Death - A Process of Growth
Indrani Devi Dasi
In society today there is much talk of death and dying because of the
loss of life due to crime, cancer, AIDS, and increase in suicide,famine and wars. Recent
issues such as living wills and euthanasia also have brought the subject of death and
dying more to our attention. Even though many people are uncomfortable talking about
death, especially their own or that of someone close, it is one experience of our lives we
know will occur with certainty. The least certain is the time when it will happen. Because
of this utter uncertainty about the time of death, we need to be prepared for it at all
times.
Anyone researching the literature on death & dying finds an array
of books and articles. Valuable as these numerous studies have been in shaping
compassionate social attitudes toward the fatally ill and in clarifying our ways of
thinking about our own life and death, most of them lack a spiritual dimension: practical
guidance in what may be called the "art" of dying.
Death is a subject we try to conceal, deny and bury, but death does not
go away. In times past when people died amid familiar surroundings, the sight of death was
not uncommon. There were no "old peoples homes," young and old lived together.
Children saw family members and friends die of one ailment or another. The full cycle of
life was more visible, birth, growth, sickness aging and death. Today, technological
development has brought dehumanization and alienation to the dying person. It is almost
impossible for anyone to hear or say any last words. New drugs appear to keep people alive
longer and kill the pain but they can also diminish the consciousness, making
communication very difficult.
Now, people die in the alien world of the modern medical hospital or
among strangers in a nursing home, who are dealing with the fear of death themselves.
Contemporary medicines approach to the dying seems to be dominated by a determined
effort to conquer death and delay its advent at all cost.
In refusing to face death, we close off a part of life. There is an
interesting tendency in Western thinking to dissociate death from life. In Western
thinking, the answer to the problem of death is to try to conquer it or postpone its
arrival as long as possible whereas, in ancient and non-western cultures, there is the
recognition of the utmost importance of dying as an integral aspect of life. In these
cultures, the theme of death has had a deep influence on religion, ritual, life,
mythology, and philosophy. For ancient cultures, dying is sometimes seen as a step up in
the spiritual hierarchy, a promotion into the world of revered ancestors, powerful spirits
or as an upward transition from the complicated earthly life fraught with suffering and
problems.
We need to examine the meaning of human life. Ancient scriptures tell
us that human life is meant for reviving ones eternal relationship with the Lord.
All religious injunctions are meant for awakening this dormant instinct of the living
entity. The sooner the awakening is brought about, the quicker the mission of human life
is fulfilled. The awakening occurs by processes. The process of expressing life is growth.
The process of dying is growth also. From the time we enter this world, we are in a
process of growth -- physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. In order for these
growth processes to occur we must "die" a little. The dying has to occur in
order to live. What is that dying? To die means there are things we put behind us. Things
we have to kill out of our "dying" experience also. We die to old ways of
thinking, to doubt and fears and we are reborn to live life more fully. These
"dying" experiences continue until the final growth experience occurs, the death
of the physical body when the eternal soul is freed to return to the Lord.
Life and death are not demarcated. They are not conditions existing
independent of each other. They are merely facets of one natural process (growth) both
present at any given time. It is the denial of death, as a part of the process, that is
partially responsible for people living empty, purposeless lives. When you live as if you
will live forever it becomes to easy to postpone the things you must do. Most people live
their lives in preparation for tomorrow or in remembering yesterday and meanwhile today is
lost. But if you live each day as if it could be your last, then you could use each day to
grow because each day we are in the dying process preparing for the final growth process:
death.
To understand these processes, we need to have a strong belief
system--religious, spiritual and/ or philosophical that teaches us who we are, the purpose
of life, and where we go after death. We must have some understanding of who or what dies.
Most people believe they are a body and a mind, an "I", an ego identified by
name, i.e "I am Jane from Boston". "I am American". "I am
Black".
A spiritual perspective includes the understanding that we are more
than the body; we are spirit/soul in a body. Understanding this is the real
preparation for the process of growth called death. This means remembering the real
purpose of life. This really means developing a higher consciousness by which we perceive
ourselves to be eternal.
In order to work with the concept of knowing who we are , we need to
study and examine how ancient religions and spiritual and philosophical teachings describe
death and an afterlife. You will find it is a more comforting explanation of the
relationship between life and death than that offered in many Western religions.
If we are to have true contentment we must free ourselves from the
chain of birth and death. We need to gain knowledge of the self. To do this we go to books
and teachers of higher knowledge.
The oldest of these books of knowledge are the Vedas, original
scriptures spoken by the Lord Himself. The purpose of books of knowledge are to train us
to understand our position as pure soul.
One such book is the Bhagavad-Gita As It Is by His Divine Grace
A.C. Bhakitivedanta Swami Prabhupada, in which Krishna, the Supreme Lord, provides
instructions on the nature of the self to His student Arjuna who is struck with terror by
the task of slaying his kinsmen on the field of battle. Krsna tells Arjuna that although
the body perishes the soul cannot be injured and does not die because it is eternal.
Arjuna is informed that knowledge means to know the difference between matter and spirit
and the controller of both. Knowledge is the preparation for facing the process of dying
leading to the final process of growth: death. Krishna tells Arjuna that "one who has
taken birth is sure to die, and after death one is sure to take birth again..." That
is until one engages in devotional service to the Supreme and moves toward ending the
cycle of birth and death. Ending the cycle of birth and death means remembering that we
are part and parcel of the Supreme Lord, controlling the mind and the senses and moving
beyond the pull of the material world, to return to the spiritual world, our true home.
Unfortunately, much of modern society, feels that death is the greatest
of human misfortunes and that dying is the final agonizing struggle against extinction.
Just as people are afraid of heights, the dark, deep water, the future or the unknown,
people are afraid of death. All are a reflection of the ultimate unknown.
Many try to relieve their anxiety by more and more self gratification.
But death does not forget about us. This means always remembering the real purpose of life
and that life is nothing but a moment on our path toward self-realization.
Srila Prabhupadas message of self-realization to this Western world is in essence
that we are not the body. We are spirit/soul, part and parcel of the Lord. He stressed
that it is not simply a matter of saying "I am not the body", but of actually
realizing it. Until we truly understand that, we will continue in the cycle of birth and
death. But we are not left to figure out how to do this. We are given a wonderful process;
chant the Names of the Lord and engage in devotional service to the Lord. We will then be
less fearful about death and more fulfilled about life.
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