Love Really is Eternal

The intention of this blog is to provide a place for sharing around common interests and in this way to feel more closely connected to life and to others. It is about building a sense of our common humanity, what we call community.

Otherwise, or if in isolation for too long, a sense of alienation may creep in. The image that comes to mind is of Adam and Eve cast out–banished–from the garden. (Chagall’s Expulsion from the Garden is shown below, and below that the opening of my Return to the Whole Garden chapter.)

chagall's expulsion from garden

Eden was a protected enclosure. Within the verdant garden’s boundaries God’s first children lived without fear of bodily harm or the pressures of necessity. They lived in a paradise of contentment and comfort. For companionship Adam and Eve had one another and God. For amusement they had the friendly animals. For nourishment they had but to pluck the sweet fruit of their choice. The idyllic innocence of their beginning was the kind we would wish for every child. In truth, life began for each of us within an enclosure comparable to Eden. The maternal womb provided for our every need. There we knew contentment and comfort, until the time came when we had outgrown our protective walls. Then the necessity for expansion pressed in upon us. Instead of a place of comfort the womb became a constraining vise. A principle of life was at work. An inherent wisdom had taken over to apply increasingly greater pressure against the uterine limitations that now had become barriers to further growth and therefore to life itself. As with Adam and Eve, so for each of us the time came when we had outgrown our primal maternal paradise. We, too had to suffer the trauma of expulsion into a larger and ultimately more needful and demanding world.

The story of physical birth, of psychological birth, and of spiritual birth all follow a similar pattern. Psychologically, we are born again and again. In fact, as someone has observed: “We cannot be born enough.” Spiritually, too, the need is to die, again and again, or order to be born anew in spirit.”

See Return to the Whole Book One Part I

If you are a new or old acquaintance of the Murray Creek web pages, you know that Bob (to whom I had been married for fifty-eight and a half years), on the Spring Equinox of last March experienced the ultimate rebirth–from an ensouled body to a soul now en spirit. And my greatest surprise and continuing source of gratitude has been coming to know–experientially–that love really is eternal.

His transition has been for me a profound re-perception of reality as I have recorded the frequent telepathic communications that have passed between us. My intention in sharing around the topic of love being eternal is to invite others to add their experiences and comments, and in so doing help strengthen our collective sense of connection. Your input (below) is therefore encouraged.

5 Responses to “Love Really is Eternal”

  1. Annie Kurteff Says:

    Hi Annie,

    Wonderful Blog! I will write soon!

    Love, A2

  2. Gerry Cartier Says:

    Welcome home! I’m so happy to hear that you’re thinking of re-starting the crones. It’s been sorely missed. I connected to the remarks made earlier about the fear of death and how our culture reinforces that fear. I have a sister recently diagnosed with lung cancer and she has been showing a lot of anger. It seems that fear and anger are some how related, blocking the possibilities of experiencing the presense of eternal love. Thank you for a beautiful blog. Love, Gerry

  3. CarylAnn Minor Says:

    So glad to see the direction your life is taking. Your words connect to deeply held but long repressed and unfinished ideas I have held about the afterlife. At this time, I don’t want to open that door again, but my sense is that, as it seems with you, things open to us “in their season.” Blessings on you and many thanks for this beautiful work. Love CA

  4. Helene Joy Says:

    Annie, I am thrilled with your blog. How beautifully and in what depth you’ve shared your learnings. And how welcome your reassurance about what I call “the spiritual being having a human experience” (Teilyard?)—the Bread and Truth—balance and the connection between the realms. Thank you so much for this amazing sharing–and with illustrations!

    Love,
    Helene

  5. Dr. Y. Hayut-Man Says:

    Dear Ann

    I’m not a Christian, yet will gladly use your seven stages of Jesus’ mission within the seven-stage Jerusalem Games System (You can see my stance on Christianity, past and future, in my recent book “The Truth about Judas - Mysteries of the Judas Code Revealed”). I shall read it attentively.

    A side note: In appreciation of your sources (like Jung, Teilhard and Mira Elphassi) it seems a pity your knowledge of Qabbalah extends only as far as Suare, which isn’t much. I guess I could help you a bit on this front (for example Abba can be written like that for reasons of correct pronounciation, but in the original Hebrew-Aramic, this is a three-letter word ABA (value of 4), which should actually better suit your scheme.

    In amity
    Yitzhaq (Isaac) Hayut-Man

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