Facilitate a dying wish
Life on this planet does not always seem easy. Amidst the constant acts of identifying and overcoming your own challenges, you may suddenly turn attention to help others realize a dying wish. Every gesture also helps yourself. Part of you is in the process of dying, going through transitions. Another part of you is learning how to truly feel renewed.
Whether or not you realize it, every moment teaches you based on how you choose to live. Many people arrive at a point in their lives when they assist loved ones in primary care during illness. You may do it directly or indirectly, hands-on or from a distance, for parents, grandparents or someone unrelated. How can or do you already help someone realize an end-of life dream? What does it mean to you to be part of that?
Some people do not feel giving up the life they lead is a sacrifice when the alternative is genuinely enriching someone else's existence. Changes in someone's health often trigger wake-up calls for family members. Do you ever ask yourself if such conditions invite changes in areas of your life?
To learn someone you care about is in an advanced stage of a serious illness might compel you to transform your life. You learn to turn thinking off, to re-awaken dormant power of intuition. You just do what is instinctive, what makes sense in the moment. This inner process opens channels of love within you that logic may have temporarily obscured.
One person's apparent crisis is everyone's crisis and also a blessing in disguise. The immortal soul dances through space and time and taps you gently when you are not being true to your authentic self. The dying wish of someone to accomplish a task with your help may hide another dying wish inside for you to be who you are. You do more than one thing unaware.
Wherever you are, stop as a meditation exercise. Look around. Be everything you see. You are part of all things, and also part of something bigger you do not yet comprehend. Notice what you do and where you do it right now. Who is with you? Who's spirit do you feel nearby? What you are not doing and what you stop doing are just as purposeful as what you are.
Reader Comments (21)
You are very right that in giving care we find depths of emotions that otherwise lie dormant.
Your post reinforces that message for me. Thanks!
Sometimes a person has a kind of Bucket List. This is a list of things he hopes to accomplish between learning physical life is ending and the supposed end itself. People diagnosed with terminal illness sometimes create this kind of list. Other people create a smiliar list earlier in life, knowing that the physical body does not last forever. What matters is the love you express, whatever form it takes, this love travels beyond the physical. Those souls you love here retain and sense this beyond this world.
One of the hardest parts of the whole experience was bringing myself back to living several times a day and during the night....
I am very pleased to have been able to grant these wishes, but I am still tired and kind of worn out from the experience. Thank you for this timely post
The world turns. Energy sails everywhere and is harnessed by loving thoughts.
Perhaps I should just ask her .. can I facilitate your dying wish? I don't know ..
Hilary Melton-Butcher
Positive Letters
Thank you - Hilary
Secondly, I've been re-evaluating my life. I know there's things I want to do - lots of things, before I die. And the death of others has inspired me to stop procrastinating and get on with them. But I do still have the feeling I need more guidance - I'm not totally sure of all the things I should be doing. I'm going to give your meditation a go and see if that helps. Thanks.
I spoke to a friend today who purchased a book called 1001 Paintings to see before you die. I am familiar with a similar book called, 1001 Places to see before you die. These kinds of books, media and the way western society is structured in general, all prompt human beings to sense a shortage of time. In reality, time is an illusion. What you do in the time you are given is what makes this physical life meaningful. It is not the quantity of activities you undertake. How you enrich the other lives, matters.
Consider you imagine time and structure your life around it because almost everyone does. This leads you to make choices to nurture impatience, fear and misunderstanding. Regardless where you are, you always do enough, you are always loved, worthy, and doing meaningful things. One view of 'procrastination' is delaying or deferring something. As you stand back, you sometimes begin to realize you always focus on a few things even though your mind is tapped into many more things at once. You are not consciously aware of all you do at this moment.
Thanks for making me aware of my fear of shortage of time. I guess it's something I've always had and it has been making me forget about the things I have achieved in a certain period of time.