Guided By Angels: There Are No Goodbyes, My Tour of the Spirit World. Paddy McMahon
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Guided By Angels: There Are No Goodbyes, My Tour of the Spirit World - Paddy McMahon страница 1

Название: Guided By Angels: There Are No Goodbyes, My Tour of the Spirit World

Автор: Paddy McMahon

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Религия: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9780007434893

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ id="u9ecbdc44-a403-5497-ac80-5a94f4d4b034">

      There Are No Goodbyes

      Guided by Angels

      My tour of the spirit world

      Paddy McMahon

       Epigraph

      Minds are like parachutes – they only function when open.

      Thomas Dewey

      Contents

       Cover

      Title Page

      Epigraph

      Introduction

      1. How My Life Changed

      2. Meeting Margaret Anna

      3. Life after Death

      4. In Come the Guides

      5. Reincarnation

      6. Spirit Guides at Work

      7. Opening Our Minds

      8. Looking Forward

      9. A Place of Our Own

      10. Earthbound Souls

      11. The Commonality of Grief

      12. Exploring Our Communication with Guides

      13. Free Will in Practice

      14. Learning from Experience

      15. Love Never Fails

      16. About Brian

      17. There Are No Goodbyes

      Acknowledgements

      Copyright

      About the Publisher

      Have you ever wondered …

      Is there life after death?

      If so, where do people go when they die?

      Can you keep in contact with your loved ones?

      Are they able to help you?

      Will you meet them again?

      You’ll find the answers to these and many more questions in the following pages.

      Introduction

      If there is one thing of which we can all be certain, it’s the fact that we are going to die. At my age (76) most of my contemporaries are already gone.

      In my early 20s there were five of us – a group who used to meet regularly every Saturday for years and often during the week, as we were all involved in theatrical activities of some kind. We kept in contact, although it became sporadic as circumstances and family responsibilities took over. Four of the five are gone now, and I’m the last man standing, so to speak. And I’m not standing all that firmly, so my turn will inevitably come in the not-too-distant future.

      Many of my friends and acquaintances died suddenly, and for no obvious health reasons. One man died watching television, another asleep in his bed and another playing golf. One of my friends died eating his breakfast. These are mundane activities that somehow sparked the end of a life, and I could quote many more examples. Some people that I knew died in car crashes or accidents; some committed suicide. Some of those deaths were tragic shocks; others were expected, after months or even years of illness. In some of them, old age was the obvious cause. As it will be for many of us.

      In 1977, shortly before my life changed in ways that I will describe in this book, I remember looking at the body of one of my friends, Tadhg Murray, as he lay silent and cold in his coffin. He had been a very vivid, articulate man, who carried his theatrical interests into the way he related to the world. There was nothing flamboyant about him in dress or appearance, but he managed to bring a sense of colour to his descriptions of even the most humdrum of happenings. He was a gentle and very popular man, much in demand as an actor and director in amateur-dramatic circles.

      As I stood looking sadly – and with an almost overwhelming feeling of loss – at his now lifeless body, it made no sense to me that all that animation would be no more. Surely the death of his body just couldn’t be the end of his life, which had impacted so profoundly on all who knew him?

      Less than six months after that I was introduced to a whole new world – and I didn’t even have to leave my body to experience it! Because of the events that transpired then, I no longer have any fear of death. I accepted totally the continuity of life, because I was given extensive information about what happens to the departing soul in the immediate aftermath of the death of the body – and how the mindset it carries affects subsequent developments. Most important, it has been a great comfort and joy for me to learn of the help that’s available to each and every soul on its passing – according to its readiness to receive help.

      Fear plays a major role in all of our lives; in fact, it’s unlikely that there is – or ever has been – a human being who has not known fear. Fear takes many forms, and in many ways it guides our lives. We fear the unknown, and a potential crisis around the corner; we are afraid of being thought foolish or ridiculous, or being laughed at if we express a point of view. We fear punishment (both temporal and eternal) if we fail to live up to expectations; we also fear not being loved, not being able to love and even being unable to show love in order to experience happiness. We are frightened about being unemployable, not managing financially, losing control of our mental or physical faculties, through such things as senility or accidents; we are fearful of the future, and what will happen to our children when we are not around to help them grow up to be happy and successful. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Life is challenging for human beings on a daily basis, without even considering the fear of death. To some extent, this is the fear that overrides all other fears, and is, perhaps, the foundation upon which all other fears are based.

      The word ‘death’ implies an ending. In between our birth and our death there are all sorts of endings, such as relationships, employment, and even mental or physical capacity. These are deaths of sorts; although not so final as the death of our bodies, they still represent the death of something that was vital and alive.

      We fear death not just because we have experienced these smaller deaths as we progress through our lives, and therefore dread the possibility that there could be something worse; we fear death because it is the unknown.

      What happens to us when we die is something about which we are all curious. Some people believe that when we’re dead ‘that’s it’. Others believe that we go on – but to what? Either way we’re unsure what death holds, and this strikes a СКАЧАТЬ