Post by Blu on Dec 7, 2004 15:49:14 GMT -5
I tried to post this on the message about "What happens when we die, but I think I blew the Server! So I am putting it here. As usual you have to click on the link posted below the article to to find the original post.
"Death in the material plane is birth in the spiritual-mental plane.” 2390-2
“Death is but the beginning of life.” 5488-1
Last year I was talking to a 50-year-old minister in the Presbyterian Church. I had delivered him when he was born and had seen him only occasionally in the years in between. He told me that all through his life he had remembered something which he had not been able to identify. It was a feeling, a sensation, a knowing, an experience that he had which he had identified when he was present for the birth of his first child. He then knew what his soul had been remembering. He knew there was a time when everything he had experienced up until that point in time was shifting.
He was being squeezed and propelled forward in a way over which he had no control. It was something that was unavoidable. He was moving through the darkness. He remembered when the pressure began to ease off and he moved into the light. There was great jubilation and excitement in the world he came into. I remember his birth very clearly. His parents had three daughters and were truly jubilant when he arrived. Through the years as I have worked with people who are being born and people who are dying, I have constantly been impressed that birth and death are different sides of the same coin. In both situations, our souls choose the time for this transition, the place and the people present. Our soul seems to know that there comes a time when we let go of the old in order to move into the new. In birth we move into the body, the vehicle through which we will find expression during this lifetime. In death we let go of that particular vehicle and move into a dimension where our soul will express itself. In both, we move through a dark tunnel, propelled by a force that we seem to have little conscious control over and it is almost as if we’re squeezing out the old in order that the new may enter. In both situations we’re moving towards the light. Our soul chooses the people who are with us at the time of our birth and at the time of our death. Time after time we hear stories of a parent who could not die until a certain child was present. I have had the same experience in delivering babies. When we were with an A.R.E. group led by Hugh Lynn Cayce in 1969, a psychic by the name of Ronald Beasley spoke to us. He drew pictures of the auras surrounding different people. Some of the people had auras that came together smoothly at the top and others had auras that were twisted at the top. I asked Ronald, “Why the difference?” and his response was that the ones whose auras were twisted were those whose souls had not been properly tucked in when they were born. To me this was very important. I truly believe the emotions of people present at birth or death impact the type of experience for that soul. If, when a baby is born, there is joy and jubilation, that soul enters into this earth with a feeling of being accepted and wanted. If, on the other hand, there is grief and dismay, the soul may feel unwanted and rejected. This can cause confusion and trauma which that soul may struggle with all of his/her life. Not only are the people who are present at the baby’s birth important, but also their attitudes and feelings are picked up by the soul of the newborn. I remember a 14-year-old who was having her second baby. Her husband was 16 and I had delivered their first girl. They both wanted a boy. When the baby arrived as a girl, the husband began to cry. When it was time to take the baby back to the nursery, I asked him if he wanted to take her. Crying still, he said no. So I had the privilege of taking her and talking to her all the way to the nursery. I told her she should pay no attention to what just happened because her daddy was just a kid and really didn’t understand. When he got home he would love her and be happy that she was in their family. Things may look new, feel new, sound new as we are born. The same way, when we die and let the five senses drop off, we will move into sensations which are of a higher vibration and will probably seem very new to us.
As we make this transition we will be responding to those who are there to receive us and, in either case, whether it’s the arms of the mother and father on this plane or the presence of our father/mother God on the other plane, we will be moving into and beholding the presence of love. When we are born we will be breathing in air and life; when we die we will be breathing out the air and breathing in the spirit. When we are born the umbilical cord is cut, separating us from our mother and we become a separate individual. When we die the silver cord is cut, separating us from Mother Earth and we become an individual spirit.
www.edgarcayce.org/venture_inward/11122001/gladys_t_mcgarey.htm
Gladys Taylor McGarey, a homeopathic physician, is coauthor of The Physician Within You and the lead physician at the Scottsdale Holistic Medical Group in Scottsdale, Arizona.
"Death in the material plane is birth in the spiritual-mental plane.” 2390-2
“Death is but the beginning of life.” 5488-1
Last year I was talking to a 50-year-old minister in the Presbyterian Church. I had delivered him when he was born and had seen him only occasionally in the years in between. He told me that all through his life he had remembered something which he had not been able to identify. It was a feeling, a sensation, a knowing, an experience that he had which he had identified when he was present for the birth of his first child. He then knew what his soul had been remembering. He knew there was a time when everything he had experienced up until that point in time was shifting.
He was being squeezed and propelled forward in a way over which he had no control. It was something that was unavoidable. He was moving through the darkness. He remembered when the pressure began to ease off and he moved into the light. There was great jubilation and excitement in the world he came into. I remember his birth very clearly. His parents had three daughters and were truly jubilant when he arrived. Through the years as I have worked with people who are being born and people who are dying, I have constantly been impressed that birth and death are different sides of the same coin. In both situations, our souls choose the time for this transition, the place and the people present. Our soul seems to know that there comes a time when we let go of the old in order to move into the new. In birth we move into the body, the vehicle through which we will find expression during this lifetime. In death we let go of that particular vehicle and move into a dimension where our soul will express itself. In both, we move through a dark tunnel, propelled by a force that we seem to have little conscious control over and it is almost as if we’re squeezing out the old in order that the new may enter. In both situations we’re moving towards the light. Our soul chooses the people who are with us at the time of our birth and at the time of our death. Time after time we hear stories of a parent who could not die until a certain child was present. I have had the same experience in delivering babies. When we were with an A.R.E. group led by Hugh Lynn Cayce in 1969, a psychic by the name of Ronald Beasley spoke to us. He drew pictures of the auras surrounding different people. Some of the people had auras that came together smoothly at the top and others had auras that were twisted at the top. I asked Ronald, “Why the difference?” and his response was that the ones whose auras were twisted were those whose souls had not been properly tucked in when they were born. To me this was very important. I truly believe the emotions of people present at birth or death impact the type of experience for that soul. If, when a baby is born, there is joy and jubilation, that soul enters into this earth with a feeling of being accepted and wanted. If, on the other hand, there is grief and dismay, the soul may feel unwanted and rejected. This can cause confusion and trauma which that soul may struggle with all of his/her life. Not only are the people who are present at the baby’s birth important, but also their attitudes and feelings are picked up by the soul of the newborn. I remember a 14-year-old who was having her second baby. Her husband was 16 and I had delivered their first girl. They both wanted a boy. When the baby arrived as a girl, the husband began to cry. When it was time to take the baby back to the nursery, I asked him if he wanted to take her. Crying still, he said no. So I had the privilege of taking her and talking to her all the way to the nursery. I told her she should pay no attention to what just happened because her daddy was just a kid and really didn’t understand. When he got home he would love her and be happy that she was in their family. Things may look new, feel new, sound new as we are born. The same way, when we die and let the five senses drop off, we will move into sensations which are of a higher vibration and will probably seem very new to us.
As we make this transition we will be responding to those who are there to receive us and, in either case, whether it’s the arms of the mother and father on this plane or the presence of our father/mother God on the other plane, we will be moving into and beholding the presence of love. When we are born we will be breathing in air and life; when we die we will be breathing out the air and breathing in the spirit. When we are born the umbilical cord is cut, separating us from our mother and we become a separate individual. When we die the silver cord is cut, separating us from Mother Earth and we become an individual spirit.
www.edgarcayce.org/venture_inward/11122001/gladys_t_mcgarey.htm
Gladys Taylor McGarey, a homeopathic physician, is coauthor of The Physician Within You and the lead physician at the Scottsdale Holistic Medical Group in Scottsdale, Arizona.