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What happens after we or our loved ones die, even if under tragic circumstances? What happens to centuries of wisdom when threats to freedom arise? How do we keep ourselves hopeful in the midst of grueling day-to-day struggles? How can we connect with, and remember, the larger tapestry of our existence?Seven Stories to Light the Way follows in the spirit of the first two books in the "Greater Reality" series by Cynthia Spring and Frances Vaughan: Seven Questions About Life After Life and Seven Questions About the Greater Reality. But this book illuminates through stories.Imagine a starry night sky when it shows the expanse of our galaxy. Imagine that each star offers a threshold, or a portal, into the Greater Realty. How many portals are there? Too many to count. This book offers seven of them. If you peek at the greater reality through each of these portals, you can put together an expansive view of your own making. Each story is like a puzzle piece. Pick one up and it's interesting. Put them together, and a whole picture starts to emerge. Seven Stories expands your consciousness through new ways to understand how our human incarnation fits into a larger frame of existence that we all share-including new ways to experience it. Each of the seven stories in this book captures a moment or event set in the context of a greater reality. Commentary and dialogue between Frances and Cynthia follow the telling of each story, illuminating their broader meaning."Truth and Story always walk together, and people love them both."Seven Stories to Light the Way. Time to come home.(This is Book 3 in the Greater Reality series by Cynthia Spring and Frances Vaughan. Book 1 is Seven Questions About Life After Life. Book 2 is Seven Questions About the Greater Reality.)
Cynthia Spring and Frances Vaughan are engaged in a dialogue based on seven questions about life after life. This fascinating book -- an anchor during a chaotic time filled with confusion and suffering -- offers a larger frame, a greater reality. The authors, one incarnate, one discarnate, address the fears we all are experiencing as we watch our world crumbling. Countries are collapsing; religious and political institutions are wobbling. In this time of rebalance, we are learning the hard way that change is the only constant. Knowledge of life after life helps us let go of the primal fear of death itself. Frances Vaughan's vantage point "from the balcony" offers us a more expansive way of seeing our world. This book encourages direct experience over belief, and provides portals for exploration.Seven Questions also moves us toward a greater sense of consciousness, of love, of the value of our own evolution. Frances describes the dimension she is in - earth-like, filled with Love and Light, and surprisingly integrated with our own space/time dimension. We can make the transition more peacefully, knowing that we will reunite with loved ones who have gone before us.The way to deal with the "upcoming upheavals," as Frances calls them, is to be of service in whatever ways we can, unique to our own evolution.Frances: Let me just say that the experience of this side fills me with a joy beyond comprehension. The important point for us to convey right now is that the reality of life in another dimension is what awaits all of us. If you can accept that as a guiding principle, then you will live your life according to higher values, no matter what is going on around you.
Sometimes we need a story more than food. That is never more true than during our dying time, or when we're taking care of people we love. A few months before she passed away, the author's mother-in-law asked her: "What do you think happens after you die"? In response, Cindy Spring shared stories from three different traditions. Sylvia chose the old Hindu tale - the wave and the drop -- as the one that carried her through her final days. The Wave and The Drop is a small book of stories that help us consider the mystery of life and death, and start conversations about life's ultimate questions.The Foreword was written by Dr. Charles Garfield, internationally recognized for over 40 years as a leader and teacher in the field of death and dying. Each chapter draws from a different tradition and addresses two essential questions: What happens when you die? What happens after you die? The Wave and The Drop is a kind of Aesop's Fables for the dying time.Every tribe, religion, and culture on the planet has evolved its own stories. In this book, the sources are referred to as wisdom traditions, and their stories as wisdom stories. Some describe entering a white light, others foretell a reuniting with loved ones, or promise a new dimension such as heaven or nirvana. These are tales of joining the beloved community, dropping back into an ocean of love, and going home. They suggest that we can temper the sadness and fear that often accompany death with grace and a deep sense that there is an afterlife. Sometimes the dying person sees escorts: deceased parents, or a spouse, or angels ready to assist in the transition from life to what comes next. Alongside traditional stories about heaven, you'll find recent accounts of near-death experiences describing a personal version of heaven. In the chapter on the ancient belief in reincarnation, the reader will find several contemporary stories about children who seem able to recall past lives with amazing detail.The Story of Transformation is that moment when the drop starts falling back into the wave, a surrender to the fact that my life in this body is ending. It can mean a larger awareness of the impermanence of everything, as Buddhism suggests. Author Richard Bach captures a version in his well-known quote: "What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly."In the Tapestry section of the book, you'll find a selection of inspiring quotes from seekers such as Rumi, Emily Dickinson, and Kahlil Gibran. There also are insights from contemporary thinkers such as psychiatrist Irvin Yalom who helps his patients move past their denial of death, and historian Arnold Toynbee who speculated on why belief in an afterlife is universal.In the Epilogue, author Cindy Spring reflects on how stories provide us with answers. They can bypass the rational mind by speaking to us in images and metaphors, like the wave and the drop. They contain universals honed over centuries by the best thinkers and practitioners within a tradition. The stories may be "pieces of the elephant" as described in the famous parable of the four blind men. Or fingers pointing at the moon. When we share stories with a whole community, we feel better equipped to step outside our usual death-denying world and open to a different point of view --- like the Stanford engineering professor who told his loved ones on his deathbed: "I'm off to my next great adventure."What do you believe will happen at your death and afterward? We, and those we love, can take these stories and shape them into a personal narrative that will help us cross that threshold. This book guides us gently by the heart as we consider our own mortality and the possibility of continued existence.
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