(October 1, 2016 at 4:50 pm)Arkilogue Wrote:(October 1, 2016 at 4:04 pm)Stimbo Wrote: It's the only one we know for certain that we get. Why not act as if it is, then whatever life comes next is a bonus?Certainly it's a one off, one of a kind event, never to be repeated. We'll never live this particular life again and it is priceless.
My particular brand of "afterlife-ism" includes a life review without the many veils of opinion, personality and time. This is immersion into the Mind of God and we can either open up to consciousness decreasing resistance to re-membrance, or contract and increase resistance which has it's own consequences.
Considering such a possibility to be real adds a great deal of reflective pressure to do rightly. I judge myself now as rightly as i can so I won't have to later. The aim to be all embracing of the messy self, to accept all negative aspects as negative and I work to change them. I'll prune what I can while alive and when I arrive in death I'll have a list of further things I want pruned out of me and burned up. I rejoice in The Judgment or else I'd never be able to self check error via an external perfect source.
Even if there is nothing after life, I will have lived a good one at least to myself and probably others.
I see the unborn soul as like a perfectly spherical diamond and each incarnation is like a meeting of it's surface with the sand paper like plane of life and it abrades a face/facet into that sphere. Subsequent lives increase the number of external facets and internal reflective capacity of the soul. Some lives are diametric opposites of others. Sometimes the abrasion is too much and fractures/trauma's form in the crystal further obscuring internal reflection.
Time between lives is spent off the abrasion surface in an EM(consciousness/light) bath that internally illuminates the crystal and can heal the mars....if we simply open up. We do have a choice, expansion and more consciousness or contraction and less. It is not unduly forced upon us, obvious by our relative mental isolation in life. But we are reminded of it from time to time.
The only burden is light.
I don't see anything necessarily wrong with that. Wipe away all the febrile froth and it sounds quite laudable. Kudos for embracing a system which works for you.
At the age of five, Skagra decided emphatically that God did not exist. This revelation tends to make most people in the universe who have it react in one of two ways - with relief or with despair. Only Skagra responded to it by thinking, 'Wait a second. That means there's a situation vacant.'