Every single thing is empty, including myself. Everything is part of this emptiness; everything is subject to the law of emptiness. Everything is changing and manifesting, including myself, so we are inherently living while letting go.
Daehaeng,
Obs of a Prnnl Lrnr Obsrvr who happens to be a dctr There is no cure for curiosity-D Parker
Every single thing is empty, including myself. Everything is part of this emptiness; everything is subject to the law of emptiness. Everything is changing and manifesting, including myself, so we are inherently living while letting go.
Here are 3 key points summarizing “Siddhashram Gyanganj (The Abode of Immortal Masters)” by Dada Muneshwar Vashisht Ji Maharaj:
1. Hidden mystical realm beyond normal time and space
2. Shangri-La / Shambala near Mount Kailash
3. Gyanganj and advanced spiritual centers
If you want, I can also:
There’s an undercurrent to every visit—the quiet, persistent awareness that things can change suddenly. A cough that lingers, a bruise that wasn’t there last week, a moment of unusual fatigue. Words like “infection” or “stroke” hover unspoken, yet they shape how I watch them breathe, how I notice the color in their face, how I listen for any shift in their voice. The waiting isn’t dramatic; it’s slow and private, a background tension that never fully leaves.
I find myself measuring time differently, dividing life into “before the last scare” and “since the last call.” When the phone rings late, my body reacts before my mind does. Even on ordinary days, there’s a sense of borrowed calm—as if stability is temporary and fragile. I try to stay present, to focus on the warmth of their hand or the small comfort of shared silence, but the awareness sits just beneath it all: that the next vascular or infective event could redraw everything without warning.
It creates a strange mix of vigilance and helplessness. I want to protect them, to anticipate what’s coming, yet so much is beyond control. So I hold onto what I can—showing up, noticing, listening, and leaving each time with the quiet hope that this visit won’t be the last ordinary one.
What do we live for, if it is not to make life less difficult for each other?
George Eliot
Dying is not a medical event. It’s an emotional, communal, social event. What you need is knowledge of the dying process..EKR
Walking into the care home always feels like stepping into a different rhythm of time. The hallway is quiet except for the soft shuffle of slippers and distant television sounds, and I can already feel my chest tighten before I even reach their room. They look both familiar and strangely fragile—smaller than I remember, as if life has slowly folded them inward. Conversations drift between clarity and confusion; sometimes we laugh about old family stories, and other times they search my face like I’m someone they almost recognize.
There’s a tenderness in the ordinary moments: adjusting a blanket, pouring tea, holding a hand that once held mine. I notice details I used to overlook—the careful way they sit down, the pause before standing, the relief when I arrive. Leaving is always the hardest part. I say goodbye twice, then once more at the door, carrying with me a mix of gratitude, guilt, love, and a quiet ache. The visit lingers long after I’ve gone, a reminder that roles change, time moves forward, and love learns to speak in softer, slower ways.