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End of Life: A Personal Journey

One man’s walk toward the end of his life

End of Life: A Personal Journey
  • Home
  • About
    • Urgent Reaching Out
    • What Has Transpired . . .
  • An Essential Truth
  • Four Vital Reminders
    • Transforming the Mind
    • (1) Precious Life: Contemplation
    • (2) Death: Contemplation
    • (3) Karma: Contemplation
    • (4) Suffering: Contemplation
  • Understanding Healing
    • Four Classes of Illness
    • Sickness and Karma
    • Understanding Healing-Relative Truth
    • Understanding Healing-Ultimate Truth
    • Medicine Buddha Healing
    • The Power of the Mind in Healing
  • Dealing with Death
    • Dying with Confidence
    • Preparing for Death
    • Crossing Over . . .
  • A Path to Awakening
    • Turning to a Spiritual Path
      • Precious Human Life
      • Impermanence and Death
      • Actions and Results
      • Suffering
      • True Renunciation
    • Foundations of Practice
      • Taking Refuge
      • Altruistic Love and Compassion
      • Acquiring Merit and Wisdom
      • Purifying Obscurations
      • The Spiritual Master
    • The Main Path
      • Nature of Mind
      • Retreat
      • Spiritual Practice
      • View, Meditation, Action
    • Progress on the Path
      • Correcting One’s Faults
      • Inner Demons
  • A Daily Practice
    • The Foundation: Ngondro
    • Dudjom Tersar Ngondro
    • Outer Preliminaries
      • Precious Human Birth
        • Precious Life: Meditation
      • Impermanence and Death
        • Impermanence: Meditation
      • Karma
        • Karma: Meditation
      • Suffering
        • Suffering: Meditation
    • Inner Preliminaries
      • Refuge
      • Bodhicitta
      • Mandala Offering
      • Vajrasattva Practice
      • Guru Yoga
      • Consciousness Transference
    • Dedication of Merit
  • Visiting a Cemetery
    • Cemetery Visits: A Lost Custom?
  • Staying in Hospital
  • Miscellaneous
    • Healing with Form, Energy and Light
    • The Spiritual Dimension
    • Relating to the Sacred
    • Dzogchen: The Great Perfection
    • My Journey into Buddhism and Dzogchen
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Quotes
    • Death’s Timing Unknown
  • Contact
    • Biographical Sketch
Home→Categories Awareness of Death

Category Archives: Awareness of Death

Reflecting on Life During the Pandemic

End of Life: A Personal Journey Posted on January 24, 2021 by koaemlqJanuary 24, 2021

It was a sobering news item. The BBC mentioned that as of January, 2021, two million people had died as a result of the pandemic encircling the globe. In one short year, the world – as I have known it … Continue reading →

Posted in Awareness of Death

Contemplating Birth, Death, and Life

End of Life: A Personal Journey Posted on October 25, 2020 by koaemlqOctober 25, 2020

Take a few moments to sit quietly. Reflect back on your life to the point at which it first began, when you first appeared. When did you appear? Where were you before that? Where did you come from? Contemplate the … Continue reading →

Posted in Awareness of Death

Cultivating a Personal Awareness of Death

End of Life: A Personal Journey Posted on October 25, 2020 by koaemlqOctober 25, 2020

Cultivating a personal awareness of death begins by cultivating an appreciation of our life as a whole. With this as our basic view, as we go about our business, whatever we do takes place within the context of that entire … Continue reading →

Posted in Awareness of Death

Making Friends with Death

The teachings presented in the book – Making Friends with Death – are rooted in the cultivation of an ongoing personal awareness of death.

We are on a journey that begins with our birth and ends with our death. At each moment of that journey, we confront the boundary of life and death. We are constantly in transition.

At the moment of death, theoretical understanding is of limited use.

Many of our ideas are untested and merely reflect our fears and confusion. As we try to avoid pain, we only increase our suffering.

We need a different approach. Instead of avoiding the reality of death, we need to look into it and examine our own fixed ideas and preconceptions.

Having done so, we could look freshly at our immediate experience through meditation, or mindfulness practice.

Mindfulness practice is a way to drop our preconceptions and reconnect with our immediate moment-to-moment experience of life and death.

With that as our ground, we can begin to explore our relationship to death in a systematic way by means of the traditional practice: contemplating the reality of death.

Through that powerful combination—mindfulness practice and the contemplation of death—we can change how we relate to death and enhance our appreciation of life. We can begin to make friends with our own death.

Source: Lief, Judith L.. Making Friends with Death (p. 4). Shambhala. Kindle Edition. (Excerpted from Part One: “Ground – Cultivating a Personal Awareness of Death”)

 

Reflect on impermanence and death each day . . .

Site Map

  • Home
  • About
    • Urgent Reaching Out
    • What Has Transpired . . .
  • An Essential Truth
  • Four Vital Reminders
    • Transforming the Mind
    • (1) Precious Life: Contemplation
    • (2) Death: Contemplation
    • (3) Karma: Contemplation
    • (4) Suffering: Contemplation
  • Understanding Healing
    • Four Classes of Illness
    • Sickness and Karma
    • Understanding Healing-Relative Truth
    • Understanding Healing-Ultimate Truth
    • Medicine Buddha Healing
    • The Power of the Mind in Healing
  • Dealing with Death
    • Dying with Confidence
    • Preparing for Death
    • Crossing Over . . .
  • A Path to Awakening
    • Turning to a Spiritual Path
      • Precious Human Life
      • Impermanence and Death
      • Actions and Results
      • Suffering
      • True Renunciation
    • Foundations of Practice
      • Taking Refuge
      • Altruistic Love and Compassion
      • Acquiring Merit and Wisdom
      • Purifying Obscurations
      • The Spiritual Master
    • The Main Path
      • Nature of Mind
      • Retreat
      • Spiritual Practice
      • View, Meditation, Action
    • Progress on the Path
      • Correcting One’s Faults
      • Inner Demons
  • A Daily Practice
    • The Foundation: Ngondro
    • Dudjom Tersar Ngondro
    • Outer Preliminaries
      • Precious Human Birth
        • Precious Life: Meditation
      • Impermanence and Death
        • Impermanence: Meditation
      • Karma
        • Karma: Meditation
      • Suffering
        • Suffering: Meditation
    • Inner Preliminaries
      • Refuge
      • Bodhicitta
      • Mandala Offering
      • Vajrasattva Practice
      • Guru Yoga
      • Consciousness Transference
    • Dedication of Merit
  • Visiting a Cemetery
    • Cemetery Visits: A Lost Custom?
  • Staying in Hospital
  • Miscellaneous
    • Healing with Form, Energy and Light
    • The Spiritual Dimension
    • Relating to the Sacred
    • Dzogchen: The Great Perfection
    • My Journey into Buddhism and Dzogchen
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Quotes
    • Death’s Timing Unknown
  • Contact
    • Biographical Sketch

None of is exempt from death!

We see others dying all around us but somehow feel entitled to an exemption. In the Hindu epic the Mahabharata, the sage Yudisthira is asked, “Of all things in life, what is the most amazing?” Yudisthira answers, “That a man, seeing others die all around him, never thinks he will die.”

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