Monday, 3 January 2022

DTH YAMA PROCESS

 DTH YAMA PROCESS 


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GOSAK 


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I'm sharing only about my experience my grandfather

Was very ill toward last few days of his life he was mostly in coma the last hrs of his living his was smiling

Small grin then serious facial expression he turned his

Toward me gave slight smile and opened his eyes open

And looked toward ceiling and gave one last gulp of air

Then let out peaceful sigh and was gone


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Death comes with an acceptance that is hard to fathom until you reach that point. It is nothing to fear, and we will all experience it. You will surrender all control at that time. Until then, create a legend of leaving your footprint in this lifetime. With each day, try to make life a little better for someone else. Always try to appreciate the wind at your back & the sun on your face. Look up at the canvas of art offered to you daily in sunrises & sunsets & enjoy them. Have no fear for the process of the end of this life. A new one awaits.


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Hello from Los Angeles. My take on this question differs from what others have suggested, and I hope it is useful to you.

I don't think you have anything to worry about because — frankly — you will be, well, dead. Meaning “as a doornail", insensate, without perceptive abilities, beyond the pale, eating a permanent dirt sandwich, having ridden into the final sunset, and having shuffled off your mortal coil.

Perception happens in our brains, not our hearts or our guts or anywhere else. When your brain stops working, so does any of its functions. You won't perceive ANYTHING once your brain stops. Nothing, nada, goodnight Irene and fuck me Agnes, this party's over. Brain death means OUR death. We simply are no more. We cease to “be". We experience nothing, neither joy nor fear, not happiness or pain, nothing. We simply AREN'T.

What's cool, however, is this: death is nothing to fear. There is no judgment, no reckoning, no ultimate punishments or rewards or whatever nonsense our death-fearing Iron Age forebears made up to allay their thanatophobia. Death is the moment we stop being. Nothing more nor less.


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"It is not fair to ask of others what you are unwilling to do yourself."

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rb 


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e. During his years in Burma, cases of rebirth memories occurring in that country had roused his keen interest, and this finally led him to assist Dr. Ian Stevenson in the tracing, investigation, and study of such cases in Sri Lanka (Ceylon), Thailand, and India. How fruitful this cooperation was is vividly told in Professor Stevenson’s Introduction, which he so kindly contributed to this volume; and it is documented by the Case Studies forming the Second Part of this book

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Man has always found it difficult to believe that his life comes to an end with the dissolution of the physical body. The question, “Do we live on after death?”, has always been prominent in human speculation, for it links up with every fundamental problem of man’s being and purpose on this earth.

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The Buddhist attitude to sentience mirrors this view. We should treat all animals as being conscious, as feeling what-it-is-like-to-be. This must inform how we behave toward our fellow travelers through this cosmos, who are defenseless before our fences, cages, blades, and bullets and our relentless drive for Lebensraum. One day, humanity may well be judged for how we treated our relatives on the tree of life. We should extend a universal ethical stance to all creatures, whether they speak, cry, bark, whine, howl, bellow, chirp, shriek, buzz, or are mute. For all experience life, book-ended between two eternities.

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OTIS 
**Our trip is  Short* I've read this atleast 5 times since this morning. It's so true and beautifully written*

A  woman climbed up the bus and sat down beside a man, hitting him with her numerous bags.

When the man remained silent,  the woman asked him why he did not complain when she hit him with her bags ?

The man replied with a Smile:
"There is no need to be upset about something so insignificant, as our journey together is so short,
because I'm getting off at the next stop "

This answer disturbed the woman so much , she asked the man to excuse her  and thought the words needs to be written in gold

Each of us must understand that our time in this world is so short, that darkening it with useless arguments, jealousy, not forgiving others, discontentment and bad attitudes are a ridiculous waste of time and energy.

Did someone break your heart?  Stay calm.
The trip is too short
💛

Did someone betray you, intimidate, cheat or humiliate you?
Relax - Don't be Stressed
The trip is too short.
💛

Did someone insult you without reason?
Stay calm. Ignore it.
The trip is too short.
💛

Did some  one make a comment  that you didn't like?
Stay calm. Ignore. Forgive, keep them in your prayers & love them still for no reason.
The trip is too short.
💛

Whatever the problems some bring to us, it is a problem only if we think of it, remember
that our journey together is too short.
💛

No one knows the length of our trip. No one has seen tomorrow. Nobody knows when it will arrive at its stop.

Our trip together is too short.💛

Let us appreciate friends and family. Keep them in good humor. Respect them. Let us be respectful, kind, loving & forgiving.

Because we will be filled with gratitude and joy, after all Our trip together is very short.
💛

Share your smiles with everyone....choose your path to be as beautiful as you wish it to be
*Our trip is  Short*  💛

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Fish have few advocates for their welfare as they can’t shout or scream, are cold-blooded, and look so different from us. We don’t even accord them the right to a swift death—fishermen think nothing of impaling fish as live, wiggling bait or of dumping thousands of them out of the net that caught them onto a trawler, leaving them to suffocate in agony. And yes, all physiological, hormonal, and behavioral evidence implies that fish respond to painful stimuli in the same manner as we do. In this ghastly and unthinking way, we kill about a trillion fish each year; a thousand billion sentient creatures. 4 If the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice, humanity will have to account for this routine atrocity in which all of us are implicated.

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Bhagavad Gita 2:62-63 : Brooding on sense objects causes attachment to them. Attachment breeds craving; craving breeds anger. Anger breeds delusion.; delusion breeds loss of memory (of the Self). Loss of right memory causes decay of the discriminating faculty. from decay of discrimination, annihilation (of spiritual life0 follows. [Translation from Paramahansa Yogananda's God Talks with Arjuna, The Bhagavad Gita]

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 The mind is like a monkey swinging from branch to branch through the forest. In order not to lose sight of the monkey, we must watch the monkey constantly and even be one with it. - Thich Nhat Hanh 

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I now know that I live in a universe in which the inner light of experience is far more widespread than assumed within the standard Western canon. This inner light shines in humans and in the denizens of the animal kingdom, brighter or dimmer, in proportion to the complexity of their nervous system. Integrated information theory predicts the possibility that all cellular life feels like something. The mental and the physical are closely linked, two aspects of one underlying reality




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A NEUROSCIENTIST PREPARES FOR DEATH

Lessons my terminal cancer has taught me about the mind


Matt Eich

About the author: David J. Linden is a neuroscience professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Kavli Neuroscience Discovery Institute. His most recent book is Unique: The New Science of Human Individuality.

When a routine echocardiogram revealed a large mass next to my heart, the radiologist thought it might be a hiatal hernia—a portion of my stomach poking up through my diaphragm to press against the sac containing my heart.

“Chug this can of Diet Dr. Pepper and then hop up on the table for another echocardiogram before the soda bubbles in your stomach all pop.”

So I did. However, the resulting images showed that the mass did not contain the telltale signature of bursting bubbles in my stomach that would support a hernia diagnosis. A few weeks later, an MRI scan, which has much better resolution, revealed that the mass was actually contained within the pericardial sac and was quite large—about the volume of that soda can. Even with this large invader pressing on my heart, I had no symptoms and could exercise at full capacity. I felt great.

The doctors told me that the mass was most likely to be a teratoma, a clump of cells that is not typically malignant. Their outlook was sunny. Riffing on the musical South Pacific, my cardiologist said, “We’re gonna pop that orange right out of your chest and send you on your way.”

While I was recovering from surgery, the pathology report came back and the news was bad—it wasn’t a benign teratoma after all, but rather a malignant cancer called synovial sarcoma. Because of its location, embedded in my heart wall, the surgeon could not remove all of the cancer cells. Doing so would have rendered my heart unable to pump blood. The oncologist told me to expect to live an additional six to 18 months.

I was absolutely white-hot angry at the universe. Heart cancer? Who the hell gets heart cancer?! Is this some kind of horrible metaphor? This is what’s going to take me away from my beloved family, my cherished friends and colleagues? I simply couldn’t accept it. I was so mad, I could barely see.

[And now comes the part where I’m weeping while I type.]

Five years ago, I met Dena and we fell for each other hard. This wasn’t mere “chemistry”; it was more akin to particle physics—a revelation of the subatomic properties of love. Dena has uplifted me with her pure and unconditional affection, her kindness, beauty, optimism, and keen intelligence. She is the best wife anyone could want, and she is way better than I deserve. Leaving her behind will be the very hardest part of this whole awful situation.

Until the moment of that diagnosis six months ago, I had been the luckiest man in town. My twins, Jacob and Natalie, have been nothing but a delight for 25 years. I’ve been fortunate to have a long career in academic science with the freedom to pursue my own ideas, which is a gift like no other. My good friends are a constant source of joy and amusement. By any reasonable measure, I’ve had a great life, full of love, creativity, and adventure.

I may be dying, but I’m still a science nerd, and so I think about what preparing for death has taught me about the human mind. The first thing, which is obvious to most people but had to be brought home forcefully for me, is that it is possible, even easy, to occupy two seemingly contradictory mental states at the same time. I’m simultaneously furious at my terminal cancer and deeply grateful for all that life has given me. This runs counter to an old idea in neuroscience that we occupy one mental state at a time: We are either curious or fearful—we either “fight or flee” or “rest and digest” based on some overall modulation of the nervous system. But our human brains are more nuanced than that, and so we can easily inhabit multiple complex, even contradictory, cognitive and emotional states.

This leads me to a second insight: The deep truth of being human is that there is no objective experience. Our brains are not built to measure the absolute value of anything. All that we perceive and feel is colored by expectation, comparison, and circumstance. There is no pure sensation, only inference based on sensation. Thirty minutes fly by in a conversation with a good friend, but seem interminable when waiting in line at the DMV. That fat raise you got at work seems nice until you learn that your co-worker got one twice as large as yours. A caress from your sweetheart during a loving, connected time feels warm and delightful, but the very same touch delivered during the middle of a heated argument feels annoying and presumptuous, bordering on violation.

If someone had told me one year ago, when I was 59, that I had five years left to live, I would have been devastated and felt cheated by fate. Now the prospect of five more years strikes me as an impossible gift. With five more years, I could spend good times with all of my people, get some important work done, and still be able to travel and savor life’s sweetness. The point is that, in our minds, there is no such thing as objective value, even for something as fundamental as five years of life.

The final insight of my situation is more subtle, but it’s also the most important. Although I can prepare for death in all sorts of practical ways—getting my financial affairs in order, updating my will, writing reference letters to support the trainees in my lab after I’m gone—I cannot imagine the totality of my death, or the world without me in it, in any deep or meaningful way. My mind skitters across the surface of my impending death without truly engaging. I don’t think this is a personal failing. Rather, it’s a simple result of having a human brain.

The field of neuroscience has changed significantly in the 43 years since I joined it. I was taught that the brain is essentially reactive: Stimuli impinge on the sense organs (eyes, ears, skin, etc.), these signals are conveyed to the brain, a bit of computation happens, some neural decisions are made, and then impulses are sent along nerves to muscles, which contract or relax to produce behavior in the form of movement or speech. Now we know that rather than merely reacting to the external world, the brain spends much of its time and energy actively making predictions about the future—mostly the next few moments. Will that baseball flying through the air hit my head? Am I likely to become hungry soon? Is that approaching stranger a friend or a foe? These predictions are deeply rooted, automatic, and subconscious. They can’t be turned off through mere force of will.

And because our brains are organized to predict the near future, it presupposes that there will, in fact, be a near future. In this way, our brains are hardwired to prevent us from imagining the totality of death.

If I am allowed to speculate—and I hold that a dying person should be given such dispensation—I would contend that this basic cognitive limitation is not reserved for those of us who are preparing for imminent death, but rather is a widespread glitch that has profound implications for the cross-cultural practice of religious thought. Nearly every religion has the concept of an afterlife (or its cognitive cousin, reincarnation). Why are afterlife/reincarnation stories found all over the world? For the same reason we can’t truly imagine our own deaths: because our brains are built on the faulty premise that there will always be that next moment to predict. We cannot help but imagine that our own consciousness endures.

While not every faith has explicit afterlife/reincarnation stories (Judaism is a notable exception), most of the world’s major religions do, including Islam, Sikhism, Christianity, Daoism, Hinduism, and arguably, even Buddhism. Indeed, much religious thought takes the form of a bargain: Follow these rules in life, and you will be rewarded in the afterlife or with a favorable form of reincarnation or by melding with the divine. What would the world’s religions be like if our brains were not organized to imagine that consciousness endures? And how would this have changed our human cultures, which have been so strongly molded by religions and the conflicts between them?

While I ponder these questions, I am also mulling my own situation. I am not a person of faith, but as I prepare for death, I have a renewed respect for the persistent and broad appeal of afterlife/reincarnation stories and their ultimately neurobiological roots. I’m not sure whether, in the end, faith in afterlife/reincarnation stories is a feature or a bug of human cognition, but if it’s a bug, it’s one for which I have sympathy. After all, how wonderfully strange would it be to return as a manatee or a tapeworm? And what a special delight it would be to see Dena and my children again after I’m gone.

David J. Linden is a neuroscience professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Kavli Neuroscience Discovery Institute. His most recent book is Unique: The New Science of Human Individuality.

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HOT ZONE OR POT ZONE - PARIETAL OCCIPITAL AND TEMPORAL CORTICES 

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CONSCIOUSNESS - BIOLOGICAL VALUE- INFLUENCE BEHAVIOUR- BIOSAR .........

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DDS

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Losing the Cerebellum Does Not Affect Consciousness

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EDS

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An expert is someone who, over many years, manages to remain confident enough to keep trying and humble enough to keep learning."

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The New England Journal of Medicine just published a study that tested how long the virus can remain stable on different kinds of surfaces within a controlled laboratory setting. They found that it was still detectable on copper for up to four hours, on cardboard for up to 24 hours, and on plastic and steel for up to 72 hours.

Money; coins or paper should be considered dirty and should be replaced with electronic payments.

Coronaviruses could be "efficiently inactivated" on surfaces within one minute if they're cleaned with solutions containing 62% to 71% ethanol alcohol, 0.5% hydrogen peroxide, or 0.1% sodium hypochlorite.


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How To Worship Kaal Bhairava
Lord Kaalbhairava is Lord Shiva. He is worshipped for several reasons. Some of the most important reasons of Kaalbhairava worship are to escape from fears, removing hurdles, to get progress and success and warding off evils and negative energies. It is also useful for curing mental disorders, attainment of spiritual powers and abilities and many others.
About Lord Bhairava worship
Kalabhairava pooja has certain maxims which we have to follow. The puja is started on the next Sunday and lasts for eight days. The ideal time to worship Kalabhairava is Raghukaal because this is the time during which Lord manifested in this form. The main part of kalabhairava puja is to chant mantra 1,25,000 times. The main mantra can be “Om Batuk Bhairvaye Namah”. Feeding dogs is very important part of Lord Kalbhairava puja.
About Lord kalabhairava worship
After puja is completed, the conclusion of puja is done with certain norms. The devotees must donate items which includes rice, sugars,pulses, milk, oil, blanket, lentils and utensils. Though Kalbhairava appears to be ferocious, he is a benign god who gets easily happy even with simple and small puja.
Which form to worship for God Bhairava
There are sixty-four forms of Kal Bhairava and all these forms are grouped under 8 categories called as Ashta Bhairavas.
Asidanga Bhairava
This is one of the most favorites form worshipped by writers, artisans and innovators. It gives immense creative capabilities to the devotees and helps to generate new ideas and creations.
Guru Bhairava
This is the divine master and the divine educator. He blesses the devotees with worldly and spiritual knowledge.
Chanda Bhairava
This is the fearful form of Lord Bhairav and he destroys evils and enemies and enhances the confidence of the devotees. He is also known to remove fears and clear the path of progress.
Kroda Bhairava
This is the angry form of Bhairava. He gives the devotees the power to accomplish massive ventures. He also gifts the devotee the power to overcome hurdles and all kinds of oppositions.
Unmatta Bhairava
This puja helps to remove all mental disorders and relieves the subjects from negativity, anxiety and depression.
Kapala Bhairava
This forms of Bhairava helps to remove actions which are unproductive and the lord gives and insight into the devotee to overcome the delays and move actions towards fulfillment.
Bhishana Bhairava
This is a powerful form of kala Bhairava. He helps to remove evil spirits and keep all negative energies away from the person. This form of Kalabhairava helps to fill positive energies around the environment.
Samhara Bhairava

Samhara Bhairava is a benevolent but a fierce form of Lord Kala Bhairava who removes all harmful old karmas and blesses the devotees with fresh energy.

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Mind is the Shiva
It is without beginning and endless
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