When I was a teenager the question of life after death really captured my attention. At that time, I read a lot on the subject: Elisabeth Kubler-Ross books (On Death and Dying), and some popular works, for instance Life After Life and The Evidence for Life After Death. I found a lot of comfort in that reading.
Mimmie and I talked a great deal about the topic. She promised she would let me know someday, as it was likely I would outlive her. The summer after she died, I felt the world was different; somehow less colorful. Oh, the grass was green and the sky was blue, but it wasn't the same shade or brightness or something. Then one night I had a dream. She was sitting there, as always, at the little table in her kitchen, but her mobile home had been transported to a stunning hillside, surrounded by hay and Christmas-tree sized spruce trees. We had tea. She was OK. I felt better afterwards, though I still think of her, and miss her, a lot.
Quite a few years ago, a friend gave me a book called
Embraced by the Light. I was impressed by the book at the time, and even shared
it with a friend’s father, when he was grieving the loss of his wife. I re-read
it recently, and even though I still liked it, I was not as taken with it as I
was the first time I read it. I am reading Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife
and so far, I’m enjoying it. After I bought it, I learned he taught at Harvard and worked at MGH. How about that!
Due to the magic of the Internet archives, I discovered this story, Compost Pile:
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