11-28-2019, 10:01 PM
I was wondering about ghosts and how they fit into the scheme.
Firstly, does a being experience death of the body, or is the trick that everyone’s conscious experience transforms into something else before the body dies (or comes full circle) and what every individual experiences before that happens includes the death of other-selves, and in this way an assumption is held by most living humans by logical process that they will also experience this process?
The process which I am describing can be summarised as following: The physical body reaches a point where, by failure of processes, caused by age, sickness or traumatic impact, shuts down and stops functioning. Movement and autonomous functions such as breathing and beating of the heart cease and a gradual decay begins to occur. This can be observed in most forms of life at some point for the individuated portions.
As we observe this in our external reality, which contains apparatus of the same kind by which we interpret and experience that around us, it is rational for us to believe that at some point we will witness or observe ourselves, the physical complex which we seemingly “inhabit”, also bearing witness to this process.
Firstly I would like to ask, is this assumption true? If we are merely the dead flesh, it would seem perfectly logical that the body shares this fate, and thus because we are the body, we would experience it too. Do “we” experience the death of the body?
Ra talks about a spirit and mind element to the physical complex. If we are also this portion, does it mean that when the physical complex dies, we continue on in mind and spirit in some way - and if this is so, are we able to enact our free will in this form?
If we do remain inhabiting the sphere in some way after the death of the physical complex, what is the period between the death and when the entity is either harvested or chooses to reincarnate on another sphere of appropriate density?
Is time experienced in the same way as when the complex is functioning? Or because the human brain is not presently operating for this portion is time not experienced as such? During the life of the body, it would seem that we are “here” for a long time. It does not strike me as a pleasant thought to think that the experience could continue in its unpleasant form even after the cessation of neurological process.
Consider that the harvest is said to occur in a 75,000 year cycle. (Or 25,000 years in portion). Say that a complex dies in the 12,000th year of a cycle. Would this mean that for the remaining 13,000 years the mind and spirit of that being would remain in the sphere. And if that being was neither positive nor negative that at the end of the cycle it would not proceed with the rest of the planet, but “fall back down”? I ask this because the 25 years I have been alive feel like an eternity. I could not imagine remaining here for hundreds or thousands of years more.
Firstly, does a being experience death of the body, or is the trick that everyone’s conscious experience transforms into something else before the body dies (or comes full circle) and what every individual experiences before that happens includes the death of other-selves, and in this way an assumption is held by most living humans by logical process that they will also experience this process?
The process which I am describing can be summarised as following: The physical body reaches a point where, by failure of processes, caused by age, sickness or traumatic impact, shuts down and stops functioning. Movement and autonomous functions such as breathing and beating of the heart cease and a gradual decay begins to occur. This can be observed in most forms of life at some point for the individuated portions.
As we observe this in our external reality, which contains apparatus of the same kind by which we interpret and experience that around us, it is rational for us to believe that at some point we will witness or observe ourselves, the physical complex which we seemingly “inhabit”, also bearing witness to this process.
Firstly I would like to ask, is this assumption true? If we are merely the dead flesh, it would seem perfectly logical that the body shares this fate, and thus because we are the body, we would experience it too. Do “we” experience the death of the body?
Ra talks about a spirit and mind element to the physical complex. If we are also this portion, does it mean that when the physical complex dies, we continue on in mind and spirit in some way - and if this is so, are we able to enact our free will in this form?
If we do remain inhabiting the sphere in some way after the death of the physical complex, what is the period between the death and when the entity is either harvested or chooses to reincarnate on another sphere of appropriate density?
Is time experienced in the same way as when the complex is functioning? Or because the human brain is not presently operating for this portion is time not experienced as such? During the life of the body, it would seem that we are “here” for a long time. It does not strike me as a pleasant thought to think that the experience could continue in its unpleasant form even after the cessation of neurological process.
Consider that the harvest is said to occur in a 75,000 year cycle. (Or 25,000 years in portion). Say that a complex dies in the 12,000th year of a cycle. Would this mean that for the remaining 13,000 years the mind and spirit of that being would remain in the sphere. And if that being was neither positive nor negative that at the end of the cycle it would not proceed with the rest of the planet, but “fall back down”? I ask this because the 25 years I have been alive feel like an eternity. I could not imagine remaining here for hundreds or thousands of years more.