Most humans live their lives in a constant state of sleep. This sleep is not of the body, but of consciousness. The eyes are open, actions are being performed, but the inner awareness remains asleep. This is why the truth, even when it is right in front of us, cannot be accepted. Seeing the truth requires vision, and vision comes from awakening, not just knowledge or information.
Only a few people are able to u break this slumber. They awaken not from external noise, but from an inner call. When the veil of consciousness begins to lift, life is no longer limited to birth and death, gain and loss, happiness and sorrow. Society later calls such awakened people Siddhas, incarnations, or great men, when in reality they are nothing special; they simply see what others, asleep, cannot see.
No ordinary person takes any action on the journey that takes place after death. Throughout life, preparations are made only for the body—arranging for happiness, security, and the fulfillment of desires. The subtle body, consciousness, and the state after death are either denied or considered imaginary. Yet, this is where the real journey begins. The physical body is temporary, but the astral journey is long and decisive.
Humans behave as if this physical life is everything. Wealth, relationships, position, desires, and identity—their entire existence revolves around these. It is not considered that all this will be left behind, nor that only the sanskars and state of consciousness will accompany them at the moment of death. The very thing that needs to be worked on remains neglected.
No one knows when physical life will end. Death sees no age, no preparation, no plans. It comes suddenly and asks whether the time given to us was awakening or merely accumulation. But then there is no opportunity for regret. Therefore, the person who works on the journey of consciousness while alive is truly visionary. The rest of the people spend their lives just walking and dreaming.
Read more : - The Silent Devotion

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