Life after death by deepak chopra pdf free download






















Modesitt, Jr. Somerset Maugham. Done That. Try This! Alan Wallace. Live a new life….. Live in your new world…. I saw no images more but I was everywere as a gold air, I knew exactly that it was me and nothing else existed somewhere, just me as an air everywere, I was very surprised that nothing else existed, I understood it very well that I was alone as an air everywere. My question is: it is so we will experience when we are dead? Have a nice day Galina Karlsson soliga outlook.

When your mind and heart are truly open abundance will flow to you effortlessly and easily. I'm an academic neuropsychiatrist with deep interest in brain and mind.

For me you seem to know that what is sacred is every moment we spend existing and not in what is "out there". How far am I from the "Truth"! What the Buddha also taught, among other things, was the acceptance of impermanence. No thing is truly impermanent or unchanging and we fight that truth and are often miserable because of it. Yes, our bodies get old and start to hurt and get sick and eventually die but we have to accept that and remind ourselves that we are not our bodies.

And without change, we would not grow up and when we get sick we would not heal. So there's an up side to impermanence. Lew November 11, What the Buddha also taught, among other things, was the acceptance of impermanence. Show More Comments You may also like. Add email and name If you want to recieve an e-mail notification when he answers your question.

Love, Deepak. Write Your Comment Cancel reply You must be logged in to post a comment. Question: When your physical body passes, does your energy simply return to the One Source, becoming everything, and nothing, as your own consciousness merges with Go, or do you continue your spiritual journey in the eternal here and now with the ability to consciously merge and separate your Spirit with the choice to merge with God or to experience life in the spiritual or physical realm?

Response: The experience and reality you manifest after you leave your physical body will vary depending upon your state of consciousness, just as your present reality is a function of your state of consciousness. This is obviously a large topic and is further discussed in my book Life After Death.

Response: Congratulations on a life full of so much love. Newest Oldest. Scientists arrive at the top of the mountain to discover a theologian sitting there. The theologian looks up and says "What took you so long? Religion has taught us that some Intelligence created the material world. Religion has taught us there is design and purpose for what we see.

Religion has taught us that we are more than our bodies our brains. The afterlife begins to make sense when you take the approach that consciousness is not in the brain. But, the brain is more like a receiver of consciousness. This is a model being investigated by some neuroscientists. Science cannot tell us how the brain works. We can see it working, different parts lighting up as we think or dream.

But, we are obviously more than just our brains. For example, while many people believe that our brains produce our thoughts, thoughts actually can change brain chemistry. Since drugs are somewhat effective in treating depression one could say changing one's brain chemistry can change one's thoughts. However, talk therapy works as well and can produce changes in brain chemistry.

Meditation can produce changes in brain chemistry. It's definitely not a one way street. While depression can be caused by chemical imbalances, a depressing event can lead to those chemical imbalances. So, our thoughts are clearly not only produced by our brain chemistry. Something, outside of our brain, is the observer, the creator. It also talks about different levels of reality from the physical all the way up to the ultimate level called the Akashic field in this book.

The heavens and hells experienced by people who have had NDEs are temporary stops along the way as many who have had NDEs have reported. They are largely created by the mind and the expectation of the person dying. Of course, scientists have said this all along- they're purely subjective experiences and do not reflect reality. But, this brings us to the question as to what the nature of reality is.

If you're in a dream and you can't wake up, that is reality to you. We call this reality because it's a shared experience. But, reality is whatever your senses tell you it is.

None of us experiences reality directly in this body anyway. How much do our minds create "reality"? At the point of death, our ties to the physical world fall away and we begin to experience more directly the other two realms the subtle world the the world of pure consciousness.

Chopra talks about how we can begin to shift our focus on these realms of reality before we die. In the second part of the book, Chopra talks about the burden of proof. If we can answer all of these questions in the affirmative, it's not so hard to believe that we survive the death of our bodies really the death of our brains since that is where the mind is said to reside. Chopra links the question about Akasha to what scientists are discovering about the ultimate nature of the universe.

He gets into some pretty complex physics that I have to confess I don't really understand. But, what is interesting is that the word Akasha has an English equivalent- ether. Up until the late s scientists believed there was no "void" in space but everything was transmitted through the ether. Physicists more recently have gone back to a model that says space is full of activity in the form of invisible fluctuations in the quantum field. Physicists have come up with a Zero Point Field which contains not just what we see in the universe but everything that could possibly exists.

This "field of fields", this seething exchange of energy is what everything that exists pops into and out of existence. The Zero Point field has been calculated to contain 10 to the 40th power more energy than the visible universe.

This sounds a lot like what religion has been telling us that the unseen is incredibly more powerful than the seen. That last paragraph may have been over your head it's over mine. Chopra goes on and gives some analogies that are very helpful. Basically what he is positing it that our physical world is projected from a nonmaterial source. The invisible world comes first. And, reality increases the closer one gets to the source.

As we die, we do not blink out of existence. We move from the projected to the real. The next chapters go on to address the other questions asked above. Chopra concludes with a poem by Rabgindranath Tagore. He only gives part of it.



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