I think today’s topic
is relevant for everyone. Death is inevitable for all of us, and most people have
some degree of fear or trepidation when facing it. It is not a question of
intelligence with fear of death relegated to only the less intelligent. In
fact, some of the most intelligent people in history have exhibited great fear
at the prospect of their physical death. John Von Neumann, who many consider
the greatest mathematician of the twentieth century and probably the smartest
person alive in the first half of the last century, was said to be terrified of
his own death when the end approached (see http://www.eoht.info/page/John+Neumann).
The most intelligent
people may exhibit even greater fear than that of the average person because
their intelligence has served them well in the material world where they have
been able to control many aspects of their lives as well as events surrounding
them. Death is an unknown for them where their physical abilities will no
longer be relevant. And I think this scares them. Also, many of the most
intelligent people are either atheists or agnostic. They do not have a belief
in the afterlife to comfort them as they approach their end.
I believe the study
and interpretation of one’s dreams can help alleviate the fear of death. Edgar
Cayce, the famous twentieth-century psychic and mystic, said that in our dreams
we were closer to the state we experience after death. If you seriously study
your dreams, not just examining an occasional one that seems unusual, I think
you will find much evidence that an aspect of you transcends the physical self.
In time, you will experience the great movement of your consciousness to other
places that occurs regularly when you sleep. Some will say that it is all in
the mind and only part of the activity of the physical brain when we sleep.
However, dream events will occur that cannot be explained by scientific
theories that limit the mind to the brain.
A simple example of
this is a visit to a place far away where you see events taking place that are
only reported to your conscious self later on. Perhaps you see a family member
or friend involved in some activity, experiencing a problem, or undergoing a
great change in their state. In your dream, you may see in considerable detail
what is occurring, even though you have had no direct contact with the person
for some time. And the occurrence in the dream may not be related to his or her
normal activity and your knowledge of them. You might dream that they
experienced a fire, which you witness in the dream, only to later learn that
they experienced a fire on the day of your dream. Now if this only occurs once,
you might pass it off to a coincidence. However, regular study of your dreams
will make it clear that this is a common occurrence.
Often, when I awake
and reflect on my dreams, I realize that I have had a very busy time during my
hours of sleep. The actual day may have been uneventful, but I may experience
events and situations that leave me exhausted from all that I have witnessed
and experienced in my dreams, from personal local events to national and world
events. Your subconscious will tune into information of relevance or interest
to you and filter out everything else. If someone you know has an undiagnosed
cancer, you may dream about it because of your closeness to him or her. You
won’t dream about the thousands of other people with undiagnosed cancer because
they are not relevant to you in a personal way.
In your dreams, you
may attend weddings, sit in on lectures, and visit cities of interest to your
conscious self. Your wanderings can be far and wide because you no longer have
the physical limitation. Edgar Cayce, in his readings while in a self-induced
trance, sometimes described the street and buildings he passed as his
consciousness went to the location of the person requesting the reading. He even
described any unusual activities of the people he passed, which were later
verified as occurring at the time of the reading.
You are not your
physical body. Your physical body is your expression in a corporeal world, but
you are not limited to it or by it. The study of your dreams will make that
very clear. After many years of dream work, I am as comfortable in my dreams as
in the waking state. I can pass from one state to another with ease. The real
work is done in my dreams because I first dream about future events before they
occur. The events I will meet in the physical are first encountered in my
dreams before becoming physical. This gives me an opportunity to make conscious
changes in my life if I don’t like what is being built in my dreams. And it allows
me to prepare myself psychologically for events I cannot change, such as
hurricane Erma discussed in a previous post.
Mystics talk about the
connectivity of all life. You don’t have to be a mystic to experience this; you
can experience it in your dreams. A study of your dreams will soon make it
clear that we are all connected in terms of consciousness. We are not the
separate isolated beings that some think we are. “Thoughts are things,” as
Edgar Cayce frequently said, and they exist independent of the brain. Our
thoughts affect others and their thoughts affect us. We are all part of a
glorious tapestry that that is interwoven through our shared consciousness, not
simply our conscious mind. The conscious mind is only one part of us that rises
to address the physical world and may become quite deluded. The deeper layers
of consciousness reach far beyond our physical bodies to the Eternal and have a
clearer perspective on our real nature and purpose, which is related in dreams
to those with a sincere purpose to seek guidance and discover the truth.
Death is merely a
transition from one state to another. I would be disingenuous if I said I was
not apprehensive about the possible pain associated with death. However, I have
no apprehension about what happens after death. If you want to understand death
and remove any fear of death, study your dreams.
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