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Death Be Not Feared!
Comforting Insight For The Suffering, Grieving And Dying
by Bob Olson
I believe that we can alter our life today simply by
learning not to fear death. And by fearing death less we discover that we
live life more! Shakespeare comments on this in Julius Caesar: “It seems
to me most strange that men should fear; seeing that death, a necessary
end, will come when it will come.”
Isn’t it remarkable how this natural transition from
one life to another—from our life on earth to our life in spirit—is so
feared, yet it is a transition we will all be making? I believe that it is
our ignorance of death that makes it so feared. And our ignorance remains
because most of us do not acknowledge that death exists.
Francis Bacon wrote, “Men fear death as children fear
to go in the dark; and as that natural fear in children is increased with
tales, so is the other.” What are some of the tales we hear about death?
We hear it is dark. We hear it is grim. We hear it is cold… or just the
opposite—death is a fiery inferno for those who are sinners! We hear
clichés like, “as cruel as death,” “as hungry as the grave,” or
we associate death with other feared realities such as in Benjamin
Franklin’s famous line, “Nothing in life is certain except death and
taxes.”
Woody Allen spoke what most of us feel. He said,
“It’s not that I’m afraid to die. I just don’t want to be there
when it happens.” We don’t want to be there. We don’t want to die.
Most of us don’t even want to think about death.
A childhood friend of mine—a gal I have known for
almost twenty years—recently learned that her friend was probably going
to die of cancer soon. The cancer was in this woman’s lungs and liver.
During a stay at this gal’s home, my wife, Melissa, and I sat and talked
with her about everything from the weather to her work and every aspect of
her life, but she would not
talk about her dying friend. Occasionally she would well up in tears and
have to walk away. We were all aware of what weighed on her mind, but she
would not talk about the most pressing topic of her thoughts—her
friend’s imminent death.
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross tells us that denial is the first
stage in dealing with death. Apparently that is true for both the person
dying and the people surrounding the person who is dying. We assume that
if we don’t talk about it, then it isn’t real. But we need to talk
about death to work through the other four stages. Dr. Kubler-Ross’ five
stages are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and finally, acceptance.
This gal’s inability to discuss her friend’s cancer
may have resulted from her parents protecting her from death when she was
a child. I don’t mean protecting her from her own death, but rather the
death of others. Many parents think they are protecting us from the pain
of knowing death by hiding it from us as children. But in reality, parents
prevent us from developing the skills to deal with death when they hide it
from us. Instead of allowing us to say goodbye to our dying loved-ones,
they withhold that gift from us as if we won’t notice, as if we won’t
forever crave that privilege.
I spent 35 years not knowing what to think about death,
especially life-after-death. I was one of those people who got frustrated
by the subject because it seemed to be a topic that could never be
confirmed. By confirmation, I wanted evidence that we continue to exist
after death. By evidence, I wanted something concrete that I could grab
hold of to know that there was no other logical outcome than to believe
life goes on.
Some people hear me speak about life-after-death and
think that I have been one of those naïve believers who has accepted the
theories and dogma of others all my life. Oh, this is so not true. In
fact, my fear of appearing naïve, of being fooled by some tricky
charlatan, used to be so intense that I fell a little to the cynical side.
Max Lerner must have written directly for me when he wrote, “There is no
crime in the cynical American calendar more humiliating than to be a
sucker.” So I lived my life, admittedly, as a cynical skeptic.
Even as a child I questioned adults for more evidence to
back up their spiritual teachings. I must have been seven or eight years
old when my parents first brought me to Catechism class. It was in the
bottom of a Catholic church. I sat at the long cafeteria-style table with
about ten other little boys and girls and I raised my hand.
“Yes, Bobby, do you have a question?” the teacher
asked.
“Well, I just wondered how we really know that heaven
exists,” I said.
Right at that moment, this little blonde girl who sat
diagonally across from me turned to me with a look of contempt that could
have melted the metal buttons on my Roy Rogers cowboy shirt. I hesitated
and then continued with my question.
“Is there any proof that there is a heaven?” I
asked.
The Catechism teacher was kind and patient. I’ll never
forget her answer. She said, “Well, Bobby, we know heaven exists because
the same God that created the trees, flowers, oceans, birds, plants,
mountains and animals also created a heaven. We know heaven exists because
we know God exists.”
Right then, the little blonde girl looked at me again
with a nasty smirk on her face and said, “There, satisfied!” And then
she stuck her tongue out at me.
Of course, I wasn’t satisfied with my teacher’s
answer. And I wouldn’t be satisfied for almost three decades despite ten
more years of Catechism classes. But it wasn’t like I continued to seek
answers to my uncertainties all this time. I barely paid attention to what
the religious teachers said. I had learned from that little blonde girl
that I shouldn’t be announcing my doubts in public—it wasn’t worth
the public disdain. So I only listened enough to get through without
getting into trouble.
Although I was skeptical, it didn’t mean I was
narrow-minded. These are two completely different animals. I was always
open to new possibilities. I had hope that there was more to life—and
death—than I was seeing. So I explored. I visited psychics, tarot
readers and so-called spiritual practitioners. But I never met with any
degree of satisfaction that there were any truly gifted people in this
world who could provide me with the evidence I was seeking. I’m not sure
if I was only led to phony practitioners or if my skepticism prevented me
from recognizing genuine practitioners. As Robert M. Pirsig wrote, “The
truth knocks on the door and you say, ‘Go away, I’m looking for the
truth,’ and so it goes away.” That might have been me.
I gave birth to a new aspect of myself on January 15,
1999. I just had a book published and it was really exciting. However, a
couple days after its release, I had a talk with my father. This was a
great deal more exciting because my father had been dead for almost two
years.
This is the day I met my first genuine and legitimate
psychic medium. Yes, there really are people who can communicate with
spirits. But, of course, one needs to believe in spirits in order to
believe that people can communicate with them. At the time, I wasn’t
sure about either.
I heard about a medium (spirit messenger) from my
brother-in-law, Derek. He had just gone to see her and he couldn’t stop
talking about his “reading” with her. The main point he kept hammering
at me was that she gave him details about his life that nobody could have
known—especially this stranger. I liked that idea: details that the
psychic medium could never know. Can you imagine? I found it intriguing,
to say the least. So I made an appointment with the medium.
It is rare that we have a single experience that
immediately alters the course of our life. My appointment with this spirit
messenger was one of those life-changing experiences. It wasn’t just the
fact that I left the medium’s home that night knowing that my father and
grandmother, as well as other loved-ones who had passed on, were still
alive. And it wasn’t just that I discovered evidence that to me was
incredible proof that we live on after we cease to exist on this earthly
plane. It was more subtle than that. It was that I had broken through to a
new reality that now changed my view of death—and life.
Today I have studied spirit communication and
life-after-death for over three years. Within my research I have studied
near-death experiences, after-death communication, out-of-body
experiences, past-life regression and other spiritually related phenomena.
What amazes me most is that each new area of study provides additional
evidence to verify the existence of life-after-death rather than discredit
it. Despite the remaining skepticism I had for practices such as
astrology, numerology and tarot readings, every time I adventured into
these new areas, my findings only paralleled the evidence I had gained
through mediumship, even though my expectation was to disprove these new
modalities.
I have had three years to think about why a reading with
a psychic medium, or any experience that provides evidence of an
afterlife, could have such a profound and life-altering effect on me. My
conclusion is very simple: it eliminated my fear of death. Gladys Hunt, in
her book, Don’t Be Afraid To Die,
says that “Psychiatrists are now saying that death is the most important
question of our time and that fear of death festers a variety of
psychoses… Some psychiatrists believe a massive panic over death
pervades young and old alike in our culture.”
Let’s think about that. What is a phobia? Isn’t a
fear of germs in some way related to a fear of death? Are not more people
afraid to fly in airplanes today than before September 11th,
2001? Dr. Kubler-Ross says there are only two natural
fears: fear of heights and fear of loud noises. All other fears are
learned. Children will play with spiders, mice and snakes until they see
someone scream at the sight of one. Sure, some fears are necessary to
protect us from harm. But at what point do our fears limit our ability to
live?
Some people never leave their house due to fear. Others
never do anything adventurous. Since September 11th, people are
traveling less. Traveling less means seeing loved-ones less if they live
far away. Traveling less means limiting our ability to experience the
world and all its treasures.
And what about people who are dying? How does their fear
of death limit their remaining months, weeks or days? Does it limit their
remaining life experience due to a fear of accelerating their death? Does
it distract them from their experience with loved-ones due to a fearful
focus on death? And is it possible that our fear of death negatively
affects our ability to heal from life-threatening, although not yet
terminal, illnesses and conditions? Although we may never know the answers
to these questions, there is no question that people’s fear of death
only adds to their suffering with a multitude of effects.
In my experience, discovering that mediums can
communicate with the dead proved to me that we don’t really die. The
transformation that occurred from this awakening resulted in the
elimination of my fear that there is nothing beyond death. This insight
gave me a new freedom to live, free from the prison of my fears.
I contend that we must think about death rather than
deny or ignore it. By acknowledging death and talking about it, we will be
more likely to investigate it. If we investigate death with an open mind,
more people will discover—as I have—that we don’t die. If we close
our minds to the possibilities, death will remain the end and our fears
will prevail. Yet if we are able to see death for what it really is, we
will realize that death is a “going home” versus a “going away.”
Perhaps John Taylor described it best when he said, “While we are
mourning the loss of our friend, others are rejoicing to meet him behind
the veil.”
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< Click To Read More Articles By
Bob Olson >
Bob
Olson is a former
private investigator and skeptic who began using his investigation skills
to research psychics, mediums and the afterlife in 1999. This research led
him to establish OfSpirit.com
Magazine (2000), BestPsychicMediums.com
(2001) and BestPsychicDirectory.com
(2007), three of the most trusted and influential sources for
understanding and locating trustworthy psychics and mediums.
Today
Bob Olson has tested hundreds of psychics and mediums around the world and
has become a leading authority on the subject with TV, movie and
documentary producers, journalists, book publishers, event promoters, as
well as law enforcement agencies and private investigators. Bob’s
achievements in psychic and medium investigation and testing has further
allowed him to evaluate and isolate the key components that set apart the
best psychic medium readings from the mediocre—leading him to create his
famous (although secret) 15-point test.
Bob
has documented his findings in a multitude of articles. He has authored
the Forewords for three books: The Complete Idiot's Guide To
Communicating With Spirits, Consult Your Inner Psychic and The
Complete Idiot's Guide To Divining The Future. Bob has also been
quoted as an expert in How To Get A Good Reading By A Psychic Medium
and Empowering Your Life With Angels. He is also the author of Win
The Battle and How To Beat Depression.
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| Bob Olson |
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Grief
& Afterlife
Author, Lecturer
& Investigator |
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BOB OLSON is a former
skeptic and private investigator who has researched evidence
of life after death for approximately five years. He now
shares the spiritual insights, extraordinary experiences and
gifted individuals he has met along his journey in order to
bring hope, comfort and peace to the grieving. |
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| Bob Olson's Background |
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Founder: OfSpirit.com Magazine
Founder:
BestPsychicMediums.com
Founder:
GriefAndBelief.com
Author:
Understanding
Spirit,
Understanding Yourself (August 2003)
Author: Win
The Battle (Jan. 1999)
Foreword writer:
The
Complete
Idiot's Guide To Communicating With
Spirits
Foreword writer:
The
Complete
Idiot's Guide To Divining The Future
Featured in:
How
To Get A Good
Reading From A Psychic Medium
Writer:
Writer Of Over 50 Internet
& Magazine Articles
Lecturer, Speaker,
Workshops:
The Grief And Belief Connection,
Spirit/Automatic Writing, Journaling
Through Grief,
Understanding The
Afterlife
Interviewer:
Authors, experts and
extraordinary people in the
spiritual,
holistic and self-improvement fields.
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| What's On This Site |
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RESOURCE WEBSITES: Check out the links
page for excellent resources on grief healing and life after death.
ARTICLES:
Our articles page offers articles by Bob Olson on The
Grief And Belief Connection, life after death, spirits,
the spirit world, spirit communication, past-life
regression, spiritual meditation, near-death experience
and more.
RECOMMENDED
BOOKS: This page lists Bob Olson's favorite books on
Belief (life after death, past lives, spirits) and Grief
(bereavement, funerals and mourning).
CONTACT PAGE: Wish to Contact Bob Olson for an interview,
speaking engagement or private consultation? This page
provides the telephone, email and address information you
need.
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