dave_a_mbs
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central california
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Alan, you've asked one of those questions that I've been trying to avoid.
I just watched a friend die of Alzheimer's. It took about 5 years and his wife is still recovering after two years of continuous care for him.
One of the things that each of us will have to face is that there is no known way to prevent senile dementia. It begins with minor loss of memory as our older neurons begin to die off and not get replaced. It then proceeds until things stop working permanently. We have no way as yet to prevent this. Of course at the same time various body parts cease their function, which at least is a diversion.
My guess is that the entire dying sequence that goes through one of the dementias, whether from Alzheimer's or the slower normal dementia, or from a terrible disease that causes a coma, or any other problem that denies function, will be about the same for the awareness of the actor. I watch people with various degrees of mental impairment - actually, half a jug of rum comes pretty close to the dementias - and my impression is that the same person still lives in the shell, but is responding to new and unfamiliar stimulii.
While we normally can sit in the dark and watch the ghosts and other psychic denizens float by without caring one way or the other, the ability to recognize the world is diminished, so that meanings no longer are clear. This can lead to anxiety. It seems that this is the level at which Buddhist ideas are operative. One who is willing to order and organize the incoming stimulii will retain autonomy of some degree. Then, when the mechanisms for rational thought cease, we drift in a combination of attitude by which we are led to respond according to our character, and the facts of our historical existence by which our place in the world is defined, and which lead to new definitions of who and what we are.
As the Bardo Thodol puts it, "blown hither and thither by the winds of karma".
A quick review of people taking deliriant chemicals suggests that at death there is an interruption of the flow of rational consciousness, followed by a collective dump of all the factors of our existence into our field of awareness at the same instant.. Thus we simultaneously have sensations of motion, screwed up geometry, multiple occurrences in parallel worlds, and impressions of being processed through a relative passive awareness that feels as if it is simply going along for the ride while the cosmos turns handsprings. Eventually this stuff seems to settle into a pattern, presumably one that is most stable with respect to our interests and desires. We can see reports of such experiences by looking at people who have been using airplane glue, toluene from shoe adhesive, or materials such as dramamine and (in my estimation) salvia divinorum - these can be found at Erowid etc, and readily Googled up.
In "primitive" society - those places where people still have awareness of natural reality, live in extended family groups, and support one another emotionally - the aged live in a progressively supportive environment of family and neighbors. There is generally a pervasive sense of respect for the elders, as they represent the respositories of wisdom and calmness, especially in the face of youthful impulsivity. Modern technological society has streamlined itself by disbanding the extended families of yesterday, and has replaced loving care with chemical restraints such as Valium. The elders live in a grey fog in your world, with neither regard for their ability to further contribute, nor for their past value. - My personal solution is to give my physician a DNR order - "Do Not Resuscitate" - so that at least I won't have to go through the knothole more than once.
Obviously the term "primitive" is a matter of opinion. It reminds me of Kardec, who came to us from Brazil where he was immersed in a spiritual culture. As I recall he was learning to participate in some of the religious activities, although whether Umbanda, Santeria or what I don't know. The ancestors are still hanging around because they are welcome members of the community. They get called up and invited to ceremonies, and are employed as helpers in times of stress. - We have lost a great deal of reality by making a trade off that selected technology over spirituality.
I've been curious whether meditation would act to stabilize the last vestiges of sanity at death, so that the transition would be more like an advanced kundalini exercise than a meltdown. This has made me wonder about the mechanisms of healing that are available to us, because they imply some kind of control over the mass of psychic crap that otherwise threatens the descend like a blanket. One of the experiences of advanced meditation is a sense of leaving the mundane values and references of the world, and adopting, in their place, a sense of direct participation in the spirit world - or perhaps better termed, a sense of unity with the Light. Although the experiences of all of us differ, I've noticed that about half the members of the forum have reported related experiences, and some have been quite advanced.
dave
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