Twilight

The Book ‘Twilight’

The Writter of Twilight the Book says that She had come up with the Idea of writing it from no-where in June 2003. She certainly dint knew that the Book will be a foundation for a Series of Movies to come, that will entertain the fans more than ever.

The Vampire story hit the screens hard and was a big succes but not many people know that it was taken from this book.
The author of the book Stephenie Meyer Says she saw a dream on June the second and that made the story begin.

It was By far the best Seller In the World and Earned her alot.
But the best of them all was the Movie, starring Rob Patterson and Kristen Stewart as The main characters. It hit the cinema Hard and Made alot. It was a very large success in what was termed to be of a series to come.
The reviews about the book that came from mostly 16 years old who found it amazing.
Katie aged 16 says: Twilight is one of the ,most moving Book i have ever read, it kept me thinking about it after i read the last page. Its heart Breaking Romance and Twisting suspense Made it hard for me to Put Down the Book.
This is the kind of reaction this book met.
The other series of same Kind ‘ The Harry Potter’ was also famous but still couldnt hit the same Likes, solely because of its concentration on the Magical stuff and Child thing.
The last Series of the movie is yet to come, but the Name that this book earned Stephenie has no parallels.

Strange Animals of the Deep (and not so deep) Sea

 

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Awesome Photography

 

See Pics of Top 10 Funny Caricatures

Maybe for you not be most funny like for me,but I am sure you will find it funny and your laugh. See, this funny caricature!

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Positive Attitude Quotes

Ralph Waldo Emerson Attitude Quote:

“What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.”

~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Kahlil Gibran Thoughts on Attitude:

“Your living is determined not so much by what life brings to you as by the attitude you bring to life; not so much by what happens to you as by the way your mind looks at what happens. “

~ Kahlil Gibran

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Theodore Roosevelt Quote on Belief:

“Believe you can and you’re half way there.”

~ Theodore Roosevelt

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William James Attitude Quote:

“The greatest discovery of my generation is that a human being can alter his life by altering his attitudes of mind.”

~ William James

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Mary Kay Ash Positive Quote:

 

“If you think you can, you can. And if you think you can’t, you’re right. “

~ Mary Kay Ash

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Norman Vincent Peale On Attitude:

“Any fact facing us is not as important as our attitude toward it, for that determines our success or failure. The way you think about a fact may defeat you before you ever do anything about it. You are overcome by the fact because you think you are. “

~ Norman Vincent Peale

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Thomas Jefferson Right Mental Attitude Quote:

“Nothing can stop the man with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help the man with the wrong mental attitude. “

~ Thomas Jefferson

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John F. Kennedy Positive Outlook Quote:

“When written in Chinese, the word crisis is composed of two characters. One represents danger, and the other represents opportunity.”

~ John F. Kennedy

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Ella Wheeler Wilcox Attitude Poem:

“One ship drives east and another drives west
With the selfsame winds that blow.
‘Tis the set of sails and not the gales
Which tells us the way to go. “

~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox

Words of Sympathy

John Taylor Sympathy Quote:

“While we are mourning the loss of our friend, others are rejoicing to meet him behind the veil.”

~ John Taylor

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Anne Frank Sympathy Words:

“I don’t think of all the misery, but of all the beauty that still remains.”

~ Anne Frank

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Rossiter Worthington Raymond Sympathy Quote:

“Life is eternal, and love is immortal, and death is only a horizon; and a horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight. “

~ Rossiter Worthington Raymond

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Kahlil Gibran Sympathy Words:

“Oh heart, if one should say to you that the soul perishes like the body, answer that the flower withers, but the seed remains.”

~ Kahlil Gibran

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Words of Sympathy from an Unknown Author:

“Perhaps they are not the stars, but rather openings in Heaven where the love of our lost ones pours through and shines down upon us to let us know they are happy.”

~ Unknown

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Emily Dickinson Sympathy Words:

“Unable are the loved to die. For love is immortality.”

~ Emily Dickinson

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Sympathy Words from an Unknown Author :

“Although it’s difficult today to see beyond the sorrow, May looking back in memory help comfort you tomorrow.”

~ Unknown

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William Penn Sympathy Quote:

“For death is no more than a turning of us over from time to eternity.”

~ William Penn

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Sympathy Words from an Unknown Source:

“Death leaves a heartache no one can heal, love leaves a memory no one can steal.”

~ Unknown

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James Whitcomb Riley Sympathy Quote:

“Think of him still as the same, I say, He is not dead, he is just – away.”

~ James Whitcomb Riley

Self-Esteem Quotes

We’ve selected the very best self-esteem quotes, useful for reminding ourselves how valuable our own opinions of ourselves are, sometimes in spite of what we hear from others. Here are our favorite self-esteem and self-image quotes and aphorisms, from some truly inspirational minds, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Golda Meir, and Lou Holtz.


St. Francis De Sales Self-esteem Quote:

“Do not wish to be anything but what you are, and try to be that perfectly.”

~ St. Francis De Sales

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Marta Kagan quote about listening to your heart:

“Listen to your heart above all other voices.”

~ Marta Kagan

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Self-esteem Quote from an Unknown Author:

“Be yourself. There is something that you can do better than any other. Listen to the inward voice and bravely obey that.”

~ Unknown Author

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Judy Garland quote on being yourself:

“Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate version of somebody else.”

~ Judy Garland

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Lou Holtz quote on being who you want to be:

“You were not born a winner, and you were not born a loser. You are what you make yourself be.”

~ Lou Holtz

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Self-esteem Motto from an Unknown Source:

“To the world you may be one person, but to one person you may be the world.”

~ Unknown Author

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Andre Gide Self-esteem Quote:

“It is better to be hated for what you are, than to be loved for something you are not.”

~ Andre Gide

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Ralph Waldo Emerson Self-trust Quote:

“Self-trust is the first secret of success.”

~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

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John Atkinson Quote on thinking for yourself:

“If you don’t run your own life, somebody else will.”

~ John Atkinson

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Ralph Waldo Emerson Self-esteem Quote:

“To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.”

~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Classic Self-esteem Quote from an Unknown Author:

“The most important opinion you have is the one you have of yourself, and the most significant things you say all day are those things you say to yourself.”

~ Unknown Author

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Eleanor Roosevelt’s famous self-esteem quote:

“No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.”

~ Eleanor Roosevelt

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Golda Meir Quote on trusting yourself:

“Trust yourself. Create the kind of self that you will be happy to live with all your life. Make the most of yourself by fanning the tiny, inner sparks of possibility into flames of achievement.”

~ Golda Meir

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Les Brown self-image quote:

“Someone’s opinion of you does not have to become your reality.”

~ Les Brown

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Anna Freud Self-esteem Quote:

“I was always looking outside myself for strength and confidence but it comes from within. It is there all the time.”

~ Anna Freud

5 Steps To Changing Any Behavior by Alex Lickerman

From quitting smoking to eating healthier to exercising regularly to getting more organized, most of us have a list of behaviors we’d like to begin (or end) that resist our attempts to do so.  As a physician, I find myself giving advice about changing habits on a daily basis.  Even though many of my patients are able to succeed in making desired changes in the short term, most of them revert to their original behaviors in the long term.  What, then, are effective ways to alter behavior on a permanent basis?

The psychology that underlies the changing of behaviors is complex.  Two researchers named Prochaska and DiClemente developed a way of describing it they called theStages of Change Model.  Though originally developed in the context of smoking cessation, it’s five stages actually describe the process by which all behaviors change.

THE STAGES
  1. Precontemplation.  In this stage, we’ve either literally never thought about needing to change a particular behavior or we’ve never thought about itseriously.  Often we receive ideas about things we might need to change from others—family, friends, doctors—but react negatively by reflex.  After all, we’re usually quite happy with our current stable of habits (if we weren’t, we wouldn’t have them in the first place).  However, if we can find our way to react more openly to these messages, we might find some value in them.  Remember, they aren’t sent with the intent to harm.
  2. Contemplation.  Here we’ve begun to actively think about the need to change a behavior, to fully wrap our minds around the idea.  This stage can last anywhere from a moment—to an entire lifetime.  What exactly causes us to move from this stage to the next is always, in my view, the change of an idea (“exercise is important”) into a deeply held belief (“I need to exercise”), as I discussed in an earlier post, Cigarette Smoking Is Caused By A Delusion.  What exactly causes this change, however, is different for everyone and largely unpredictable.  What we think will produce this change isn’t often what does.  For example, it may not be the high cholesterol that gets the overweight man to begin exercising but rather his inability to keep up with his wife when they go shopping.  This is the stage in which obstacles to change tend to rear their ugly heads.  If you get stuck here, as many often do, seek another way to think about the value of the change you’re contemplating.  Remember, it’s all about finding and activating a motivating belief.
  3. Determination.  In this stage, we begin preparing ourselves mentally and often physically for action.  The smoker may throw out all her cigarettes.  The couch potato may join a gym.  We pick quit days.  We schedule start days.  This mustering of a determination is the culmination of the decision to change and fuels the engine that drives you to your goal.  I firmly believe that human beings possess the ability to manifest an unlimited amount of determination when properly motivated by a deeply held belief.
  4. Action.  And then we start.  We wake up and take a power walk.  Or go to the gym.  Or stop smoking.  Wisdom—in the form of behavior—finally manifests.
  5. Maintenance.  This is continuing abstinence from smoking.  Continuing to get to the gym every day.  Continuing to control your intake of calories.  Because initiating a new behavior usually seems like the hardest part of the process of change, we often fail to adequately prepare for the final phase of Maintenance.  Yet without a doubt, maintaining a new behavior is the most challenging part of any behavior change.  One of the reasons we so often fail at Maintenance is because we mistakenly believe the strategies we used to initiate the change will be equally as effective in helping us continue the change.  But they won’t.  Where changing a strongly entrenched habit requires changing our belief about that habit that penetrates deeply into our lives, continually manifesting that wisdom (and therefore that habit) requires that we maintain a high life-condition.  If our mood is low, the wisdom to behave differently seems to disappear and we go back to eating more and exercising less (this isn’t, of course, equally true for all behaviors, especially for addictive behaviors we’ve long ago abandoned).  In a high life-condition, however, that changed belief will continue to manifest as action.  When you’re feeling good, getting yourself to exercise, for example, is easier because the belief that you should exercise remains powerfully stirred up and therefore motivating.  The key, then, to maintaining new behaviors…is to be happy!  Which is why it’s so hard to maintain new behaviors.
ONE STAGE LEADS TO ANOTHER

The true power of this model really becomes apparent when we recognize these stages are sequential and conditional.  In my medical practice, I first identify the stage in which a patient sits with respect to the behavior I want them to change.  A smoker who’s never seriously considered giving up tobacco would be in the stage of Precontemplation—and if I expected them to jump from that stage over Contemplation and Determination directly to Action, they’d almost certainly fail to change and frustrate us both.  If, however, I focus on ways to move them from one stage to thenext, I can “ripen” them at a pace with which they’re comfortable:  from Contemplation to Determination to Action to Maintenance.  As an example, I often give patients in the stage of Precontemplation a simple assignment:  I ask them to think about how the change I want them to make would improve their lives.  That doesn’t seem like such a difficult step, but if they do it, I’ve just moved them into Contemplation!  That may seem like insignificant progress, but it’s actually 1/5 of the work that needs to be done.  Most people (though certainly not all) seem to be more comfortable embracing change in a step-wise fashion.

The utility of the Stages of Change Model isn’t restricted to the medical arena but in fact extends to almost every area of life.  As an example, my wife used it on me to get me to try sushi (which I now love!).  It could be used in business perhaps on employees to yield changes like improved productivity or cooperation, or even on potential clients to get them to hire you!  The potential applications are limited only by your imagination.

Finally, and most importantly, you can use this model on yourself.  By recognizing which of the five stages of change you find yourself in at any one time with respect to any one behavior you’re trying to change, you can maintain realistic expectations and minimize your frustration.  Focus on reaching the next stage rather than on the end goal, which may seem too far away and therefore discourage you from even starting on the path towards it.

RELAPSE

The final stage of any process leading to behavior change is one extremely difficult to avoid:  relapse.  Though it may sometimes be inevitable, if you train yourself to view relapse as only one more stage in the process of change rather than as a failure, you’re much more likely to be able to quickly return to your desired behavior.  Alternatively, when you allow yourself to view relapse as a complete failure, that assessment typically becomes self-fulfilling.  Just because you fell off the diet wagon during a holiday doesn’t mean you’re doomed to return permanently to poor eating habits—unless you think you are and allow yourself to become discouraged, in which case you will.  Long term weight gain or loss, it turns out, isn’t correlated to calorie intake on any one day but rather to calorie intake over a period of time, which essentially means if you overeat here or there on a few days only, it won’t actually affect your long-term ability to lose weight.

The same is true, in fact, with any behavior you want to change.  Never let a few days, or even weeks, of falling back into bad habits discourage you from fighting to reestablish the good habits you want.  Always remember:  none of us was born with any habits at all.  They were all learned, and can all, therefore, be unlearned.  The question is:  how badly do you really want to change?

Why Are You Here? by Robert M. Sherfield, Ph.D.

Do you sit around thinking of an answer to this question on a daily basis? Probably not. It is not a question that many people ponder on a daily or even yearly basis, but it is a question that needs to be examined when searching for purpose.

Earlier, the ancient Sanskrit word dharma was mentioned. Dharma means purpose in life. According to this word, you have a rare gift, a unique talent, and an uncommon way of bringing that gift to life.

Have you discovered your dharma? Have you given thought to why you are here? Discovering your gifts can very well lead you to your purpose, which in turn can lead you to healthier self-esteem.

Ask yourself a few questions. What are your unique talents? What are your unique abilities? What do you do that you don’t see anyone else doing? What can you do that you see others doing but not as well as you do? What aptitudes and powers do you have that you simply don’t see exercised every day? Answering these questions can help you find your purpose.

Let’s turn this around for a moment and look at it from the negative side. Sometimes, finding your purpose, and indeed your esteem, comes from looking at what you do not do well, and then changing your actions accordingly.

 

“Everyone has a purpose in life … a unique gift or special talent to give others. And when we blend this unique talent with service to others, we experience the ecstasy and exultation of our own spirit, which is the ultimate goal of all goals.”

— Deepak Chopra

So, what is it that you do on a daily basis that you do not do very well? What do you do on a daily basis that you do not enjoy doing? What do you do that does not bring you joy? What do you do that does not serve humanity and make the world a better place?

Answering those questions can help you better identify the things that you do well, enjoy doing, and the things that bring goodness into the world.

Overcoming The Fear Of Death

In January of 2007, I developed a mild stomach ache and general feeling of being unwell while at a Sunday brunch.  Initially, the pain sat in the center of my abdomen just above my belly button, but gradually over the course of the day inched its way down into my right lower quadrant, causing me to wonder briefly if I’d developed acute appendicitis.  However, by evening the pain had actually begun to improve so I dismissed the possibility; I’d never heard of a case of appendicitis resolving on its own without surgery.  But mindful of the adage that the physician who treats himself has a fool for a patient, the next day I asked one of my physician friends to examine me.  When he did, he found a fullness he didn’t like in my right lower quadrant and ordered a CT scan.  To our mutual surprise, it showed that I had, in fact, developed acute appendicitis.

Later that afternoon, I saw a surgeon who began me on antibiotics and scheduled an elective laparscopic appendectomy, which he performed two days later.  The surgery went well and I was back at home that night with a bloated stomach but minimal discomfort.

At 3 a.m., however, I awoke with projectile vomiting, and after a particularly violent episode, briefly lost consciousness.  Panicked, my wife called 911 and an ambulance delivered me back to the hospital where I was found to be anemic.  My surgeon diagnosed an intra-abdominal bleed and began following my red blood cell count every few hours, hoping the bleeding would stop on its own.  By late afternoon, however, it became clear that it wasn’t, so I was taken back to the operating room where the surgeon found and evacuated approximately 1.5 liters of free-flowing blood from inside my abdomen.  All told, I’d bled out half of my blood volume over the course of sixteen hours.  Over the next few days, however, my blood count stabilized and my strength returned, so I was sent home four days after I’d been admitted, slightly less bloated than I’d been after the first surgery but four units more full of a stranger’s blood.

Three weeks later, my wife and I took a four-hour flight to Mexico—a vacation we’d planned to take in Cabo San Lucas prior to my illness—spent three days on the beach, and then flew back home.

Two days later, I developed diarrhea.  Because I’d only had bottled water while in Mexico, I thought I’d contracted a viral gastroenteritis that would resolve on its own within a few days.  While driving home a few days later, however, I developed right-sided chest pain.  I called my physician friend who asked me to return immediately to the hospital to have a chest CT, which in short order showed I’d thrown a largepulmonary embolism.  I was taken immediately to the emergency room and placed on intravenous blood thinners to prevent another clot from traveling to my lung and possibly killing me.  Luckily, this time my hospital stay was uneventful, and I was ultimately discharged on an oral anti-coagulant called coumadin.

A week later, the diarrhea still hadn’t resolved, however, so a stool culture was sent forclostridium difficile.  It came back positive, undoubtedly as a result of the antibiotics I’d been given prior to my first surgery, so I was started on Vancomycin.  Then I developed an allergic reaction to the Vancomycin, so I was switched to Flagyl.  Within a week the diarrhea resolved, but then a week later it returned.  Relapses are common with clostridium difficile colitis, so I tried Flagyl again, this time with a probiotic called Florastor.  The diarrhea resolved and never came back.

A week later, however, the nausea did.  It was absolutely crippling—as was the anxiety that accompanied it.  What could possibly be wrong now?  I longed for the blissful ignorance of a non-medical mind that had no knowledge of all the terrible diseases I now thought I might have.  I called my physician friend who suggested, after listening to my symptoms, that the nausea might be due to anxiety.  I told him that idea hadn’t occurred to me, that I’d supposed the anxiety was present as a result of the nausea, not as its cause, but that I was open to the possibility he was right.  The next day I had a conversation with a psychiatrist who diagnosed me with mild Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

DENIAL OF DEATH

I’m always surprised by people who say they’re not afraid to die.  Most are usually quick to point out they are afraid to die painfully—but not of  the idea of no longer being alive.  I continue to be mystified not only by this answer but by the number of people who give it.  Though I can imagine there are indeed people who, because of their age, character, or religious beliefs, truly do feel this way, I’ve always wondered if that answer hides a denial so deeply seated it cannot be faced by most.

Certainly, this has been the case with me.  I love being here and don’t want to leave.  I’ve always spoken openly of my fear of death to anyone who’s ever asked (not that many have—I suppose even the question is uncomfortable for most), but I’ve rarely experienced moments where I actually felt afraid.  Whenever I’ve tried wrapping my mind around the concept of my own demise—truly envisioned the world continuing on without me, the essence of what I am utterly gone forever—I’ve unearthed a fear so overwhelming my mind has been turned aside as if my imagination and the idea of my own end were two magnets of identical polarity, unwilling to meet no matter how hard I tried to make them.

THE SHATTERING OF A DELUSION

The true significance of my denial wasn’t made clear to me, however, until I was diagnosed with PTSD.  The anxiety that began to envelop me at that point was of an entirely different order than I’d ever experienced before.  It began to interfere with my ability to function, which made plain to me that what my brush with death—twice—had taken from me was my ability to believe I would never die.  Knowing intellectuallythat death awaits us is quite clearly a different thing from believing it, much in the same way knowing intellectually gravity will make you fall is a different experience from actually swooning at the edge of a parapet at the top of a tall building.  Ultimately, being ill brought me to the realization, contrary to what I’d always believed in my heart, that there was nothing special about me at all.  Like everyone else, I was only a piece of meat that would eventually spoil.

From that point forward, whenever I’d feel a minor twinge in my chest or develop a rash on my arms or my hand would shake for no reason I would become paralyzed with anxiety.  Even though I recognized intellectually that my reaction was overblown, every new random symptom I felt caused my doctor’s brain to leap to horrifying conclusions simply because I now knew in a way I hadn’t before that bad things could actually happen to me.  I felt like one of my long-time patients who for as long as I’ve known him has been consumed by an anxiety so great he’d become like a child in his need for constant reassurance that he would be all right.  His anxiety had made him inconsolable and his life a joyless nightmare.

PTSD is often diagnosed in men (and now women) who return from the battlefield, women who’ve been raped, people who witnessed the Twin Towers come down on 9/11—in short, in anyone who either has an intense traumatic experience themselves or witnesses one occurring to someone else.  In my view—completely unsubstantiated by any psychiatric literature, I should point out—PTSD results when a person has their deluded belief that they’re going to live forever stripped away from them.

WHAT TO DO NEXT

I’d always considered the shattering of delusion in my life to be a good thing, something that’s always brought me more happiness rather than less.  And yet here seemed to be an example that contradicted that rule, for around the time I was diagnosed with PTSD I was surely suffering to a degree I never had.  Frankly, I was happier before living in denial.

Over time, though, the crippling anxiety of PTSD resolved and I returned to my previous level of functioning.  However, even minor injuries or transient symptoms that I would have ignored before now stir up vague feelings of worry.  I remain acutely aware to this day that my ability to believe in my invulnerability has been irrevocably ruined.

I’ve decided, however, that this is a good thing:  I’ve been given the opportunity to challenge my fear of death without actually having to be actively dying.  Many others aren’t so lucky.  I began practicing Nichiren Buddhism 20 years ago because I was intrigued by the notion that enlightenment might actually be a real thing, attainable if only the correct path was followed.  I’ve continued because I’ve had experiences with the practice that have convinced me it has real power to shatter delusions about life.  But now more than an intellectual curiosity, my desire for enlightenment has become synonymous with my desire to relieve myself of delusions about death.

For me, three things are certain:  First, my experiences with Buddhism so far have inclined me to think that enlightenment is a real thing, and that it might be the solution to my problem with fear of death.  But, second, for me to become convinced that life is eternal (“there is no beginning called birth or ending called death”), I must have an experience that proves it to me beyond a shadow of a doubt.  I need to know it the way I know gravity is real.  I must confess I can’t today even conceive of what that experience could be.  Yet I must remember that every time I’ve gained real wisdom from my Buddhist practice and become genuinely happier, it’s always come as a result of having an experience I could never have predicted.  And lastly, because I hope the establishment of indestructible happiness based on a belief in the eternity of life is possible, I must remain on guard against the seductive tendency to convince myself of it.  Belief that arises from a desire to believe is usually, in my experience, too flimsy to withstand a genuine challenge.  And I can think of no more genuine a challenge to a belief in life after death (whether through reincarnation or an ascension to Heaven or anything else) than the actual imminent approach of death itself.

I fully recognize that my current belief about death—that it is truly the final end of the self—is likely to be correct.  Which makes me wonder if I wouldn’t be better off throwing my energies into re-embracing denial and simply accepting that when it comes my time to die, if I’m given the chance to see it coming, I’ll suffer however many moments, hours, days, or weeks of fear there are to suffer and then be granted a final release.

If only I could.  Once a delusion has been shattered, I’ve found there’s no going back.  And even if there were, at some point I’m certain to be re-confronted with a denial-eradicating sickness or injury.  Everyone will.  Depending on your current life stage this might not seem like a pressing issue.  But shouldn’t it be?  An experience like mine could become yours at any moment.  And even more desirable than being able to die peacefully is being able to live fearlessly.  In fact, one of the supposed benefits of manifesting the life-condition of the Buddha is freedom from all fear.

I’ve tried to resolve my fear of death intellectually and come to the conclusion that it can’t be done, at least not by me.  Some kind of practice that actually has the power to awaken me to the truth is required (assuming, of course, the truth ends up being what I hope it to be).

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