What Is Death?
A return to the Ocean of All Possibilities
Death comes wrapped in fear, sorrow, and loss. When someone dies, it seems they are gone forever. They leave behind a void that seems impossible to fill.
What is really going on? We can only know this: we can no longer perceive them with our ordinary senses. We have experienced a frequency shift. This shift results in a change in our perception. We are no longer vibrating on the same frequency bandwidth. They have not gone anywhere, but our perceptual awareness has shifted to a new sector of all that is.
The change has occured in us, not in them. Their death is a shift in our own frequency. We have moved into a different vibrational state. Our ordinary senses can no longer detect that person. We cannot know if they have changed frequency, because this is our dream only. ‘Their’ dream is unknowable.
The eternal soul
The Bhagavad Gita, reminds us that the soul is eternal: "For the soul, there is neither birth nor death at any time. He has not come into being, does not come into being, and will not come into being. He is unborn, eternal, ever-existing, and primeval. He is not slain when the body is slain" (Bhagavad Gita 2.20).
In Buddhism, death is viewed as a transition within the cycle of Samsara. This is the continuous flow of birth, death, and rebirth. The Tibetan Book of the Dead describes the soul's continuing journey. In Indigenous and shamanic traditions, death is a return to the spirit realm. Similarly, in the Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime there is an ever-present spiritual reality. From this viewpoint, the deceased are not gone. We are merely experiencing another stage of our own dream.
Another way of seeing the ‘spirit realm’ is ‘The Ocean of All Possibilities’. When someone ‘dies’, we are no longer rendering them into perceptual reality. They have returned to the Great Sea of Undifferentiated Wave Form. The particle has collapsed and become a wave. We, as the previous observers of the particle, have now looked away.
To understand this better, consider an apple in a bowl. When we look at it, it takes the form of the fruit we call 'apple'. When we are not looking at it anymore, it returns to a state of unformed beingness.
All
Many traditions emphasize the unity of all existence. They teach us that every soul is an expression of the Divine. The Sufi poet Rumi wrote, “Goodbyes are only for those who love with their eyes. Because for those who love with heart and soul, there is no such thing as separation.”
The essence of those we love continues to dwell within us. It is inseparable from the core of our being. They are Life. We are Life. All Life is one. As Jesus said, “I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.” (Matthew 28:20). Life transcends physical separation.
Folklore is rich with stories of loved ones manifesting as animals, or elements of nature. In Celtic stories, it is common for souls to take the form of birds, butterflies, or other creatures. They are seen as messengers from the spirit world. The Native American tradition also tells us that our loved ones can appear in the form of animals.
In Japanese Shinto, ancestors are revered. They are thought to become kami, or spirits, that dwell in the natural world. These kami are now an integral part of the environment. Similarly, in many African spiritual traditions, ancestors are ever-present.
Transformation
Death, then, is a transformation rather than an end. The form that we knew—the body, voice, presence—is no longer perceptible to us on this Timeline. But the Truth of who they are persists on all Timelines, and in all worlds. As Lao Tzu wrote, “Life and death are one thread, the same line viewed from different sides.”
Socrates also spoke of death as a natural part of existence. In Plato’s “Phaedo,” he suggests that death only separates the soul from the body. Death allows the soul to return to its true, eternal state. What we perceive as loss is, in fact, a liberation into a more expansive reality.
Many people report visits from their loved ones in dreams or moments of meditation. These encounters often feel as vivid and real as waking life. It suggests that we exist across many Timelines. There are many realms beyond our ordinary perception. The Timeline that we now experience is but one of a multitude. Nothing changes but our perceptual attunement. Our perceived bandwidth expands and contracts and shifts.
Contact with the departed has been recognized for millennia. In the Bible, the prophet Samuel is called upon to speak to King Saul. (1 Samuel 28:7-19). In ancient Egypt, the living reached out to the dead through letters or offerings.
Nothing is ever lost. We are Life itself, manifesting in endless forms and expressions. We are our loved ones, and our loved ones are us. The energy that animated their being still vibrates. It may be found in the gentle sway of trees, the sparkle of sunlight on water. A bird flying across the sky, or the love in our hearts.
Death, then, is not an end but a reminder of the continuity of all that is. Everything true exists for all eternity.



This is beautiful Pippa!