Death, now here is a topic guaranteed to let the air out of a room, a
polite conversation killer. Yet we all have/will deal with it. First
the death of those around us and finally, and I think you would agree
the most important, our own. It is curious how differently cultures
mark/celebrate a passing. Westerners typically make the event a clean
straightforward affair handled almost exclusively by professionals,
family and friends provided with a regimented schedule of events leading
to a final “farewell” usually all taking place in a weeks time. Other
cultures leave the departed in their beds for a year or longer, the
family handling everything, finally throwing a huge party where the
departed are honored, cremating the remains at its conclusion, again all
handled by loved ones.
Death is inevitable, so what
happens to our physical remains after we have translated from the
mortal coil matters little. What matters is everything that takes place
right up to the moment we somersault into eternity. You are eternal.
The spark of the divine, the connection to all that is, the I AM, our
consciousness, our soul has always existed. It was never born and will
never die. It has always been and will always be. We are not human
beings in search of the miraculous, we are spiritual beings experiencing
the human condition, this flesh a mere conveyance. So we mourn the
passing of those we cared for, for they have passed from our sight for a
time and we miss them, but celebrate their transition as well for it
comes for all and is as natural as the rolling in and out of the tide.
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