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Reincarnation (Read 25521 times)
Nanner
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #15 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 4:50am
 
Quote:
THE only law there is, the law of energy resonation aka like attracts and begets like, and the reality of freewill.   All the rest is totally limitless, and anything goes in a sense.    


Justin,
That resonates a great deal with my thoughts ingeneral. Thank you for reminding me.
Love,
Nanner

PS: I still want that cat! Breed it and call me pls.. Wink
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #16 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 7:06am
 
Alan McDougall wrote on Feb 6th, 2008 at 3:19pm:
 Cool Wink
Nanna,

I remain a skeptic as far as reincarnation goes and do not like the idea at all. I know my not liking it will not alter anything if it is true.

But if you guys insist you are going to be reincarnated, God will give you your wish. As for me, I am not coming back to earth when I I finally pass over. I am moving on into  the light forever.

alan


That may not be up to you. Meaning, while you are 3D now.
How do you know if you made a deal or not before coming into this lifetime?
A deal to 'see things through'.

That is how I look at it.  That maybe even though life is tough down here that maybe I made a deal to 'live it' and get whatever needs to be done....done.
No matter how many lifetimes it takes.

Who would not want to 'Live in the Light'?  Then again, how much will you 'learn' by only living the 'easy life'?
Maybe to get to the point in which we all want to get to takes many many lifetimes down here to 'speed it up'.
To learn what we need to learn.
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Rondele
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #17 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 12:52pm
 
So we are here to learn?  I guess that is true if we agree that earth is a school.

But here's an interesting question.....if we accept that we were all created by God, and if we accept that God is perfect and by definition, therefore, is incapable of creating anything less than perfect, why do we have to learn anything??

How can a perfect God create anything as imperfect as, for example, a Hitler or Pol Pot or Charlie Manson?

So then the question becomes, perhaps God didn't create us.  Or maybe He created our souls, but not our bodies/brains, as ACIM says.

A real "who-dunnit" for you mystery fans out there.

R

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Nanner
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #18 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 1:57pm
 
Rondele,
I have pondered that question at least 20 centuries (exageration) or more, so that I wouldnt loose my cookies, ..lol..maybe I have though and havent realised it yet too....

I decided to put it to rest by explaining it to myself this way. ..lol..(guess it works for me)

We were created by All there is aka God, so to "experience emotions" individually. Be it for whomever in the long run - its all about experiencing and therefor thru experiencing theres eventually a growth that comes forth.

I mean, considering that I am under the impression that there are other worlds out there where we can incarnate to and other species as well, maybe even nicer that our fellow mankind is (which might not be so hard to top) ...we sure wouldnt appreciate one of our "human self centered dudes" whom possibly lack in common sense of basic respect but with a 357 S&W or a soul with very very little experience to meet up in that other dimension which just might be a bit more higher in consciousness, so I sort of figure theres a reason for being here going thru all this mess and how does Old Dood make it known.. "what kinda Hell is this"..lol..

Hugs,
Nanner

What I am hoping for is that all of this is a trial run for something bigger, I am really really really hoping exactly that. Dont take my illusion...lol.. ITS MINE! ...lol...
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #19 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 2:20pm
 
I believe it is important to consider that when people experience past lives in some way, they might be experiencing what other disk/I-there/soul group members experienced.

It could be that they've experienced past lives as viewed in a conventional sense. This doesn't mean that as a probe/self, they had hundreds or thousands of incarnations.

Yesterday during my lunch break I went to the library, and grabbed a Rosemary Altea book off the shelf. I turned to a page about reincarnation. She said that sometimes people experience what they believe to be a past life, but actually is a visitation from a spirit. She also wrote that there are so many ways available for a soul to learn, it is unlikely that one would keep reincarnating in this World over and over again (I don't remember her exact words).

There have been occasions while laying in bed awake, I would for a short period of time experience a lifetime that has nothing to do with me. Nothing led me to the conclusion that I was experiencing a past life. It is possible that I tuned into the mind current of another person or a spirit. I experienced this quite a bit one night while on a nine hour air flight. I tried to meditate, but I kept experiencing the lives of other people. Who were they? I don't know. Perhaps some of my fellow passengers, perhaps the people who lived on the land we flew over. 

Regarding Ian Stevenson's cases, there are some where a person would be born with a birth mark that matches the location where the person they have memories of was injured before he or she died.  This reminds me of Bruce Moen's story of Joshua. Bruce had a liver condition until he retrieved Joshua. Joshua was killed by being stabbed right where Bruce's liver condition was located.  Bruce's liver condition went away after Joshua was retrieved. Bruce suffered with Joshua's ailment not because he was the same self/probe, but because Joshua was a fellow disk/total self member. Bruce's arrangements for incarnation were made years before Joshua was retrieved. Perhaps something similar happened with Ian Stevenson's cases, or cases where people get rid of a physical problem during  hypnosis, after doing a past life recall.  When I read about Bruce's Joshua story, my spirit guidance started communicating to me because they wanted me to pick up on a clue as to how reincarnation doesn't taken place in the limited over and over again manner people tend to believe.

How could the knowledge gained through thousands of incarnations, be smushed down into one body? Perhaps just a very small part of our soul/total self  is incarnated, while the rest of our soul/total self remains in the spirit World.
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blink
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #20 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 2:23pm
 
Fascinating thought, that we might have a "do-over" for our specific lifetimes as these individual personalities. Or numerous do-overs for this lifetime.

I would never want to relive my life for many reasons, although I find that, because of all that I have read, I am somewhat convinced that there will be some kind of "life-review" at some point. I am hoping that some of the actual "life-review" can be skipped if enough energetic work is done on different levels of my being here.

I have many times in my life that I would prefer not to revisit. However, if I had to take the good with the bad, I suppose I could do so, at this point, having reached a particular level of self-acceptance.

I have no definite conclusions on reincarnation. I'll have to wait until I get there.

However, I did try a few regressions on my own and came up quickly in those meditations with several other completely different personalities in completely different lives. I was not conscious of "inventing" these personalities, and they were detailed, much as Justin describes in his previous post. The detail, in particular, is different from other types of meditation, in that the experiences were more vivid that usual, and longer. After going through some of these exercises I was amazed by them.

These other personalities seemed completely unaware of me (this personality). They were living their own lives, sometimes of another gender, in many different places and times.

These are spontaneous images, true to character....is it possible that I invented them when I was not conscious of doing so? Certainly, just as we do in dream imagery. But why were the scenarios so coherent? I found them plausible, whether they were actually my own lives or not.

love, blink Smiley



Desert wrote on Feb 7th, 2008 at 12:00am:
It would be strange if reincarnation went in the opposite or even an angular direction than we speculate it to be. For us "here", we usually think of reincarnation as a "future" scenario. But considering that time itself probably changes in different dimensions, i.e., states of being, then one could possibly reincarnate in the past. Apart from that it's "our" position", there's really nothing that certifies this point in time, space and reality as being the premium vantage point.  

But one scenario that I heard was truly strange: you come back and live the same life over again with adjustments learned from previous rounds. Yikes! Once you live this life in perfection, satisfaction and all the other better outcomes, then you move into a different life/higher state of existence. It's a weird version of get the homework right - then graduate.  

Though I must admit that if the "repeat" is true then it would go toward explaining a lot of what we go through now in a variety of ways. One example: Déjà vu. Another is this forum: all of us may have done this very same "forum thing" before.  But wait a minute, it gets even weirder: it's not just the possibility that we were doing the forum thing the same as we're doing it now, we may have switched identities if the general reality context remains the same but the elements within it change positions.

Nanner, is that you or is/was/or will it be, me? LOL

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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #21 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 2:31pm
 
Blink:

Yes, you can take care of issues while still alive, so you don't need to take care of them during a life review.  NDE man Danion Brinkley has helped hospice patients do so. Will you miss some things, yeah probably. It is probably good to leave a few surprises. Smiley


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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #22 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 3:09pm
 
Quote:
Fascinating thought, that we might have a "do-over" for our specific lifetimes as these individual personalities. Or numerous do-overs for this lifetime.

I would never want to relive my life for many reasons, although I find that, because of all that I have read, I am somewhat convinced that there will be some kind of "life-review" at some point. I am hoping that some of the actual "life-review" can be skipped if enough energetic work is done on different levels of my being here.

I have many times in my life that I would prefer not to revisit. as

[/quote]

Nice line of thought here, I think. The mystic Neville Goddard stated flat out that nobody reincarnates, that it's a very crude and superstitious idea. "Leave such ideas to the sleeping man," he stated. He put it very clearly that "we are born but once via the womb of a woman."

In addressing this reincarnation stuff, he taught a technique he called Revision and said this is how it's done in the worlds beyond. Working from our higher 4th dimensional self, we revise our earth life, changing it and smoothing out any imperfections. Thus, there is simply no reason whatsoever to actually try to come back and relive something, hoping we can do it better.

Just some grist for this mill.

-Chuck-
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Justin aka asltaomr
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #23 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 3:39pm
 
Nanner wrote on Feb 7th, 2008 at 4:50am:
Quote:
THE only law there is, the law of energy resonation aka like attracts and begets like, and the reality of freewill.   All the rest is totally limitless, and anything goes in a sense.   


Justin,
That resonates a great deal with my thoughts ingeneral. Thank you for reminding me.
Love,
Nanner

PS: I still want that cat! Breed it and call me pls.. Wink



   I would if i could Nanner, but we took precautionary measures already.   She can't have baby kittens. 

I'll ask her to visit you nonphysically, though its kind of hard to pet a nonphysical kitty.
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Justin aka asltaomr
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #24 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 3:47pm
 
asethaa wrote on Feb 7th, 2008 at 3:09pm:
Quote:
Fascinating thought, that we might have a "do-over" for our specific lifetimes as these individual personalities. Or numerous do-overs for this lifetime.

I would never want to relive my life for many reasons, although I find that, because of all that I have read, I am somewhat convinced that there will be some kind of "life-review" at some point. I am hoping that some of the actual "life-review" can be skipped if enough energetic work is done on different levels of my being here.

I have many times in my life that I would prefer not to revisit. as



Nice line of thought here, I think. The mystic Neville Goddard stated flat out that nobody reincarnates, that it's a very crude and superstitious idea. "Leave such ideas to the sleeping man," he stated. He put it very clearly that "we are born but once via the womb of a woman."

In addressing this reincarnation stuff, he taught a technique he called Revision and said this is how it's done in the worlds beyond. Working from our higher 4th dimensional self, we revise our earth life, changing it and smoothing out any imperfections. Thus, there is simply no reason whatsoever to actually try to come back and relive something, hoping we can do it better.

Just some grist for this mill.

-Chuck-
[/quote]


  Why should we believe Neville Goddard, does he show an unusual attunement to Spirit, does he have a lot of verifications in relation to his info and work?   

   One major flaw with the above arguement.   The physical, unlike the nonphysical dimensions whether the lower hells, the BST's, and higher heavens, has unique properties which cannot be experienced in any of those other consciousness states. 

   Only in the physical, can people regularly and easily interact with folks on all different wavelengths.   In the nonphysical states, its all much more in line with "like attracts and begets like."      Sure, a guide type can temporarily slow down their vibrations somewhat and interact with consciousnesses at slower vibrating levels, like in the BST's, but even they have a hard time reaching those stuck in the "hells" or even just in the etheric where people get stuck between physical and nonphysical.   

  So, it makes quite a bit of sense to me, that we come/phase here to work out stuff that we imbalanced here to begin with.   It's a unique place of conditions.   

  When all become Light beings who express and are receptive to love, then the physical will no longer be needed and its "reality" will wash away.   

  Or at least some credible sources like Rosiland McKnights guidance say.
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #25 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 3:54pm
 
From spiritual work, there is a strong inference that the afterlife is not experienced in everyday terms of rational abstract thought.

In meditation, rational thought gets in the way and must cease to proceed. The higher states of samadhi require that eventually ALL thought must cease in order to reach unity with God, as thinking distracts. In regressions, the spirits contacted tend to be monomanaical in throught, totally one tracked without the ability to abstract (because, perhaps, abstraction requires a place to hold the abstract thought, which is difficult without a brain), and thought occurs on a primary level in terms of nominals and absolutes. That's why a person who builds a BST can get trapped into it

The everyday state of mind corresponding to "non-thinking" is sleeping. Some of the esoteric Buddhist texts suggest that by lucid dreaming we can prepare for the afterlife - the idea being that this allows us to exist in a dreamworld as thinking beings. If we can "think" without the use of a brain, this might be useful.

Looking at our existence as a process, the nature of what we are is only partially dependent upon the body we choose. We exist as a dynamic flow of information, always in motion, never able to stop.  This is also true of the "material world", which is always engaged in some kind of change by which it manifests its nature. So too, our dynamic manifests our own nature. This dynamic carries values from which we derive goals, and from goals we derive our attitude toward events, which determines how we respond to the stimulii that the events bring us. This means that just as the flows and eddies of a river determine which banks get built up and which ones get washed away, so too the flows and eddies of our dynamic existence will continue to define what we attach to, and what we avoid. In other words, we carry our likes and dislikes into the grave where they define what happens next.

We find support for this in the way that some spooks build BSTs in which to hide -  they can't see any farther with the limited apparatus they're using, because it lacks the concepts needed for escape. To rescue them requires that Bruce, or one of us, encounters them and gives them new information through which they can get past their stuck places. I have exactly the same experiences working with entities attached to people, and when I encounter spirits in the afterlife who have issues to be worked out.

As a result, when we die, the Bardo Thodol tells us that we are "blown hither and thither by the winds of karma", meaning that our residual urges and such are pushing us along in spite of our preferences.

I use the perspective that everything is actually either a projection of potentialities from God from which we pick and choose the world in which we want to live, or everything is the dynamic nature of God into which we are absorbed in death. If we pick a path through the world that can attach to a physical shape, we can use the faculties of that form to think, since the brain is an effective computer. (As far as I have been able to tell, we attach by breathing - once you intend and take the first breath you get all the feelings that go along with it, and life proceeds as if a person. Until then, all the potential lives are just passing images.) Otherwise, we are, to the degree that we allow it, merged into the nature of God, much like a meditator who has quieted all the competing thoughts and ideas.

The question is why would a person want to leave the unity of merger into God, even if imperfectly merged, and go back to the cycle of deaths.

As anyone who has had a transcendental experience knows, the experience of transcendence does not remove our drives, desires or urges. No matter how we struggle to retain the divine, the mundane slowly creeps back, until in a moment, a day, a week or a year, we find that we have subsided back into our intiial state. (If you have never had a transcendental experience, this is rather like the manner in which a wonderful dream slowly fades, no matter how we struggle to stay asleep. - And then we smell the morning coffee and it's gone, as we renew attachments to the world.)

I suggest that we have the ability to stay forever as one with God. The problem is that to stay in oneness with God we have to stop wanting the things that come with being people (or whatever critter you reincarnate into) - we have a lot of options in our universe. If there is even the tiniest little urge remaining, then it will redirect us into another incarnation. After all, God gives us what we want - whether we want it or not - So watch out what you wish for! 

For major urges and strong attachments, reincarnation seems to occur rapidly. Within a week or so after the 9-11 attack I found that most of the Arabic pilots could not be contacted in spirit because they had been reborn. For those with little attachment to the material world there seems to be a much longer time between rebirths. This suggests that we do indeed have an eternal life in heaven available, but in general we choose to reincarnate instead. The usual analogy is that this is like choosing a piece of broken glass when we are offered a priceless diamond.

The Egyptians beieved in transmigration of souls through a vast number of preliminary stages, so that we work our way up from primitive ceatures to humans. Superficially, this makes excellent sense. Support is found in the fact that virtually everyone n regression who is asked to "go back as far as you can recall just now, and tell me what is there and what yo are doing" comes back with some kind of tale involving their existence as an animal. I personally recall being a worm, plus a whole lot of shaggy things that presumably were primate ancestors to my present form. Since those forms were the most advanced forms I knew, it makes sense subjectively that I would keep choosing the highest lifeform I could, and eventually I wound up as I am today.

In particular, there is absolutely no evidence in regression work to support the idea that we start out as people. Like hell, which simiarly cannot be located  - this is a myth designed for the gullible by the exploitive fire-and-brimstone crew, so that they can rationalize their egocentric feelings and desires. (These are the guys who seek the Voodoo Chicken solution to their own guilt.)

The solution to this dilemma that Buddhism suggests is quite creative. First, there are the "Four Noble Truths", that life is frustrating and inconvenient, that the frustration and inconvenience arises from attachments to material things that are transient and innately cannot satisfy us, and that gettign rid of clinging and attachment gets rid of frustration and inconvenience. Then we have the "Eightfold Path", which is like Patanjali's yoga sutras etc, and offers one way to rid ourselves of attachments. By ridding ourselves of attachments we allow ourselves to remain longer in a transcendental state.

The issue of rebirth is handled in Buddhism by the suggestion that the best and highest goal is to serve others. (We support this by our awareness that all is God, so to serve others is to serve God, and to discover our own nature in God.) The Buddhisattvic Vow is a promise to return to serve others and help them get rid of their hangups. that helps all of us to clear up our issues, and thus is a universally useful thing. In later incarnations we encounter the world as we have "improved it" by service, and thus we help our own progress as well.

Any other expression of the value of service to others is obviously equally useful, and any life in which we offer such service will benefit us and the rest of the world.

Criticisms of these concepts tend to be arbitrary, mythic or merely opinionated. There are a few data that seem to controvert these concepts, but the bulk of evidence seems to support them. In particular, logical arguments against these general principles seem largely non-existent. unfoprtunately, this seems to make people unhappy when their favorite manifestation of God is compared to other manifestations of God. It worries many people to think that Jesus said much the same thing as Krishna, as Moses, as Mohammed, as Arjuna, as Vajnavalkya, or as Zoroaster etc. I tend to view that kind of objections as elite snobbery, but since I'm equally snobbish for my own ideas, maybe that's a basic problem with any kind of metaphysics. Wink

dave

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Justin aka asltaomr
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #26 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 4:02pm
 
rondele wrote on Feb 7th, 2008 at 12:52pm:
So we are here to learn?  I guess that is true if we agree that earth is a school.

But here's an interesting question.....if we accept that we were all created by God, and if we accept that God is perfect and by definition, therefore, is incapable of creating anything less than perfect, why do we have to learn anything??

How can a perfect God create anything as imperfect as, for example, a Hitler or Pol Pot or Charlie Manson?

So then the question becomes, perhaps God didn't create us.  Or maybe He created our souls, but not our bodies/brains, as ACIM says.

A real "who-dunnit" for you mystery fans out there.

R




  My understanding is this.  We were created as companions and potential Co-Creators with The Creator, the First Source.   

  In order to create self aware, unique and individualized aspects out of itself, it had to give these aspects Freewill.    In order to give Freewill, the condition for and awareness of "unSourceness" had to be provided, otherwise there couldn't be freewill, but yet this "unSourceness" wasn't and isn't a real reality, because its not eternal, and its not what The Creator experiences itself.   

     Learning was not originally a necessity.  "Learning" only became part of the process, when some used their freewill to concentrate on and indulge in unSourceness.   In doing this more and more, they cut themselves off in consciousness, from the pure At-One-Ment consciousness with their Creator--that perfectness.  It wasn't "God" who did anything at this point, it was all pure freewill.   

  So instead of becoming full and fully conscious Co-Creators with same, they became self limited, largely unconscious Co-Creators with same, until they returned via living that which is Creative, pure, and Source like in their illusionary and temporary "creations".   

  The question is, was this ever actually necessary?  I have come to believe that it wasn't ever necessary to begin with, to be Co-creators with The Creator, though perhaps it has given us a different perspective.    Ego, the part of us that tries to keep us separated from each other and from The Creator, whispers that it was necessary of course.     Only those who have completely transcended same, know for sure.   Any here?    Yeshua was, and he never taught that it was necessary.

  It doesn't have to be either-or.   The left brain not in touch and balanced with the right brain, views things linearly and cut and dried.   It says Either one...or not at all.  This mind, is overly structured, is to quick to put limitations on itself, on life, on Reality, and the whole process.

  All the above is actually a pretty simple concept and makes a lot of both "logical/intellectual" and feeling sense.
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #27 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 5:45pm
 
"I'll start with the below paragraph first, even though Dave wrote it last, because it is the main paragraph I want to address. My comments can be found within double quotation marks."


Criticisms of these concepts tend to be arbitrary, mythic or merely opinionated. There are a few data that seem to controvert these concepts, but the bulk of evidence seems to support them. In particular, logical arguments against these general principles seem largely non-existent. unfoprtunately, this seems to make people unhappy when their favorite manifestation of God is compared to other manifestations of God. It worries many people to think that Jesus said much the same thing as Krishna, as Moses, as Mohammed, as Arjuna, as Vajnavalkya, or as Zoroaster etc. I tend to view that kind of objections as elite snobbery, but since I'm equally snobbish for my own ideas, maybe that's a basic problem with any kind of metaphysics. Wink

""Can't a person know something without it being referred to as elite snobbery?  Does one have to bow down to gurus who put themselves on a pedestal, so one won't be considered a snob? There is no way that Jesus, Krishna (and Arujuna), Moses, Mohammed and Vajnavalkya said the same thing. Regarding my opinions being arbitrary, mythic and merely opinionated, why not try to see a viewpoint beyond what you read, experienced in a trance state, and collected from hypnosis subjects, and see what happens when you make contact with light beings who exist at higher realms, and see if they have things to say that differ from what gurus say after they parrot each other over and over again? Since they don't even acknowledge the existence of something such as a higher self/oversoul/disk, how could they possibly know what reincarnation looks like from such a vantage point?

Regarding my feelings for Christ, I would think it would be apparent by now that such feelings aren't based upon book knowledge, but upon experiences and messages I received, mainly after I was willing to acknowledge that perhaps I don't know who/what Christ is actually all about.  I still don't know,  but it sure seems to me that I've been notified that he has more to do with divine reality than people who don't try to find out for themselves but instead stick to the opinions they formed, are willing to admit.  

If somebody such as Krishna or Vajnavalkya were reaveled to me I would have considered them, but they weren't.  What am I supposed to do? Pray to God for answers and then not accept the answers I receive, because some people who want to believe that every Tom Dick or Harry guru who walked this earth, is just as valid of a messenger of God as Jesus was? Forget it. ""




[quote author=dave_a_mbs link=1202219576/15#25 date=1202414083]From spiritual work, there is a strong inference that the afterlife is not experienced in everyday terms of rational abstract thought.

In meditation, rational thought gets in the way and must cease to proceed. The higher states of samadhi require that eventually ALL thought must cease in order to reach unity with God, as thinking distracts. In regressions, the spirits contacted tend to be monomanaical in throught, totally one tracked without the ability to abstract (because, perhaps, abstraction requires a place to hold the abstract thought, which is difficult without a brain), and thought occurs on a primary level in terms of nominals and absolutes. That's why a person who builds a BST can get trapped into it

""I don't believe that thought has to come to an end in order for unity with God to be found. The only thing one does when they reach such a state, is experience a part of God in his unmanifest state. Is there something wrong with his ability to manifest and create? If he chose not to make use of such an ability, none of us would exist. In fact, there wouldn't be anything to experience at all, because even love and peace are the results of his ability to create something that can be experienced.

It isn't a matter of bringing one's thought processes to a halt. If this was the case, anybody who had a lobotomy would have an enlightenment experience. The key is to get to the point where one no longer needs to look outwardly for peace, happiness, security, knowledge and love, so one will let go of one's opinions and experience truth as it is through universal mind. When I have done so I was still able to think in a regular way. However, I was connected to a level of mind where things are known as they are. The only reason there was something to know, is because God's creative aspect of being got around to creating something that can be experienced. Otherwise you'd have an awareness being with infinite creative potential, who never got around to making use of it.""  

The everyday state of mind corresponding to "non-thinking" is sleeping. Some of the esoteric Buddhist texts suggest that by lucid dreaming we can prepare for the afterlife - the idea being that this allows us to exist in a dreamworld as thinking beings. If we can "think" without the use of a brain, this might be useful.

Looking at our existence as a process, the nature of what we are is only partially dependent upon the body we choose. We exist as a dynamic flow of information, always in motion, never able to stop.  This is also true of the "material world", which is always engaged in some kind of change by which it manifests its nature. So too, our dynamic manifests our own nature. This dynamic carries values from which we derive goals, and from goals we derive our attitude toward events, which determines how we respond to the stimulii that the events bring us. This means that just as the flows and eddies of a river determine which banks get built up and which ones get washed away, so too the flows and eddies of our dynamic existence will continue to define what we attach to, and what we avoid. In other words, we carry our likes and dislikes into the grave where they define what happens next.

We find support for this in the way that some spooks build BSTs in which to hide -  they can't see any farther with the limited apparatus they're using, because it lacks the concepts needed for escape. To rescue them requires that Bruce, or one of us, encounters them and gives them new information through which they can get past their stuck places. I have exactly the same experiences working with entities attached to people, and when I encounter spirits in the afterlife who have issues to be worked out.

As a result, when we die, the Bardo Thodol tells us that we are "blown hither and thither by the winds of karma", meaning that our residual urges and such are pushing us along in spite of our preferences.

I use the perspective that everything is actually either a projection of potentialities from God from which we pick and choose the world in which we want to live, or everything is the dynamic nature of God into which we are absorbed in death. If we pick a path through the world that can attach to a physical shape, we can use the faculties of that form to think, since the brain is an effective computer. (As far as I have been able to tell, we attach by breathing - once you intend and take the first breath you get all the feelings that go along with it, and life proceeds as if a person. Until then, all the potential lives are just passing images.) Otherwise, we are, to the degree that we allow it, merged into the nature of God, much like a meditator who has quieted all the competing thoughts and ideas.

The question is why would a person want to leave the unity of merger into God, even if imperfectly merged, and go back to the cycle of deaths.

As anyone who has had a transcendental experience knows, the experience of transcendence does not remove our drives, desires or urges. No matter how we struggle to retain the divine, the mundane slowly creeps back, until in a moment, a day, a week or a year, we find that we have subsided back into our intiial state. (If you have never had a transcendental experience, this is rather like the manner in which a wonderful dream slowly fades, no matter how we struggle to stay asleep. - And then we smell the morning coffee and it's gone, as we renew attachments to the world.)

I suggest that we have the ability to stay forever as one with God. The problem is that to stay in oneness with God we have to stop wanting the things that come with being people (or whatever critter you reincarnate into) - we have a lot of options in our universe. If there is even the tiniest little urge remaining, then it will redirect us into another incarnation. After all, God gives us what we want - whether we want it or not - So watch out what you wish for!  

""Coming out of a transcendental experience while still involved with the physical World, isn't the same thing as being a bodyless being who has moved on to the World of spirit, and is surrounded by the love and light that pervades the realm, rather than the mixture of influences that exist in the physical. There are too many examples of people having NDEs where they felt no need from an attachment standpoint to go back to their life in the physical World, even though they weren't involved with a spiritual practice beforehand. The same was true for me when I had my night in heaven experience. This experience wasn't below samadhi, it was beyond it. It was a state where I didn't have to bring my thoughts to a stop, in order to see what truth is about.

We weren't created as unique beings by accident, as eastern teaching tend to assume.  We were created so we can partake with God in the creative process. He decided to provide the gift of life to many others.  He allowed self determination to be a part of the process, rather than creating a bunch of automatums who can't decide for themselves.  In the end we all get to return to God (there might be some exceptions) with the lessons we learned and the uniqueness we have to contribute, so we all get to share an eternal state of love and oneness.  A state that wouldn't be a possibility, if he didn't get around to creating us in the first place.

It isn't a matter of renouncing the physical World. The physical World can't compete with what the spirit World has to offer. It is more a matter of learning to be a being who knows how to live according to love,  and learning to be a soul who can exist with many possibilities.  How can one learn about such possibilities, if one is intent on snuffing all of one's being out of existence until only pure awareness exists?  Isn't it interesting that people who have NDEs tend to speak of the importance of living according to love and taking part in life in a meaningfull way, rather than telling people to renounce the World because you'll incarnate over and over again if you don't.  It is gurus who have little knowledge of the spirit realms who speak of such things.""



For major urges and strong attachments, reincarnation seems to occur rapidly. Within a week or so after the 9-11 attack I found that most of the Arabic pilots could not be contacted in spirit because they had been reborn. For those with little attachment to the material world there seems to be a much longer time between rebirths. This suggests that we do indeed have an eternal life in heaven available, but in general we choose to reincarnate instead. The usual analogy is that this is like choosing a piece of broken glass when we are offered a priceless diamond.

""I find the above hard to believe.  The evidence provided by people who explore the afterlife realms show, that people with issues tend to get stuck in a lower realm like state after they die, until they reach a point where they call out for help. Once they call out for help, they'll receive some help before they choose to incarnate again, if they choose to incarnate again. The evidence shows that incarnations don't take place in a haphazzard whoever jumps into a body first manner. A fair amount of planning first needs to take place.

Even if you did receive this week in a clear manner, perhaps within a week meant quite a different thing for the Arabic pilots involved.  Regarding what you found through hypnosis, is it possible that many of your subjects tuned into memories that came from their disk/oversoul, rather than past selves in a conventional manner?""


The Egyptians beieved in transmigration of souls through a vast number of preliminary stages, so that we work our way up from primitive ceatures to humans. Superficially, this makes excellent sense. Support is found in the fact that virtually everyone n regression who is asked to "go back as far as you can recall just now, and tell me what is there and what yo are doing" comes back with some kind of tale involving their existence as an animal. I personally recall being a worm, plus a whole lot of shaggy things that presumably were primate ancestors to my present form. Since those forms were the most advanced forms I knew, it makes sense subjectively that I would keep choosing the highest lifeform I could, and eventually I wound up as I am today.


"Even if the above is true, isn't it possible that this is done in a disk/oversoul sense. Therefore, the self that incarnated millions of years ago as a dinasor, isn't the same self that incarnates as a human today? I just don't see how so many memories could be stuffed into a body. It must be that a small portion of a disk/oversoul incarnates, while the rest of the disk/oversoul remains in the World of spirit.""

In particular, there is absolutely no evidence in regression work to support the idea that we start out as people. Like hell, which simiarly cannot be located  - this is a myth designed for the gullible by the exploitive fire-and-brimstone crew, so that they can rationalize their egocentric feelings and desires. (These are the guys who seek the Voodoo Chicken solution to their own guilt.)

""I believe you are being rather simplistic. Do you really believe that past life regression has the ultimate say on the matter? If hypnotists can hypnotize people to act like chickens and celebreties, if Michael Newton can over suggest people as you suggest, then perhaps other hypnotists have influenced people more than they are willing to acknowledge.  If a person is in a hypnotic state, there might be more to it than the words a hypnotist recites. Thoughts are things, and if a hypnotist somehow projects his thoughts to the person he or she hypnotizes, he or she might be effected accordingly.

Certainly I've made points that go beyond an exploitive fire and brimstone approach. Points that are partly based upon my experience.  The fact that you've made such a statement simply shows your distaste for Christianity.  

Even if some human spirits started out as lower life forms, does this mean that every spirit who ever incarnated into the human system has done the same? Isn't it possible that spirits from all kinds of places incarnate here?""

The solution to this dilemma that Buddhism suggests is quite creative. First, there are the "Four Noble Truths", that life is frustrating and inconvenient, that the frustration and inconvenience arises from attachments to material things that are transient and innately cannot satisfy us, and that gettign rid of clinging and attachment gets rid of frustration and inconvenience. Then we have the "Eightfold Path", which is like Patanjali's yoga sutras etc, and offers one way to rid ourselves of attachments. By ridding ourselves of attachments we allow ourselves to remain longer in a transcendental state.

""This was already addressed when I spoke of people who move onto higher realms during NDEs without having to go through some yogic path before they do so. Why don't NDE people and out of body explorers ever receive the message that you better follow something such as the four noble truths or else? Not to say that they don't have anything to offer, but I don't believe we incarnate to this World so we can renounce it.  We come into it so we can learn from it.""

The issue of rebirth is handled in Buddhism by the suggestion that the best and highest goal is to serve others. (We support this by our awareness that all is God, so to serve others is to serve God, and to discover our own nature in God.) The Buddhisattvic Vow is a promise to return to serve others and help them get rid of their hangups. that helps all of us to clear up our issues, and thus is a universally useful thing. In later incarnations we encounter the world as we have "improved it" by service, and thus we help our own progress as well.

""My guess is that when people who make such vows return to the spirit World, they find that the divine powers that be have orchestrated things quite differently.  I have yet to read an NDE or OBE account, or had an experience, which shows that Boddhisatva vow is adheared to in a universal manner. I believe the sentiment behind the Boddhisatva vow is noble; however, it is misleading in that it suggests that a person needs to become an enlightened Buddha before they stop incarnating.  Many eastern based groups have used the fear that some people have of reincarnating over and over again, as a means to get people to not leave a group.""


Any other expression of the value of service to others is obviously equally useful, and any life in which we offer such service will benefit us and the rest of the world.

""Related to this, even though I don't agree with some of the conclusions of Eastern thought, I believe that people benefit from such teachings in various ways. For example, I believe it is fine when somebody such as Ramana Maharshi says happiness can be found inside. Hopefully they'll reach the point where such teachings don't become a way of thinking that they can't see clear of.""

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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #28 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 7:07pm
 
SO there we have the essence of the argument.

On one side we have a lot of tradition, especially of the Western perspective, which supports very little of what the Eastern perspective proposes. This is supported by a very large number of people who have had specific experiences in which they experienced that perspective.

On the other side of the mountain we have the Eastern perspective, tradition, etc, and experiences by a very large number of people who support that viewpoint.

Questions about whether hypnosis mysteriously corrupts people (hypnosis is guided meditation, and has properties appropriate to any meditation), whether we have been programmed into this or that belief, and whether we are just plain wrong are all very pertinent here. The same fervor that supports a Western persective can support an Eastern one as well, and the same delusions that cause the Estern metaphysician to err will also cause the Western seeker to make equivalwent mistakes.

So where do we turn to get answers?

I refuse to accept the word of the Constantine dynasty as the direct and unbiased word of God. In the same way, I don't accept any other scripture as useful until can personally make it work for me. That seems prudent, although a lot of people would tell me that I am denying God's Son and his words, and that this runs the risk of eternal hellfire and brimstone. Seems to me that any religion that can't withstand questions isn't worth the time of day. So I question.

We have a misunderstanding about the nature of samadhi. At present it is not useful to go there, as the experience is needed to understand the experience, and all the rest is just "my trance experience is better than your trance experience" which is a worthless debate. As Charlie Tart put it, "It is a state specific consciousness." There are inadequate words in English, and Sanskrit doesn't do much better - just a list of terms.

What we have in specific form are reports from people who have OBEs, NDEs, regressions, and who rescue souls directly. A number of cases, such as the Indian kid who abruptly astounds his family by pointing out that Rajinda or Jalal, who lives down the block, still owes him money, and knows the secret hiding place, suggest that something is hapening that is inexplicable. These can be denied - denia lis the first line of defense of  a threatened mind. - Or they can be questioned. Regrettably, there is little more than the facts of the case, and meanings are uncertain.

The thousands of Eastern gurus who have similar experiences through adoption of meditative techniques are similarly open to question, as their experiences might be the result of their meditative methods. The counter to this is that other methods do not give other results for them. For Westerners, we have experiences focussed on Jesus, that always lead to Jesus-oriented experiences. Nothing proven here either.

What we can see is that virtually all the great religious leaders have supported one train of thought, which was not especially brought out by the post-Constantine bible. They agreed that there is a single principle of life that we call God - albeit expressed variously. They also agreed that some actions lead to discomfort, some actions lead to improvement. The Easterner calls this "cause and effect activity" and uses the term "karma", meaning "action". The details seem to be more a matter of how each individual' experience of God will occur.

The idea of "buddhahood" and "enlightenment" seem to be matters of great confusion. This is especially true within Eastern religions. Kashmir Saivism uses a different model of the spirit world than Buddhism, and both differ from Wicca or New Age Christianity. If we admit that we have free will and choice, than this might be personal bias. However, "enlightenment" is a simple expression that reflects a participatory experience of the metaphysicval nature of the world. We all have this (at least on this forum) to some degree, so everyone is partially enlightened. Those who are able to act from the point of their participation in God, as God, would be said to be "perfectly enlightened" - although their notion of God might seem strange to the rest of us (or it might not). This is neither a Western nor Estern perspective, just a matter of awareness. A buddha is a person who has awakened to that realiztion and lives in that state of mind. There are literally thousands of buddhas in the world today. However, none of them are in a position to influence the rest of the world as Siddhartha did, because circumstances differ. Jesus would be termed an enlightened buddha, as would all the truly great religious thinkers - although history might confuse material gains with spiritual greatness.

Whether taking vows of service or not leads to a better afterlife or not is an interesting question. Aside from the theory of improving the world etc, there seems to be precedent for making choices that provide service to others. Jesus comes to mind. Of course we could argue that the whole "Jesus trip" was accidental, drafting some ignorant soul into a suicidal death spiral against which he vainly struggled all his life, but there are too many coincidences and transcendental truths in Jesus' words for me to readily accept that idea.

We have absolutely nobasis to believe that the afterlife preserves everyday conscious awareness. We have a lot of information that opposes that idea. - I don't know about you guys, but I find this thought scary as hell.  Literally. The problem is to overcome our biases and examine the data. Scripture of all religions, Est or West, seems to support an afterlife, but how we experience it is unknown. 

Meditation requires that interfering ideation cease in order to reach deeper truths. This is equally true when we study geometry. The levels of meditation are defined accordng to the information they provide. First, we focus and suppress side trips and attain the level called "concentration".  Here we focus on the world as we experience it. Next, by suspending self-stimulation further, we reach the level called "meditation". This is a transcendental trance mode in which we perceive the interconnections of both the world and the transcendental. The outcome of this level is called "sarvastarka samadhi", meaning the trance state in which we recognize the absense of contradictions, and the manner in which everything serves as a part of everything else, right up to the to the level of Godhead. Then by silencing the mind so that all the side trips stop completely we can reach the next level which is commonly termed "contemplation". This level and wth absorption into the participatory experience of the presence of God, and is called "nirvastarka samadhi" which essentially means that there is only one.

To suggest that the sequence of development of the mental discipline to silence the mind and emotional side trips is equivalent to being a mindless idiot is fallacious, argumentum ab ignoratio elenchi. People who believe that simply fail to understand meditation.

As far as I can tell, all of the people on this forum are somewhere in the range between concentration and nirvastarka samadhi, inclusive. Because samadhi is such a powerful experience, there is a tendency to think that, "My experience was valid and you are full of BS," but everyone has slightly different experiences. The only common point is awareness of God, and that cannot be expressed. We lack language, and we cannot easily recover the transcendental aspects of samadhi from memory, even as sensations.

I'm open to better ways to look at thngs. I'd like to find a way to view matters that is free of doctrine, especially the militancy and closed mindedness that we tend to use in order to avoid thinking hard thoughts. (And that is true of all religions and their followers.)  It is always easy to criticize that which bothers us. It is far more difficult to offer alternative options, especially when they might uncover uncomfortable concepts. One fact which is extremely uncomfortable for most of us is that weare fearful of what we do not understand, and especially what death holds for us. That fear is whence the vehemence and militancy of opinionated groups arises.

Having nothing but (1) my meditations and (2) my own investigations, that's the nformation that I use. To that I add logical implications that come from physics etc, because those ideas have been pretty well pinned down. Regression seems to give the same information as do soul retrievals, and as do meditation.

So where is a better source of information?

dave
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Re: Reincarnation
Reply #29 - Feb 7th, 2008 at 7:46pm
 
Dave:

I don't want to go on about this forever. I'll just end up repeating some of the same points. I will say a few things.

You seem to be interested in scaring people. You want them to believe that they'll have to incarnate thousands of times with little respite inbetween, until they finally get to the point where they'll admit that there is no such thing as an individual self, a soul.  If you assume an average lifetime of 60 years and multiply 60 by just two thousand incarnations, you get 12,000 years of suffering and toiling before a soul gets around to thinking its way out of existence. I used to embrace such a way of thinking, until I found out differently. Now that I think about it, this way of viewing things is just as creepy as a fire and brimstone approach.

On the other hand, forum members who have read Bruce Moen's books, might figure that when Bruce met up with folks such as Robert Monroe, Nancy Monroe, and Ed Carter, it is significant that each of them was getting on quite fine in the spirit World, even though they didn't become enlightened Buddhas before dying.

Regarding there being thousands of enlightened people as you claim, I guess this is a possibility if immoral people like Osho are judged to be enlightened, and enlightenment means you have the incomplete and not completely accurate viewpoints that gurus tend to have.

Regarding my experiences with Christ being nothing more than a product of the approach I took, some of these revelations came before I asked for them, and some came in a manner that is hard to refute. It takes a lot of audacity for a person to claim that they are meaningless, because he didn't have enough humility to find out for himself what Christ is about. Regarding the supposed meaningless of his crucifixion, this can only be judged by people who are inspired accordingly, not by people who act like a rebelious angel anytime the subject of Christ comes up. Regarding having the willingness to question, as I wrote before, I did question, and received answers.  Regarding Christ acting according to divine authority, rather than being a guru who was more interested in playing God than serving God, again, a person can find out about this authority for his or herself, if he or she has the humility to ask.  

Are there any takers, or do people prefer to rely on what the limited perspectives of their intellects tell them?
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