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A violent death, and the afterlife (Read 12727 times)
blink
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #15 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 7:58am
 
recoverer wrote on Jul 26th, 2007 at 7:42pm:
The day I start believing murderers should be punished in a hell realm, is the day I'll start believing in a wrathful and vengeful God, and I won't do that.

I'm certain it is understood in the spirit World that many spirits who incarnate into the physical World are going to end up being negative people. It happens way too much for it not to be a possibility.  Even though spirits are divine Souls before they incarnate, they get off course. Why? Because the World is filled with all kinds of corrupting influences. We're provided with an ego like nature that causes us to be self centered and defensive.  Sometimes we're provided with living circumstances that make it difficult to be a  positive person. It hurts when we are cut off from the love we inately desire. So some people end up negative.

Why does the spirit World keep sending Souls into this World even though it understands that some will become negative for a while? Because it has no choice. We keep creating difficult lifetimes. Parents who are racists, abusers, molestors, gang bangers, drug pushers, terrorists, mafia members, and so on. Combine this with other possible negative influences, some spirits are going to end up being negative for a while, just as some end up being positive.

Perhaps the spirits who volunteer for difficult lifetimes are courageous. Do so even though they understand the strong possibility things might go bad. They probably also understand that if they do go bad, there are light beings who will try to help them when they get stuck in a lower realm.

It is also important to understand that once a Soul realizes it has made mistakes and truly feels sorry about doing so, there is no point in throwing stones at it.  This is because the personality that made the mistakes no longer exists. What and who we are inately and eternally means much more than who we are for a short period of time.

It would be impossible for me to help with retrievels, if I felt the need to pass judgement on each Soul I try to help.


Recoverer,

Excellent points you make, in my opinion.  Truth spoken here.

love, blink Smiley
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #16 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 8:10am
 
Berserk2 wrote on Jul 26th, 2007 at 7:49pm:
Matthew,

OBE adepts like Bob Monroe and Robert Bruce independently report visits to a Healing Center in what seems like Paradise.  Sudden and unexpected violent exits from the earth plane might create a special urgency for an extensive postmortem convalescence program.  I suspect that this program is very temporary.

Don


This makes sense, Don, and also makes sense that it would normally be of short duration. Perhaps part of this convalescence is to be placed in sitations which are healing to our souls, such as in activities we always loved. The convalescence center may simply be a place for some to "sleep" as they wish, and others to have "experiences" created for them by interested and caring guides/helpers/other spirits.

In fact, if this scenario were different and we were speaking of a war scene in which all were killed, including the perpetrator....but, I take away that word....the perpetrator in this instance sees himself/herself as a soldier.....

Perhaps all might end up in this convalescence center together, but in different areas of perception there.

I have seen, in meditation, a place like this, being used for good purposes.

As far as ghosts that go bump in the night because they are so tied to the earth plane...that is surely a possibility, but I would think it a much less likely one. So many accounts of near death experiences show that souls in such dire circumstances often find themselves away from their bodies almost immediately, and with great suddenness, and find themselves irresistably attracted to the light they see.

Therefore, if they are ready, of course they will have an accounting of their lives, there in the Light, in whatever manner is right for them. If they are just not ready yet, perhaps a place to "rest" for a while is necessary.

love, blink Smiley
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #17 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 12:08pm
 
recoverer, I believe that the being its self creates the heaven or hell scenario. An edvanced soul such as yourself is far beyond those limiting thoughts or areas I would think. Your statement about beings being courageous for living some of these lifetime is very true. How courageous for those kids and the Mom to have chosen such a horrific way to have their lives end and/or to have assisted in helping anouther move further along  the road to spiritual enlightenenment, (or to help themselfs move along.) I also don't wish the perpetrators hell. I don't have a say in the matter as only they can create their own. as for punishment for their deeds here on earth, that is a different matter. My value of life make me want something done to them for what they did. I may not be right spiritually for wanting it but if the only one to judge and impose punishment was yourself when you die, then what a world we would be living in. Not everone is advanced so far as to do no harm and sometime the lesson needed to be learned will come through these meens.
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #18 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 1:40pm
 
Blink said:

Recoverer,

Excellent points you make, in my opinion.  Truth spoken here.

"Thank you Blink." Smiley
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #19 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 1:46pm
 
Hawkeye:

I figure the two men who commited the murders have a lot of suffering ahead of them. Unless they admit that what they did was wrong while alive and do something to change themselves, they are liable to end up in a lower realm after they die.  Not because God sends them there, but because this is where their states of mind will lead them.

I don't believe the death penalty is a good idea, because there is a chance they will admit how wrong they were to do what they did while alive.  If they don't, they might end up being negative minded earth bound spirits who continue to do harm until somebody finally gets them to admit their mistakes, and cross over to the light.

Regarding the victims, when they find out how happy life is in the heavenly realm they end up in, I doubt they are going to hold a grudge against the men who killed them.  Of course the loved ones they left behind will go through some hardship. Hopefully they inwardly heal themselves before they rejoin their deceased loved ones in the spirit World.  If they find a way to look at the bigger picture, their healing will proceed much faster. A vengeful attitude won't help them or anybody else heal. Of course it is understandible why they might be angry.


hawkeye wrote on Jul 27th, 2007 at 12:08pm:
recoverer, I believe that the being its self creates the heaven or hell scenario. An edvanced soul such as yourself is far beyond those limiting thoughts or areas I would think. Your statement about beings being courageous for living some of these lifetime is very true. How courageous for those kids and the Mom to have chosen such a horrific way to have their lives end and/or to have assisted in helping anouther move further along  the road to spiritual enlightenenment, (or to help themselfs move along.) I also don't wish the perpetrators hell. I don't have a say in the matter as only they can create their own. as for punishment for their deeds here on earth, that is a different matter. My value of life make me want something done to them for what they did. I may not be right spiritually for wanting it but if the only one to judge and impose punishment was yourself when you die, then what a world we would be living in. Not everone is advanced so far as to do no harm and sometime the lesson needed to be learned will come through these meens.  

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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #20 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 3:21pm
 
DocM wrote on Jul 26th, 2007 at 3:24pm:
Hi Dave, and Hawkeye,

I think my question was not about forgiveness.  It makes sense that one must overcome the trauma and pain one feels, and release it through forgiveness.  Forgiving even the ultimate evil these poor people face can, however be a monumental task if the victims' lives were taken violently.  That is where my question lies.....

Can victims of these unthinkable crimes lose their panic and negative emotions on crossing over, quickly enough to embrace love and forgiveness?  I know there is no one  "set" answer to this quesiton, but it seems to be important.

Nice answers though, for what was said.


Matthew



hi Doc  recently I wrote an article and felt I had to put it up on myspace, of similar violent circumstance involving a young college boy as the perpetrator against his parent. I observed in my mind, the slain father's body had risen, his heart still pumping blood, but his spirit had vacated the premises, as that can be the only explanation for after having received enough hatchet blows to the head, you get up and start putting the dishes away, and then he finally died, the body died.

I have observed a few stories here and there of early departure of a spirit, while the body still lives robotic like status. so I am assuming we all have guides, and that the girls inner, essence is allowed to blink out during too much violence.

it comforts my sense of outrage to think so anyway.

in regards to this same context I think of Cami, an extremely lucid retrieval, she was 16 and I as retriever could only sense the tragic circumstances, and since I wasn't there to dig into her mind, but only to gain her attention, I didn't press for details, but I sensed rape and murder were a part of that.

after death she was disposed to areas in the astral, the counterparts of happier conditions, a school with peers. the pleasure she had known there, she tried to return to. a brief question and answer session with her I can describe, it may help you to reduce your level of outrage:

beginnings: I observe a depressed teen slink in and take a seat within the gymnasium rec room.
I briefly consider my role as mother spirit and take a form throwing myself at her feet asking for attention.
she smiles and reaches to pet me on the head coming up briefly from her troubles and confusion. she remembers nothing that is too difficult to remember. a shock. there is a blinking out of memories, so that she will remember only when she is prepared to deal with it.

what is you name? I ask. Cami she says.
How do u spell that I ask.
She tells me.
How old are you? I ask
16 she says.
where is your family I ask.
then I tell her my family is small, is hers also small?
I have an aunt she says, brightening to recall the love she has for her aunt.
where is your aunt? I ask
A cloud comes over her face as confusion again arises. I see her mind, I see a boyfriend of the aunt is involved in some tragedy.
Spirit tell me back off, you are not a psychoanalyst right at this time.
we are entering dangerous territory and guides assistance is immediately needed to take Cami with them, as does happen, there were 5 or 6 of her peers entered at just the right time, before I could probe any deeper.

since I had her attention, it was easy to lead her to the guides whom she could not see at first, I just shifted my gaze to them and she followed my attention and they received her into their care.

The PUL had made us one, so that the shift could occur and the retrieval be accomplished.

______

I'm not going to mention forgiveness as the others have mentioned the importance of it. forgiveness clears the way for PUL though. she was not at a place to even know of this tool yet.  theres one other story Alan Watts mentions of two men who ran each other through, exiting the body at the same time, floating upwards in their spirit forms, they continued fighting until they both burst out laughing as they finally noticed after much further "running thru" nobody was dropping. Roll Eyes

I imagine they then made their way to their appropriate classroom and an alternative solution perhaps to settling one's differences other than the sword.

all in all, it is we, who are left, that suffer the most when these tragedies occur. I studied the senselessness of the holocaust in this vein for many years and concluded there are sacrificial spirits who have that in their intentions for incarnating, as I believe the jews did; it was for us to wake up then as a whole humanity, so we could get past the way that we have become a warring planet which must change each one in their heart to decide, no, I won't kill anymore, nor harm life.
and its true as a healer, what you are, you have to do your part to focus on mending the others and eventually we all have to mend each other.
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #21 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 4:24pm
 
Could it not be that these people who were killed, chose to do so willingly before this carnation, as an offering of assistence to the perpetrators to assist them in gaining a furthering of spritual awareness. If so, what a gift. How would one make the choice to leave behind a living family member (the Dad) to help others? A true offer of sacrifice, giving and PUL.(?)
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #22 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 4:42pm
 
Hi Its good to forgive but not easy to actually do it,as i have forgiven people all through my life and sometimes ive regretted it as some of them when i forgave them for something ,just turned around and threw it back at me,so ive regreetted it sometimes,so it is hard sometimes to do the right thing like forgive,especially people that take a  life away from loving families

This is what ZODIAC said through this medium,as he was around the same time as Jesus and sometimes walked with him.And this is what he says about the part of the lords prayer  Forgive us our tresspasses as we forgive them,that tresspass against us,this is what he says.

You are exhorted for your own sakes to tear out of your hearts and mind the bitterness of unforgiveness.As much is expected of the child as is forthcoming from the Father.If you pray with sincerity to be able to forgive those who have injured you,then on making the crossing through the veil you will see that the hurt that seemed to remain was only imagination.

"Forgive us our tresspasses"again and again we have to make this petition to the Father.It should not be necessary for me to tell you that His loving Heart never would or could shut us out.Over and over again these spiritual battles go on in the heart and mind of man.The higher side cries out to be free from the lesser and yet that lesser at times appears to be the stronger and anguish follows as a natural result.

In spite of the clamour of the physical mind God hears the cry of the spirit within and never ceases to help and encourage it to get free.Do not be disheartened by these battles.They seem so terribly destructive to you as if in a few short hours they had the power to pull out the bricks of the foundation of your faith so that the whole world would topple to the ground.This is the trial of those who wish to do better.To those who do not wish to do better,the tragedy does not seem so intense.Do try and read between the lines and strive more earnestly to gather in some faint conception of the love and compassion of your Father.

Love and God bless   Love Juditha

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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #23 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 8:15pm
 
hawkeye wrote on Jul 27th, 2007 at 4:24pm:
Could it not be that these people who were killed, chose to do so willingly before this carnation, as an offering of assistence to the perpetrators to assist them in gaining a furthering of spritual awareness. If so, what a gift. How would one make the choice to leave behind a living family member (the Dad) to help others? A true offer of sacrifice, giving and PUL.(?)


I don't know in all cases that it was predestined. we do have some choosing and experimenting and plans going awry on this planet, as well the soul's intentions for incarnating. this just my opinion, my thought, take it with grain of salt.

I was thinking of the Jews, that i was there, otherwise I would be able to stop thinking about them. but the years went on and still I grieved, so I think I was there.
I saw the entire race as a cloud of energy with individuals in it. and it was agreed there would be sacrifice for these ones. and maybe thats why it was said back then, they were the ones chosen of god. the sacrifice was not in vain. we can never think otherwise and still grow in god's love.

but these isolated instances of brutality and mindlessness are a different matter. I do not think in all cases it is destiny so much as an experiment to see if the right choice can be made, and a soul can then advance more quickly. the parents and the boy's soul may have been informed before incarnation of the risk and agreed to undergo that anyway. like I said, just my opinion.

we are essentially on a planet where anything can happen due to free will.
and not enough education of the right kind, my opinion.

I was talking with my guides on one occassion about the violent ones, who snap, in our courts they defend these by saying they are insane. true enough. my guides then told me the predator mentalities are metered into the earth plane, so that total anarchy will not result from too much of this violence, of course, those of us on a spiritual path will say even one such incidence is one too many, we share our planet with the insane while attempting to teach the insane a better way through the social system. I look to a new world where education that we do not really die can change some of the violence we encounter. I would not choose to be saying, die, its good for you because we agreed to this plan somewhere else. thats a little bit insane to think that way.
but if we say control your passion which is without thought, which is without compassion, then we are teachers to these others, in this life or the next.

in my story the parents were not knowing their son and those possibilities inherent in him. a parent should study their child day and night and get very close to their thought system. this is another way to look at prevention of violence.


and then we are all a little touched as well, just to a lessor degree than the mayhem we are looking at now. we need help.

love, alysia

thanks Juditha, for talking as you do, from your guidance. it is important.



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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #24 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 9:15pm
 
Hi there,
I would like to have some clarity about "forgiveness". What would you say would be the healthiest meaning?

To "let go"? Like "forget it", I don't care anymore, don't think about those sad things.

To, so to say, actively forgive, actually to have the specific deed in mind and, like to abate debts, abate the debt of this deed.

Or, something in the middle. I saw on tv a lady who was in a German concentration camp, and lost her relatives. She said (from my memory), "Forget? No. That's impossible. But forgive...it's another thing. If I wouldn't, I would be full of hate, I would get ill about it. So I forgive."
As you can see, she is very aware of her own health and thinks pragmatic. But it does not explain what forgiveness actually is, how you do it. It surely has something of "let go", "release", "discharge". Is there maybe a sort of visualization which could explain it to me?

Spooky
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #25 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 9:55pm
 
Hi Spooky. unforgiveness sets up pockets of energy blocking pathways in the body, most often to the organ of the heart. tumors can develop from holding unforgivenss in the human body. it is therefore as you say releasing that energy which does solidify.

in order to truly forgive I think one would see the grievance that needs to be released, as having been a lesson plan. for instance, how was I responsible for what befell me?
various scenes could play out in the mind how it might have been avoided until one fits and one can see where one failed to avoid the suffering. unless we're talking about children who do not harbor grievances the way adults do.
then we can perceive innocense in both parties, but only with assistance from guidance can we learn to forgive at first. then one can forgive automatically and come into power that way, to not be holding the energy for sometimes years, it gets held there.
I think there must be an inherent belief in justice to prevail eventually, but that of our own selves, not from our hand necessarily, but a faith in order to prevail, a divine order.
there are equalizer spirit NP's out there who love balancing the ledger, so we can assume they are of god also if we are all one. we can have faith. it moves mountains.

but first things first, since we are all one, forgiveness of self goes before forgiveness of another.
I used to say, to give good will as before the grievance occurred is forgiving.
forgetting is not truly to forget, as the memory is there. but the memory no longer induces a painful reaction.
all in all, to see bitterness as an energy construct in my body, really helped me identify the problem.

love, alysia
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #26 - Jul 27th, 2007 at 9:56pm
 
Dave insightful as uaual

Quote:
The basic traumatic response mechanism is (1) I hurt and it's "your" fault. (2) To blame you I have to remember the pain, and I anchor that with hatred of "you". (3) I change my personality, my muscle tone and my physical posture o incorporate these tensions. (4) My body hurts because of what it is experiencing, and that gives me pain. I think I will feel better if I can bame "you". (1) back to step one


The story of the woman clarifies while also rasing questions...

Since I have struggled with sowm trauma and not been too good with the forgiveness, I reallt found this interesting.

Because part of the problem is not understanding how I attracted the trauma into my life. Perhaps when we start delving into understanding "we create our own reality" we have to learn to go deeper than we know we can...to a deeper level than we know exists.  You have to know all the layers to realit before you can understand how you create the events you see in C1. It is a challenge to connect all the dots when they are on multidimensional planes.

It is a little too easy to say maybe someone did something in a past life that brought this about, but when you can tie a current event into something someone recalls (even if it is under special conditions) then it seems so much more valid an argument. I assume there have been other cases where people could go the forgiveness route and achieve loss of pain from doing so? I assume you've witnessed that. Yes? No?

Alot of my not letting go early on was because I just couldn't get it as to why this came into my life. (Still don't but Time helps you let go some). I suppose a Saint would just let it go.

SO many people are now hearing about this story and expressing outrage...I wonder what that looks like from the other side?

Forgiveness...intellectually, I think the letting go is ultimately realizing that we create the illusion. But Spooky, I don't know how to live that.
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #27 - Jul 28th, 2007 at 11:28am
 
Greetings,

Lucy said:
" It is a challenge to connect all the dots when they are on multidimensional planes."

That's great, Lucy!
Now that i have arthritis and am about to give up my painting and drawing, I've been looking for an artsncrafts format that I can do. I think you just invented it--thank you!
And like you, I'm motivated to draw out those little rascals, wherever their trail leads!

Love, Bets
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #28 - Jul 28th, 2007 at 3:50pm
 
Hi Spooky-
My personal expression of forgiveness is not an "I don;t care" attitude, nor is it "that's OK" or "You can do it again". It's a case in which we do not need to burden ourselves seeking vengeance over some kind of damage done to us by others. In that way, it is a retreat from the scene that ends the potentiality for further interaction. That doesn't mean that we need to go back and stick our hand in the mouth of a dog because we forgave it for biting us last time we did that. I simply means that we accept it to be the nature of the dog to bite, just as the nature of a snake is the slide on its belly, and the nature of egocentric and needy people to exploit others - they know no better. Well, God help them, and let me out of there.

Viewed in reverse, as long as we hold a grudge we are still giving our power to others. We allow them to determine our lives. To forgive and move on gets rid of that. It does nothing for them, but it sets us free. The cycle thus is changed from the toxic loop to a healing pattern.

(1) I hurt. (2) I investigate and discover how the problem came to pass. (Focus is on facts, not the cast of characters.) (3) I evaluate and perform damage control. (4) I take steps to prevent the issue from happening again. (For example, I decide not to invade small countries without first coming up with an exit strategy.) (5) I put it behind me as a fact of history, and go on with life.

This is the escape from the toxic loop.

In my practice I offer a slight modification, which is to suggest that "You can forgive him and just go on, or you can forgive him and send him off to be 'repaired as needed' by God. Which do you prefer?" Most people take the latter choice, which allows them to feel vindicated, yet no longer involved.  I also make it a point, when it's a person in a harmful relationship, to point out that to forgive their SO doesn't mean to stay in harm's way. If it hurts to do something, or to go somewhere, then don;t do it and don;t go there.

Hope this helps-
dave
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Re: A violent death, and the afterlife
Reply #29 - Jul 28th, 2007 at 7:48pm
 
Alysia and Dave,
I'd like to see the common thing of your responds in a visual way.

Unforgiveness creates a psychologic and often bodily sensible "block"- a thought which has almost bodily quality, a "thought-thing", this because it is stabilized like a swirl, it stabilizes itself because it is a loop: It provokes a person to think it all over again, this thinking keeps it solid, so it can provoke one to think it again etc... This pattern sounds, so I guess, familiar to people who have done retrievals, because most retrievees live in such a block, an ever again repeating thought-loop.
Now forgiveness would be to destabilize this semi-solid bothering thought thing through cracking the loop, this by letting it be one event in open time, rather than allow it to be a loop-time event on it's own. To not be catched in this loop, but again able to see the openness, the free horizon. By putting this traumatic event back in a line of events, includes, as you both said, to become aware of it's surrounding, meaning why could it happen, and how can it be made to not happen again.

Alysia, yes I think it's best to start with forgiving one's self. It might be that in every grief what we have, while it seems that something different causes us pain, there might be as well an element of self-guilt in it, like "I let it happen, I'm just too weak" or "Basically, I caused it with my behaviour" or so. Our nature seems to be that we can accuse ourselves in the same way like we can accuse others, as if we were many persons in one. This is leading to the thought that we are one, when we can treat ourselves like we can treat other persons.

That again leads to a thing you both have in your responds, the external, or wholeness instance you could trust in, reaching the faulty things to it for healing, fixing. Also ourself, I remember there is this christian prayer when things get tough, "I command my soul into God's hands" or so.

Personally, I have such a semi-solid feeling block- but not yet able to see what it consists of in detail, meaning where it comes from; it is fed by my aggressions and anxieties, which are, I guess, at least partly, provoked by it, so we have this feedback loop again. With time and meditation I'm optimistic it would uncover and be solved.

Thank you,

Spooky
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