Immortal Being (2)
March 24, 2010
Information about our world, our solar system, and the Cosmos has exploded over the past few years. Amazing information has poured through the Internet, changing our ideas about what we thought was true, and expanding our pictures of reality.
Many people are getting more insightful access to what fuels their growth. And unsurprisingly these insights allow us to develop a more clearer bigger-picture view of what’s going on.
What fuels my growth? That’s easy – it’s my enquiry into everything: the getting of answers to the biggest of questions and then making practical use of it all. Currently, I’m fascinated by the physical possibility of immortality. Something compels me to better understand what is possible, how we can experience the magnificent power of that possibility, and then what to do with that knowledge.
So let’s return for a moment to those definitions of an immortal being in my previous article. I’m vastly interested by indefinite growth, knowing that aging is only a perception and an interpretation of change, whereas indefinite growth is our body’s response to unrestricted energy movement.
I’ve experienced a vast shift in past years through expanding my relationship with life. Instead of seeing myself as a human being with a barely perceptible energy field, I’ve become a limitless flow of energy. My energy field is the cosmos, my consciousness flows through all of it. My lived experience is to know myself as a blend of the physical and the non-physical in a perfect union. And the physical effect of that is a relaxed sustainable rhythm that’s unaffected by the passing of time.
I may go through physical changes and energy shifts but essentially my focus is upon growth: the potential for the amazing and the unimaginable to occur.
So, I wonder, if there’s a correlation between the regeneration cycle of Turritopsis nutricula (the immortal jellyfish) and the possibility of us as humans enjoying endless growth, as we explore the boundless potential of life through the lens of our evolving physicality. It seems that we are not really considering eternal youth or returning to a previous stage of our lives. We are considering something different.
To really enjoy the succulent invitation behind this promise of immortality, we must put aside any preconceived ideas about what dying is, as a process, and be ready to enter into a new covenant with life. [continuation]
Image: Turritopsis nutricula (the immortal jellyfish)