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Difference between revisions of "The Bardos or Stages of the Afterlife"

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[[Tibetan Buddhism]] has [[concentrated]] more [[attention]] on helping the dying [[person]] cross the borders of [[death]] than any other living [[religious]] [[tradition]]. The [[Tibetan Book of the Dead]] and other sources give detailed descriptions of the stages of [[death]] and [[afterlife]], as well as instructions about how the dying {{Wiki|individual}} should confront and react to these mysterious places and events. Dealing with a [[tradition]] that contains so many [[lineages]], [[deities]], and [[philosophical]] subsystems in a short article will necessarily involve generalizing about the [[tradition]]. Though the material is complex and sometimes difficult to interpret for a Westerner who must rely on English sources, the author will describe the stages of [[death]], and attempt to show how they are relevant to our [[discussion]] of [[spiritual]] travel.
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[[Tibetan Buddhism]] has [[concentrated]] more [[attention]] on helping the dying [[person]] cross the borders of [[death]] than any other living [[religious]] [[tradition]]. The [[Tibetan Book of the Dead]] and other sources give detailed descriptions of the stages of [[death]]  
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and [[afterlife]], as well as instructions about how the dying {{Wiki|individual}} should confront and react to these mysterious places and events. Dealing with a [[tradition]] that contains so many [[lineages]], [[deities]], and [[philosophical]] subsystems in a short article will necessarily involve generalizing about the [[tradition]]. Though the material is complex and sometimes difficult to interpret for a  
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[[Westerner]] who must rely on English sources, the author will describe the stages of [[death]], and attempt to show how they are relevant to our [[discussion]] of [[spiritual]] travel.
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The [[Bardos]] or Stages of the [[Afterlife]]
 
The [[Bardos]] or Stages of the [[Afterlife]]
  
The [[realm]] of the [[afterlife]] is called the [[world]] of the [[bardo]]. The term [[bardo]] is a general term which literally means "in-between" and in this context denotes a transitional state, or what Victor Turner calls a liminal situation. The [[bardo]] {{Wiki|concept}} is an [[umbrella]] term which includes the transitional states of [[birth]], [[death]], [[dream]], [[transmigration]] or [[afterlife]], [[meditation]], and [[spiritual]] [[luminosity]]. We focus, in this essay, on the [[bardos]] of [[death]] and [[transmigration]]. For the dying {{Wiki|individual}}, the [[bardo]] is the period of the [[afterlife]] that lies in between two different [[incarnations]].
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The [[realm]] of the [[afterlife]] is called the [[world]] of the [[bardo]]. The term [[bardo]] is a general term which literally means "in-between" and in this context denotes a [[transitional state]], or what Victor Turner calls a liminal situation. The [[bardo]] {{Wiki|concept}}  
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is an [[umbrella]] term which includes the transitional states of [[birth]], [[death]], [[dream]], [[transmigration]] or [[afterlife]], [[meditation]], and [[spiritual]] [[luminosity]]. We focus, in this essay, on the [[bardos]] of [[death]] and [[transmigration]]. For the dying {{Wiki|individual}}, the [[bardo]] is the period of the [[afterlife]] that lies in between two different [[incarnations]].
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In [[Tantric Buddhist]] [[cosmology]], [[existence]] has a foreground which consists of the many [[worlds]] of [[incarnation]], and also a background which is the [[space]] between these [[worlds]] which is called the [[bardo]] [[world]]. The {{Wiki|stars}} are the many [[worlds]], and [[bardo]] of the [[afterlife]] is like the night sky which is the backdrop or the [[space]] where the {{Wiki|stars}} are hung.
 
In [[Tantric Buddhist]] [[cosmology]], [[existence]] has a foreground which consists of the many [[worlds]] of [[incarnation]], and also a background which is the [[space]] between these [[worlds]] which is called the [[bardo]] [[world]]. The {{Wiki|stars}} are the many [[worlds]], and [[bardo]] of the [[afterlife]] is like the night sky which is the backdrop or the [[space]] where the {{Wiki|stars}} are hung.
  
The first stage of the [[bardo]] of the [[afterlife]] follows the initial [[experience]] of the [[dissolution]] of the four [[elements]] of the [[physical body]] at the [[time]] of [[death]]. These consist of something similar to the [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] of [[earth]], [[fire]], [[water]], and [[air]] in the {{Wiki|West}}, and are related to the progressive dissociation of the [[soul]] from the [[physical body]]. This [[dissolution]] follows a prescribed progression: the [[senses]] fail and the muscles lose their strength as the [[body]] becomes inert and still resembling [[physical]] matter ([[earth]]), there is loss of control over [[bodily]] fluids ([[water]]), the [[body]] loses its warmth ([[fire]]), and the [[breath]] fails ([[air]]). All this is [[experienced]] in sequence by the dying [[person]] when the [[person]] is able to remain [[conscious]] during the [[bardo]] of [[death]].
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The first stage of the [[bardo]] of the [[afterlife]] follows the initial [[experience]] of the [[dissolution]] of the four [[elements]] of the [[physical body]] at the [[time]] of [[death]]. These consist of something similar to the [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] of [[earth]],  
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[[fire]], [[water]], and [[air]] in the {{Wiki|West}}, and are related to the progressive dissociation of the [[soul]] from the [[physical body]]. This [[dissolution]] follows a prescribed progression: the [[senses]] fail and the {{Wiki|muscles}} lose their strength as the [[body]]  
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becomes inert and still resembling [[physical]] {{Wiki|matter}} ([[earth]]), there is loss of control over [[bodily]] fluids ([[water]]), the [[body]] loses its warmth ([[fire]]), and the [[breath]] fails ([[air]]). All this is [[experienced]] in sequence by the dying [[person]] when the [[person]] is able to remain [[conscious]] during the [[bardo]] of [[death]].
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Note here that the "[[soul]]" in [[Tibetan Buddhism]] is only a collection (or bundle) of [[karma]] (credits and debits based on previous [[actions]] which mold both the [[habit]] patterns of the {{Wiki|individual}} and the kinds of [[conditions]] encountered in [[life]]). In [[Buddhism]], the [[soul]] has no substantial [[nature]] but otherwise the [[soul]] and this "collection" seem very similar and are functionally {{Wiki|equivalent}} for our purposes. We therefore use the term [[soul]] above even though it is not a [[Buddhist]] term.
 
Note here that the "[[soul]]" in [[Tibetan Buddhism]] is only a collection (or bundle) of [[karma]] (credits and debits based on previous [[actions]] which mold both the [[habit]] patterns of the {{Wiki|individual}} and the kinds of [[conditions]] encountered in [[life]]). In [[Buddhism]], the [[soul]] has no substantial [[nature]] but otherwise the [[soul]] and this "collection" seem very similar and are functionally {{Wiki|equivalent}} for our purposes. We therefore use the term [[soul]] above even though it is not a [[Buddhist]] term.
  
The First [[Bardo]]
 
  
Following this, the person's [[experience]] of the first [[bardo]] of the [[afterlife]] commences. However, for most {{Wiki|individuals}}, it passes by in a split second and goes unnoticed. Only those who have undergone training in and practiced [[meditation]], contemplative [[prayer]], and similar [[spiritual]] [[disciplines]] will likely even be aware of the first [[bardo]] state. For some of those [[fortunate]] [[souls]], there will be several opportunities to meet with [[spiritual]] [[beings]] and enter the [[realms]] of [[enlightened]] [[beings]]. One description of the kind of [[meditation]] done by advanced practitioners consists of a [[conscious]] [[effort]] to "dissolve [[space]] into [[light]]", which if successful will propel the dying [[soul]] into an a state of [[light]] and [[bliss]] [[beyond]] the continual cycles of [[birth]] and [[death]] to which most [[souls]] are [[subject]]. For those less familiar with such formal [[meditation]] practices, the act of remembering very bright [[light]] (such as, for example, remembering an [[experience]] of staring into the {{Wiki|sun}}) and [[seeing]] that [[light]] as a source of [[pure]] [[awareness]] or [[divine]] [[love]] could produce a similar effect. A series of [[meditations]] and understandings that can be helpful as one enters the [[bardo]] can be found on our [[Death]] [[Meditations]] page.
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The  [[First Bardo]]
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Following this, the person's [[experience]] of the first [[bardo]] of the [[afterlife]] commences. However, for most {{Wiki|individuals}}, it passes by in a split second and goes unnoticed. Only those who have undergone {{Wiki|training}} in and practiced [[meditation]], {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[prayer]], and similar [[spiritual]] [[disciplines]] will likely even be {{Wiki|aware}} of the first [[bardo]] [[state]]. For some of those  
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[[fortunate]] [[souls]], there will be several opportunities to meet with [[spiritual]] [[beings]] and enter the [[realms]] of [[enlightened]] [[beings]]. One description of the kind of [[meditation]] done by advanced practitioners consists of a [[conscious]]  
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[[effort]] to "dissolve [[space]] into [[light]]", which if successful will propel the dying [[soul]] into an a [[state]] of [[light]] and [[bliss]] [[beyond]] the continual cycles of [[birth]] and [[death]] to which most [[souls]] are [[subject]]. For those less familiar with such formal [[meditation]] practices, the act of remembering very bright [[light]] (such as, for example, remembering an [[experience]] of  
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 +
 
 +
staring into the {{Wiki|sun}}) and [[seeing]] that [[light]] as a source of [[pure]] [[awareness]] or [[divine]] [[love]] could produce a similar effect. A series of [[meditations]] and understandings that can be helpful as one enters the [[bardo]] can be found on our [[Death]] [[Meditations]] page.
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[[File:891.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:891.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
For those [[experienced]] in [[spiritual]] travel who were able to enter [[spiritual]] states of [[light]], [[sound]], and [[emptiness]] during [[life]], the first [[bardo]] may offer an opportunity to enter into these areas shortly after the [[time]] of [[death]]. Also, those with a devotional disposition who were able to develop a strong bond with a [[deity]] during [[life]] may have similar opportunities to enter into one of the [[heavens]] of that [[deity]] during the first [[bardo]]. The [[devotion]] must usually be intense and [[concentrated]] to draw the [[deity's]] [[attention]] in this circumstance. Also, those who were devoted to a [[guru]] or [[spiritual]] guide during [[life]] can call upon that [[being]] and ask for guidance. Although the [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[tradition]] is not primarily devotional, it like most of the world's great [[religious]] [[traditions]] contains devotional aspects where practicianers are encouraged to focus on powerful [[teachers]] or {{Wiki|saints}} of the {{Wiki|past}} or {{Wiki|present}} as well as [[dakinis]], [[bhairavas]], [[Bodhisattvas]], [[Buddhas]], and other helpful [[beings]].
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For those [[experienced]] in [[spiritual]] travel who were able to enter [[spiritual]] states of [[light]], [[sound]], and [[emptiness]] during [[life]], the first [[bardo]] may offer an opportunity to enter into these areas shortly after the [[time]] of [[death]]. Also, those  
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The [[spiritual]] aperture that opens briefly at the [[time]] of [[death]] presents a wonderful opportunity to those who can control their [[thoughts]] as the first [[bardo]] begins. This is probably why there is a common {{Wiki|folk}} [[belief]] in the [[Hindu]] [[tradition]] which puts much emphasis on controlling and directing the last [[thought]] of the dying [[person]]. If this [[thought]] is strong, clear, and of a [[spiritual]] [[nature]], it may permit the [[person]] to enter through this doorway into a [[spiritual]] [[world]] immediately at the [[time]] of [[death]], and thus avoid the {{Wiki|confusion}} of the second [[bardo]].
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with a devotional disposition who were able to develop a strong bond with a [[deity]] during [[life]] may have similar opportunities to enter into one of the [[heavens]] of that [[deity]] during the first [[bardo]]. The [[devotion]] must usually be intense and [[concentrated]] to draw the [[deity's]] [[attention]] in this circumstance. Also, those who were devoted to a [[guru]] or [[spiritual]]  
  
The Second [[Bardo]]
 
  
If the first [[bardo]] passes and attempts to access [[spiritual]] states were unsuccessful, the next [[bardo]] begins. The second [[bardo]] or the "[[bardo]] of becoming" is a stage in which the [[desires]] of the {{Wiki|individual}} are said to carry the largely helpless [[soul]] through a great variety of intense [[emotional]] states. Good [[thoughts]] bring great [[bliss]] and [[pleasure]], and hateful or negative [[thoughts]] bring great [[pain]] and desolation. The [[soul]] bounces from [[thought]] to [[thought]] as a torrent of [[thoughts]] and [[feelings]] come like a waterfall. [[Existing]] [[thought]] [[habits]] and [[desires]] are said to define the [[experience]] of the [[soul]] during the [[afterlife]] in this way.
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guide during [[life]] can call upon that [[being]] and ask for guidance. Although the [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[tradition]] is not primarily devotional, it like most of the world's great [[religious]] [[traditions]] contains devotional aspects where practicianers are encouraged to focus on powerful [[teachers]] or {{Wiki|saints}} of the {{Wiki|past}} or {{Wiki|present}} as well as [[dakinis]], [[bhairavas]], [[Bodhisattvas]], [[Buddhas]], and other helpful [[beings]].
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The [[spiritual]] aperture that opens briefly at the [[time]] of [[death]] presents a wonderful opportunity to those who can control their [[thoughts]] as the first [[bardo]] begins. This is probably why there is a common {{Wiki|folk}} [[belief]] in the [[Hindu]] [[tradition]]
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which puts much {{Wiki|emphasis}} on controlling and directing the last [[thought]] of the dying [[person]]. If this [[thought]] is strong, clear, and of a [[spiritual]] [[nature]], it may permit the [[person]] to enter through this doorway into a [[spiritual]] [[world]] immediately at the [[time]] of [[death]], and thus avoid the {{Wiki|confusion}} of the second [[bardo]].
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The [[Second Bardo]]
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If the first [[bardo]] passes and attempts to access [[spiritual]] states were unsuccessful, the next [[bardo]] begins. The second [[bardo]] or the "[[bardo]] of becoming" is a stage in which the [[desires]] of the {{Wiki|individual}} are said to carry the largely helpless  
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[[soul]] through a great variety of intense [[emotional]] states. Good [[thoughts]] bring great [[bliss]] and [[pleasure]], and hateful or negative [[thoughts]] bring great [[pain]] and desolation. The [[soul]] bounces from [[thought]] to [[thought]] as a torrent of [[thoughts]]  
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and [[feelings]] come like a waterfall. [[Existing]] [[thought]] [[habits]] and [[desires]] are said to define the [[experience]] of the [[soul]] during the [[afterlife]] in this way.
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[[Spiritual]] Travel and the  [[Second Bardo]]
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It is here where some [[experience]] and {{Wiki|training}} in [[spiritual]] travel and out-of-body [[experience]] may be of greatest help. It may first help the {{Wiki|individual}} maintain a [[state]] of [[detachment]]. The [[spiritual]] traveler who has [[experienced]] the [[inner world]] during [[life]] can take the whirlwind [[nature]] of [[inner world]] following [[death]] with more [[calm]] and [[detachment]].
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Those who have read examples of the kinds of states encountered in [[spiritual]] travel located on other pages of this site will understand that some experimentation and discovery in the inner [[worlds]] may prepare the [[soul]] for many of the dynamics of the states it may encounter after [[death]]. The similarity of certain aspects of the near-death [[experience]] (a {{Wiki|temporary}} [[bardo]] [[state]]) and
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[[elements]] of [[spiritual]] travel [[experience]] (the "tunnel" [[experience]] for example) show some common qualities between certain [[spiritual]] travel states and these [[bardo]] states.
  
[[Spiritual]] Travel and the Second [[Bardo]]
 
  
It is here where some [[experience]] and training in [[spiritual]] travel and out-of-body [[experience]] may be of greatest help. It may first help the {{Wiki|individual}} maintain a state of [[detachment]]. The [[spiritual]] traveler who has [[experienced]] the [[inner world]] during [[life]] can take the whirlwind [[nature]] of [[inner world]] following [[death]] with more [[calm]] and [[detachment]]. Those who have read examples of the kinds of states encountered in [[spiritual]] travel located on other pages of this site will understand that some experimentation and discovery in the inner [[worlds]] may prepare the [[soul]] for many of the dynamics of the states it may encounter after [[death]]. The similarity of certain aspects of the near-death [[experience]] (a {{Wiki|temporary}} [[bardo]] state) and [[elements]] of [[spiritual]] travel [[experience]] (the "tunnel" [[experience]] for example) show some common qualities between certain [[spiritual]] travel states and these [[bardo]] states.
 
 
[[File:Chinese-ghost.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Chinese-ghost.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
The [[soul]] [[experienced]] in [[spiritual]] travel is less likely to be disoriented by this inner torrent of [[psychic]] [[experience]]. To put it another way, while the [[spiritual]] traveler or [[yogi]] swims through the ocean of [[consciousness]], the inexperienced [[soul]] may [[feel]] more like it is drowning in that ocean. But as with a drowning [[person]], the most important thing is to have a [[direction]] in which to swim to safety. The point of orientation or goal for the [[person]] in the second [[bardo]] may be a [[deity]], a [[mantra]], a [[prayer]], a [[heaven]], a guide, or some similar [[spiritual]] goal but the [[spiritual]] traveler must be able to focus and move towards that goal using [[meditative]] techniques learned and practiced during their former [[life]] in the [[physical]] [[world]]. This is the active approach of the [[spiritual]] traveler.
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The [[soul]] [[experienced]] in [[spiritual]] travel is less likely to be disoriented by this inner torrent of [[psychic]] [[experience]]. To put it another way, while the [[spiritual]] traveler or [[yogi]] swims through the ocean of [[consciousness]], the inexperienced [[soul]]  
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may [[feel]] more like it is drowning in that ocean. But as with a drowning [[person]], the most important thing is to have a [[direction]] in which to swim to safety. The point of orientation or goal for the [[person]] in the second [[bardo]] may be a [[deity]], a [[mantra]], a  
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[[prayer]], a [[heaven]], a guide, or some similar [[spiritual]] goal but the [[spiritual]] traveler must be able to focus and move towards that goal using [[meditative]] [[techniques]] learned and practiced during their former [[life]] in the [[physical]] [[world]]. This is the active approach of the [[spiritual]] traveler.
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The second advantage is that the [[spiritual]] traveler has entered the waters of [[consciousness]] [[consciously]] on many occasions and is practiced at directing his or her [[experience]] in the inner [[worlds]].
 
The second advantage is that the [[spiritual]] traveler has entered the waters of [[consciousness]] [[consciously]] on many occasions and is practiced at directing his or her [[experience]] in the inner [[worlds]].
  
The greatest problems of the [[soul]] in the second [[bardo]] are negative [[emotions]] like [[guilt]] and {{Wiki|fear}} (which results from a lack of familiarity with the inner [[worlds]]), and lack of [[conscious]] control over its own [[experience]]. {{Wiki|Fear}} is particularly harmful because it fragments the [[self]] making [[concentration]] on one thing difficult or impossible, and this can lead to {{Wiki|confusion}} and loss of [[conscious]] control.
 
  
The [[soul]] in the second [[bardo]] is many times caught in a [[dream]] state sometimes unaware that it has [[died]], and incapable of taking [[action]] to raise its state of [[consciousness]] to a threshold level of [[awareness]] where it can direct its [[attention]] towards [[spiritual]] states.
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The greatest problems of the [[soul]] in the second [[bardo]] are negative [[emotions]] like [[guilt]] and {{Wiki|fear}} (which results from a lack of familiarity with the inner [[worlds]]), and lack of [[conscious]] control over its [[own]] [[experience]]. {{Wiki|Fear}} is
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particularly harmful because it fragments the [[self]] making [[concentration]] on one thing difficult or impossible, and this can lead to {{Wiki|confusion}} and loss of [[conscious]] control.
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The [[soul]] in the second [[bardo]] is many times caught in a [[dream]] [[state]] sometimes unaware that it has [[died]], and incapable of taking [[action]] to raise its [[state]] of [[consciousness]] to a threshold level of [[awareness]] where it can direct its [[attention]] towards [[spiritual]] states.
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This is one of the [[reasons]] it is important to do a regular [[spiritual]] practice during [[life]]. Doing [[meditation]] or [[prayer]] every day establishes a pattern of [[spiritual]] [[activity]]. It then becomes automatic and the [[habit]] of seeking after the [[divine]] [[reality]] continues during the [[after-death state]] where it can have powerful results. A daily [[spiritual]] practice differs from other
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more common [[spiritual]] practices such as going to {{Wiki|church}} or [[temple]] because it is done more often than once or twice a [[week]]. [[Meditation]] therefore establishes a stronger [[habit]] pattern in the {{Wiki|individual}} and is a valuable addition to group oriented [[spiritual]] [[activities]] such as attending {{Wiki|church}}.
  
This is one of the [[reasons]] it is important to do a regular [[spiritual]] practice during [[life]]. Doing [[meditation]] or [[prayer]] every day establishes a pattern of [[spiritual]] [[activity]]. It then becomes automatic and the [[habit]] of seeking after the [[divine]] [[reality]] continues during the [[after-death state]] where it can have powerful results. A daily [[spiritual]] practice differs from other more common [[spiritual]] practices such as going to {{Wiki|church}} or [[temple]] because it is done more often than once or twice a week. [[Meditation]] therefore establishes a stronger [[habit]] pattern in the {{Wiki|individual}} and is a valuable addition to group oriented [[spiritual]] [[activities]] such as attending {{Wiki|church}}.
 
  
 
Regular [[meditation]] can also be more powerful because it is usually a less passive [[activity]] than {{Wiki|church}} since it fully involves the {{Wiki|individual}} in the [[meditative]] process rather than making a spectator out of him or her.
 
Regular [[meditation]] can also be more powerful because it is usually a less passive [[activity]] than {{Wiki|church}} since it fully involves the {{Wiki|individual}} in the [[meditative]] process rather than making a spectator out of him or her.
 
[[File:Abc.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Abc.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
What the [[soul]] in the second [[bardo]] needs to do is "wake up", as in a lucid [[dream]], and begin a [[meditation]] or [[mental]] exercise that draws it towards a [[desired]] {{Wiki|stable}} and more [[conscious]] state of [[awareness]] where it can have some control and continue to evolve [[spiritually]]. The opposite of [[conscious]] control is a dream-like state where the {{Wiki|individual}} [[experiences]] only the results of his or her previous [[actions]], and mechanically moves from [[thought]] to [[thought]] based on [[thinking]] patterns developed during [[life]].
 
  
Waking up within a [[dream]] is one of the [[activities]] the [[spiritual]] traveler practices when he or she leaves the [[body]] to travel the inner planes. [[Beyond]] this, the traveler is also always practicing and perfecting the [[art]] of directing his or her [[attention]] towards some [[desired]] state. It is the contention of the author that [[experience]] with [[meditation]] and actual [[spiritual]] travel [[experience]] during [[life]] can both be of great help in rising above the semi-conscious state [[characteristic]] of the second [[bardo]], and moving into a more [[conscious]] and desirable state following [[physical]] [[death]].
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What the [[soul]] in the second [[bardo]] needs to do is "wake up", as in a lucid [[dream]], and begin a [[meditation]] or [[mental]] exercise that draws it towards a [[desired]] {{Wiki|stable}} and more [[conscious]] [[state]] of [[awareness]] where it can have some control
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and continue to evolve [[spiritually]]. The opposite of [[conscious]] control is a dream-like [[state]] where the {{Wiki|individual}} [[experiences]] only the results of his or her previous [[actions]], and mechanically moves from [[thought]] to [[thought]] based on [[thinking]] patterns developed during [[life]].
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Waking up within a [[dream]] is one of the [[activities]] the [[spiritual]] traveler practices when he or she leaves the [[body]] to travel the inner planes. [[Beyond]] this, the traveler is also always practicing and perfecting the [[art]] of directing his or her [[attention]] towards some [[desired]] [[state]]. It is the contention of the author that [[experience]] with [[meditation]] and actual [[spiritual]] travel  
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[[experience]] during [[life]] can both be of great help in [[rising]] above the semi-conscious [[state]] [[characteristic]] of the second [[bardo]], and moving into a more [[conscious]] and desirable [[state]] following [[physical]] [[death]].
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For those who practiced a devotional [[tradition]] in [[life]], some will semi-consciously repeat a [[religious]] or a [[meditative]] [[ritual]] asking [[gods]] or intercessors to draw them out of the second [[bardo]] [[world]]. We see an example of an attempt to create such a [[ritual]] in the {{Wiki|Catholic}} rosary, where Mary as intercessor is requested to
 
For those who practiced a devotional [[tradition]] in [[life]], some will semi-consciously repeat a [[religious]] or a [[meditative]] [[ritual]] asking [[gods]] or intercessors to draw them out of the second [[bardo]] [[world]]. We see an example of an attempt to create such a [[ritual]] in the {{Wiki|Catholic}} rosary, where Mary as intercessor is requested to
  
     Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our [[death]] ...
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Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our [[death]] ...
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This [[phrase]] is from the Hail Mary [[Prayer]]. One effect of the repetition of this [[prayer]] fifty times in the rosary is that such a [[prayer]] for help and intercession may become an automatic process, which will repeat itself in the [[bardo]].
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This phrase is from the Hail Mary [[Prayer]]. One effect of the repetition of this [[prayer]] fifty times in the rosary is that such a [[prayer]] for help and intercession may become an automatic process, which will repeat itself in the [[bardo]].
 
  
For those [[fortunate]] enough to be more [[conscious]] in these [[bardo]] states, a petition to a [[god]], [[guru]], guide, {{Wiki|saint}}, or intercessor can be made in [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] that the {{Wiki|individual}} will be lifted or guided out of the [[bardo]] [[worlds]] by one of those entities. But here again, the call must be [[concentrated]] and the ability to ignore the surrounding {{Wiki|chaos}} somewhat developed. When such grace is given, it is a [[form]] of {{Wiki|salvation}} where the {{Wiki|individual}} is saved from the discomfort and {{Wiki|confusion}} of the "outer darkness" of the [[bardo]] by a powerful {{Wiki|entity}} - usually one that {{Wiki|individuals}} formed a bond with in their former [[life]]. To use the swimming analogy, here the {{Wiki|individual}} calls out to a lifeguard in [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] of [[being]] rescued from the turbulent waters of the [[bardo]] state. This is the more passive approach of the devotee.
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For those [[fortunate]] enough to be more [[conscious]] in these [[bardo]] states, a petition to a [[god]], [[guru]], guide, {{Wiki|saint}}, or intercessor can be made in [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] that the {{Wiki|individual}} will be lifted or guided out of the [[bardo]] [[worlds]] by one of those entities. But here again, the call must be [[concentrated]] and the ability to ignore the surrounding {{Wiki|chaos}}  
  
We should also note that [[souls]] in this [[bardo]] are [[thought]] to be very sensitive to the [[thoughts]] and attitudes of those they knew during [[life]]. The [[Tibetans]] therefore put great [[effort]] into doing [[chanting]], reading of [[sacred]] texts, and other [[religious]] [[rituals]] to help the dying [[soul]] on its journey in the [[afterlife]]. Praying for the [[peace]] and [[happiness]] of the dying [[person]] therefore has great value and provides a [[benefit]] to both the living and the [[dead]]. This process of sending good wishes to those who have recently [[died]] can create a positive [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|atmosphere}} which can {{Wiki|orient}} and bring [[peace]] to the [[person]] in the [[bardo]] [[realm]], and can also counter some of the [[sorrow]] and upset that accompanies the loss of a loved one.
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somewhat developed. When such grace is given, it is a [[form]] of {{Wiki|salvation}} where the {{Wiki|individual}} is saved from the discomfort and {{Wiki|confusion}} of the "outer {{Wiki|darkness}}" of the [[bardo]] by a powerful {{Wiki|entity}} - usually one that
  
The Third [[Bardo]]
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{{Wiki|individuals}} formed a bond with in their former [[life]]. To use the swimming analogy, here the {{Wiki|individual}} calls out to a lifeguard in [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] of [[being]] rescued from the turbulent waters of the [[bardo]] [[state]]. This is the more passive approach of the [[devotee]].
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We should also note that [[souls]] in this [[bardo]] are [[thought]] to be very [[sensitive]] to the [[thoughts]] and attitudes of those they knew during [[life]]. The [[Tibetans]] therefore put great [[effort]] into doing [[chanting]], reading of [[sacred]] texts, and other [[religious]] [[rituals]] to help the dying [[soul]] on its journey in the [[afterlife]]. Praying for the [[peace]] and [[happiness]] of the
 +
 
 +
 
 +
dying [[person]] therefore has great value and provides a [[benefit]] to both the living and the [[dead]]. This process of sending good wishes to those who have recently [[died]] can create a positive [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|atmosphere}} which can {{Wiki|orient}} and bring [[peace]] to the [[person]] in the [[bardo]] [[realm]], and can also counter some of the [[sorrow]] and upset that accompanies the loss of a loved one.
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The [[Third Bardo]]
 
[[File:Bardo deities 42.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Bardo deities 42.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
The third and last [[bardo]] consists of the stage of [[reincarnation]] where the [[soul]] is pulled into another [[body]] to start a new [[life]], often but not always in the [[physical]] [[world]]. [[Tibetan]] [[Buddhists]] believe that the most desirable [[world]] to be born in is the [[physical]] [[world]], since it affords the most opportunity for [[spiritual]] growth and [[realization]]. The third [[bardo]] consists of a series of images determined by the soul's [[karma]] that lead to [[psychic]] vortices that draw the [[soul]] into a [[womb]]. The soul's {{Wiki|reaction}} to the images ([[attraction]] or [[repulsion]]) determines which vortex the [[soul]] enters and in which [[womb]] the [[soul]] ends up. The [[Tibetan tradition]] gives detailed advice on which {{Wiki|representations}} to choose and which to avoid in [[order]] to gain a desirable [[rebirth]]. Once [[reborn]], the [[karma]] of impulse [[manifests]] to [[influence]] the person's [[actions]] and reactions in their new [[life]].
 
  
This ability to choose a good [[incarnation]] requires {{Wiki|discrimination}}, and a certain {{Wiki|degree}} of [[conscious]] [[awareness]]. The {{Wiki|new age}} approach to [[reincarnation]] which claims we choose our new [[incarnation]] is {{Wiki|idealistic}} and not always true from this vantage point. Many [[souls]] desperate to escape the {{Wiki|confusion}} of the second [[bardo]] will grab on to the first opportunity that presents itself like a swimmer who [[grasps]] a log in [[dangerous]] rapids in [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] of making it to calmer waters. Choosing the first [[object]] (or [[incarnation]]) that comes along may not be the wisest choice.
 
  
The average [[person]] is said to spend a period of about forty-five days in the second [[bardo]]. However, [[passionate]] [[souls]] with strong [[desires]] or those responsible for [[evil]] acts in their most recent [[life]] are said to [[reincarnate]] almost immediately. In [[exceptional]] cases, the {{Wiki|individual}} can stay in the [[bardo]] state for longer periods, and be drawn into its currents awaiting [[rebirth]].
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The third and last [[bardo]] consists of the stage of [[reincarnation]] where the [[soul]] is pulled into another [[body]] to start a new [[life]], often but not always in the [[physical]] [[world]]. [[Tibetan]] [[Buddhists]] believe that the most desirable [[world]] to be born in is the [[physical]] [[world]], since it affords the most opportunity for [[spiritual]] growth and [[realization]]. The third [[bardo]]
  
If the {{Wiki|individual}} does not [[reincarnate]] in the [[physical]] [[world]], he or she will go to one of the other five [[worlds]] of [[rebirth]]. These are the [[heaven]] [[worlds]], the [[hell]] [[worlds]], the [[world]] of [[hungry ghosts]], the [[asura]] ([[demigod]]) [[worlds]], and the [[animal]] [[worlds]]. Each of these is believed to be limited and {{Wiki|inferior}} to obtaining another [[body]] in the material [[world]]. This is because they [[exist]] mostly to receive good or bad [[karma]] (the results of previous [[actions]]), and are not considered places to create new [[karma]].
 
  
The least familiar of the above [[worlds]] is the [[asura]] [[world]] which is a place of conflict and struggle where {{Wiki|kings}}, knights, and warlords battle each other for dominance. Persons who were fascinated with gaining and exercising [[power]] over others during [[life]] are said to be likely to [[incarnate]] in the [[asura realm]].
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consists of a series of images determined by the soul's [[karma]] that lead to [[psychic]] vortices that draw the [[soul]] into a [[womb]]. The soul's {{Wiki|reaction}} to the images ([[attraction]] or [[repulsion]]) determines which vortex the [[soul]] enters and in which [[womb]] the [[soul]] ends up. The [[Tibetan tradition]] gives detailed advice on which {{Wiki|representations}} to choose and which to
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 +
 
 +
avoid in [[order]] to gain a desirable [[rebirth]]. Once [[reborn]], the [[karma]] of impulse [[manifests]] to [[influence]] the person's [[actions]] and reactions in their new [[life]].
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 +
 
 +
This ability to choose a good [[incarnation]] requires {{Wiki|discrimination}}, and a certain {{Wiki|degree}} of [[conscious]] [[awareness]]. The {{Wiki|new age}} approach to [[reincarnation]] which claims we choose our new [[incarnation]] is {{Wiki|idealistic}} and
 +
 
 +
 
 +
not always true from this vantage point. Many [[souls]] desperate to escape the {{Wiki|confusion}} of the second [[bardo]] will grab on to the first opportunity that presents itself like a swimmer who [[grasps]] a log in [[dangerous]] rapids in [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] of making it to calmer waters. Choosing the first [[object]] (or [[incarnation]]) that comes along may not be the wisest choice.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The average [[person]] is said to spend a period of about forty-five days in the second [[bardo]]. However, [[passionate]] [[souls]] with strong [[desires]] or those responsible for [[evil]] acts in their most recent [[life]] are said to [[reincarnate]] almost immediately. In [[exceptional]] cases, the {{Wiki|individual}} can stay in the [[bardo]] [[state]] for longer periods, and be drawn into its currents awaiting [[rebirth]].
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If the {{Wiki|individual}} does not [[reincarnate]] in the [[physical]] [[world]], he or she will go to one of the other five [[worlds]] of [[rebirth]]. These are the [[heaven]] [[worlds]], the [[hell]] [[worlds]], the [[world]] of [[hungry ghosts]], the [[asura]] ([[demigod]])
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 +
[[worlds]], and the [[animal]] [[worlds]]. Each of these is believed to be limited and {{Wiki|inferior}} to obtaining another [[body]] in the material [[world]]. This is because they [[exist]] mostly to receive good or bad [[karma]] (the results of previous [[actions]]), and are not considered places to create new [[karma]].
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 +
The least familiar of the above [[worlds]] is the [[asura]] [[world]] which is a place of conflict and struggle where {{Wiki|kings}}, knights, and warlords {{Wiki|battle}} each other for dominance. Persons who were fascinated with gaining and exercising [[power]] over others during [[life]] are said to be likely to [[incarnate]] in the [[asura realm]].
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The [[asura realm]] also offers the potential for rapid {{Wiki|learning}} where the individual's [[actions]] produce clear and dramatic effects without generating the powerful [[karmic]] ripples that would normally occur in the [[physical]] [[world]]. It can thus be a kind of
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remedial [[world]] for those who are caught in negative repeating patterns which incline them to make bad decisions in the [[physical]] [[world]] [[incarnation]] after [[incarnation]].
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The [[hungry ghost realm]] is a place of need and [[desire]] where [[souls]] are denied fulfillment or given only small rewards. Here [[souls]] [[experience]] states of continuing [[anxiety]] and {{Wiki|frustration}}. The [[animal world]] is reserved for those whose extreme
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{{Wiki|instincts}} for {{Wiki|violence}}, gluttony, or {{Wiki|sexual}} gratification dominated their previous [[lives]] in the [[physical]] [[world]] to the extent that they devolved into the instinctual and unreflective [[state]] of [[animal]] [[existence]]. The [[heaven]] and
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[[hell]] [[worlds]] have wide variations, but it is [[interesting]] that the [[Tibetan tradition]] has both burning [[hells]] (as in the {{Wiki|Christian}} [[tradition]]) and freezing [[hells]] ({{Wiki|present}} in Dante's [[Divine]] Comedy but not commonly known in {{Wiki|{{Wiki|Christianity}}}}).
  
The [[asura realm]] also offers the potential for rapid {{Wiki|learning}} where the individual's [[actions]] produce clear and dramatic effects without generating the powerful [[karmic]] ripples that would normally occur in the [[physical]] [[world]]. It can thus be a kind of remedial [[world]] for those who are caught in negative repeating patterns which incline them to make bad decisions in the [[physical]] [[world]] [[incarnation]] after [[incarnation]].
 
  
The [[hungry ghost realm]] is a place of need and [[desire]] where [[souls]] are denied fulfillment or given only small rewards. Here [[souls]] [[experience]] states of continuing [[anxiety]] and {{Wiki|frustration}}. The [[animal world]] is reserved for those whose extreme {{Wiki|instincts}} for {{Wiki|violence}}, gluttony, or {{Wiki|sexual}} gratification dominated their previous [[lives]] in the [[physical]] [[world]] to the extent that they devolved into the instinctual and unreflective state of [[animal]] [[existence]]. The [[heaven]] and [[hell]] [[worlds]] have wide variations, but it is [[interesting]] that the [[Tibetan tradition]] has both burning [[hells]] (as in the {{Wiki|Christian}} [[tradition]]) and freezing [[hells]] ({{Wiki|present}} in Dante's [[Divine]] Comedy but not commonly known in {{Wiki|{{Wiki|Christianity}}}}).
 
 
[[File:Guhyagarbha.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Guhyagarbha.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
We will also note here that the [[hell]] normally described by {{Wiki|Catholic}} and {{Wiki|Protestant}} clerics is based on {{Wiki|folk}} [[tradition]]. Their descriptions of [[hell]] as a fiery place of {{Wiki|punishment}} are taken mostly from the Apocrypha (specifically, the [[Book]] of Enoch), Dante's [[Divine]] Comedy, and the [[Book]] of [[Revelation]] with its "end of the [[world]]" [[prophesy]]. This {{Wiki|folk}} [[view]] of [[hell]] as a place of burning {{Wiki|punishment}} and [[demons]] is unsupported by the Bible except for a few {{Wiki|apocalyptic}} passages in the last six chapters of the [[Book]] of [[Revelation]]. These passages are very inconsistent with the {{Wiki|concept}} of [[hell]] in the rest of the Bible. Reading what the bible actually says about [[hell]] may reduce the [[anxiety]] of some {{Wiki|Christians}} about the [[afterlife]]. It is explained on the page titled Confronting Mistaken Concepts of {{Wiki|Christian}} [[Hell]].
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We will also note here that the [[hell]] normally described by {{Wiki|Catholic}} and {{Wiki|Protestant}} {{Wiki|clerics}} is based on {{Wiki|folk}} [[tradition]]. Their descriptions of [[hell]] as a fiery place of {{Wiki|punishment}} are taken mostly from the [[Apocrypha]] (specifically, the  
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 +
[[Book]] of Enoch), Dante's [[Divine]] Comedy, and the [[Book]] of [[Revelation]] with its "end of the [[world]]" [[prophesy]]. This {{Wiki|folk}} [[view]] of [[hell]] as a place of burning {{Wiki|punishment}} and [[demons]] is unsupported by the Bible except for a few  
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 +
{{Wiki|apocalyptic}} passages in the last six chapters of the [[Book]] of [[Revelation]]. These passages are very inconsistent with the {{Wiki|concept}} of [[hell]] in the rest of the Bible. Reading what the bible actually says about [[hell]] may reduce the [[anxiety]] of some {{Wiki|Christians}} about the [[afterlife]]. It is explained on the page titled Confronting Mistaken Concepts of {{Wiki|Christian}} [[Hell]].
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Returning to [[Buddhism]], we note that [[heavens]] are not entirely desirable in many [[Buddhist]] [[traditions]] because they are places where little {{Wiki|learning}} takes place, and they do not allow for much {{Wiki|creativity}} or [[compassionate]] [[action]]. They are thus viewed as vacation spots that promote [[happiness]] for the inhabitants but accomplish little in the way of [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|maturation}}. They are also viewed as {{Wiki|temporary}} and not [[eternal]].
  
Returning to [[Buddhism]], we note that [[heavens]] are not entirely desirable in many [[Buddhist]] [[traditions]] because they are places where little {{Wiki|learning}} takes place, and they do not allow for much creativity or [[compassionate]] [[action]]. They are thus viewed as vacation spots that promote [[happiness]] for the inhabitants but accomplish little in the way of [[spiritual]] maturation. They are also viewed as {{Wiki|temporary}} and not [[eternal]].
 
  
 
The Freedom to do [[Spiritual]] Travel in the [[Afterlife]]
 
The Freedom to do [[Spiritual]] Travel in the [[Afterlife]]
  
One factor that helps the [[soul]] achieve the freedom of [[conscious]] control and [[spiritual]] travel during the [[afterlife]] is [[acceptance]] of [[death]]. Those who have not accepted [[death]] will resist the process of dying and introduce conflict into the [[bardo]] stages. This is why it is important for [[people]] to take care of any unfinished business as they near [[death]] so they can let go of [[life]] completely.
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One factor that helps the [[soul]] achieve the freedom of [[conscious]] control and [[spiritual]] travel during the [[afterlife]] is [[acceptance]] of [[death]]. Those who have not accepted [[death]] will resist the process of dying and introduce conflict into the  
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[[bardo]] stages. This is why it is important for [[people]] to take [[care]] of any unfinished business as they near [[death]] so they can let go of [[life]] completely.
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In {{Wiki|Brahmanical}} [[Hinduism]], there is a stage of [[life]] called the {{Wiki|forest}} dweller or [[vanaprastha]] stage in which the older {{Wiki|individual}} who has finished raising a [[family]] is supposed to begin [[letting go]] of [[pleasures]] and [[attachments]] to
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[[life]] in [[preparation]] for [[death]]. However, in the {{Wiki|West}} the goal is to keep spending [[money]] and maximize [[enjoyment]] up to the end of [[life]]. This makes it difficult for many to make a graceful transition into [[death]]. Intense [[attachment]] to the material [[world]] makes it difficult to do [[spiritual]] travel both during [[life]] and after [[death]].
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It also usually helps to have [[faith]] in something [[beyond]] the material [[world]] at the [[time]] of [[death]]. Those with a strong [[faith]] in {{Wiki|Jesus}} or another [[religious]] figure will be more [[calm]] and [[relaxed]] as they enter the [[bardo]] [[realms]]. While the [[religious]] [[person]] can look forward to [[heaven]] at the [[time]] of [[death]], the [[spiritual]] traveler who has been
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 +
trying to do [[spiritual]] travel all his or her [[life]] can also look forward to [[death]] in certain respects. This is because the opportunity for exploration and [[spiritual]] travel will hopefully be greatly expanded after [[death]] when the [[physical body]] and its
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needs will no longer be a major {{Wiki|distraction}}. Of course the areas the [[spiritual]] traveler wishes to explore are the [[heavenly]] areas and [[beyond]], and in that [[sense]], he or she has much in common with other more [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] [[religious]] [[people]].
 +
 
  
In {{Wiki|Brahmanical}} [[Hinduism]], there is a stage of [[life]] called the {{Wiki|forest}} dweller or [[vanaprastha]] stage in which the older {{Wiki|individual}} who has finished raising a family is supposed to begin [[letting go]] of [[pleasures]] and [[attachments]] to [[life]] in [[preparation]] for [[death]]. However, in the {{Wiki|West}} the goal is to keep spending [[money]] and maximize [[enjoyment]] up to the end of [[life]]. This makes it difficult for many to make a graceful transition into [[death]]. Intense [[attachment]] to the material [[world]] makes it difficult to do [[spiritual]] travel both during [[life]] and after [[death]].
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Both have a {{Wiki|distinct}} advantage over the {{Wiki|secular}} {{Wiki|individual}} because they expect to enter into a positive [[afterlife]] ([[heaven]]), and expectations have great [[power]] in the inner [[worlds]]. This expectation combined with [[love]] and [[devotion]] towards some [[religious]] {{Wiki|ideal}} can propel the [[religious]] {{Wiki|individual}} towards a [[heavenly]] [[state]] just as
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the practice of [[spiritual]] travel does. The {{Wiki|secular}} {{Wiki|individual}} with no [[faith]] or expectation of [[heaven]] is more likely to flounder after [[death]] and get stuck in some [[intermediate]] gray area surrounded by [[thoughts]] and [[emotions]] from the {{Wiki|past}} waiting for something to happen.
  
It also usually helps to have [[faith]] in something [[beyond]] the material [[world]] at the [[time]] of [[death]]. Those with a strong [[faith]] in {{Wiki|Jesus}} or another [[religious]] figure will be more [[calm]] and [[relaxed]] as they enter the [[bardo]] [[realms]]. While the [[religious]] [[person]] can look forward to [[heaven]] at the [[time]] of [[death]], the [[spiritual]] traveler who has been trying to do [[spiritual]] travel all his or her [[life]] can also look forward to [[death]] in certain respects. This is because the opportunity for exploration and [[spiritual]] travel will hopefully be greatly expanded after [[death]] when the [[physical body]] and its needs will no longer be a major {{Wiki|distraction}}. Of course the areas the [[spiritual]] traveler wishes to explore are the [[heavenly]] areas and [[beyond]], and in that [[sense]], he or she has much in common with other more [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] [[religious]] [[people]].
 
  
Both have a {{Wiki|distinct}} advantage over the {{Wiki|secular}} {{Wiki|individual}} because they expect to enter into a positive [[afterlife]] ([[heaven]]), and expectations have great [[power]] in the inner [[worlds]]. This expectation combined with [[love]] and [[devotion]] towards some [[religious]] {{Wiki|ideal}} can propel the [[religious]] {{Wiki|individual}} towards a [[heavenly]] state just as the practice of [[spiritual]] travel does. The {{Wiki|secular}} {{Wiki|individual}} with no [[faith]] or expectation of [[heaven]] is more likely to flounder after [[death]] and get stuck in some [[intermediate]] gray area surrounded by [[thoughts]] and [[emotions]] from the {{Wiki|past}} waiting for something to happen.
 
 
[[File:Avalokitesdecal-300.gif|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Avalokitesdecal-300.gif|thumb|250px|]]
A brief mention of [[ethics]] is appropriate when discussing the state a [[person]] enters at [[death]]. In general, both the [[state of mind]] of a [[soul]] and the [[world]] it inhabits is presumed to be the result of its {{Wiki|past}} [[thought]] patterns and [[actions]] ([[karma]]). Trauma and intense [[pain]] whether [[experienced]] by the [[soul]], or inflicted on another during [[life]] will tend to fragment the [[self]] and make [[conscious]] control after [[death]] difficult. {{Wiki|Violence}}, [[cruelty]], and [[hatred]] expressed towards others in [[life]] will almost certainly have a limiting effect on the soul's freedom both in the after [[death]] state and in subsequent [[existences]] . This is true even for [[souls]] who have become proficient in [[spiritual]] travel during their [[life]]. Unethical [[actions]] during [[life]] seem to separate the [[soul]] from the [[knowledge]] and [[wisdom]] attained while living, and leave it helpless to [[experience]] the results of its [[actions]] in the [[afterlife]].
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A brief mention of [[ethics]] is appropriate when discussing the [[state]] a [[person]] enters at [[death]]. In general, both the [[state of mind]] of a [[soul]] and the [[world]] it inhabits is presumed to be the result of its {{Wiki|past}} [[thought]] patterns and [[actions]]  
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([[karma]]). [[Trauma]] and intense [[pain]] whether [[experienced]] by the [[soul]], or inflicted on another during [[life]] will tend to fragment the [[self]] and make [[conscious]] control after [[death]] difficult. {{Wiki|Violence}}, [[cruelty]], and [[hatred]] expressed towards others in [[life]] will almost certainly have a limiting effect on the soul's freedom both in the after [[death]] [[state]] and in  
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subsequent [[existences]] . This is true even for [[souls]] who have become {{Wiki|proficient}} in [[spiritual]] travel during their [[life]]. Unethical [[actions]] during [[life]] seem to separate the [[soul]] from the [[knowledge]] and [[wisdom]] [[attained]] while living, and leave it helpless to [[experience]] the results of its [[actions]] in the [[afterlife]].
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Interestingly enough, some of the {{Wiki|Western}} [[ideas]] of [[heaven]] and [[hell]] can be accounted for by the [[Tibetan]] notion of the second [[bardo]]. The {{Wiki|saint}} or righteous [[soul]] will find itself in places of [[bliss]], [[happiness]], and [[light]] based
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on the kinds of [[thoughts]] it was in a [[habit]] of [[thinking]], while the [[evil]] [[person]] will lead an [[existence]] of {{Wiki|fear}}, [[anger]], and torment in the [[afterlife]]. However, the second [[bardo]] is a {{Wiki|temporary}} [[transitional state]] that actually precedes the longer term [[experiences]] of [[heaven]], [[hell]], or [[rebirth]] in the [[physical]] [[world]] which can occur following the third [[bardo]].
  
Interestingly enough, some of the {{Wiki|Western}} [[ideas]] of [[heaven]] and [[hell]] can be accounted for by the [[Tibetan]] notion of the second [[bardo]]. The {{Wiki|saint}} or righteous [[soul]] will find itself in places of [[bliss]], [[happiness]], and [[light]] based on the kinds of [[thoughts]] it was in a [[habit]] of [[thinking]], while the [[evil]] [[person]] will lead an [[existence]] of {{Wiki|fear}}, [[anger]], and torment in the [[afterlife]]. However, the second [[bardo]] is a {{Wiki|temporary}} transitional state that actually precedes the longer term [[experiences]] of [[heaven]], [[hell]], or [[rebirth]] in the [[physical]] [[world]] which can occur following the third [[bardo]].
 
  
 
[[Spiritualism]] as an Alternative [[View]] of the [[Afterlife]]
 
[[Spiritualism]] as an Alternative [[View]] of the [[Afterlife]]
  
The focus of [[Buddhism]] in the [[afterlife]] is similar to its approach to [[earthly]] [[existence]]. The emphasis is on [[passion]], and its restrictive and {{Wiki|destructive}} consequences. It is therefore not surprising that the [[Buddhist]] [[view]] of after [[death]] states [[concentrates]] on [[desire]] as the {{Wiki|mechanism}} which turns the [[dead]] into machines who must [[live]] out a [[karmic]] [[destiny]] in the [[afterlife]]. These {{Wiki|individuals}} will [[exist]] in a depleted state of [[awareness]] with little freedom of choice during the [[bardo]].
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The focus of [[Buddhism]] in the [[afterlife]] is similar to its approach to [[earthly]] [[existence]]. The {{Wiki|emphasis}} is on [[passion]], and its restrictive and {{Wiki|destructive}} {{Wiki|consequences}}. It is therefore not surprising that the [[Buddhist]] [[view]] of after [[death]]  
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states [[concentrates]] on [[desire]] as the {{Wiki|mechanism}} which turns the [[dead]] into machines who must [[live]] out a [[karmic]] [[destiny]] in the [[afterlife]]. These {{Wiki|individuals}} will [[exist]] in a depleted [[state]] of [[awareness]] with little freedom of choice during the [[bardo]].
 +
 
  
 
As an alternate and competing [[view]] of the [[afterlife]], we will briefly examine the {{Wiki|Western}} [[tradition]] of [[spiritualism]] which has been around for more than one hundred years, and is still popular in some quarters today.
 
As an alternate and competing [[view]] of the [[afterlife]], we will briefly examine the {{Wiki|Western}} [[tradition]] of [[spiritualism]] which has been around for more than one hundred years, and is still popular in some quarters today.
  
The central conclusion of the {{Wiki|data}} provided by the spiritualists and [[trance]] mediums is that [[dead]] [[people]] have scarcely more [[insight]] and [[wisdom]] in [[death]] than they had while alive. Such a proposition emphasizes the importance of {{Wiki|learning}} [[spiritual]] skills such as [[spiritual]] travel while alive instead of hoping for [[spiritual]] redemption and [[transformation]] after [[death]]. Though the spiritualist's [[view]] differs from [[Buddhism]] in the specifics, it supports the contention that [[people]] should not wait until [[death]] to begin {{Wiki|learning}} since such a delay can result in a very limited and routine [[afterlife]]. We examine the spiritualist's [[view]] on the page titled A Spiritualist's Approach to After-Death States.
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The central conclusion of the {{Wiki|data}} provided by the spiritualists and [[trance]] mediums is that [[dead]] [[people]] have scarcely more [[insight]] and [[wisdom]] in [[death]] than they had while alive. Such a proposition emphasizes the importance of {{Wiki|learning}} [[spiritual]] skills such as [[spiritual]] travel while alive instead of hoping for [[spiritual]] redemption and [[transformation]] after  
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[[death]]. Though the spiritualist's [[view]] differs from [[Buddhism]] in the specifics, it supports the contention that [[people]] should not wait until [[death]] to begin {{Wiki|learning}} since such a delay can result in a very limited and routine [[afterlife]]. We examine the spiritualist's [[view]] on the page titled A Spiritualist's Approach to After-Death States.
 
[[File:Mfegd9.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Mfegd9.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
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{{Wiki|Kabir}}, the Hindu-Muslim poet of [[India]], talks about the [[afterlife]] in an {{Wiki|ambiguous}} way describing it as the "city of [[death]]" which could be consistent with either the [[Tibetan]] or Spiritualist's [[view]] of the [[afterlife]]. He offers the following words which support the notion that a [[person]] who is limited in [[life]] will also be limited in [[death]].
 
{{Wiki|Kabir}}, the Hindu-Muslim poet of [[India]], talks about the [[afterlife]] in an {{Wiki|ambiguous}} way describing it as the "city of [[death]]" which could be consistent with either the [[Tibetan]] or Spiritualist's [[view]] of the [[afterlife]]. He offers the following words which support the notion that a [[person]] who is limited in [[life]] will also be limited in [[death]].
 +
  
 
     O [[friend]]! {{Wiki|Hope}} for Him whilst you [[live]], [[know]] while you [[live]], understand while you [[live]]:
 
     O [[friend]]! {{Wiki|Hope}} for Him whilst you [[live]], [[know]] while you [[live]], understand while you [[live]]:
Line 111: Line 301:
 
           I am the slave of the [[Spirit]] of the quest.
 
           I am the slave of the [[Spirit]] of the quest.
  
                 Songs of {{Wiki|Kabir}} (York Beach, Maine: Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1991), pps. 46-47
+
                  
 +
Songs of {{Wiki|Kabir}} (York Beach, Maine: [[Samuel Weiser]], Inc., 1991), pps. 46-47
 
</poem>
 
</poem>
  

Latest revision as of 14:12, 1 January 2024

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Tibetan Buddhism has concentrated more attention on helping the dying person cross the borders of death than any other living religious tradition. The Tibetan Book of the Dead and other sources give detailed descriptions of the stages of death


and afterlife, as well as instructions about how the dying individual should confront and react to these mysterious places and events. Dealing with a tradition that contains so many lineages, deities, and philosophical subsystems in a short article will necessarily involve generalizing about the tradition. Though the material is complex and sometimes difficult to interpret for a


Westerner who must rely on English sources, the author will describe the stages of death, and attempt to show how they are relevant to our discussion of spiritual travel.



The Bardos or Stages of the Afterlife


The realm of the afterlife is called the world of the bardo. The term bardo is a general term which literally means "in-between" and in this context denotes a transitional state, or what Victor Turner calls a liminal situation. The bardo concept


is an umbrella term which includes the transitional states of birth, death, dream, transmigration or afterlife, meditation, and spiritual luminosity. We focus, in this essay, on the bardos of death and transmigration. For the dying individual, the bardo is the period of the afterlife that lies in between two different incarnations.



In Tantric Buddhist cosmology, existence has a foreground which consists of the many worlds of incarnation, and also a background which is the space between these worlds which is called the bardo world. The stars are the many worlds, and bardo of the afterlife is like the night sky which is the backdrop or the space where the stars are hung.


The first stage of the bardo of the afterlife follows the initial experience of the dissolution of the four elements of the physical body at the time of death. These consist of something similar to the concepts of earth,

fire, water, and air in the West, and are related to the progressive dissociation of the soul from the physical body. This dissolution follows a prescribed progression: the senses fail and the muscles lose their strength as the body

becomes inert and still resembling physical matter (earth), there is loss of control over bodily fluids (water), the body loses its warmth (fire), and the breath fails (air). All this is experienced in sequence by the dying person when the person is able to remain conscious during the bardo of death.



Note here that the "soul" in Tibetan Buddhism is only a collection (or bundle) of karma (credits and debits based on previous actions which mold both the habit patterns of the individual and the kinds of conditions encountered in life). In Buddhism, the soul has no substantial nature but otherwise the soul and this "collection" seem very similar and are functionally equivalent for our purposes. We therefore use the term soul above even though it is not a Buddhist term.



The First Bardo



Following this, the person's experience of the first bardo of the afterlife commences. However, for most individuals, it passes by in a split second and goes unnoticed. Only those who have undergone training in and practiced meditation, contemplative prayer, and similar spiritual disciplines will likely even be aware of the first bardo state. For some of those


fortunate souls, there will be several opportunities to meet with spiritual beings and enter the realms of enlightened beings. One description of the kind of meditation done by advanced practitioners consists of a conscious


effort to "dissolve space into light", which if successful will propel the dying soul into an a state of light and bliss beyond the continual cycles of birth and death to which most souls are subject. For those less familiar with such formal meditation practices, the act of remembering very bright light (such as, for example, remembering an experience of


staring into the sun) and seeing that light as a source of pure awareness or divine love could produce a similar effect. A series of meditations and understandings that can be helpful as one enters the bardo can be found on our Death Meditations page.


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For those experienced in spiritual travel who were able to enter spiritual states of light, sound, and emptiness during life, the first bardo may offer an opportunity to enter into these areas shortly after the time of death. Also, those


with a devotional disposition who were able to develop a strong bond with a deity during life may have similar opportunities to enter into one of the heavens of that deity during the first bardo. The devotion must usually be intense and concentrated to draw the deity's attention in this circumstance. Also, those who were devoted to a guru or spiritual


guide during life can call upon that being and ask for guidance. Although the Tibetan Buddhist tradition is not primarily devotional, it like most of the world's great religious traditions contains devotional aspects where practicianers are encouraged to focus on powerful teachers or saints of the past or present as well as dakinis, bhairavas, Bodhisattvas, Buddhas, and other helpful beings.



The spiritual aperture that opens briefly at the time of death presents a wonderful opportunity to those who can control their thoughts as the first bardo begins. This is probably why there is a common folk belief in the Hindu tradition

which puts much emphasis on controlling and directing the last thought of the dying person. If this thought is strong, clear, and of a spiritual nature, it may permit the person to enter through this doorway into a spiritual world immediately at the time of death, and thus avoid the confusion of the second bardo.


The Second Bardo


If the first bardo passes and attempts to access spiritual states were unsuccessful, the next bardo begins. The second bardo or the "bardo of becoming" is a stage in which the desires of the individual are said to carry the largely helpless


soul through a great variety of intense emotional states. Good thoughts bring great bliss and pleasure, and hateful or negative thoughts bring great pain and desolation. The soul bounces from thought to thought as a torrent of thoughts


and feelings come like a waterfall. Existing thought habits and desires are said to define the experience of the soul during the afterlife in this way.


Spiritual Travel and the Second Bardo



It is here where some experience and training in spiritual travel and out-of-body experience may be of greatest help. It may first help the individual maintain a state of detachment. The spiritual traveler who has experienced the inner world during life can take the whirlwind nature of inner world following death with more calm and detachment.


Those who have read examples of the kinds of states encountered in spiritual travel located on other pages of this site will understand that some experimentation and discovery in the inner worlds may prepare the soul for many of the dynamics of the states it may encounter after death. The similarity of certain aspects of the near-death experience (a temporary bardo state) and


elements of spiritual travel experience (the "tunnel" experience for example) show some common qualities between certain spiritual travel states and these bardo states.


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The soul experienced in spiritual travel is less likely to be disoriented by this inner torrent of psychic experience. To put it another way, while the spiritual traveler or yogi swims through the ocean of consciousness, the inexperienced soul

may feel more like it is drowning in that ocean. But as with a drowning person, the most important thing is to have a direction in which to swim to safety. The point of orientation or goal for the person in the second bardo may be a deity, a mantra, a

prayer, a heaven, a guide, or some similar spiritual goal but the spiritual traveler must be able to focus and move towards that goal using meditative techniques learned and practiced during their former life in the physical world. This is the active approach of the spiritual traveler.


The second advantage is that the spiritual traveler has entered the waters of consciousness consciously on many occasions and is practiced at directing his or her experience in the inner worlds.


The greatest problems of the soul in the second bardo are negative emotions like guilt and fear (which results from a lack of familiarity with the inner worlds), and lack of conscious control over its own experience. Fear is


particularly harmful because it fragments the self making concentration on one thing difficult or impossible, and this can lead to confusion and loss of conscious control.

The soul in the second bardo is many times caught in a dream state sometimes unaware that it has died, and incapable of taking action to raise its state of consciousness to a threshold level of awareness where it can direct its attention towards spiritual states.



This is one of the reasons it is important to do a regular spiritual practice during life. Doing meditation or prayer every day establishes a pattern of spiritual activity. It then becomes automatic and the habit of seeking after the divine reality continues during the after-death state where it can have powerful results. A daily spiritual practice differs from other


more common spiritual practices such as going to church or temple because it is done more often than once or twice a week. Meditation therefore establishes a stronger habit pattern in the individual and is a valuable addition to group oriented spiritual activities such as attending church.


Regular meditation can also be more powerful because it is usually a less passive activity than church since it fully involves the individual in the meditative process rather than making a spectator out of him or her.

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What the soul in the second bardo needs to do is "wake up", as in a lucid dream, and begin a meditation or mental exercise that draws it towards a desired stable and more conscious state of awareness where it can have some control


and continue to evolve spiritually. The opposite of conscious control is a dream-like state where the individual experiences only the results of his or her previous actions, and mechanically moves from thought to thought based on thinking patterns developed during life.


Waking up within a dream is one of the activities the spiritual traveler practices when he or she leaves the body to travel the inner planes. Beyond this, the traveler is also always practicing and perfecting the art of directing his or her attention towards some desired state. It is the contention of the author that experience with meditation and actual spiritual travel

experience during life can both be of great help in rising above the semi-conscious state characteristic of the second bardo, and moving into a more conscious and desirable state following physical death.


For those who practiced a devotional tradition in life, some will semi-consciously repeat a religious or a meditative ritual asking gods or intercessors to draw them out of the second bardo world. We see an example of an attempt to create such a ritual in the Catholic rosary, where Mary as intercessor is requested to

    
Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death ...



This phrase is from the Hail Mary Prayer. One effect of the repetition of this prayer fifty times in the rosary is that such a prayer for help and intercession may become an automatic process, which will repeat itself in the bardo.



For those fortunate enough to be more conscious in these bardo states, a petition to a god, guru, guide, saint, or intercessor can be made in hopes that the individual will be lifted or guided out of the bardo worlds by one of those entities. But here again, the call must be concentrated and the ability to ignore the surrounding chaos

somewhat developed. When such grace is given, it is a form of salvation where the individual is saved from the discomfort and confusion of the "outer darkness" of the bardo by a powerful entity - usually one that


individuals formed a bond with in their former life. To use the swimming analogy, here the individual calls out to a lifeguard in hopes of being rescued from the turbulent waters of the bardo state. This is the more passive approach of the devotee.



We should also note that souls in this bardo are thought to be very sensitive to the thoughts and attitudes of those they knew during life. The Tibetans therefore put great effort into doing chanting, reading of sacred texts, and other religious rituals to help the dying soul on its journey in the afterlife. Praying for the peace and happiness of the


dying person therefore has great value and provides a benefit to both the living and the dead. This process of sending good wishes to those who have recently died can create a positive spiritual atmosphere which can orient and bring peace to the person in the bardo realm, and can also counter some of the sorrow and upset that accompanies the loss of a loved one.



The Third Bardo

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The third and last bardo consists of the stage of reincarnation where the soul is pulled into another body to start a new life, often but not always in the physical world. Tibetan Buddhists believe that the most desirable world to be born in is the physical world, since it affords the most opportunity for spiritual growth and realization. The third bardo


consists of a series of images determined by the soul's karma that lead to psychic vortices that draw the soul into a womb. The soul's reaction to the images (attraction or repulsion) determines which vortex the soul enters and in which womb the soul ends up. The Tibetan tradition gives detailed advice on which representations to choose and which to


avoid in order to gain a desirable rebirth. Once reborn, the karma of impulse manifests to influence the person's actions and reactions in their new life.


This ability to choose a good incarnation requires discrimination, and a certain degree of conscious awareness. The new age approach to reincarnation which claims we choose our new incarnation is idealistic and


not always true from this vantage point. Many souls desperate to escape the confusion of the second bardo will grab on to the first opportunity that presents itself like a swimmer who grasps a log in dangerous rapids in hopes of making it to calmer waters. Choosing the first object (or incarnation) that comes along may not be the wisest choice.


The average person is said to spend a period of about forty-five days in the second bardo. However, passionate souls with strong desires or those responsible for evil acts in their most recent life are said to reincarnate almost immediately. In exceptional cases, the individual can stay in the bardo state for longer periods, and be drawn into its currents awaiting rebirth.


If the individual does not reincarnate in the physical world, he or she will go to one of the other five worlds of rebirth. These are the heaven worlds, the hell worlds, the world of hungry ghosts, the asura (demigod)


worlds, and the animal worlds. Each of these is believed to be limited and inferior to obtaining another body in the material world. This is because they exist mostly to receive good or bad karma (the results of previous actions), and are not considered places to create new karma.


The least familiar of the above worlds is the asura world which is a place of conflict and struggle where kings, knights, and warlords battle each other for dominance. Persons who were fascinated with gaining and exercising power over others during life are said to be likely to incarnate in the asura realm.


The asura realm also offers the potential for rapid learning where the individual's actions produce clear and dramatic effects without generating the powerful karmic ripples that would normally occur in the physical world. It can thus be a kind of

remedial world for those who are caught in negative repeating patterns which incline them to make bad decisions in the physical world incarnation after incarnation.


The hungry ghost realm is a place of need and desire where souls are denied fulfillment or given only small rewards. Here souls experience states of continuing anxiety and frustration. The animal world is reserved for those whose extreme

instincts for violence, gluttony, or sexual gratification dominated their previous lives in the physical world to the extent that they devolved into the instinctual and unreflective state of animal existence. The heaven and


hell worlds have wide variations, but it is interesting that the Tibetan tradition has both burning hells (as in the Christian tradition) and freezing hells (present in Dante's Divine Comedy but not commonly known in [[Wikipedia:Christianity|Christianity]]).


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We will also note here that the hell normally described by Catholic and Protestant clerics is based on folk tradition. Their descriptions of hell as a fiery place of punishment are taken mostly from the Apocrypha (specifically, the


Book of Enoch), Dante's Divine Comedy, and the Book of Revelation with its "end of the world" prophesy. This folk view of hell as a place of burning punishment and demons is unsupported by the Bible except for a few


apocalyptic passages in the last six chapters of the Book of Revelation. These passages are very inconsistent with the concept of hell in the rest of the Bible. Reading what the bible actually says about hell may reduce the anxiety of some Christians about the afterlife. It is explained on the page titled Confronting Mistaken Concepts of Christian Hell.


Returning to Buddhism, we note that heavens are not entirely desirable in many Buddhist traditions because they are places where little learning takes place, and they do not allow for much creativity or compassionate action. They are thus viewed as vacation spots that promote happiness for the inhabitants but accomplish little in the way of spiritual maturation. They are also viewed as temporary and not eternal.


The Freedom to do Spiritual Travel in the Afterlife

One factor that helps the soul achieve the freedom of conscious control and spiritual travel during the afterlife is acceptance of death. Those who have not accepted death will resist the process of dying and introduce conflict into the

bardo stages. This is why it is important for people to take care of any unfinished business as they near death so they can let go of life completely.



In Brahmanical Hinduism, there is a stage of life called the forest dweller or vanaprastha stage in which the older individual who has finished raising a family is supposed to begin letting go of pleasures and attachments to


life in preparation for death. However, in the West the goal is to keep spending money and maximize enjoyment up to the end of life. This makes it difficult for many to make a graceful transition into death. Intense attachment to the material world makes it difficult to do spiritual travel both during life and after death.


It also usually helps to have faith in something beyond the material world at the time of death. Those with a strong faith in Jesus or another religious figure will be more calm and relaxed as they enter the bardo realms. While the religious person can look forward to heaven at the time of death, the spiritual traveler who has been


trying to do spiritual travel all his or her life can also look forward to death in certain respects. This is because the opportunity for exploration and spiritual travel will hopefully be greatly expanded after death when the physical body and its


needs will no longer be a major distraction. Of course the areas the spiritual traveler wishes to explore are the heavenly areas and beyond, and in that sense, he or she has much in common with other more conventional religious people.


Both have a distinct advantage over the secular individual because they expect to enter into a positive afterlife (heaven), and expectations have great power in the inner worlds. This expectation combined with love and devotion towards some religious ideal can propel the religious individual towards a heavenly state just as


the practice of spiritual travel does. The secular individual with no faith or expectation of heaven is more likely to flounder after death and get stuck in some intermediate gray area surrounded by thoughts and emotions from the past waiting for something to happen.


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A brief mention of ethics is appropriate when discussing the state a person enters at death. In general, both the state of mind of a soul and the world it inhabits is presumed to be the result of its past thought patterns and actions

(karma). Trauma and intense pain whether experienced by the soul, or inflicted on another during life will tend to fragment the self and make conscious control after death difficult. Violence, cruelty, and hatred expressed towards others in life will almost certainly have a limiting effect on the soul's freedom both in the after death state and in

subsequent existences . This is true even for souls who have become proficient in spiritual travel during their life. Unethical actions during life seem to separate the soul from the knowledge and wisdom attained while living, and leave it helpless to experience the results of its actions in the afterlife.

Interestingly enough, some of the Western ideas of heaven and hell can be accounted for by the Tibetan notion of the second bardo. The saint or righteous soul will find itself in places of bliss, happiness, and light based


on the kinds of thoughts it was in a habit of thinking, while the evil person will lead an existence of fear, anger, and torment in the afterlife. However, the second bardo is a temporary transitional state that actually precedes the longer term experiences of heaven, hell, or rebirth in the physical world which can occur following the third bardo.


Spiritualism as an Alternative View of the Afterlife


The focus of Buddhism in the afterlife is similar to its approach to earthly existence. The emphasis is on passion, and its restrictive and destructive consequences. It is therefore not surprising that the Buddhist view of after death

states concentrates on desire as the mechanism which turns the dead into machines who must live out a karmic destiny in the afterlife. These individuals will exist in a depleted state of awareness with little freedom of choice during the bardo.


As an alternate and competing view of the afterlife, we will briefly examine the Western tradition of spiritualism which has been around for more than one hundred years, and is still popular in some quarters today.



The central conclusion of the data provided by the spiritualists and trance mediums is that dead people have scarcely more insight and wisdom in death than they had while alive. Such a proposition emphasizes the importance of learning spiritual skills such as spiritual travel while alive instead of hoping for spiritual redemption and transformation after


death. Though the spiritualist's view differs from Buddhism in the specifics, it supports the contention that people should not wait until death to begin learning since such a delay can result in a very limited and routine afterlife. We examine the spiritualist's view on the page titled A Spiritualist's Approach to After-Death States.

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Kabir, the Hindu-Muslim poet of India, talks about the afterlife in an ambiguous way describing it as the "city of death" which could be consistent with either the Tibetan or Spiritualist's view of the afterlife. He offers the following words which support the notion that a person who is limited in life will also be limited in death.


    O friend! Hope for Him whilst you live, know while you live, understand while you live:
       for in life deliverance abides.
    If your bonds be not broken whilst living, what hope of deliverance in death?
    It is but an empty dream that the soul shall have union with Him because it has passed from the body:
    If He is found now, He is found them,
    If not, we do but go to dwell in the city of Death.
    If you have union now, you shall have it hereafter.
    Bathe in the Truth, know the true Guru, have faith in the true Name.
    Kabir says:
          It is the spirit of the quest that helps;
          I am the slave of the Spirit of the quest.

                
Songs of Kabir (York Beach, Maine: Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1991), pps. 46-47


Source

www.spiritualtravel.org