Cultivate a Friendship with Death
By Dr Tim Ong
Why We Fear Death
"Men fear death as children fear to go in the dark." - Bacon
There may be a thousand reasons why we fear death, but most of all we fear
death because we fear the unknown, and death is an unknown entity to most
people. We fear that dying may be painful and we do not know what will happen to
us at the point of death.
Some people fear death because they imagine the dying process to be very
painful. Death is not painful. In fact, death is often very peaceful and silent
even for those suffering from cancers or other terminal illness.
When the physical body is deteriorating day by day from a terminal illness,
and pain arises from superficial wound such as bed sores, or deep pain such as
bone or nerve pain, death may even be a welcome relief for the sufferer.
We need to distinguish the pain of the physical body from the process of
dying. The dying process is a distinct process that is separate from the
deterioration of the physical body. At the point of death, there is no pain.
What happens at death is the cessation of the breath and all other
physiological functions of the physical body. The heart stops pumping and the
blood circulation stops moving. The body stops generating heat, and thus
progressively turns cold.
For those who believe that we are more than just a physical body, and that we
are in fact spiritual beings, the dying process means much more than just
physical death. Death is just a natural process that allows us to discard the
physical body as we move into the spiritual realm.
Since our fear of death is due to the fact that we do not know or understand
death, it makes sense to familiarise ourselves with it. The more we understand
death, the less we fear it. We should therefore cultivate a friendship with
death, and be totally familiar with it, just as we are familiar with our
friends.
We can cultivate a friendship with death in three simple steps:
1. Establish a link with God.
2. Cultivate a habit of acceptance, instead
of blame.
3. Be a blessing to others.
Establish a link with God.
By establishing a link with God, we touch base with our own spirituality. God
can be whatever you perceive God to be. For Christians, Muslims and Hindus, that
may mean an omnipotent God. For Buddhists, it may mean the Buddha seed within.
Atheists may have to come to term with their own spirituality.
Establishing a link with God means re-gaining your spirituality. It leads you
closer to the spiritual aspect of yourself. Whether we accept it or not, we are
more than just this physical body. When we die, we leave this physical body
behind and only our spirituality continues on.
It is therefore essential for us to be familiar with our own spirituality. It
is the only part of us that continues after death. This 'fact' is in accordance
with all major religions.
Cultivate a Habit of Acceptance.
It is funny how when good things come to us, we readily accept them as though
we deserve them or we have worked hard for them, yet when calamities befall us
we quickly look for an external source to blame.
This is especially so when misfortunes such as terminal illness befall us. We
may blame God, and later blame ourselves or people around us. We should
cultivate a habit of neutrality regardless of whether good or bad things come
our way. Otherwise, we can become very bitter about life when negative things
happened. Looking for someone or something to blame only serve to prolong our
own suffering. Death is an enemy when we resist it, but the moment we accept it,
it turns into an ally.
However, cultivating a habit of acceptance does not mean not doing anything
to correct or improve our conditions. It does not mean, for example, that when
we are diagnosed with a terminal illness we do nothing about it. It is only
sensible to seek treatment, if it is available to us. On the other hand, it also
means we must know and accept when curative treatment is no longer possible. We
fear death only when we refuse to face it.
Unfortunately, there are unscrupulous people who would take advantage of our
fear of death to sell their 'cure'. In my experience with the terminally ill, I
have come across countless stories of dying people being duped into parting with
their savings and properties in the hope of achieving a cure.
Be a Blessing to Others.
This is our greatest and most reliable ally at the time of death.
Knowing that we have been helpful to others and that we have tried to live a
blameless life takes away the fear of death. If our life has been an honest one,
free of any conscious intention to hurt any living beings, we have nothing to
fear when death approaches. Our mind will be at peace, undisturbed.
On the other hand, those who lead selfish lives, and harm others to get
little advantages for themselves, find themselves imprisoned in tiny, dark cells
when they move to the other side.
Therefore, while we still can, we should give our best to the world and to
people around us. Lend a helping hand to others and help to lighten their loads.
Bring joy to the joyless and comfort to those in need of comfort. There are many
who are less fortunate than us. Count our blessings and be a blessing to others.
Author:
Dr. Tim Ong is a medical doctor with keen interests in self improvement, mind
science and spirituality. He also teaches meditation and volunteers his service
to the loca hospice services. He is the author of
"From
Fear to Love: A Spiritual Journey"