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suicide,which is forgiven near death experience (Read 13054 times)
juditha
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suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Jan 25th, 2010 at 5:41pm
 
hi  suicide is forgiven

In Jean Ritchie's excellent book entitled Death's Door, she has documented the suicide attempts and subsequent near-death experiences of a woman named Helen. Her near-death experiences demolish the myths held by many religious people that suicide and homosexuality are one-way tickets to hell. Although today Helen is very comfortable with the fact that she is a lesbian, coping with it has not always been easy. By the time she was seventeen, she was drinking heavily and experimenting with drugs. Over the years, her problems greatly escalated which led her to decide to take her own life. After writing suicide notes and taking an overdose of pills and drink, Helen was rushed to a hospital in very serious condition. Her heart stopped four times, she learned later from the medical staff.

I remember clearly floating up above myself, and looking down on my body. It was connected to numerous machines. I could see the drip and the oxygen mask. I could see the doctors working to restart my heart with electronic pads. I could see that my parents were there. It felt very peaceful, much better than where I had been before. I was bathed in warmth and light, and the calm was almost tangible. I felt it was up to me to decide where I wanted to be, up there or back in my body, but the peace was so overwhelming that I knew I wanted to stay.

And then I was in a small supermarket, floating between the aisles. It was like any ordinary supermarket, with shelves loaded with goods. My grandmother, who died when I was very young, was at the checkout, and so was my auntie. I knew without anyone telling me that it was my auntie, my mum's sister, although she had died of a brain hemorrhage before I was born. They were beckoning to me to go to them, but through the plate-glass window I could see my parents and my immediate family, also beckoning and urging me to hurry.

(The next thing Helen remembers is waking from her coma with the oxygen mask pressing on her face and causing some pain. She felt regret at having left the peace behind.)

Helen's second near-death experience occurred a couple of years after the first, after another suicide attempt. This time she took pills and tried to swallow bleach. Her partner found her and called an ambulance. The following is her experience.

I was drifting in and out of consciousness, more out than in, but I remember being wheeled from the flat on a stretcher. Again, I floated above and could look down and see two men carrying the stretcher, and I felt secure and safe in the knowledge that I was walking away from all the chaos of my life. Again, I felt it was my decision to walk away. Then I remember a very powerful force pulling me towards a serene, very beautiful realm, a higher realm. I traveled very slowly along a tunnel toward a bright light, and I could feel an overwhelming sense of warmth and peace and whiteness. I wanted to walk into the whiteness, which was so tranquil and happy. It was like stepping into a vacuum, there was nothing tangible, no scenery to look at, but a tremendous feeling of being somewhere, like nirvana. I felt okay, as though this was where I was meant to be, as if I had arrived home, and I was at ease with myself for the first time in a long time.

I also felt at one with the forces of the universe, as though I was part of something much much bigger, and yet I was also the whole of it. It was a tremendously powerful feeling, and such a contrast to the despair and depression that had led me there.

(This second time Helen did not see any relatives, and although she experienced the same sense of there being an element of choice in whether or not she returned to life or continued in that lovely place, she did not feel any panic when she awoke in the hospital a few days later.)

I knew I had not wanted to relinquish the good feelings the place had given me, but at the same time I did not feel regret at returning. This time, the experience seemed to give me strength. I felt refreshed.

(She was told by hospital staff that she was lucky to have survived.)

Helen's two near-death experiences have taken away any fear she may have had of death, and she now anticipates that when it comes she will once again experience those feelings of peace and tranquility. She does not believe that her near-death experiences encouraged her to make more suicide attempts: suicide, she says, is born of despair with this world, not a hankering after the peace and serenity of the next. Eventually, Helen was able to beat her alcohol and drug addiction. She is back with her partner, studying for a master's degree and doing volunteer work.

http://www.near-death.com/experiences/suicide07.html

love and god bless  love juditha
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hawkeye
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #1 - Jan 26th, 2010 at 1:17pm
 
Who wrote this post? This does not sound like Juditha.
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b2
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #2 - Jan 26th, 2010 at 1:51pm
 
http://www.near-death.com/dale.html

It is from this page, entitled: Dr. Liz Dale's NDE research.

About 2/3 of the way down the page.

Juditha's link at the bottom of her post has the link to this page on it, under 'Helen's positive suicide NDE', from what I have noticed.
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hawkeye
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #3 - Jan 26th, 2010 at 4:59pm
 
ohh, now I get it. (It just didn't seam like Juditha's form of writing. Just wondering.)
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detheridge
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #4 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 11:02am
 
Here's the quote from Robert Monroe's Ultimate Journey pps89-90 in my hardback edition:
Maintain your transient status. You are being human at your own option in the strictest sense. That option remains in force throughout your visit.
You may pack up your experience and leave whenever and for wherever you desire, with no censure or penalties FROM ANY SOURCE THAT MATTERS. If your Human Mind is satisfied, you will do this in spite of local custom or effort. Earth Life System Addicts may not understand, but that is their problem.
(My italics and Caps)

So I'm speculating that from Bob Monroe's perspective, the whole question of suicide is moot, and any karmic repercussions simply don't exist for the different overview he discovered in the last years of his life.
For me at the moment I've given up on anything getting better in my life. That's not to say that will be the case for others, but right now I've had the door spiritually shut in my face and I can see no way out, so right now suicide seems like not only an attractive proposition, but quite a logical one. I've finally failed in this life so maybe I should admit defeat, cut my losses and get out now.
So development, progress and exploring other states of being are great, but it looks like I'm not included in the party. I just have to accept that. There's no other option for me right now.
I'd just like to know from any of you highly experienced folks just what is the point of striving if you're blocked at every turn, and at what point you just give up and go home?

Best wishes,
David.
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juditha
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #5 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 12:11pm
 
hi detheridge i have had the door shut in my face for years,i have always thought that i should not be here and that i dont belong,but the one wall that stands in front of me commiting suicide is my children,they keep me here,but i admit if it were not for that and the fact that im not selfish enough to do this to my children,i would have done it ages ago.

the world is a crap place but i just tell myself now that oneday i will be free of it.only though when it is my time,god is the light in the darkness of this so called wonderful planet,and god is the light that will come when i finally die.

love and god bless  love juditha
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DocM
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #6 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 12:21pm
 
David,

I hope you reconsider.  Its not that I don't agree with Monroe in some ways.  But there are things to think about.  When we pass away, we are much the same as we were before we died.  If we feel despondent and are in a bad frame of mind, I do not think that dying will solve the problem - the state of mind is us.

You state you have failed in life....perhaps this is by a societal standard but has NOTHING to do with what really matters.  In Howard Storm's NDE, he found to his surprise that succes in school, business, etc. was met with feelings of neutrality or disdain in some cases, but he was given encouragement during his life review for times he expressed love, and compassion.

In other words, perhaps you have been a success at being a loving person - something more important than societal definitions of success. 

The complex web of people usually carries some reactions, and that is another reason that suicide is not the answer for most people.  You may be able to forgive yourself for ending things.  But would others forgive you?  If not, would that hold you back in the afterlife from progressing until that person could forgive? 

It seems to me,  that we stand to make the most rapid advancement in love and spirituality in the physical world.  I don't see death as an escape from anything.  For me, I think of it as circumstances are brought about from our own mind, and interactions with others.  Although death will change our immediate circumstances, our mind is unchanged just by not having a body.  It would therefore attract a surrounding similar to itself.  So it may be a change of scenery, but not the release that some who seek refuge in suicide imagine.

I also tend to look toward the positive.  Who can you interact with now, while alive to show love?  The effects on that person would be profound, and would also change your own circumstance.  Who can you make smile by acts of charity or joy?  All of these things are possible, no matter how bleak other conditions seem. 

I don't believe in judgement or condemnation from an outside source, but I also don't think of suicide as a viable escape, except under very specific physical circumstances.

Matthew
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nini
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #7 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 12:29pm
 
The truth is, only you will know what happens after a suicide. You can't go on someones supermarket experience as proof all ends well with that kind of choice. I do hope you reconsider. That is something you don't always get a second chance at and the consequences may be permanent.

When doors shut, there is a lesson to be had, in my experience. It's your job to find the way around it and to learn from it. If you don't, you don't evolve, and well, then really what was the point of this existence?
God bless. I'll be sending good vibes and prayers your way today.
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b2
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #8 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 1:17pm
 
I've given up many times, d, and yet there is always a way provided for me. If your energy is low, it is okay to wait it out, to take some more time, to get some assistance later. I think it is a mistake to act on feelings of futility, rather see if you can find a clear emotional space in which to look at your life. I have 'failed' many times at life, and yet life goes on. Somewhere, someone makes me laugh. Somewhere, someone has a need, and I am able to fulfill it. Somewhere, I have a moment of peace or happiness, and I am able to look at it and wonder, how did that happen? How can that happen again? I don't know your circumstances, so I have nothing to say about your decisions, but I will say that the conversation is one worth having, this one, right here and now.

detheridge wrote on Jan 29th, 2010 at 11:02am:
Here's the quote from Robert Monroe's Ultimate Journey pps89-90 in my hardback edition:
Maintain your transient status. You are being human at your own option in the strictest sense. That option remains in force throughout your visit.
You may pack up your experience and leave whenever and for wherever you desire, with no censure or penalties FROM ANY SOURCE THAT MATTERS. If your Human Mind is satisfied, you will do this in spite of local custom or effort. Earth Life System Addicts may not understand, but that is their problem.
(My italics and Caps)

So I'm speculating that from Bob Monroe's perspective, the whole question of suicide is moot, and any karmic repercussions simply don't exist for the different overview he discovered in the last years of his life.
For me at the moment I've given up on anything getting better in my life. That's not to say that will be the case for others, but right now I've had the door spiritually shut in my face and I can see no way out, so right now suicide seems like not only an attractive proposition, but quite a logical one. I've finally failed in this life so maybe I should admit defeat, cut my losses and get out now.
So development, progress and exploring other states of being are great, but it looks like I'm not included in the party. I just have to accept that. There's no other option for me right now.
I'd just like to know from any of you highly experienced folks just what is the point of striving if you're blocked at every turn, and at what point you just give up and go home?

Best wishes,
David.

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hawkeye
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #9 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 2:03pm
 
I think Bob Monroe became quite depressed in the latter time of his life. Loosing his wife,  I understand was devastating to him. He also spent a lot of time not being as commutative as he had been, and kept to himself up at RMR, his house. Depression is a killer. I highly suggest you look for help if you are seriously considering killing yourself. At least go and talk to someone. That said, I dont think that by killing yourself you would be nessassarly going to "hell" as what some would like to have you believe. That's not to say that you wouldn't pack yourself off to a hell of your own design. Which is most likly what would happen. I personally dont have a problem with some reasons for suicide. Take incurable pain and suffering from disease. Like what can be caused by some forms of cancer as an example. You have no necessity to continue going on living in pain. But choices like that must be made with your eyes open. What you are doing to people left behind. How it effects others. Or suicide when you get older. If you have completed the reason for your lifetime then why not. I know for myself, I dont especially desire to be 100 years old and a burden upon the system. Or have someone have to come into my room and wipe my butt because I no longer can, or even know I need to. So if I feel compleat then I should have the choice to kill myself. Again looking at who it effects. Now murder is a differant thing. Killing anouther by turning of the switch or unplugging the  feeding tube could be looked at as differant. Grandma is old and sick...in the hospital and hooked up to a machine to live. Now if I unplug her and she dies...I get the house. That sort of a thing. Not good in my books. Now the other side of the coin is that a child gets hurt in an accident and is on life support. No chance to ever have a normal, or for that matter a real life. You donate the organs to save anouther child. Is it a good thing to murder that child? (Or euthanize?)  Well, I think its acceptable. Myself, I have a living will. So if something happens to me, I wont be hooked up to a feeding tube or whatever to keep this body alive for years just to make some doctor rich. Or to have relatives coming to visit me in a hospital setting where they really dont want to come, and most likly would be wishing I had died anyways. And also because that just what I would want. To die instead. So no matter what choices people make when it comes to suicide. They should be made for the right reasons. The effect on others must be considered. But is it wrong? Only if done for the wrong reasons and only if you believe it is wrong.   
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b2
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #10 - Jan 29th, 2010 at 5:17pm
 
Can I ask you, David, how you have had the door spiritually shut in your face?

What does that mean, and what does it mean to you, when you say that?

I just really want to understand what you are going through, and will be sending you some good vibrations, no matter what.
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spooky2
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #11 - Jan 30th, 2010 at 12:13am
 
Detheridge, to answer your question, I will stay as long as I can say to myself  "One day more I can bear". Then I just go on. I found one of the hardest things you can do in your life is thinking about suicide. That gets you even more down. So, make a deal with yourself, one day more, and till the next day don't think about it, but appreciate the present moment instead. That's my method.

Spooky
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"I'm going where the pavement turns to sand"&&Neil Young, "Thrasher"
 
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detheridge
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #12 - Jan 31st, 2010 at 7:16am
 
Hi again folks, and many thanks for the comments.
I've come recently to a point where things are beginning to shutdown in my life. In my case I'm a musician who plays, teaches and writes about all aspects of playing music.
With the recession beginning to bite in the U.K. (despite government claims that the recession is at an end!) my teaching is declining in numbers (schools and parents cutting back), gigs have all but disappeared, and earlier in January the magazine I write for was shut down due to lack of advertising.
Now I can understand that happening, but the sense of loss and creative frustration is increasing. It's not that I'm searching for great wealth and fame (the former would be nice as my income is so low I hardly even pay tax, and the fame thing is irrelevant) but after many years of a path that is anything but straightforward I found a path that was for me supremely fulfilling creatively. After decades of blundering through life wondering what the hell I was supposed to be doing in this life I found a situation where I have the ability and knowledge and my seemingly true path in life (doing what I'm supposed to be doing and loving every minute of it) and now it feels like its being taken away bit by bit.
Imagine if you will the analogy of an artists who finds his eyesight failing and can no longer see to paint, a pianist that loses the use of his hands, or an athlete who loses the use of his limbs and try to imagine the loss of motivation and creative frustration that ensues.
The day before I posted my original comment I found that I'd finally run out of money, that nothing new was coming in. At that point I just thought 'right, that's the end of it' and felt as though if I'd had a gun I would have blown my brains out then and there. With no seeming future doing what I feel I am supposed to be doing, what was the point of prolonging the agony any further?
That's why I felt as though I had to admit that my life was a failure as far as any creative impulses were concerned and it was time to go over there and face any guides, and just put my hands up and say 'Okay, fair enough, I failed'. I'm not blaming anyone else -I did it and I'm the one responsible.

Needless to say, I'm not claiming this is the correct conclusion, or even the sane one. It's just how I felt at the time. In addition, I look at the world unfolding and things seem to be getting worse. I read all about the supposedly perfect unfolding of the universe and wonder whether someone up there hasn't screwed up mightily regarding existence and the coming earth changes.
We have David Icke going on about the Illuminati trying to take over the world, those in positions of power and responsibility acting with ever more hypocrisy and incompetence to the point where I thought a few days ago that maybe we should have ended the world with a nuclear war to wrap things up and put the planet out of its misery. Then those beings from other levels of existence would have to admit that this whole experiment was a failure and start again somewhere else in the universe.
Again I'm not claiming any of this to be rational, just how I felt at the time.

b2, thanks for the question on having the door spiritually shut in my face. This is what's happening inside:
I've been working with the Hemisync CDs and taapes for four or more years now and got precisely nowhere. sometimes I think I get to Focus 10 but I don't perceive anything that makes sense or is so intangible that I can't get a grip on it. Sometimes I fell somethign starting to happen and then my mind makes a 'heave' (for that is what it feels like) and I'm wide awake -just as if someone's shut a door in my face.
So while I believe in all the stuff we discuss on this forum they remain that. I can't make them knowns and as a result I don't actually know anything. This leads to a feeling of spiritual loneliness deep within myself, even around family, friends and acquaintances. So while I might forget myself for a day of music making -which in my case is supremely enjoyable and fulfilling- when at the end of it I'm back with myself, it feels like nobody's home.
At times I wonder why I'm here at all, and the feeling that accompanies those thoughts is not a burst of emotional outpouring or self pity, but a cold, hard and emotionless feeling. In the famous Borg saying: 'resistance is futile'.
So from where I am fulfilment, spiritual progress and transformation are all great things, but I just so happen to be excluded from it and I'm placed on the sidelines to watch it happen to others, but not to me.
I'm not upset or angry or resentful about it. I just have to put up with it and accept the situation. But that leaves me feeling as though I have no further purpose being here, and that even if I wasn't here, my function and actions in this life could easily be substituted by others without too much trouble.
That's where I am at the moment. I'm impelled to follow the spiritual path and keep seeking, but the door seems shut in my face. How do I get out of this existential seeming dead end?

Many thanks folks.
Best wishes,
David.
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DocM
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #13 - Jan 31st, 2010 at 8:50am
 
Hi David,

First off, you sound like a good person who has been through tough times.  I played music for about 15 years - always had a day job, and saw my friends who took it more seriously struggle (and they still do), so I empathize with you.  Not easy at all, and very frustrating.

I also am in the same boat as you with hemi-sync.  Many meditations I do not have any breakthroughs.  But I don't expect to anymore.  They happen when they do, and if not, I use my meditations to relax, and get into the "10" state.  And then apply/play with focusing intent - which I suppose some would describe as "real magic."

I discovered early on, that if you focus intent while drowsy, and state a desired goal (something simple), that anywhere from 1-7 days later, you'd see something tangible come out of it.  I started simply.  Someone advised me to tell myself exactly what time I wanted to get up in the morning without the use of an alarm clock.  I tried this a few times, and it worked. Ok, self-hypnosis, right?  Maybe nothing spiritual....

Then, I began to telegraph focused intentions about what I want to see in my life, and would wait till totally relaxed and see them happen in my meditations.  I would imagine how I would feel when the desired outcome was achieved.  Smiling, laughing with my family.  I would put it deep down in my gut that it had happened, and give thanks for the event as if it happened already (something I picked up from christian thought although I'm Jewish). 

To my surprise, with close scrutiny, I began to see success almost immediately.  Probabilities changed in my life.  Its not as if something desired materializes out of thin air.  No, our subconscious couples with intent to change multiple probabilities to manifest the goal in our lives. 

At one point, I went through some rough times, where me and my family were actually in danger.  And a prayer and healing group forum, with some loving members from this board helped add their intent to mine.  The result was beyond what you would expect by random chance.  Events occurred and probabilities were changed so that my family and I were saved from a horrible situation.  When you put it all together, the chance of random events causing that outcome was a million to one.

I was shocked.  On one level, it proved to me, without a doubt that we were all connected, and that we were more than our physical bodies.  How else to explain that human intent, applied during prayer and meditation could manifest in a seemingly random, cold world?  I couldn't say what was divine intervention, but I know that I applied myself and my friends did as well.  And it worked. 

So this is my humble advice to you.  Don't worry if you don't get transported astrally to some beautiful park.  If you get into the "10" state or beyond and relax, take a stab at applying intent.  Start with something simple.  Then play around with it.  I always state that it should be for the highest good for myself and others, and ask for help from higher forces, but that is my method.

If you find that things start to happen - synchronicities that are too unlikely to have occurred by chance, then you have a form of proof.  Proof that we are more than the physical and can apply our minds to make things happen.  Heal ourselves and others.  Make a difference.

I don't think many of us were meant to flit about from the physical world to the astral or heaven at will.  So I don't mind at all if during my daily meditations I stay right where I am.  But I do apply intent after getting into that state, and am now quite adept at it.

I have some free online text references for this if you are interested - PM me.

Best,

Matthew
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Lights of Love
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Re: suicide,which is forgiven near death experience
Reply #14 - Jan 31st, 2010 at 11:25am
 
Hi David,

I completely agree with Matthew that intent is at the heart of all creativity. Intent is what moves consciousness along its evolutionary path.  Going into a state like focus 10 to put forth a desire certainly helps to create a stronger more focused intent.

I think when we are not able to create what we desire in our life it is because we have mixed intentions or what I call cross-purposes, which clouds our intent.

All the best to you.

Kathy

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Tread softly through life with a tender heart and a gentle, understanding spirit.
 
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