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My goal in life is never to have a moment when I could not say, "This
is how I want to die."
Mark DeBolt
Author's note: This article makes the most sense if you've already read "Death Is My Friend."
If you read the article below, please also check out the link at the end of this article for an important update. Thanks!
Spiritual Bushwhacking
Sharing the Secret of Death
By Cat Saunders
I "came out" about my own death in the first article of this series, "Death
Is My Friend." It's a long story. The punch line is that I've been given information about my death timing in advance. Barring any cosmic wild cards, I'm apparently due to die at the age of
55 in the year 2009.
This
information was given to me (at my request) by a Vedic scholar and former
monk of twenty years, who was extensively trained in the ancient Hindu
science of death prediction.
Obviously, the Cosmic Trickster can run circles
around any human's capacity to determine the course of fate. However,
when I found out about my death timing, all my cells felt
as if I'd been shot through with 20,000 volts of electricity. My body
said yes, and I trust my body.
After
finding out about my "date with destiny" through Rishi (not his real name),
it took me three years to get up enough courage to write publicly about
my death timing.
Eventually, I got tired of being secretive about this information, because being secretive is not my style. Besides, I knew I wanted to get on with one of my most powerful
passions, namely, writing about death. Coming out about this aspect of my death work was simply a necessary step toward fulfilling this passion.
Although
I write about death because I must in order to express and integrate
my own growth process I also hope that others can use my intimate
self-disclosures to stimulate their own thoughts and feelings about death.
To give you a few examples of how others have been using my personal work to go
deeper in their own contemplations about death, I'd like to share brief interviews with
three special people: Leslie Heizer (my best friend), John Giovine (my
partner), and Sally Giovine-Kerr (John's mother).
Leslie
Cat: Tell me about your experience when I first told you about my death
timing.
Leslie: I remember feeling honored that I was the first person you told,
since John wasn't quite ready to know at that point. I remember being
both scared and excited. I think there was a part of me that checked out.
I felt awkward! How do you behave when your best friend tells you that
she knows when she's going to die?
Cat: After I told you I'd probably die at 55, you said, "Oh, that's
a relief!"
Leslie: I know that 55 is short by cultural standards, but it was a relief
that you weren't dying next month. I guess I have abandonment issues!
Another
thing I remember was feeling stunned by your experience of being told
how the whole story evolved with Rishi and the volts of electricity.
It had that awesome, absolutely right sense about it whatever it
means!
I'm
absolutely convinced of the reality of it, but I sometimes think
and I know you sometimes wonder is it a cosmic joke? Is it a way
for you and others to work on death? Or is it a finite fact and date
or both?
Cat: How has my death work affected you over time?
Leslie: I've gone through the same kind of death stages you've talked
about. Sometimes I feel acceptance, and I'm grateful and happy to know
about your death. Other times I feel angry. It's that cultural thing:
55 is relatively young.
There
are also times when I'm really angry that your physical health is what
it is. I wish you didn't have to suffer so much.
Cat: How has my death timing affected your relationship with me?
Leslie: Sometimes I get mad at you for leaving sooner. I feel sad, too.
I also imagine that my experience around it may get more intense as time
goes on.
I think
about how long I've known you. I realize that connections go on after
people die, but it's not the same. You and I have such a rare connection.
I'll really miss you, because I think I'll be around longer than you.
Cat: How has this news affected your relationship with death?
Leslie: It has increased my curiosity. If I could know, would I want
to know when I will die? I see it's an option now, because of you.
It
also makes me think more about my death and other people's deaths. It
pushes me. I wasn't totally asleep about death, but I was more asleep
than I knew. I think I somehow assumed I could live forever.
I think
your death work has made me more awake and more conscious about valuing
what we have. It cuts through the denial. Like, if I don't talk to you
this week, then there's forever. There's not forever! It makes every communication
more precious.
John
Cat: Will you tell me how my death timing has affected you?
John: At first, I didn't want to know. To me, there's a certain elegance
involved in not knowing. I like the idea of dropping dead when you drop
dead.
There are mysteries in life that we'll never figure out, and I think
death is one of the biggest mysteries. It's a huge threshold to say we
can now figure out death.
Cat: I don't think that knowing my death timing takes away the mystery
of death any more than knowing when I was born takes away the mystery
of birth, but I respect your desire not to know. I wonder if you'd talk
about how you were mad at Rishi initially?
John: I was ready to punch him in the nose! I went through a similar
process to what people experience when they're going to die: anger, fear,
denial, withdrawal. I was mad because I didn't want to lose you.
You're
very close to me; I love you. Even though it wasn't me being given a death
sentence, I felt like Rishi was meddling in my life, because you're like
an extension of my life. It affected me, and I was furious!
Cat: Later, you realized you were projecting your anger about losing
me onto Rishi.
John: Yes. I came to that by talking with you about your process, because
I saw that you were quite well grounded in your journey into death. Also,
it helped that you said that you know there's option in the timing. You
could die sooner. You could die later. You could die right on time.
I don't
doubt that it's possible to know. I just have edges around knowing.
Cat: How was it for you the night you were ready to hear the actual
punch line?
John: I remember you telling me the age, 55. At first I was cavalier
about it; then I felt very sad. If you die at 55, I'll be 53. To think
about your dying at a particular time was one of the saddest things I
could imagine.
Cat: I remember we wept together. I can imagine how much I'd miss
you if you died first, and it breaks my heart to know you will go through
that when I die. Would you talk about how this has affected your
relationship with me?
John: I think it's brought us closer together. I've also learned to appreciate
your process, even though I don't necessarily share it in total accord.
I respect it, and I appreciate the way you're bringing death out of the
closet.
Cat: How do you feel about my being public with the work?
John: I think it's important. It's definitely the ultimate edge in Western
culture. Probably the hardest thing for me is when people hear about your
death work and they come up to me and say, "What's this about Cat dying
at 55?" I think, "Oh, damn! I have to try to explain this?"
Cat: Will you say a few words about how my death work has affected
you over time?
John: It's given me a greater appreciation of life. I've changed in terms
of what really bugs me. Little things may still bother me, but there aren't
many things that get too far under my skin anymore.
Also,
I've watched you work with death energy, and I play with it, too. I feel
much friendlier with death now. I look at it as a healthy process.
Sally
Cat: What was it like for you to learn about my dying at 55?
Sally: I felt shock shock and all my other feelings about losing
you and what would John do?
As a mother, I didn't want hm to have
to go through what I went through with Peter [Sally's first husband and
John's father], who died of a heart attack at forty.
When
you told me, I think there was also denial, because you look so young
and healthy!
Cat: Yes, we've talked about how scary it is for you to face that
my health is debilitated.
Sally: I don't seem to have any obvious fears about my own death, but
I have terrible fears about other people's deaths. I also know that I
haven't finished with my daughters' deaths. I lost them both at birth,
as you know.
When
you lose infants, it's like losing this huge potential, and when you lose
someone you love who's an adult, you lose someone you have history with.
It's like taking a piece of your life and pinching it off.
With
you, I think, "Hey Cat, you have all this stuff to do!" It's my old "save
the world" business.
Cat: As if it's my job!
Sally: Right! It's your job to stay here and do the work you're doing:
getting people to see what they're not willing to see. So hey, you have
your nerve, going!
Cat: I know how you hate to lose a compatriot! How has this affected
you over time?
Sally: I have to say that I hated it so much I went into denial. It's
only recently that I've had to look again.
Your working
with death means that I get to share your process. That makes me want
to start crying, yet I can also understand that this is going to be a
strange blessing not the kind of blessing I'd ask for, but if I
can just hang in there, completely open to it, I'll learn a whole lot
about dying.
Cat: How has this information affected your relationship with me?
Sally: I see you as totally alive, so I'm sure the denial's there. I'm
still juggling with the information about your death. On one hand, I accept
it, but then there's the other ball. I don't want it. Throw that one out!
Cat: There's so much in this culture about death being about loss
and grief and suffering. There isn't much about how it's a constant gift
to work with death. The joy, the incredible vision that comes with it!
Sally: I think you're going against a huge mountain of culture when you
say that, and yet, that's where I want to get.
Cat: How has my work affected your own relationship with death?
Sally: The main thing is that I know you're pioneering it. I want
to be part of it, even if at this point I'm saying, "no, no, no!"
I
realize that your death is going to be part of my spiritual path. You
know, you're bushwhacking! Spiritual bushwhacking! I have no doubt how
important that's going to be for me.
Important
update about my death timing: In December
2006, I was given an update about my predestined death timing. It appears
that I may live another 12 years beyond the original 2009 prediction.
Basically,
this 12-year "extension" is related to a rare astrological anomaly in
my chart that protects against death at the earlier time. This anomaly could not be factored into the original calculations for my death timing, because information about it was only recently given to a
few American astrologers, including my longtime Vedic astrologer, Robert
Koch (aka "Rishi" in the Death Series).
For
more details, please see my follow-up Q&A article called "A New Lease on Life: Guess What? You're Not Going to Die Yet!"
"Spiritual Bushwhacking"
is from a series of articles on death originally published by The
New Times (1998-99).
To receive Cat's free online
newsletter, "Dancing with Death," please click
here.
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Death Is My Friend ||
Sitting in the Fire
|| No Time
to Go Fast ||
|| Death
as an Adviser || My
Dream || Violence,
Pacifism and War ||
|| Requiem
for My Sister || Tell
Me About Your First Time ||
|| The
Remarkable Value of Dying Well ||
|| Growing
Wings || Spiritual
Bushwhacking ||
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