In most human societies, preparation for death and the afterlife is a central part of life. The practice of the ars moriendi -the art of dying - does not reflect some morbid preoccupation. It is actually life-affirming rather than life-denying. By coming to know Death as a friend, you release the energy you have invested in trying to bottle up your darkest fears. When you establish for yourself — through personal experience — that there is life after life, you will find you take a more relaxed and generous view of the vicissitudes of everyday life. When you examine your life from the standpoint of your death, you will surely find that there is no reason to perpetuate old quarrels and jealousies. You will wish to put things right between yourself and others, to give up petty agendas and live fully and creatively for the years allotted to you.
In postindustrial
Western societies, the neglect of the art of dying has led to a vogue for
spiritual practices drawn from other traditions, such as Tibetan Buddhism,
which offers a detailed geography of the afterlife that may or may not be
relevant to you if you are not a Tibetan Buddhist. Our general neglect is fed
by both fear and denial. The denial thrives on our hurry sickness, our tendency
to fill up our time with compulsive, external activities — interspersed with
infusions of passive consumer entertainment, IV-fed through the TV tubes —
leaving no space for the inner search. Filling our lives with a bustle of
responsibilities that leaves us with “no time” to commune with soul is
mockingly described by a Tibetan master as “housekeeping in a dream.” Sögyal
Rinpoche asks, “Would anyone in their right mind think of laboriously
redecorating their hotel room every time they booked into one?
Our fear of death is
bound up with our confusion about who we are. We fear losing all the props,
connections, and résumés that we confuse with identity. We are terrified of
being stripped of rank and title and credit cards and cell phones and being
sent naked into the next world, as Inanna must descend naked into the
underworld.
Your death is a
rather important subject, not just the when and how, but the question of what
follows, and what it all means. On a subject this vital and this intimate, you
would be ill-advised to take answers on trust from other people. But how can we
know before dying what lies on the other side, and know this as personal truth?
In two ways: through a visitation by
a resident of the Otherworld whose information can be verified; or by soul
travel, by making a personal journey
to the Other Side. My book Conscious Dreaming
explores dream visitations by the departed. Here I want to suggest a variety of techniques by which you can embark on conscious dream journeys to
explore the conditions of the afterlife for yourself.
An art of dying adequate to our needs and yearnings today must address at least these five key areas:
Practice in dream travel and journeying beyond the body. By practicing the projection of consciousness beyond the physical plane, we settle any personal doubts about the soul’s survival of physical death.
Developing a personal geography of the afterlife. Through conscious dream journeys, we can visit “ex-physicals” — and their teachers — in their own environments. We can explore a variety of transit areas and reception centers, adapted to the expectations and comfort levels of different types of people, where the recently departed are helped to adapt to their new circumstances. We can tour the “collective belief territories,” some established centuries or millennia ago, where ex-physicals participate ins hared activities and religious practices. We can examine processes of life review, reeducation, and judgment and follow the transition of spirits between different after-death states. We can also study the different fates of different vehicles of consciousness after physical death.
Helping the dying. The application of insights and techniques gained in these explorations to helping the dying through what some hospice nurses describe as the “nearing death experience.” In many of our hospitals (where most Westerners die) death is treated as a failure, or merely the loss of vital signs, followed by a pulled-out plug, a disconnected respirator, and the disposal of the remains. As we recover the art of dying, many of us in all walks of life — not only ministers and health care professionals and hospice volunteers — will be able to play the role of companion on the deathwalk, helping the dying to approach the next life with grace and courage and to make the last seasons of this life a period of personal growth. The skills required in this area include the ability to communicate on a soul level with patients who are in coma, are unable to speak or reason clearly, or have suffered severe memory loss. A vital aspect of this work is facilitating or mediating contact between the dying and helpers on the other side — especially departed loved ones — who can give assistance through the transition. Dreamwork and meditation are invaluable tools in helping the dying to prepare for the conditions of life beyond the body.
Helping the departed. We pray for our dead in our churches and temples, and no good intention is ever wasted. However, you may have a hard time finding a priest who is willing to take on the role of psychopomp, or guide of souls, and provide personal escort service to spirits of the departed who have lost their way and gotten stuck between the worlds, causing pain and confusion to themselves and sometimes to their survivors. Yet the living have a crucial role to play in helping to release earthbound or troubled spirits. For one thing, some of these “ex-physicals” seem to trust people who have physical bodies more than entities that do not, because there is comfort in the familiar, because they did not believe in an afterlife before passing on — or quite simply because they do not know they are dead. An art of dying for our times must include the ability to dialogue with these spirits and help them to find their right path.
Making death your ally. Finally, we are challenged to reach into the place of our deepest fears and master them: to face our own death on its own ground and re-value our lives and our purpose from this perspective. When we “brave up” enough to confront our personal Death and receive its teaching, we forge an alliance that is a source of power and healing in every aspect of life. We may now be able to carry a sense of divine comedy that can help us weather whatever life throws at us on a given day.
Art: "Storm Bird Brings Me Back" by Robert Moss
Text adapted from Dreamgates: Exploring the Worlds of Soul, Imagination and Life Beyond Death. by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library. Here you will find detailed practices and travel repots.
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