A.H. Almaas Diamond Approach
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y

 

Death

One learns that death is nonexistent on the Being level. More accurately, one learns that death, in terms of consciousness, is really nothing but an aspect of Being. The associations that most of us have with death are actually related to an aspect of Being which we call Death Space. By following these associations one can experience a certain state that feels like death, but which is actually a certain black spaciousness. Also, from the perspective of boundless and nondifferentiated Being, physical death is seen as a transformation of form, and not as ultimate in the way most people think of it. What most people think of as death is actually the presence of the essential aspect of Death Space. Also, the aspect of Peace has experiential qualities similar to that of Death Space, such as stillness and silence. (The Pearl, pg 313)

 

Death

 

In fact, the fear of death is encountered in all the black spaces. The personality does not usually differentiate itself from the body when feelings about death are involved. (The Void, pg148)

Death

 

To understand that the totality of the universe is constantly renewing itself radically changes our notion of death. Personal death is simply Being manifesting at one moment with a particular person as part of the picture, and in the next moment without that person. From this perspective, all the issues about death change character. Death disappears into the continual flow of unfolding, self-arising change. (Facets of Unity, pg 265)

 

Death

 

Death, departure of presence

A second observation on this subject relates to the difference be­tween a live person and a dead person. Many individuals report that when they are in the presence of someone who has just died - when they are with the corpse of the individual - they are surprised by their experience of the corpse. The body does not merely seem dead. There is a distinct sense that the body is missing something it had before. It is not that it is not moving, not that it is not breathing. It is clear that the corpse is missing something more fundamental. The body feels to them empty, only an empty shell. There is often a sense of something having departed that before had not been explicitly recog­nized. Death turns out to be not only the cessation of functioning, but also the absence of something that now seems very substantial. This perception is heightened when there are other individuals present. The contrast between the presence of the dead person and that of the other living individuals becomes distinct and palpable. The living individuals clearly have something that is missing in the corpse. And it is not exactly what was expected. It is as if when the individual dies he or she is emptied in some fundamental and obvious way. A presence of some sort is gone. What is missing is not only energy, not only mind, not only movement. It is something that has all of these qualities, but much more. Here it becomes clear what life is. It is not merely the body functioning, breathing and metabolism and so on. Life is a manifestation of a presence, a fullness that is clearly missing from a corpse. (The Inner Journey Home, p 123)

 

Death

 

Death, life and Soul

Exploring the contrast between a corpse and living people can be an occasion to recognize what people actually are, to discern that they are souls, and to see clearly the characteristics of these souls. They seem to exude something, to have some kind of fullness and luminosity that seems to radiate from their pores. The corpse is miss­ing this quality, this presence. The moment we recognize the living soul it becomes possible for us to see others as souls, and not just bodies. We may begin to see and appreciate the energy, the vitality, the color, the glow, and the intelligence of life in everyone. We can come to appreciate these quali­ties as manifestations of the presence of the soul, rather than viewing them as properties of the body. Recognizing in this way what a human being is naturally brings us to a deeper respect for people, and an appreciation of humanness. (The Inner Journey Home, p 124)

 

Death

 

When we are in the presence of the recently dead it is possible to see that when the body dies it loses not only aliveness but also some­thing much bigger, something that has life. It loses the soul that gave it life, but that also gave the person many other characteristics, some in common with other persons, and some unique to this particular person. We might need to be attuned to recognize this loss, and we possibly need to be sensitive and receptive to see it clearly. However, this sense of the loss of the soul in a corpse is a common perception, and the sense that the corpse has been vacated is also common and unmistakably clear. Death seems to come when the soul vacates the body. The loss of life is identical to the loss of the soul. It is clear then that life is a property that the soul gives to the body. As the soul leaves the body, she takes away life with her, for life is one of her basic properties. If we have subtle perception, we might be able to perceive that some kind of consciousness or presence has left the body. We might be able to sense or perceive this presence, depending on how sensitive we have been to our experience of soul. Individuals who have learned to experience their souls directly will generally be able to perceive the soul when she leaves the body. She is the same soul, whether occupy­ing the body or not. (The Inner Journey Home, p 124)

 

Death

 

Death, seen as a concept

Recognizing the living quality of soul allows us to understand many significant aspects of the spiritual path. For instance, we see more precisely the similarities and differences between soul and es­sence. Essence is a conscious presence, like the soul. However, essence is only a conscious presence, while soul is not only a conscious pres­ence but also a living presence. This is the main distinction between essence and soul. In some sense, we can say essence is more basic than soul, more fundamental, more primordial, because it is simpler; it is prior to life. It is beyond life and beyond death. From the perspective of essence, life and death are concepts. However, we can also say that soul is more than essence - she contains essence as her primordial ground, but she possesses other dimensions. Soul has infinite potential, which expresses itself as life. One of the main expressions of this life is biological life. The life of soul is also beyond death, because it is beyond biological life. (The Inner Journey Home, p 127)

 

Death

 

Death, Soul’s transcendence of death

These developments in turn bring about a profound sense of alone­ness, for the presence of Being is not connected psychically to any internalized object relation; it is autonomous from the structured sense of self that consists of representations of the self in relation to others. At the beginning the soul inevitably experiences this transcen­dence as aloneness, which tends to bring a fear of loss of contact, relatedness, connection, and communication. However, deep and per­sistent inquiry reveals the intrinsic intimacy of essential presence, whose boundlessness and formlessness constitute a much more funda­mental connectedness than that known by the ego-self. The soul con­tends with the notion of death and the fear of death, and learns, with persistent inquiry, that her true nature transcends both life and death, for it is the pure consciousness that forms the eternal ground of all phenomena. We see, then, that even though the inner journey con­fronts us, often painfully, with existential issues, the experience and understanding of essence provides resolution and a depth of wisdom not envisaged by existential philosophy or any form of psychotherapy. (The Inner Journey Home, p 231)

 

Death

 

Death, death of God

The orientation of modern and postmodern times has been criticized by many thinkers and philosophers as having a general dehumanizing effect, due in part to our increased dependence on science and technol­ogy. Our material improvement, they argue, has happened at the ex­pense of inner spiritual and moral richness, resulting in a pervasive psychic emptiness. The human effects of this development have been described by various significant Western thinkers, and also by broad movements in philosophy, psychology, and even physical science. We can see this, for example, in the work of Nietzsche, who described one consequence in his notion of the death of God. We can see it in the development of phenomenology and existentialism in philosophy, as exemplified in the work of Heidegger and his insight into how Western philosophy has forgotten Being. We see it also in the phenomenal in­crease of interest in Eastern spiritual teachings and shamanic approaches, in the revival of interest in the various Western mystical schools, and even in the latest rise of fundamentalism in all the major faiths. Even though what is called the New Age movement contains many superficial and distorted elements, it is an expression of the awareness of a certain lack and a sense of emptiness; it is a response to a felt need. We can see the response to this need in the emergence and devel­opment of humanistic, existential, and transpersonal psychologies that recognize the underlying emptiness of the positivistically based mainstream of Western psychology. We see it in the rise and proliferation of many approaches and disciplines of the human potential movement, the growth movement, and the many consciousness groups and self­ help approaches. These developments in psychology indicate an increasing awareness of the death of soul in our postmodern, primarily psychological, society. (The Inner Journey Home, p 461)