The answer
is yes and no.
The masters
explained that after death, most humans fall into a deep sleep and dream during
most of their post-mortem journey, until they return to Earth again to
reincarnate in a new physical body.
Then you
will understand that under these conditions, there can be no direct coexistence
with the beings that the person has loved, since the person spends all her time
sleeping.
But inside
his dream, the person will be able to create this coexistence with his loved
ones, and although it will only be a dream, for her that experience will be as
real as if she were living it on Earth.
However, the
type of dream varies depending on where humans are. Basically, there are three
areas that humans will visit during their post-mortem journey:
- The divine world
- The Kama-Loka and
- The astral plane
So,
depending on whether or not you were living with your loved ones at that time,
you will dream of them during your akashic dream in the astral plane.
2) And when
their stay in the astral plane ends, the human souls ascend to the Kama-Loka
(Purgatory), and master Kuthumi specified in Kama-Loka:
·
People
who were good will have sweet dreams.
·
People
who were bad will have nightmares, and
·
People
who were materialists will sleep without dreaming of anything.
3) And when
their stay in Kama-Loka ends, the human souls ascend to the divine World
(Heaven, Devachan), and there, the theosophical instructors say that the humans
will dream of what makes them happier, whether they have truly experienced it
during their life on Earth, or only intensely desired it.
For example,
a woman whose great desire was to marry, but who for various reasons, she could
not realize this desire. During her stay in Devachan, she will dream of being happily
married and from that base, she will create a whole beautiful story around her
marriage.
And if your
great happiness was living with your loved ones, then you will find them during
your devachanic dream, but contrary to the dream in Kama-Loka, this time they
will not appear with their defects, but only in the best way that you wish they
were.
And that's
why William Judge wrote:
« Sometimes people ask me:
What of those we have left behind: do we see them in Devachan?
And the
answer is that we do not see them there in fact, but we make to ourselves their
images as full, complete, and objective as in life, and devoid of all that we
then thought was a blemish. We live with them and see them grow great and good
instead of mean or bad.
The mother
who has left a drunken son behind finds him before her in Devachan a sober, good man, and
likewise through all possible cases, parent, child, husband, and wife have
their loved ones there perfect and full of knowledge. This is for the benefit
of the soul. You may call it a delusion if you will, but the illusion is
necessary to happiness just as it often is in life. And as it is the mind that
makes the illusion, it is no cheat. »
(The
Ocean of Theosophy, chapter 13)
THE TUNING OF DREAMS
Master Kuthumi
pointed out that in Devachan, when humans have similar dreams, they connect
their dreams one to each other:
« In Devachan, two
sympathetic souls will each work out its own devachanic sensations making the
other a sharer in its subjective bliss, but yet each is dissociated from the
other as regards actual mutual intercourse. »
(CM
25, p.198)
So, two
people who have loved each other very much, when they are in heaven, both will
find asleep, but both dreaming the same dream where they will continue to love
each other.
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