Thursday, September 15, 2016

MY LIFE AFTER DEATH


I died a little while ago; maybe minutes, maybe hours, maybe days, maybe weeks, though probably not months; there is no time as such in this bodyless state. So I don’t know how long I’ve been like this. What I do know is that I had hoped that my life might “pass before my eyes” before I died, but it really didn’t. In retrospect, dying was more like falling to sleep, which is not so difficult for me, though waking up to pain and bad dreams a few hours later, as was my habit, was difficult. I seem to have awakened from my death, but am not in pain and haven’t had any bad dreams; I am strangely feeling rather “neutral,” for want of some way to describe myself, which is quite different than I am used to. With no physicality, I seem to be left with my thoughts and feelings, which remain quite body-centered; it is as though I have a body but there’s nothing here. I still feel my body, even sensations of a sort, and my bodily senses feel somehow intact, which seems to indicate that much if not most of my physicality was in my mind all along. I don’t literally feel my flesh in that state but I feel as if I am still in my flesh. Perhaps this bodily identity will fade as I “proceed” in this different reality. What I “see” is the life I just “left.” Like I said, I wish I could have seen this before I passed rather than now, though I doubt whether it would have made any difference. I was already experiencing almost first hand many of my life memories as very vivid moments of “being there” again; feeling it and being it. I may convey some of these somehow always poignant moments as my narration goes on.
          My priority now is to somehow make sense of the whole process we call “life and death.” Though I am aware that at this point I am “suspended” in “nothing,” outside of time and space, that is more of a conception than anything else. I feel as if I am meant to “make sense” of my life in this phase of the “life and death process.” I don’t know if this means that I should discover a context for it all, a “greater life” in which I exist. Obviously, something like this has to be the case, otherwise I would not even be thinking and feeling as I am now. I do toy with the notion that “I” do not even exist, and am the thought of something in which I think that I do exist. But this is more conception. I think that I am here at this point (rather than this moment) to “review” and even reexperience my life so that I might come to comprehend what it is, was, how “I” fit into it, and how I came to believe that it was “my” life as seemingly opposed to the notion that Life was living and manifesting through “me.” My “life story” is not the issue; what “my” life was and what “I” learned and am learning from it is the crux.
          For some years prior to my death I was preparing for this “moment.” My state of mind and emotion is not one of fear nor particular discomfort. Rather it is one of intent with a sense of responsibility and focus. I am of the belief that if I don’t come to some adequate understanding of my degree of fulfillment of my “life’s purpose,” I may remain in this limbo state indefinitely. It may be that I am being given some kind of opportunity and test rather than being rushed through my own unpreparedness and desire into a new body even as I speak. I have heard that this is the tendency of most human beings and, given my own identities, can see how true it is. At least I have settled myself to the extent that I plan to go into the details of my existence and to hopefully come to some kind of honest self-revelation and consequent self-understanding, which, as previously noted, would be an understanding of myself in relation to my life and to the life and death process overall. Once I breathe a sigh of relief perhaps something will open, though it may require many sighs of relief, many openings, and, by logic, just as many closings, hopefully behind me. I may have to transcend my tendency towards “hopefulness,” which I believe I have to a certain extent. Hopefulness is the step-child of hopelessness. I believe I will have to abandon them both and simply be able to be here with all as it is now.

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On the other hand, if you will, I started feeling uncomfortable in a physical body at various junctures in my life, finally realizing that I actually “didn’t belong” within the confinement of a physical body. I am realizing right now that I feel better without it; it is extremely limiting and unnatural for me. I’ll talk more about this at another time. These are pieces worth telling. Some of us are given certain experiences by and through which to become aware of certain aspects of “our” being and of life itself. It is up to us to notice what is happening and to respond to its particular “lessons.” If we don’t learn in the “school of life,” it seems to me that we are destined to repeat the lessons until we do learn them quite well, until they are “second nature” to us. The “learning” is not simply an intellectual process or physical discipline, though they do have their place; it is more than that. And only we can learn for ourselves; no one else can take these tests for us.
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Marley’s ghost exclaims to Ebenezer Scrooge that the chains he wears around his neck were “forged in life.” I wanted to be able to free myself from fear and ignorance before I died rather than after. “Before the fact” one has time to do such things; after the fact there is no time. Now I have all the time I need but now it feels more like a requirement than a choice; in fact it is a requirement if I am to get free of myself, of the thoughts and emotions that imprison me, that I believe I actually am, that “are” me. it is true that we approach death as we approach life, though it is not so simply as to say that we either live in fear and ignorance or not, for the material world itself is proof of fear and ignorance in and of itself. As I got older and my body began to fail, I began to be able to “see through” the physical world and all the distraction we generated so as to avoid the “spiritual” world in which we also exist. We make much more of “survival” than survival itself. Our survival is more about worry generated by our fear and ignorance that it is simply about survival. Nature, its animals and plants present a much different version of survival.
          I was a “good” person, perhaps even exemplary. I cared for my disabled daughter for many years and then to my disabled wife for many more. It was no hard choice for me whatsoever; I did what was there for me to do. It was not particularly a hardship, though for someone else it might have been. And I was to remain sufficiently self-centered the whole time, though think much of my life and my focus revolved around my daughter and then my wife. I did “take on” much of my wife’s pain, making it my own, though I have no idea whether this helped either of us. I felt much sorrow for her pain, prayed to many gods (as I had done for my daughter as well). In the end, things were as they were; I had to accept them as such.

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As in life, so in death, so they say. So much of my life was defined by pain—physical, emotional, mental, spiritual. You could see it in my face as a little boy in third grade and as an old man looking at himself in the bathroom mirror. Life in the flesh seems inherently disappointing, just as life not in the flesh may be such as well. So far, my life not in the flesh has been a kind of review of my life in the flesh, which I remember as sad and disappointing. This is not to say that there were not very enjoyable moments, even parts, of my life, but such pleasures and fulfillments are bittersweet, for they pass and then one compares any other moment with them, with the pleasure, contentment, and beauty they may have held. I needed to have learned to accept disappointment and pain too as part of living, but instead I let it break me down in my ability to endure and withstand. I did learn to love enough to put the happiness and smile of another, however momentary, before my own. I loved to see my wife smile and my daughter smile. That my wife had to suffer such pain in her body and her mind was a knife that cut into my soul, a knife wielded by the same God who brought seizures to my daughter and snatched her words away. Of course I am aware of this simplistic perspective, however it is the one in which I was immersed and which I absorbed into myself as a child, and which I believed in my skin even though in my mind I could clearly see its unreality. I wanted to believe in a loving, merciful, forgiving, healing, powerful God, and did until my child was born with profound autism. In truth, a great part of me has always believed, has always kept faith, if not in a God, then in the basic and intelligent goodness of human beings. However, even much of that was lost as I saw people with whom I had thought I understood and with whom I believed were my friends became as rabid dogs and turned on me and attacked. I knew that my father loved me but could not understand when, as a young child of six, he would go into a rage and come at me with a belt. I suppose an understanding of sorts was attained when I had glimpses into his mind which was on the battlefields of WWII such as Omaha Beach and the Ardennes Forest. But I was still disappointed that my father could not love me like other fathers loved their sons; in a manner that did not make bruises and draw blood.
          My third grade school photo shows a little boy wearing large black-rimmed glasses with a forced half-smile and deep sadness in his eyes. Those same glasses would soon be snapped in half at the middle when my father slapped me across the face for having my elbow on the table while eating my dinner. Those glasses would hit the wall so hard that they would break into two pieces. I would later pick them up and wrap some black electrical tape around the center to hold them together in one piece so I might wear them and be able to see; I had a stigmatism. A few days after that my father would yell at me for breaking my glasses; he had no memory whatsoever of being the one responsible. I made the mistake of wondering why my father could not be like the fathers of my friends, who I believed were kind and loving towards them. But in time I learned to duck when it was simply a hand to hit my face at the dinner table, though such movement on my part further infuriated my father to the point of taking off his belt to use on my back. I could say that these beatings were my ultimate undoing, for as I aged, the small fractures in my ribs became the source of extreme arthritic pain that I could see in my face in the bathroom mirror. From the third grader to the old man in the mirror.
          You would think that after death a person wouldn’t be pondering on these kinds of memories, for they are painful. You would think that a person might be able to somehow get through them during his or her life, to comprehend what they were, what happened, forgive, and just get over it. But instead such memories are carried over beyond death, to be relived then, out of time, even though the memory is vividly in time. I do not recount such memories so that I can blame; I am not trying to find fault with my father, but am trying to understand my own thoughts, conclusions about myself and about life that I made; inaccurate conclusions that I may be able to comprehend now that I am not so distracted by the outside world. However, do not think that just because one is dead that the “outside world” no longer exists; in fact they bring it with them in their own minds. That I have done this is probably testament that others do as well. In this “moment” I can literally “see” everything that I saw through my eyes during my life; in fact I even notice things that I did not notice in those moments. Everything is recorded; it is as though our eyes were cameras and all is stored within us. I remember Monarch butterflies lighting on tomatoes in my garden for a sip of water after I watered it. And that wonderful moment with my father at Catskill Creek when he overturned a rock a crayfish swam out; we were both so surprised and, looking into each others’ eyes, laughed together, his hand tenderly on my shoulder. My father loved me very much. I loved him as well.

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Much of this “remembering” I did during my twilight years in dreams. Memories revealed themselves to me almost every morning; sometimes I would wake up in tears, of joy as well as sadness, and sometimes I would awaken in shame at my uncaring, indifferent, cruel treatment of others. I have noted that, upon death, I have remembered my past life, however, when the boundary of one life is removed, previous lives have also been remembered just as distinctly as my most recent one. I will reveal this in due time.
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I actually had a rather exciting life, which had such distinct phases or “acts” that I always tended to see it as different existences in the same life. I tended to both be very engaged in my work in the world and very involved in my seeming spiritual reality as well. The latter was always detrimental to my close relationships, that is, my marriages, until my third marriage in which that quest for meaning and context had the effect of holding the relationship together. When I made the decision to become a Conscientious Objector before I was drafted to go to Vietnam, I did much to define myself and my life in a certain spiritual context. The fact that I was unwilling to kill others and unwilling to participate in a war in any way, and that I was willing to stand up for my principles with a high risk of going to prison if my claim was refused and I still would not participate, required that I actually make decisions that would affect me and the living of my life deeply. I married my first wife before I was assigned to do two years of Civilian Service and she came with me and worked as a houseparent in an institution for emotionally disturbed children as did I. Rather quickly I discovered that the place, now modernized but once a Victorian establishment, was downright haunted. The little boys to whom I was houseparent were terrorized by the ghosts of those adults who had died in an epidemic, perhaps smallpox or cholera, that swept the area at the turn of the century. The boys would see them at night and the malicious spirits pinched their toes, severely frightening them. They would come running to my room, scared out of their little wits, individually or in small groups. We practiced a technique which I imagined might have some effect in which the boys were to exclaim to the ghost there bothering them, “In the name of Jesus Christ, leave me along and leave this house, never to return.” I wasn’t a church-goer myself but my kids were primarily black children from Harlem in New York City; I assumed most of them had had some exposure to Christianity in their local churches, even though they had come from very abusive, neglectful, and dangerous homes. We practiced this technique a bit and then a few of the boys, even a four-year-old, tried it and it seemed to work to repel the ghosts temporarily for the children. But it didn’t work for me; I could still feel the spirits all around me, literally tearing at me with unseen fingers. I could almost visually make them out but my wife was able to clearly see them, which was terrifying to us both. Their presence in our room at night filled the space with a cold, impenetrable inky black cloud; we were paralyzed in fear, and, for me, morbid fascination, until it would dissipate. I wanted to understand what this whole thing was, what was going on. I found a small ad in a magazine, perhaps The Atlantic, that offered meditation to “transcend astral energies.” I had read that “earthbound spirits” fed on the astral, or emotional, energy of those whom they haunted, and assumed that if I were able to raise my energy to the higher, mental level, the ghosts would no longer bother me, my wife, or my boys. The meditating group turned out to be a theosophical organization, which taught much about the “World Avatar” and presented very detailed and specific “esoteric” meditations. I started to religiously, if you will, practice the meditation and did so to the point that I was somehow able to elevate my consciousness above the astral, or so I believed. The effect was that the spirits no longer bothered me, my wife, or the boys. I assumed that it had to be because I somehow was able to “protect” them all, which leads to my point that I came to think that I was perhaps the World Avatar. I kept on meditating and maintaining celibacy, which was also highly recommended if not required in the theosophical writings of Alice Bailey. And so, my wife and I had no sexual relationship, and I was unable and unwilling to discuss this issue with her whatsoever, which is not what composes a marriage. Though together, we never talked. It was fine with me but horrendous for her. I had no idea what relationship was and was unable to relate emotionally. We still lasted together almost five years. After the two years of Alternative Service, we spent another two attaining Montessori Teaching Certificates at the UN in New York City and then in Ithaca, New York. It may be that I had undiagnosed Asperger’s Syndrome and had had it since birth, in which I was born six weeks premature and spent the first month or so in a lamp-heated incubator like those used to hatch eggs, and was so frail that I wasn’t even touched. “My own little world” became more prevalent and real than the outside world with people from the very beginning—of the most recent life.
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One important thing I neglected to mention earlier is that one of the first “sensations” of no longer being in a physical body is the great pleasure at no longer being in physical pain. I got so used to experiencing chronic pain in my back that it became a constant limitation and relentless pain in my back. I noticed this too when I was stricken with Reyes Syndrome in the mid 1980s and was essentially paralyzed by nerve pain throughout my body for six months. The slightest movement in my body as I lay in bed caused my whole body to spasm in extreme pain. When I came out of that condition as a result of fasting for maybe three weeks, just being in a pain-free condition was the most pleasurable experience I had ever known. Of course one adapts to anything and as I tell you this I am feeling nothing at all like I did when I had a body, though, as I previously noted, I do have physical-like sensations directly and closely associated with memories of my life. As I got older and moved into a painful physical condition, I did tend to forget how it was to be in my body when I was in my teens up into my 60s.


          

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