Recently I was doing a phone reading and I connected with my client’s deceased mother. She had a really strong energy and I had a nice lock on her frequency. The information was flowing fast and well.
I was telling my client about his mom’s transition experience and how she was doing on the other side. One of the first things she said was “Well, it’s not boring!” So we immediately were interested to know what she meant by that.
She explained that when you cross over, if you desire, you gain access to the experiences of others. She said if she wanted to know what it felt like for Neil Armstrong to walk on the moon, she could tune in to that experience and feel it herself. If she wanted to know what it felt like for Elvis to get on stage and sing, she could don the experience like you put on a coat.
She used an analogy to describe why. She said, “When a raindrop is falling from the sky, it is a raindrop. As soon as it touches the ocean it becomes part of the whole ocean, no longer separate. It moves as a single body of water.”
So when we are incarnate here, we are like the raindrop. And when we cross over, we are back with the collective “ocean.”
This jives with something I was shown a while back where I was able to view any day in the life of any person. See my article on the Akashic Staircase. This will blow your mind. But when I viewed the lives of others, I wasn’t IN their experience, I was only viewing it. Now I’m hearing from this lovely deceased gal that you can also tune in and experience the same sensations.
You might be wondering if that’s a little invasive, to be able to tap into the private moments of another soul’s life. I had a similar thought myself. Maybe it is.
Or maybe when we cross over, we realize that we are like cells in the body of Source and connected intimately to each other, and that while we are here, we seem separated but really we are not. I guess we’ll see for ourselves when we get there.
If this concept is true as she describes it, I can see why she said the afterlife is not remotely boring. What a rich tapestry to explore. It’s truly a fascinating concept.