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metgat : blind groper Embracing Death

Embracing Death

Posted on Dec 7th, 2006 by metgat : blind groper metgat
 

After becoming aware of this site and noting its objectives a few weeks ago, I decided I wanted to be part of it.  However, after joining and further exploring the various pods and pod tags, I found it strange that a site dealing in good part with consciousness, enlightenment, and spiritual matters does not seem to have a single one dealing with death.

   

I suspect that comment will draw puzzled expressions and raised eyebrows.  "We're about living, not about death," many will no doubt respond.  Let me reply by suggesting that we can only fully live by understanding death...and embracing it.


Before anyone jumps to the conclusion that I am in need of psychiatric help, let me call on several esteemed men to support my position.


The eminent Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung said that it is psychologically beneficial to have death as a goal toward which to strive. Mozart called death the key to unlocking the door to true happiness.  Shakespeare wrote that when we are prepared for death, life is sweeter.   The French philosopher Michel de Montaigne said that "to practice death is to practice freedom."


Strange ideas to most, but these great men drank deep from the fountain of wisdom and understood life's greatest paradox --  that in embracing death we can live a fuller, more enjoyable more meaningful life.


 "Death is indeed a fearful piece of brutality," Jung offered.  "There is no sense in pretending otherwise.   It is brutal, not only as a physical event but far more so psychically. [However] from another point of view, death appears a joyful event. In the light of eternity, it is a wedding, a mysterium conjunctionis.   The soul attains, as it were, its missing half.  It achieves wholeness."


It's difficult for most Western materialists, whether they subscribe to a religion or not, to comprehend such sage reasoning.   "The idea of death, the fear of it, haunts the human mind like nothing else," wrote anthropologist Ernest Becker in his 1974 Pulitzer prize-winning book, The Denial of Death.  Becker explained that to free oneself of death anxiety, nearly everyone chooses the path of repression.   We bury the idea of death deep in the subconscious and then busy ourselves with our jobs, partake of certain pleasures, strut in our new clothes, show off our polished cars, hit little white balls into round holes, escape into fictitious stories in books, at the movies, and on television, experience vicarious thrills at sporting events, pursue material wealth, and seek a mundane security that we expect to continue indefinitely, all the while oblivious to the fact that in the great scheme of things such activities are exceedingly short-term and for the most part meaningless.   Becker refers to this "secure" person as the "automatic cultural man."  He is "man confined by culture, a slave to it, who imagines that he has an identity if he pays his insurance premiums, that he has control of his life if he guns his sports car or works his electric toothbrush."


Becker's "automatic cultural man" is a modern description of Kierkegaard's "Philistine."   For Kierkegaard, Philistinism was man fully concerned with the trivial.  Of course, if we are not completely selfish, we also involve ourselves in loving, caring for, and serving others.  Those acts seem to at least partially give meaning to our lives and validate our existence, until we ask:  If our loved are simply marching toward nothingness with us, what is the point of it all?   And then, one day, perhaps when it becomes apparent that our days are numbered, those repressed anxieties relating to death begin welling up into the consciousness.  We proceed to live our final years under a dark and increasingly foreboding shadow.  For the most part, the muddled information provided by orthodox religion offers little relief, little comfort.


Becker called repression of death the enemy of mankind.  The theme of his book is that the unrepressed life can bring into birth a new man.   Robert Jay Lifton, a distinguished professor of psychiatry and psychology, says much the same thing in his book, The Broken Connection. He states that we must "know death" in order to live with free imagination.


As I understand it, knowing death is what Montaigne called practicing death, a term which seems to have originated with Socrates.  As he put it, according to Plato, practicing death is merely pursuing philosophy "in the right way" and learning how "to face death easily."   It also has been referred to as embracing death. 


The key to living the unrepressed life, according to Becker and Lifton, is having a sense of immortality, a firm belief that our earthly life is part of a much larger and eternal life. Lifton points out that there are some who can derive satisfaction out of a biological sense of immortality, that there will be a "living on" through one's progeny.  There is also the creative mode, whereby one "lives on" through his or her works of art, literature, or science.  However, when we begin to ask ourselves to which generation full fruition, to what end the legacy, such views seem pretty foolish and myopic.


The bottom line is that we must accept the survival of consciousness at death in order to free ourselves from the fetters that bind us to our culture's negative view of death. Unfortunately, orthodox religion, especially the Judeo-Christian form, has done little to help us understand the survival of consciousness.  It tells us that faith alone is all that is necessary.  Yet, all the practicing Jews and Christians that I know - and I know quite a few - seem to fit into Becker's "automatic cultural man" mold, escaping from death anxiety through the use of repression.  Most of them strive to be one with their toys, rather than ONE with the Creator.  Death is a monster to be feared.


It is only when we permit ourselves to make sense of the Bible, to understand its contradictions, its apparent distortions over the centuries, and its different interpretations, that we can begin to understand death and the survival of consciousness.  But we must first recognize that revelation did not end with the Bible,  that it is continuing today, through mediums (called "prophets" in the Bible), through near-death experiencers and other out-of-body experiencers, through automatic writers, and through inspired writers.    We are continually receiving messages designed to help us better understand what this life is all about and how it ties in with the "larger life."


True, there are many frauds calling themselves mediums or psychics and there is something to be said for warnings in Scripture that we "should not consult the dead" (Deuteronomy 18:12-13).  If the medium is not a charlatan, the messages may very well come from immature or earthbound spirits.   That is why the Bible also tells us to "test the spirits whether they are of God" (John 4:1) and that we should be "discerning of the spirits" (1 Corinthians 12:10).


If we test, discern, and analyze all of the modern revelation, we can begin to see meaning in the underlying messages of Scripture and other ancient writings, myths, traditions, and supposed superstitions.   We can to some degree visualize the larger life, finding purpose in this one and better understanding the next one.  We see that there is a divine plan and that it is not governed by the cruel, capricious, vindictive, wrathful intelligence of the Old Testament, one who offers the alternative of a horrific hell or humdrum heaven. We see a plan of attainment and attunement, of gradual spiritual growth, of evolution of spirit through progressively "higher" planes.


To me, embracing death or practicing death means moving from either skepticism or blind faith to conviction by continually searching for higher truths, cultivating an awareness of the larger life, and then being able to visualize other realms of existence.   This is done through constant metaphysical study, through testing, analyzing, and discerning both ancient and modern revelation, through meditating, praying, and pondering, through seeking, serving, striving, struggling, surrendering, sacrificing, and, finally, solving and soaring.


In embracing death, or practicing death, one does not live in the past or the future, not even in the present. He lives in eternity, which is the only true way to live in the present as well as to live in the past, present, and future at the same time.


Practicing death does not mean locking oneself up and hiding from the rest of the world while pursuing enlightenment. It simply means putting priority on searching for Truth so that we can better love and serve our fellow humans in what time we have left. That search might not take any more than an hour a day, the time many of us spend on physical exercise to assure a particular quality of life.  However, that hour a day should gradually allow us to better understand life, to savor it, to harmonize with it, to find inner peace, tranquility, and repose, to move closer to being one with the Creator, and to make a graceful transition to the world of higher vibration when the time is right.


The alternative to embracing death or practicing death, as I see it, is living out one's final years by doing not much more than growing gray, griping, groaning, groping, growling, grabbing, and grieving -- the path followed by Becker's automatic cultural man.


 I would like to invite those who have read this far to go to the Academy of Spirituality and Paranormal Studies, Inc. website at http://www.lightlink.com/arpr/

and explore it, especially the "Life After Death" button at the bottom of the list.   Consider the evidence for survival and grab onto it.  I believe that this evidence will help you move from psuedo-skepticism, skepticism, or blind faith to conviction and from there to finding meaning in this life.


"Let us have nothing more in mind than death," said Montaigne. "At every instant, let us evoke it in our imagination under all aspects.  Let us wait for it everywhere."

Access_public Access: Public 3 Comments Print Send views (1,544)  
Sangey Dorje : Special Educator - walking again
about 21 hours later
Sangey Dorje said

good post, my friend.

This is a cogent observation, not only of Zaadz, but of our modern society in general. When ‘60 is the new 40,’ and other such slogans bombard us, we witness the aging, the graying of the boomer generation.

One of my students was murdered over the Thanksgiving weekend, and this got me thinking about the topic again.

I was a combat soldier in wartime. I was not a hero, but people did try to kill me, and I did my best to kill them. I saw friends and enemies die.

I am an old man; I have watched family die. I have buried parents, relatives, and friends.

I am a teacher. I have buried students who never lived beyond the adolescent illusion of immortality and invulnerability.

Death is with us always. Many of us choose not to see it, because it questions the strength and very nature of our faith. It is still with us, It walks with us every where we go. It is not dressed in silk and vibrant colors, not a super-villan or the ‘big bad’ in a video game. For most of us, it is not be as dramatic as a 9-11 attack, not the moment of supreme glory. Statistically, death for most of us will be as banal as an icy spot on the road or a bad burrito at a fast-food joint. It will be an accident, a disease, or the simple yet inevitable wearing out of our own bodies.

Death will be with us always, walking at our sides. Many of us, perhaps most of us, ignore it.
For some of us, our faith allows us to quietly go about with death at our sides. We are aware of its presence. We use this as a reminder that each moment can be our last.

How do I spend this last moment on earth?

Do I spend it doing good, or simply watching the world go by?
Do I spend it trying to preserve the precious Dharma,
trying to help a friend,
or comfort someone who needs relief?

If all I do is carry the weight of the world on my shoulders, I bid death come sooner and relieve me of my burden. No, I must also take time to take care of myself. I can do no good for others If I cannot take care of myself. I must find a balance - as do we all.

So, do we forget death and waste our lives in blissful ignorance, falsely secure in the delusion that ‘there’s always tomorrow’ to make it right? Do we live in fear and apprehension, coveting each second and mourning each sunset? Or, do we make a friend of death, and allow it to inform our actions?

just a thought - a reaction.

metgat : blind groper
about 22 hours later
metgat said

Sangey,

Thank you for your very thoughtful response, with which I fully agree. Just before logging on to this site, I was checking other e-mail and someone forwarded on to me a very colorful picture of Arlington Cemetery with all the Christmas wreaths on the graves, etc., along with a prayer that said, “sleep well, my friends,” and other words suggesting that those who have passed on are “sleeping” in their graves.  That is so much fundamentalist BS and is at the root of the problem.  There is a preponderance of evidence that we do not “sleep” until some far off day of judgment.  True, many souls passing over may be in a dream state and not know they have actually “died,” i.e., they think they are still their physical shells, but it is not “sleep” in the sense that fundamentalists believe.  How can one  “befriend” death if he thinks he is going to sleep in the grave for the next 100 to 10,000 or so years?   Some people ask me how one cannot know he or she has died.  My response to them is to ask them if they know they are “alive” when they are dreaming.  

 

ToltecLogic : Poet Artist
2 days later
ToltecLogic said

Of course it is an old Taoist axiom that if we wish to be more fully alive
then we should “Learn to die before we die”. It is also a sort of right of
passage in most indiginous cultures in one form or another setting
the ground for a more meaningful life. Whereas in western modern
society the intellect is king, our rational temporal continuity is a
reflection of our own unique dream of the planet rich with ego and
sensual gratifications essentially we 'amuze ourselves to death'. So,
what you are suggesting might sound strange by conventional
standards, when in fact as you have pointed out it is a long held truism
among the more evolved among us who have seen beyond the limitations
of  typical mundanity as it is propagated through out our history. I think it
was Thoreau who noted - quite accurately i might add - that the vast
majority of people lead lives in 'silent desperation.' We live by proxy
for the most part the slaves to infinite distractions, what was that book
Understanding Media' by Marshal McLulan way back in the 60's about
community and self identity, if anything our culture is even more hard
wired to embrace the basic tenates of Orwell's '1984'. And even those
of us who strive for something more resembling a natural peaceful
existance fall victim to information overload… There is an expert on
every corner promoting self improvement and personal power or the
latest amalgamation of mind body and spirit usually with the primary
emphasis on the body aspect pleasure principle as the true means
to awakening… Yep we do tend live all in our heads and neglect this
true heart connection with all things - this notion of oneness that is the
result of meaningful recapitulation or simply learning to 'die before
we die' where the past falls away as we stand firmly liberated in the
present moment… as Jung says, this immortal capacity we have
within.

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metgat : blind groper Posted on December 07, 2006
by metgat

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