A Letter Concerning Death
By P. Princeton Prasad, published Oct 07, 2007
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Let us liken death to a serpent. The serpent is by far the most beautiful creature placed on the face of the earth. Behold and see that it glides gracefully and is strikingly more colorful than it ought to be for a creature so greatly feared amongst mankind. The beauty of the serpent is often obscured by the fear man have towards the fatal potion it has in its possession.
It is undeniable that most of us fear the serpent or at least some us were fearful of it prior to the understanding that in true nature, it is the serpent, which is more fearful. Yet as we acquire wisdom through maturity (some inherited and some from experience), we arrive at a well-defined sense of comprehension. We soon understand that nothing whatsoever becomes offensive without first being offended. Hence, it is understanding that teaches us to appreciate the evident beauty of the serpent and to not despise it merely because we feel threatened by the harm it may do us.
Likewise, death ought to be dealt with in maturity. And maturity does not imply that we should simply wait for whatever to come. Death, my beloved, is the beginning of a phase in existence where the material substance comes to a halt to allow that which is not matter to transcend the limits of matter into a finer state where it expands in greater dimensions with respect to infinity as the only limit. Shortly, death is the transit point to the second birth that must take place before a soul can completely be a soul.
A Letter Concerning Death
Thank you for reading
Credit: Bit Map Paint, MIcrosoft Photo Editor
Copyright: Princeton Prasad Pillai
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Did You Know?
Approximately 155520 people dying all over the world everyday?
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