a hunter." They listened and, sure
enough, they heard the
sounds of a man walking. The old bear-woman smiled. "We have nothing
to fear from him,"
she said. "He is the heavy- stepper and the twigs and the leaves
of the forest speak of him
wherever he goes."
Another time as they walked along, the old bear- woman again motioned
them to silence.
"Listen," she said. "Another hunter." They listened and soon they
heard the sound of singing .
The old bear- woman smiled. "That one too is not dangerous.
He is the flapping-mouth, the one
who talks as he hunts and does not remember that everything
in the forest has ears. We bears
can hear singing even if it is only thought, and not spoken."
So they lived on happily until one day when the old bear-woman motioned
them to silence, a
frightened look in her eyes. "Listen," she said, "the one who hunts
on two-legs and four-legs.
This one is very dangerous to us, and we must hope he does not find
us, for the four-legs who
hunts with him can follow our tracks wherever we go and the man
himself does not give up until
he has caught whatever it is that he is hunting for."
Just then they heard the sound of a dog barking "Run for your lives,"
cried the old bear-woman
"The four-legs has caught our scent."
And so they ran, the boy and the three bears. They ran across streams
and up hills, but still
the sound of the dog followed them. They ran through swamps and
thickets, but the hunters were
still close behind. They crossed ravines and forced their
way through patches of thorns, but
could not escape the sounds of pursuit. Finally, their hearts ready
to burst from exhaustion,
the old bear-woman and the boy and the two bear-brothers came to
a great hollow log. "It is our
last hope," said the old bear-woman. "Go inside."
They crawled into the log and waited, panting and afraid. For a time,
there was no sound and
then the noise of the dog sniffing at the end of their log
came to their cars. The old
bear-woman growled and the dog did not dare to come in after them.
Then, once again, things
were quiet and the boy began to hope that his family would
be safe, but his hopes were
quickly shattered when he smelled smoke. The resourceful hunter
had piled branches at the
end of the log and was going to smoke them out!
"Wait," cried the boy in a loud voice. "Do not harm my friends."
"Who is speaking?" shouted a familiar voice from outside the log.
"Is there a human being
inside there?" There came the sound of branches being kicked away
from the mouth of the log
and then the smoke stopped. The boy crawled out and looked into
the face of the hunter--it was
his uncle!!
"My nephew!" cried the uncle with tears in his eyes. "Is it truly
you? I came back to the cave
where I left you, realizing that I had been a cruel and foolish
man . . . but you were gone
and there were only the tracks of many animals. I thought
they had killed you.
And it was true. Before the uncle had reached home, he had realized
that he had been a wicked
person. He had turned back, resolved to treat the son of his
own sister well from then on.
His grief had truly been great when he had found him gone.
"It is me," said the boy. "I have been cared for by the bears. They
are like my family now,
Uncle. Please do not harm them."
The uncle tied his hunting dog to a tree as he nodded his agreement.
"Bring out your friends.
I will always be the friend of bears from now on if what you
say is true."
Uncertain and still somewhat afraid, the old bear- woman and her
two sons came out of the log.
They talked to the boy with words which sounded to the uncle
like nothing more than animals
growling and told him that he must now be a human being again.
"We will always be your friends," said the old bear-woman and she
shuffled into the forest after
her two sons. "And you will remember what it is to know the
warmth of an animal's heart."
And so the boy returned to live a long and happy life with his uncle.
A friend to the bears and
all the animals for as long as he lived.
The story came from my friend Lightingcloud
TEACH ME THE WAY:
Creator..Teach me Compassion, Forgiveness
and Selflessness. May my journey be one of Honor and Respect.
May I always follow my heart without regret. Allow my Spirit
To see the beauty -To Believe with Innocence To create new
Hope where there is none and to always follow the beckoning
call of Great Spirit - whispering from above.
As I tilt my head toward the sky so that my eyes may see
That you are only a prayer away