10-29-2016, 12:14 PM
This is an interesting question to canvass, and reading the responses is also interesting.
I know in martial arts training that almost no one reacts the way they think they will. Shock can make us freeze, when we experience something too far out the known. A good example is when people see extraterrestrials such as in Whitley Strieber's accounts—reactions are off the charts because though we may speculate how we would react, the reality is different.
In the Seth material, Seth talks about guides, volunteers, a welcoming team (can't recall what he calls them specifically) on the "other side" who set up a stage show for those who need it when they die. For instance, a devout Christian would see Jesus or other biblical characters in a heaven-like setting, to ease them into the idea that they have died and everything is okay.
I personally don't know what comes next. It makes sense that something does. My focus is on this world and what I do here. And in my worst moments, when I feel I want out of here, then I remind myself that I may have a mission here, and if I were to check out before that is complete, I can see myself saying from the "other side," ***!, why didn't I just hang in there a little longer no matter how hard?
The revelation Einstein discovered, that the speed of light is the constant, is a clue from the scientific perspective that there is an underlying cohesiveness to this universe. It suggests that there is something—light—which isn't touched by entropy or even evolution. It could be said to be infinite, even from an empirical standpoint. This aligns with the Ra material and the logos, and the progression toward light. This is one of many reasons I eat a plant-based diet, and not dead corpses—to bring more light into my physical body. For, even though the physical body is ephemeral, each addition to the whole of existence matters (in my opinion). This is just my path however, and if there are those who approach evolution differently that's not my responsibility.
To answer the OP, I would say I am not afraid. There are rare moments, though, when a feeling of enormity hits me, in that death is really unknown and it feels very unsettling. I usually recognize this feeling as the ego fearing death, and yet this is just human speculation. No matter how much we think we know, when has a human, veiled and mired here, ever known it all?
I know in martial arts training that almost no one reacts the way they think they will. Shock can make us freeze, when we experience something too far out the known. A good example is when people see extraterrestrials such as in Whitley Strieber's accounts—reactions are off the charts because though we may speculate how we would react, the reality is different.
In the Seth material, Seth talks about guides, volunteers, a welcoming team (can't recall what he calls them specifically) on the "other side" who set up a stage show for those who need it when they die. For instance, a devout Christian would see Jesus or other biblical characters in a heaven-like setting, to ease them into the idea that they have died and everything is okay.
I personally don't know what comes next. It makes sense that something does. My focus is on this world and what I do here. And in my worst moments, when I feel I want out of here, then I remind myself that I may have a mission here, and if I were to check out before that is complete, I can see myself saying from the "other side," ***!, why didn't I just hang in there a little longer no matter how hard?
The revelation Einstein discovered, that the speed of light is the constant, is a clue from the scientific perspective that there is an underlying cohesiveness to this universe. It suggests that there is something—light—which isn't touched by entropy or even evolution. It could be said to be infinite, even from an empirical standpoint. This aligns with the Ra material and the logos, and the progression toward light. This is one of many reasons I eat a plant-based diet, and not dead corpses—to bring more light into my physical body. For, even though the physical body is ephemeral, each addition to the whole of existence matters (in my opinion). This is just my path however, and if there are those who approach evolution differently that's not my responsibility.
To answer the OP, I would say I am not afraid. There are rare moments, though, when a feeling of enormity hits me, in that death is really unknown and it feels very unsettling. I usually recognize this feeling as the ego fearing death, and yet this is just human speculation. No matter how much we think we know, when has a human, veiled and mired here, ever known it all?