Home base, in
Hereafter, is this world rather than the Other Side. Depictions of the
afterlife that intrigue me most are those that take us deeper into Otherworld
geography, especially those in which the Otherworld is home base. Here are
notes on a few of my favorite Hollywood visions of the afterlife in classic
movies, and conversation themes they suggest. .
- Dreaming is the best and
easiest way to talk to the departed. The vital importance of dream communication with the
departed is brought home by the movie The Sixth Sense. A psychic boy meets the Bruce Willis character, a
man who had recently died but is foggy about his situation and distraught
because he can no longer touch or talk to his wife. When he tries to speak
to her she can’t hear him. The boy tells the dead guy how to proceed:
"Speak to her in her dreams, only then will she hear you".
- Why the departed stay
earthbound or feel obliged to play tricks. The wonderful movie Ghost is
quite instructive on how the Departed can stay earthbound through
addictions and desires (witness the smoker on the subway, desperate for a
last drag), and how and why the Departed may feel compelled to produce
physical effects to get attention from survivors
- - The afterlife journey (like
this one) is all about love and courage. The hilarious Albert Brooks comedy Defending Your
Life gives a quite plausible version
of a process of afterlife review and assessment, and makes the vital point
that our courage – or lack of it – and our ability to love, and express
that love, may be central to our progression in any world.
- In the reality we inhabit after
death, thoughts are things. The
movie What
Dreams May Come dramatizes the
fact that on the imaginal plane – which we enter in dreams and journeys,
and where the Departed may find or build their homes, at least for a time
– “thoughts are things”. This is a real world, but it is a world whose
substance is ideoplastic; in other words, it will take on the shapes of our
strongest thoughts and desires. To do well here, on either side of death,
it is necessary to train the imagination
-
Movie stars can get to know a few things about the afterlife from sources other
than movie scripts. According to Dan Aykroyd (the star of Ghostbusters), John Belushi reached out to living people
after his death, desperate for help to get to a better life situation than the
one he found himself in after he checked out through a dug overdose. Aykroyd
said on the Larry King Show back in 2004 that a mutual friend called Isaac had
a dream encounter in which Belushi asked for help in order to go into the
Light. The reality of this contact seemed to be confirmed by the fact that
Belushi used a personal name for his grandmother (“Nana”) that the dreamer did
not recognize, but was known to Belushi’s widow. “So Isaac did a meditation
with this woman that he worked with her inLos Angeles, and they had a vision of
John, you know, extricating himself from bad circumstance, call it Limbo or the
Bardo region, Purgatory. And they were able to cross him over into the light.”
This is a very old note awaiting update. I am interested in seeing recommendations and mini-reviews from others.
No comments:
Post a Comment