This is a phenomenal short giving us a glimpse of the Contemplative End of Live Care retreat for which Roshi Joan Halifax and Upaya are famous.
07:42 min
CLEAR ALL
Neale is the author of 33 books on spirituality including the famous Conversation with God series, which was translated into 37 languages. His latest book is Conversation with God book 4: Awaken the species.
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In this video, Neale Donald Walsch answers the questions of a woman who has recently lost her father and helps her come to terms with that sense of loss. The grief that comes when a loved one has passed can be painful, especially for those who want them to have stayed.
Atul Gawande talks about death at the 2010 New Yorker Festival.
Practicing surgeon Atul Gawande discusses the four important parts of talking with terminally ill patients about their end-of-life care. Rather than pressing patients to make hard decisions, Gawande emphasizes the importance of asking questions about their hopes and fears.
Modern medicine has transformed the dangers of birth, injury, and infectious disease from harrowing to manageable. But when it comes to the inescapable realities of aging and death, what medicine can do often runs counter to what it should do.
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Mitch discusses his book, THE FIVE PEOPLE YOU MEET IN HEAVEN.
It's a question humanity has grappled with for centuries: What happens to us when we die? For spiritual author Eckhart Tolle, it's not a question worth thinking about.
Death is unavoidable.Many people fear death because they don't know what will happen afterward. Some believe there will be life after death while some don't. Let's find out what is Buddhist perspective about death.
Simply the mind continues, because as we’ve discussed in previous times, the mind is a stream of awareness which is not generated from physical causes.
This interview is part of a series of videos that Shantideva Meditation Center is presenting with an aim to aid people around the world with meditation questions and tips for spiritual practice. In this interview we ask Geshe Sherab: What happens when we die, from the Buddhist point of view?