Death Is a Part of Life-We Need to Realize and Accept This Inevitable Part of the Cycle of Life
Death is not to be feared, it is simply a transition from one state of being to another
Life and death are a cycle. It is a natural and expected phenomenon, accepted and understood on an abstract level. But still, people resist it until the very end, as well they should.
“Do not go gentle into that good night” is a poem by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas. It includes this refrain along with one other, “Rage, rage against the dying of the light,“ in his deeply personal poem first published in 1951.
Life is precious and should be fought for until the last dying breath, even though we all realize simultaneously that death is inevitable for every living creature, is the poet’s message. We will all know when it is truly our time.
We all must confront that critical point at some time, but we need to try to squeeze out every last ounce of love and joy, every moment of excitement and passion, every chance at peace and harmony before then.
It is our right and privilege as sentient beings. We should live each moment as if it is our last because one day it will be. There is nothing to fear about death, it is a natural process.
Dying is merely a transition from life on earth as we know it to another plane of existence, another dimension.
It marks a return to the other side from which we came originally and is a springboard for reincarnation if we choose to do so.
Many people today have rejected or modified traditional religious beliefs about life and death, heaven and hell as a final destination in favor of this theory of transition and reincarnation.
They believe we are all part of the cycle of life, and that we can all travel from our point of origin to become part of life on earth again if we choose to do so. Nobody knows, where it comes and where it goes.
Reincarnation is not a necessity or a requirement. Some souls, usually called “old souls” are often content, if they have fulfilled their life purpose, to remain on the other side.
They can be counted upon to guide in turn those of us with unfinished business here on earth. Many of us wish to return to earthly life to finish off projects and fulfill our purpose.
This may take several reincarnations for many people, but there is no hard and fast rule, no absolute right or wrong, no judgmental beliefs that are written in stone.
This is fine. If we choose to be reincarnated we will be guided by our spiritual advisers in our long journey of the soul into the mysteries of the cosmos.
Scientists have already proven that matter can neither be destroyed nor created in chemical reactions. The Law of Conservation of Mass was first discovered by Antoine Lavoisier in 1789.
It has led to a scientific basis for this belief in the transition from our life as we know it on this earthly plane to another dimension. We are still intact as earthly, living beings with consciousness and free will when we make this transition.
It is nothing to be feared if we just relax and accept the wisdom of all the others who preceded us and passed through the veil to the other side.
The grief and emotional pain, the shock, tears, and emotional anguish of those left behind on earth when the death of a loved one occurs are natural.
Their catharsis is the feeling of being made new, an acceptance of the inevitable.
Nobody cheats or evades death, but it is not to be feared.
For myself, I cannot accept that the complex, combined swirling, whirling combinations of atoms that comprise my soul, my essence, can ever be destroyed.
I believe that my own individual consciousness will merely transition into another dimension.
The unique combination of being that marks and defines each of us can never be eliminated, even though our physical bodies inevitably will.
We are all fellow travelers on an endless journey into the mysteries of consciousness.
Life is the sum of all our hopes, dreams, and aspirations. We are all connected…
