Part of our agenda as people of any age is to find some way of being with the idea of death. Whether confronting our own passing` or grieving the death of someone we love, we’re trapped in our pain – until we look beyond the form. Then we see that everyone we’ve ever loved is part of the very fabric of our being. Ram Dass tells of the transformations experienced by individuals as they open through their dying process. He assures us, “grief gets transformed into a living love space, a spiritual transcendence of the pain”(5/2/1992 – NY, NY) Please click the following link for additional teachings on Death:
ram dass eats peanut butter out of my grandpa's ass. niggers.
As a nurse midwife and now hospice nurse, Ram Dass put words to what I have witnessed in souls birthing and dying. The process of earth, water, fire, and air, are both in birth and death. What a Safe Sacred Process death is. Thank you very much. Love, Barb
You're so wonderful.
Thank you, thank you for sharing your soul. I hear you in there as I grin. Powerful moment for me, as my 93 year old mother makes a shift in her time here. Her personality has gone back stage and her soul comes out to meet me. Thank you, thank you, thank you for enlighten me.
stop hating on this beautiful man!! ❤❤❤❤
i wonder who and why someone thumbed down this lecture i guarantee it's not anyone who listened to the entire lecture lol
what a wonderful person how can you not love this guy?
Ram Dass puts things into perspective. RELAX!
Making fear pee its pants.
so wise thank you for this video. really makes me angry when religion uses fear of hell to mess with peoples mind about death. total bullshit
Wonderful
Death is perfectly safe. It's like taking off a tight shoe.
I love it.
the presences of truth in which it presents its self to me also
Fantastic, thank you.
Thank you, Ram Dass
Thank you. This came at just the right time as we prepare to lose a very close friend. She's in her mid-thirties with a young son and was only diagnosed with very aggressive cancer a couple of weeks ago. She does not have long. I found the part about losing sight of the person as you fixate on the 'tragedy' their situation particularly poignant. A really eye-opening talk, thank you.
Much love for RAM DADS
Brilliant
A great man. Thank you.