Beau
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I know many of you have heard this from me before but here is what I think in as concise a manner as I get it down.
There are many theories about where we come from, what we’re doing here, and where we are ultimately going (if anywhere). Are we going to Hell? Are we in a Virtual Reality simulation? Are we real? Will we become real? What is real? How do we grow in this world? Is morality to be our guide? Churches? Yogis? Who knows best how to advance spiritually? And is that advancement really why we are here? If this experience is to benefit our higher selves, then why should what we do be curtailed to someone else’s idea of what we should be? This is where I have to draw the line and say that open minded skepticism is the best way to obtain the knowledge we seek. One must look for their own answers for what we are is a very subjective experience. We can see this from all the varying accounts people have from Near Death Experiences to Drug induced observations and out of body experiences and so much more. Since science is based on a belief system just as religion is created from the same, these ideas will not provide the answers, but I say the consciousness of the arts as opposed to the sciences can offer a glimpse at the truth.
I consider the theatre to be the culmination of all the different arts in one manner or another. Theatre did not grow out of religious practice as many would have you believe. It grew out of a need to communicate everyday happenings to a large group of people whether they be cave men or a more modern audience. Theatre predates Religious practice by thousands of years and there is even science to back that up. It was at first purely for communication by acting out how the hunt went, how to hunt, how to plant food. Theatre was a method of informing the prehistoric masses and grew into what is now considered entertainment for its own sake or performance that is geared to speeches and the like, still informing.
Within the theatre you will find every other art form represented in one manner or another. Understanding of the plight of the actor is key to understanding our existence beyond our physical world. I liken each of us to the actor who has forgotten he is playing a role and believes what is happening on the stage is absolutely real and that there is nothing beyond the stage. Imagine his folly when he dies upon the stage or simply exits stage left to find a whole other world beyond what he perceived to be all there is. In addition to the expansion of place and even time to the point where it seems infinite compared to what he had thought all of the characters “life” he finds that within himself he is remembering how he is not really the character he portrayed but so much more. He is, relative to that character, immortal.
I say this is what happens at “death” pure and simple. If we can steer clear of all the preconceptions we have about what the experience will bring then we discover a much larger imagination than we had ever conceived of dwelling within our consciousness.
I liken it to Bruce Willis believing he is John McClain in Die Hard to the point that he becomes so immersed in his scene that everyone outside of it, ie the director and technicians and even his fellow actors are concerned. Then perhaps through de-hypnotherapy he is brought out of his trance to realize he is actually an actor with a much larger decision space than the character he was portraying.
I do believe we are mostly improvising here, but occasionally we are given hints and even pieces of scripted thought forms to utilize.
The belief system will affect us the same way as we leave the stage as it will when we leave the body perhaps. As an actor or simply a human being if I have expectations in the here and now can I not perceive them to be true even if to others they are not? Certainly I cannot conjure monsters or Jesus in my current waking life, but when my experience becomes much more subjective in the realm beyond this dimension suddenly thoughts are things and if hallucination is possible here would like not be even more powerful there? I liken this to how the character may feel as he comes out of his “trance” and realizes there is more to be experienced than the mere stage he existed on for a time and now believes his immediate impressions of this new life or after life (which is actually where his actor self came from in the first place) are real when they are just his mind trying to make sense of the new situation.
Once off the stage the actor remembers all the characters he has been over the ions, just as the stage actor in the physical can remember and even recite some of those past character’s lines. So the person, after death remembers his other ventures. Unless of course he has never been onstage before and that might explain why in life he went with the pack rather than explore new facets of existence. The new actor can be either careful or rambunctious when on stage for the first time. Perhaps within the non careful actor is where the murderers and thieves that come into play (no pun intended), as they are more anxious to perform and be seen than those who have crafted their experience to learning about this stage and pursuing a higher calling or we are all characters wired a certain way and that’s that. Or we are here to overcome the character and experience the stage as the actor now in control of his environment.
I’ve written about this theory before but there were some things I wanted to clarify for myself. There are many theories out there and I find them to be very complex or very limiting or both. This is what I have been working with for many years and I find hints of it in most every open minded assertion of the afterlife I’ve come across so far.
I try to avoid religion in what write, but I sometimes use constructs like Lucifer and God and Angels in what I write but they are just metaphors to me and things that are seen upon expectation, I guess. I have never had these experiences, but sometimes someone else writing about them can get my attention because in my earliest years my parents attended a very fundamentalist church and it was pretty scary to a little kid …mercifully that didn’t last very long and my parents began to open their minds more to what could actually make sense to me.
Yours, Beau
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