Monday, March 3, 2008

Dissolving the Boundary between Life and Death

If there’s one thing certain about our changing times, it is that boundaries are disappearing. Pollution, computer viruses, terrorism, AIDS, digital information, the world economy—isn’t oneness wonderful? Something is in process that is taking us, kicking and screaming, toward the interconnected world we’ve always preached about, but seem unready to handle. The dissolving boundary between the objective world “out there” and the subjective world “in here” is especially troublesome for our identities. Out-of-body experiences that prove clairvoyant and alien abductions that leave physical scars are two examples where the realm of the mind and the realm of the physical world seem to overlap or coalesce. We keep a tight distinction between what is only “imaginary,” and what is (physically) “real.” But with the birth of quantum mechanics that distinction was destined to be dissolved. What is happening to our world, to humanity? We might suggest that there’s something afoot whose aim seems to be to “shamanize humanity.” There’s a growing collection of bizarre experiences that threaten to transform our very notion of reality and our place in it. Near-death experiences and the enormous amount of research conducted on this phenomena is a case in point.

The Big Book of Near-Death Experiences: The Ultimate Guide to What Happens When We Die (Hampton Roads Publishing) is a big book alright, and it is as much about the nature of the life as it may truly be than it is simply about the journey from life to death and back again. The author, P.M.H. Atwater, has many books to her credit on this theme, many of which draw upon the work of Edgar Cayce. Her Big Book is certainly encyclopedic and comprehensive. We learn in it more than about the enormous body of research that is providing important information about the nature of these experiences. We also learn how NCEs fit into the more general class of all transformative experiences. We learn that there is a general pattern to transformative experiences and that they are becoming more and more common. So common that together they are inspiring a new concept of what is afoot: “the translucent revolution,” meaning more and more people are becoming less egotistically dense and more transparent to the transpersonal light of creation, or God. Humanity is undergoing a transformation, and Atwater sees evidence of it in the children, what some call the Indigo children. As the veil between life and death disappears, it reveals a greater reality. Truly, this Big Book is as much about this larger reality than it is about simply the phenomenon of being dead for awhile and coming back to life. If it were the case that NDEs were the only phenomenon to transform lives, the only phenomenon in which alternate realities were visited, the only phenomenon in which spirit beings were encountered, the only phenomenon in which people experienced their inherent divinity, then NDEs would certainly be anomalous. But by placing NDEs within the larger context of other transformative experiences, Atwater is able to make a credible case for an emerging evolutionary force at work within and around us.

We are moving, slowly but surely, away from being “grounded” in the physical world and becoming more and more beings in the world of consciousness itself. It is as if the physical world could disappear someday, but we would continue living in a “virtual” world of consciousness. Whether or not we experience this coming change as rapture or rupture may depend upon the attitude with which we regard the death of life as we know it

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