The Ostrich and the Elephant

A blog on spirituality, science, philosophy, ETs, and mental health

Tag: Eternity

  • On Death and Eternal Life

    “Contemplation of death is the highest meditation.”

    ~ Unknown

    When I was younger I used to be absolutely terrified of death. It wasn’t the process of dying I was afraid of – I couldn’t have cared less about that – it was the eternity part. I’m going to be dead forever and ever and ever and ever and ever. Being dead for a long time? Sure, I could handle that, but forever? That made me so afraid any time I thought about it I would be filled with terror and had to quickly distract myself and push it out of my mind. Sequestered in a little box labelled, “Not to be thought about.”

    Of course, all this presupposed the idea that “I” would be having an “experience” of “nothingness” “forever”. It is impossible for the human mind to imagine nothingness, so what it usually conjures up is an experience of an infinite black void with nothing going on. But that’s not nothingness, that’s an infinite black void with nothing going on.

    Despite this fear of death, getting older never really bothered me. I remember turning 30 and my uncle telling me he hated his 30th birthday because he felt like his youth was over. I couldn’t have cared less. Maybe it was because I didn’t have a terribly enjoyable youth, but it was just another birthday for me.

    This changed when I turned 36. I thought, wow, my youth really is kind of over now, I’m pretty much middle-aged now. If you consider the fact that the average life expectancy of a male in Australia is 83 years, it’s not that far off. I remember when I was at school, and the holidays were half over, I started to feel really depressed. I hated school, so the idea that we had reached the halfway mark and it was now a slippery slope to the end made me feel horrible.

    So when I turned 36, I started to think about death more. But I didn’t consider this a bad thing – in fact I was excited by it! I’d been on the spiritual path for 11 years at this point, and I knew that the concept of death was central to enlightenment, so I was grateful that I could contemplate this and hopefully let go of the Will character even more.

    Ramana Maharshi, an enlightened sage from India, had his uncle die when he was 16. He became obsessed with the idea of death, and one day he laid down and imagined what it would be like to die. The fear of death began to overwhelm him, he completely let go in the face of it, and then… he woke up. He no longer identified with Ramana.

    But it was still scary for me. You can have all the “spiritual knowledge” in the world, but until you directly experience this truth for yourself, you don’t know it. You just believe it. And beliefs are never ultimately convincing.

    About halfway through my 38th year on this planet, I started to experience some health concerns. Because I’ve been on the antipsychotic Olanzapine for 7 years, I’ve put on a lot of weight. 50kgs. It makes you super hungry, and also messes with your metabolism. So I developed sleep apnoea as a result of this, and soon after started experiencing heart pain and palpitations. This brought up tremendous fear in me. I thought I could have a heart attack any moment. I went to hospital about 4 times because I thought I had had one. It was terrifying.

    And all my spiritual “knowledge”? It didn’t help one fucking bit. Because I didn’t know it. I hadn’t seen it for myself in a way that removed all doubt. I still identified with Will, and as long as I identified with Will, it was believed that if Will goes, I go. Nothingness.

    I had some sessions with the spiritual teacher Tom Das during this time (who is a GP by coincidence), and told him about how much anxiety I had regarding my health. It got really, really bad in the first two months of 2025. I was petrified. I’d never experienced that level of anxiety over an extended period before. I couldn’t leave the house, I was constantly measuring my heart rate, I bought a blood pressure monitor (although most of the time was too anxious to use it, knowing that it can give false high readings if you’re anxious about measuring, which I absolutely was). I was terrified.

    Tom’s response?

    “Oh, you’re a materialist.”

    Um, what? I thought to myself. I had spent the last 13 years arguing against materialism (the idea that we live in a physical, space-time universe), that it was an illusion based on the mind’s interpretation of reality. This again is the difference between believing and knowing. I thought this, but I hadn’t seen it.

    There’s one thing I know for certain in this life, and that is “I am” or “consciousness is.” Everything else is completely up for debate, but the fact that there is some type of existence is undeniable. It is self-evident, and requires no external proof.

    So what do I think is likely, but do not know, based on what I’ve learnt from enlightened people over the years? That death is ultimately an illusion. What you are – consciousness – was never born and cannot die. In the world of form, there is constant change. The person you were when you started reading this sentence is effectively dead now. You are a different person. Are there similarities? Sure, but you’re not exactly the same. You’ve been changed. Maybe the change is, “Man, Will’s really an idiot.” But there’s been a change.

    Even if you think about it at an atomic level: every moment every atom in your body changes state. So where is the continuous “you” that moves from one moment to the next?

    In Eastern traditions, they talk a lot about the cycle of death and rebirth – reincarnation. I think this is likely to be true for two reasons. 1. Many, many spiritual teachers I trust have said this to be the case and that they’ve experienced their past (and future) lives directly. 2. There’s a lot of evidence of young people in particular recounting stories of “who they used to be.” The interesting thing is, this becomes a scientific question because we can actually look up details of what they describe and see if a person matching that description existed. There are a lot of videos of this on youtube which I’d recommend checking out. Even Sam Harris, the famed atheist, said at a scientific conference once, there are “spooky stories” of this kind. The University of Virginia was actually studying these cases to determine their validity, and they said they had thousands of cases. Most parents never speak about it, either because they chalk it up to childhood imagination, or they’re too weirded out by it to talk to anyone about it.

    This opens up the possibility – in my opinion the likely possibility – that there is a potentially infinite cycle of death and rebirth. If the universe is infinite and eternal, which I think it must be logically speaking, then this opens up the possibility of an endless cycle.

    Some spiritual teachers and traditions claim that enlightenment is the end of this cycle. That you are no longer reborn but exist as your primordial Self eternally (capital S Self referring not to the individual but the universal Self). My teacher Isira rubbished this idea once. She said, referring to the notion of karma and rebirth: “And guess what? You’ll go back and do it all over again anyway, because you are eternal. You know what most concepts of karma are based on this finite cycle as if you go from point A, you know? Right, “Go,” there’s your piece on the board, roll your dice, “oo, you get to move three steps today!” And that somehow you get to the end of the board and that’s liberation, over and out, no more reincarnation. What? What? Hang on a minute, isn’t it recognised right alongside of that notion that actually the source of all of those experiences is eternal life? That we ourselves are eternal life? Well, if we’re eternal life, how are we going to stop? And this eternal life includes the dynamic of manifesting in form which is a given end of the spectrum of energy – that doesn’t cease. In liberation, this condensed level of energy does not cease. You can’t erase anything from the universe. So have fun, while you’re at it!” (The link to this full satsang can be found here, and it is great: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvzM2EC3v4s&t=3221s ). But either way, what is experienced is not “nothingness.” At least, not in the way the mind imagines that.

    The Australian spiritual teacher Linda Clair once said ultimately all fear is a fear of death. I really agree with this. People might find this a bit hard to believe, but take one example: social anxiety. This is essentially a fear of people thinking badly of you. How could this be a fear of death? Well, as a social species, in our evolutionary history our tribes were of utmost importance to us. It was part of how we survived and thrived. To be cut off or ostracised from a group meant that we were vulnerable, and this meant vulnerability to death. So you can see how something as commonplace as social anxiety can actually really be a fear of death.

    Enlightenment is the complete eradication of psychological fear. Physiological fear reactions – stepping too close to a cliff, getting cut off in traffic – still exist, but they are fleeting, and leave once the danger is removed. The perpetual fear all humans who aren’t enlightened experience is conquered when the fear of death is conquered. And it can be. Completely.

    So here’s to eternal life! (hopefully 😉)

    Will.

    P.S. I eventually went to a cardiologist and they said my heart seemed fine so that eased my concerns a bit, and my heart pain has mostly subsided now, but my anxiety is still there, for a variety of reasons. I’m working on it.

  • Ajata Vada

    A warning:

    I would probably only read this article if you are very committed to awakening. If not, it could be unnecessarily challenging for you. This teaching is about as radical as radical can get – and true spirituality is already pretty radical!

    I want to emphasise though that I do not know if this teaching is true, or if it is the full truth; however, I think something Jesus said is appropriate here if it is true:

    “Those who seek should not stop seeking until they find, and when they find they will be disturbed, and when they are disturbed they will be astonished, and will reign over the All.”


    A bit over two years ago now, I came across a video from the nonduality teacher Tom Das called “The highest truth is Ajata”. Hmm, I thought. I’d been on the spiritual path for 11 years at this point, and had never heard that word. I respect Tom as a teacher so I watched the video. (link here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RTlr5GdZXc).

    It was radical. Like, really, really radical. World-ending radical.

    At first I was excited to hear it. My whole life had been focused on awakening for 11 years, and I was so frustrated with not making the “progress” I wanted. Not actually waking up. When I heard it, I thought to myself, “Okay, this is going to change things. This is big.”

    Ajata is a Sanskrit word which means “unborn”. “A” being the prefix “not” and “jata” being “born”. “Vada” means “view”. What this perspective states is that “there is no creation.” “Nothing ever happened.” The world is not just illusory, it never even appeared to exist!

    After my initial excitement of feeling like this could be a breakthrough for me, a bit of fear crept in. Quite a bit. “Well, this is just one teacher”, I said to myself; “he could be wrong.”

    In the following months and years however, I came across more and more teachers who were saying the same thing. Ramana Maharshi, Papaji, Rupert Spira, A Course in Miracles, some awakened friends on Facebook. The evidence started to mount up.

    I wrote to Tom, initially, when the fear crept in.

    “Is it scary?” I said.

    “No, it’s not scary at all, Will. It’s heaven,” he said. “Ajata = total endless peace, love, and bliss.”

    Still, there were things I wanted in the world. I wanted a deep relationship with a partner. I wanted to write my book. Will that all disappear?

    I don’t know the answer to this question, and really, before I see the ultimate truth myself, what I think about it means absolutely nothing. Whether I believe or disbelieve in ajata is kind of irrelevant. The truth is the truth no matter what I think about it. It’s impossible to know what the coffee in Paris tastes like until travelling to Paris.

    This teaching would say that the world does not exist in any way, but only “God”, “the Absolute”, consciousness, beingness, the I Am exists.

    As Rupert Spira said once, “When the somethingness of the waking state starts to appear less and less like something, the nothingness of the deep sleep state starts to appear less and less like nothing.”

    There’s a tendency for the human mind to picture “nothing” as just an endless black void. But apparently that’s not what is experienced. This state is impossible for the mind to imagine, as I’ve been told. Only that it is everything we’ve always been searching for.

    One thing that makes me hesitate with this teaching is my teacher Isira. As best as I could tell, she was the most awake person I’d ever come across, and I remember her once mentioning the book, “The Disappearance of the Universe”, and dismissing the idea as not true. The world does exist, only our thoughts about it do not exist, she said.

    That was always my position on this matter until coming across the ajata teachings. But I still just don’t know. I can’t know until I experience the truth, whatever it is, for myself. All the philosophising in the world means nothing. Truth is experiential. Philosophy and spiritual teachings can lead you to water, but they can’t make you drink. At a certain point you have to dive in, even though you don’t know that it’s safe.

    This is why I think faith on the spiritual path is so important. Faith doesn’t mean belief in something without evidence, it just means that at a certain point you have to have trust and let go into the unknown.

    What are the benefits of this teaching though? Well, what do humans want more than anything? Eternal life and happiness. That is, apparently, what’s on offer with these teachings. What you truly are was never born and cannot die, and it is bliss. Eternal bliss as “God”. That is where the spiritual path ultimately leads. Yet people are running around picking up scraps of temporary happiness, mostly struggling. As the philosopher Søren Kierkegaard wrote: “People settle for a level of despair they can tolerate and call it happiness.”

    There really is so much denial going on in humans. People, on the whole, are suffering a lot. Yet we often refuse to admit it to ourselves I think because we’re scared that there is no solution. That if we faced up to how unhappy we are we would just get stuck there and it would make it worse. People think the best they can hope for is brief periods of happiness interspersed amongst long periods of struggle.

    The spiritual path says there is a solution. And it’s better than we could imagine.

    Another benefit is that this teaching really removes your attachment to the world. Regardless of whether the world exists or not, our intense focus and fascination on the vicissitudes of life can distract us from discovering our true unchanging Self (capital S indicating the ultimate Self, not the individual self or ego). This teaching is a very powerful means for shifting our attention in that way.

    One thing I have noticed, however, with most people who advocate for the ajata teachings, is that they think the world = suffering, and that it can’t be any other way.

    While I think there is both light and dark in existence, and there will always be the full array of human emotion experienced, I don’t see it this way. I believe it is possible to create “Heaven on Earth”. Will it take a while? Yes, but I do believe it’s possible. And I do wonder whether there is an emotional avoidance inherent in the ajata teachings. Maybe if you see the world as inherently just suffering, you are more likely to reject it, and stay in this “absolute” state because it is “safer”.

    I don’t know if this is true, but it is a thought that I had. Adyashanti once said, “Don’t get stuck in enlightenment.” If you get stuck in enlightenment, the world will seemingly make you aware pretty quickly of your neglect of it.

    As I said, that’s just a possibility for me. I don’t know the truth of this yet. All I know is that I’m going to keep exploring until I find the highest truth myself. Until then, I leave you with this image:

    Thanks for reading,

    Will.

    P.S. Something I’ve learnt a lot on the spiritual journey is to take the “middle way” approach. Buddha is credited with saying this, but in his case he meant it in terms of asceticism versus over-indulgence. The way I see it is that we should always plant ourselves firmly in the middle ground of any propositions and be open to the truth of each, if there is any. I’ve been surprised at how accurate the middle way generally is in this sense, and getting lost in extremes often indicates a blind spot. I don’t know if this is true of ajata, but it’s a possibility. Some teachers have often said the world is real and unreal at the same time. As I said, I will continue to investigate it either way, and even though it might take a while, I’ll get back to you with the results. 😉

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