DocM
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Before I began my spiritual search, about 12 years ago, I took a martial arts class (aikido) in a dojo near my house. There was a guy named Frank there who was very well educated. However, at times, he went off about how he contacted mediums, received messages from his deceased sister through them, etc. which made me think he was off his rocker. It is funny in retrospect, but at the time, I remember wondering - how it was that I could have a normal conversation with him at one minute and the next be talking to someone who believed in such nonsense?
Of course, deep down, we all want to believe that life has a meaning; that there is an afterlife and a grand plan to it all; that life is more about existing for a short time in a cold, cruel physical world and then, somewhat randomly being snuffed out forever.
My answer to Albert is that you can't talk to a "non-spiritual" person about spirit and the afterlife without coming across like either a loon or a simpleton. However, there is an "in-between," and this is what I strive for when I talk with my patients about death. I don't give them my "knowns" about the afterlife or consciousness. Rather, I posit questions to them which allows their minds to leave the door open to the possibility of an afterlife. I mention near death experiences (NDEs), and talk about how difficult it is to locate consciousness or thought in any one area of the brain. I talk about Princeton's P.E.A.R. lab, which showed that human intent or will could change the outcome of random number generator machines. And then, I simply pose the question - are they (the person), sure that all they think that they are (a human being solely existing due to a biological process) is all that there is?
Most patients (and friends I talk with) will then admit that they really don't know. My hope is, that without talking further about OOB, spiritual guides, etc. right away, that the conversation leads the person to be open about the possibilities.
You see, the post-mortem state appears to be based on your inner most thoughts and convictions. Bruce has documented cases of those "stuck" in the afterlife, because they truly expected death to be a "sleep without end." People who ask for help after they pass over, and expect help, seem to get it. People who believe in nothing, get what they believe.
So I like to open the door to the idea that we are more than our physical bodies, and at least initially, leave it at that.
Matthew
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