Hi guys, and Alysia.
Please pardon my long absence. Having got going again after my back problems last autumn I've been buried in sorting out a bathroom so we could move my 92 year old mother in. I ended up doing quite a lot of the work myself, and didn't want to get involved in discussions I couldn't support.
This is a topic that I've thought about from time to time too - with the sense that there's possibly the potential to do harm as well as good. Also feeling that the reality of mind is such that our intervention is not required after death to progress beings through the afterlife - that it is actually a very minor influence.
I've no direct communication on the topic, and so am talking from a mostly theoretical perspective.
It seems likely however that beings will be led by their beliefs no matter what we do. Monroe's books for example are full of stories of those he recovered 'peeling' off and away as they were headed where he thought they should go.
This suggests that the most we can hope to do is to trigger helpful realisation or insight or dropping of a limiting belief in a being who is already more or less 'there' in terms of view, but who for some reason has forgotten, or been distracted and become 'stuck'.
It makes sense that as physical being of a certain vibration (as posted above) that there will be specific situations we can help with - provided our motivation is correct.
Most traditions would suggest that we're best to focus on our own spiritual path - that that's how we can do the greatest good. My instinct is that if we find ourselves involved in or genuinely drawn to retrieval situations at an appropriate point on our path that that's fine.
It's almost certainly wrong however, and indeed a classic ego trap to force the issue - even if it happens we have the psychic ability required to do this. It'd be very easy to get hung up on wanting to be perceived as a 'master recoverer', or on grasping after such a status. To start aggrandising ourselves through it - talking big, feeling important, gathering a following and so on. Or to run scared from it, if it's genuinely on our path.
All the while being led by ego and selfish needs, and consequently not by love. And as a result almost inevitably misleading any being we do manage to engage with.
While in this sort of space it's perhaps also worth raising some caution about the afterlife. It's not necessarily, and to my mind definitely isn't 'heaven' or anything like it. Certainly not if you take the Buddhist or ACIM views on board.
Put another way it's just the post-death non-physical continuation of ego based existence - a part of the ongoing cycle of life, death, dissolution and rebirth. (except for those realised beings who have transcended it, but chosen to manifest in this reality to help others as in the Buddhist bodhisattva tradition)
It's not heaven, because unless we can transcend ego it inevitably leads back into other lives - with the possibility of our getting sidetracked into not very pleasant existences on the way, and with the likelihood of undergoing a highly unpleasant process of experiencing our ego/persona from the previous life disintegrate during the transition. (my sense is that we tend from this life to access to early stages of the afterlife or the first bardo - that there's a lot we're not aware of.
That's not to say that the afterlife does not present great teaching and learning experiences, much as in the case of physical life but with extra possibilities. Also that there are not the usual mix of negative and very positive beings at work trying to help us or hinder us in what is after all apparently still a dualistic or relative state of existence - there's no reason to think it's all good.
The point is surely that in the end how we fare in this transition will be determined by our beliefs/state of mind - because they determine our behaviours.
Which brings us back to the point that it very much behoves us in life to work on healing our separation from God and our brothers (ACIM language), or on progressing towards realisation/transcendence of ego/the cycle of rebirth (Buddhist language).
Which inevitably means (instead of for example getting sucked into intellectual ego games) progressing our practical learning to see and live reality through spiritual eyes through self work - ultimately to realise that individual existence is basically a delusion and the cause of separation/the harm we do to others.
I guess the good news is that regardless of what we do we in the end can do no 'real' harm, at least not viewed from the perspective of Spirit...