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Stop Worrying!

Stop Worrying! My Book is Finally Done!

It’s been a long time coming, but I’ve finally finished the book I’ve been working on for the past couple of years, Stop Worrying! There Probably Is An Afterlife. It should be available to purchase in the next week or two, but today eBook copies were sent out to those people who contributed to the crowdfunding effort for the book on IndieGoGo. If you were one of those people, but haven’t received an email (due to spam filters, change of email address etc), please get in touch with me so that I can get your long-awaited copy of the book into your hands (I’m greg, and I’m at dailygrail.com)!

I’ll of course post an update here when the book is available for purchase on Amazon, for those interested.

Editor
    1. It is the single most
      It is the single most important realization for westerners, and once absorbed the idea is liberating. It changes everything for people when some nagging fear or apprehension is put to rest. If consciousness is a continuum then there are no sad endings or dark abysses ultimately.

      1. Once upon a time in the west, east, north and south
        [quote=emlong]It is the single most important realization for westerners, and once absorbed the idea is liberating. It changes everything for people when some nagging fear or apprehension is put to rest. If consciousness is a continuum then there are no sad endings or dark abysses ultimately.[/quote]

        It’s far from a “westerners” thing. In fact I’d say that there are relatively few people who have an objective knowing of it. Reading about evidence and even agreeing with that evidence is not the same. I can also say that consciousness beyond physical is so different that knowledge of it doesn’t always quell all apprehension.

    1. It quells some apprehension
      It quells some apprehension but may also spark new ones. I can say from personal experience though that getting people over fear of death or a conception of death as some vast, voidy blankness transforms them hugely.

      1. The “beyond”
        [quote=emlong]It quells some apprehension but may also spark new ones. I can say from personal experience though that getting people over fear of death or a conception of death as some vast, voidy blankness transforms them hugely.[/quote]

        And what I’m saying is that people getting past the idea that there is no consciousness beyond death is not always enough to get them past fearing it. It may often depend in part on what ideas people place on the actuality. Sometimes those who view non-physical as some version of this physical feel more comfortable with it. On another perspective, those who come to know that non-physical existence as what this physical is being generated from and that it is also the state “before birth” also often are more comfortable with it.

        1. Well, here is what I have
          Well, here is what I have noticed among my friends who have “gotten it” – the novelty of this realization alone both excites and relaxes them. There may be some new apprehensions, but they are more exciting and less depressing than their previous apprehensions. Of course there are “flavors” or this awareness. people digesting the experiences of Amy Allen on her show The Dead Files are likely to have a more fearful idea of an afterlife whereas people who are more inclined to take to heart the discoveries of Kim Russo on her show “The Haunting Of…” will have a much more optimistic stance. Synthesizing the various interpretations eventually causes one to understand the importantance of one’s own biases or slants as well. That implies that the afterlife is plastic and malleable according to one’s intent. That is usually where I see the most inspired people – when they get that part they feel empowered.

          1. Believing it isn’t the same as experiencing it.
            As I think I mentioned my comments aren’t about those who come to believe in “afterlife” It’s about those who have objectively experienced non-physical states.

            “That implies that the afterlife is plastic and malleable according to one’s intent. ”

            It is. And – appearances to the contrary – so is physical reality.

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