Sunday, 14 June 2026

SD X VEGETARIANISM

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Why Does Hinduism Recommend a Vegetarian Diet? — 10 Key Points

  1. Food influences the mind and personality.
    Hindu philosophy teaches “Jaisa ann, vaisa mann” (“As the food, so the mind”), meaning the quality of food affects thoughts, emotions, and character.

  2. The Bhagavad Gita classifies food into three categories.
    Foods are categorized as Sattvic (goodness), Rajasic (passion), and Tamasic (ignorance), each influencing consciousness differently.

  3. Sattvic foods promote spiritual growth.
    Grains, fruits, vegetables, pulses, beans, milk, and other vegetarian foods foster health, happiness, mental clarity, and contentment.

  4. Rajasic foods stimulate restlessness.
    Excessively spicy, salty, sour, sweet, or stimulating foods increase desires, ambition, agitation, and mental disturbance.

  5. Tamasic foods dull the mind.
    Meat, fish, eggs, stale, overcooked, and impure foods are considered tamasic because they are believed to increase lethargy, anger, ignorance, and violence.

  6. Pure food leads to a pure mind.
    The Chandogya Upanishad states: “Āhāra śhuddhau sattva śhuddhiḥ” — “By eating pure food, the mind becomes pure.”

  7. Vegetarianism is seen as supporting health and longevity.
    Hindu teachings associate a vegetarian diet with better physical well-being, vitality, and a longer, healthier life.

  8. Human anatomy is presented as being closer to herbivores than carnivores.
    Advocates point to human teeth, stomach acidity, and longer intestines as evidence that humans are naturally suited for plant-based foods.

  9. Many influential thinkers practiced vegetarianism.
    Figures such as Mahatma Gandhi, Leo Tolstoy, Leonardo da Vinci, and George Bernard Shaw advocated vegetarian living.

  10. Hinduism generally encourages rather than strictly forbids meat consumption.
    The emphasis is on understanding the spiritual, mental, ethical, and health consequences of food choices, with vegetarianism recommended as the path most conducive to purity, compassion, and spiritual advancement.

One-Line Summary

Hinduism recommends a vegetarian diet because it is believed to cultivate purity of mind, better health, compassion, and the spiritual qualities necessary for higher consciousness and self-realization.

Saturday, 13 June 2026

YT PETER FENWICK X “Death is not an endpoint, but a transition in consciousness we have stopped learning how to see.”

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POINTWISE SUMMARY

  • Ethics constraints & study design

    • Ethics committee allowed a carer-based study but prohibited direct interviews with dying patients.

    • Researchers conducted studies in three hospices in the UK and three in Rotterdam for a slight cross-cultural comparison.

    • This led to development of a measure of end-of-life phenomena based on carers’ reports.

  • Introduction to neuropsychiatry

    • A neuropsychiatrist works at the intersection of neurology and psychiatry, linking brain function with mind and behaviour.

    • The speaker, Peter Fenwick, worked with epilepsy, seizures, and EEG studies.

    • Early research included EEG studies of meditation (including work involving George Harrison).

  • Shift toward consciousness and NDE research

    • Interest evolved from brain disorders → sleep, meditation → near-death experiences (NDEs).

    • Initially dismissed NDEs as “rubbish,” but changed view after encountering real clinical cases.

    • A key case involved a cardiac patient who reported out-of-body experience during resuscitation.

  • Methodology of NDE research

    • Collected large datasets, including ~2,000 letters after a TV documentary.

    • Selected ~500 detailed cases for analysis.

    • Found NDEs occur across many triggers:

      • Cardiac arrest

      • Childbirth

      • Illness

      • Even spontaneous non-medical situations

    • Conclusion: NDEs are not limited to near-death medical events.

  • Nature and variability of NDEs

    • Common features include tunnels, light, life review, and encounters with beings.

    • Strong cultural variation:

      • Western cases: tunnels and light

      • Japanese accounts: river crossing with boatman

      • Hunter-gatherer accounts differ significantly

    • Interpretation shaped heavily by worldview and cultural background.

  • Consciousness debate

    • Central question: Is consciousness produced by the brain or filtered through it?

    • Two main positions:

      • Materialist: consciousness is entirely brain-based (e.g., Daniel Dennett)

      • Non-reductive / dual-aspect views: consciousness may transcend brain activity

    • Reference to Wilder Penfield, who suggested mind is not fully explained by neurons.

    • Mention of quantum theories by Roger Penrose and Stuart Hameroff (microtubule-based consciousness hypothesis).

  • End-of-life phenomena (“The Art of Dying”)

    • Studies expanded to dying patients via carer observations in hospices.

    • Key phenomena observed:

      • Premonitions of death (less common but present)

      • Deathbed visitors (relatives, friends, sometimes unknown beings)

      • Spiritual or transitional experiences before death

  • Deathbed visions and “visitors”

    • Visitors are often:

      • Close relatives (parents, spouses)

      • Occasionally strangers or animals

    • Many experiences include a comforting interaction and goodbye messages.

    • “Deathbed coincidences” reported where relatives experience visions at the exact time of death.

  • Terminal lucidity

    • Some patients (including those with severe dementia or paralysis) briefly regain clarity before death.

    • They may:

      • Recognize relatives

      • Say goodbye

      • Then die shortly after

    • This is presented as a challenge to purely brain-based explanations of consciousness.

  • Other phenomena near death

    • Reported experiences include:

      • Bright light in rooms

      • Sensation of shapes leaving the body

      • Electrical anomalies like clocks stopping at time of death

      • Animals reacting (e.g., cats, birds behaving unusually)

  • Frequency of phenomena

    • Carer reports suggest:

      • Deathbed visions may occur in ~50% of cases (higher in some studies)

      • Some later studies suggest up to ~80–90% experience some transitional phenomena

    • Underreporting is likely due to lack of discussion in clinical settings.

  • “Hellish” NDEs

    • Reported but relatively rare (~4% in one sample).

    • Often have alternative explanations (e.g., ICU delirium, sensory misinterpretation).

    • No strong evidence of literal “hell realms” in data presented.

  • Model of dying process

    • Proposed stages:

      • Premonition of death

      • Visitor phase

      • Transitional “other reality”

      • Gradual detachment from identity and possessions

      • Movement toward non-dual awareness (loss of ego/self)

  • Non-duality and consciousness states

    • Some NDEs show:

      • Loss of narrative self (“inner voice disappears”)

      • Strong present-moment awareness

      • Deep peace or joy

    • Linked to broader research (e.g., Jeffrey Martin’s studies of non-dual states).

  • Influence of personality and belief

    • Cultural and religious beliefs strongly shape experiences (e.g., angels in the Bible Belt).

    • Attachment, guilt, and self-centeredness may influence how easily people “let go” during dying.

    • Less attachment → smoother dying process (hypothesized).

  • “Good death” concept

    • Difficulty of dying linked to:

      • Attachment to possessions/identity

      • Guilt or unresolved emotions

    • Not strictly moral (“good vs bad person”) but psychological readiness.

  • Critique of “hallucination” explanation

    • Argument: calling experiences hallucinations is unhelpful.

    • Some phenomena are corroborated by multiple witnesses (e.g., relatives, nurses).

    • Therefore, cannot be fully dismissed as subjective illusions.

  • Message for society

    • Western culture tends to avoid and medicalize death, unlike historical societies.

    • This avoidance leads to fear and lack of preparedness.

    • Suggested reforms:

      • Teach children about death as a natural process

      • Normalize discussion of dying

      • Treat death as part of life continuum

  • Overall conclusion

    • NDEs and end-of-life experiences suggest:

      • Consciousness may not be fully explained by brain activity alone

      • Dying is a structured psychological/spiritual transition

    • Strong call for more research and cultural openness toward death.

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The interview presents the work and ideas of neuropsychiatrist Peter Fenwick, focusing on near-death experiences (NDEs) and the broader psychological and experiential aspects of dying. His research sits at the intersection of neurology and psychiatry, a position he describes as uniquely suited to understanding both brain function and subjective experience. Early in his career, he worked with patients suffering from epilepsy and seizures, using EEG recordings to study altered states of consciousness. His interests gradually expanded from clinical neurology into sleep, meditation, and eventually into unusual or transcendent experiences, including near-death phenomena.

Fenwick explains that his involvement in NDE research began with skepticism. He initially dismissed such accounts as culturally restricted or implausible. However, his perspective shifted after encountering a patient who reported a detailed out-of-body experience during a cardiac procedure, including accurate descriptions of resuscitation efforts. This case led him to reconsider the phenomenon as something worthy of scientific investigation rather than dismissal.

To study NDEs systematically, Fenwick collected large numbers of firsthand accounts, particularly after a television documentary generated thousands of written responses. From these, he analysed several hundred detailed cases, identifying recurring patterns such as sensations of leaving the body, travelling through tunnels, encountering light, life reviews, and meetings with deceased relatives or spiritual beings. Importantly, he found that such experiences were not limited to cardiac arrest. They also occurred in childbirth, illness, and even in apparently non-life-threatening contexts, suggesting that NDEs are not exclusively tied to physiological near-death states.

A key finding in his work is the strong influence of culture and belief on the content of these experiences. While Western accounts often include tunnels and bright light, other cultural contexts produce different imagery. For example, Japanese accounts may involve crossing a river with a boatman, while hunter-gatherer narratives reflect their own symbolic environments. This suggests that although the underlying experience may be universal, its interpretation is shaped by worldview and expectation.

The discussion then turns to the broader philosophical implications of NDEs, particularly the question of consciousness. Fenwick frames the central issue as whether consciousness is entirely produced by the brain or whether the brain acts more like a filter for a wider reality. This places him in contrast with strictly materialist thinkers such as Daniel Dennett, who argue that consciousness is fully reducible to brain activity. He also references the work of neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield, who suggested that while brain processes are essential, they may not fully explain subjective experience. Additionally, he mentions speculative scientific theories such as the quantum consciousness model proposed by Roger Penrose and Stuart Hameroff.

Fenwick’s research also extends into end-of-life experiences observed in hospices, where direct study of dying patients was initially restricted by ethics committees. Instead, he conducted “carer studies,” gathering observations from nurses and hospice staff in both the UK and Rotterdam. These studies revealed a range of recurring phenomena. One of the earliest is a sense of premonition, where individuals or families feel that death is approaching. This is followed, in many cases, by so-called deathbed visitors—often deceased relatives or loved ones who appear to the dying person, sometimes in dreams or waking visions, and typically convey reassurance.

As death approaches, patients may enter altered states that Fenwick describes as transitions into another reality, often cycling between awareness of the physical world and a more transcendent experience. He suggests that this process culminates in a gradual withdrawal from personal identity and attachment. The dying individual is described as progressively letting go of relationships, possessions, and ego, eventually reaching a state of non-duality, in which the sense of a separate self dissolves.

Another striking phenomenon discussed is terminal lucidity, in which individuals with severe cognitive decline—such as advanced dementia—or long-term paralysis briefly regain clarity shortly before death. During these moments, they may recognise relatives, communicate clearly, and say farewell. Fenwick presents this as a challenge to purely material explanations of consciousness, since it appears to show sudden restoration of mental coherence in severely impaired brains.

Additional reported phenomena include unusual environmental effects, such as bright lights in rooms, sensations of shapes or energies leaving the body, clocks stopping at the moment of death, and animal reactions to dying individuals. While some of these accounts may be anecdotal, Fenwick argues that their frequency across many observers suggests they cannot be dismissed outright as hallucinations, particularly when multiple witnesses report the same event.

He also addresses so-called “hellish” NDEs, which are comparatively rare and often interpreted as distressing hallucinations or ICU-related delirium rather than evidence of a literal hell. In his view, the majority of experiences tend toward neutral or positive emotional tones, with themes of peace, transition, and acceptance.

From these findings, Fenwick proposes a model of dying as a psychological and possibly transpersonal process. Rather than being a sudden event, death is described as a gradual transition involving stages of detachment, altered perception, and increasing immersion in non-ordinary states of consciousness. He links this to broader research on non-dual awareness, in which individuals report the disappearance of internal narrative thinking, a strong focus on the present moment, and a sense of unity with existence.

He further argues that cultural background, belief systems, and emotional state significantly shape how individuals experience both NDEs and dying. People who are more self-centred or emotionally burdened by guilt may find it more difficult to “let go,” whereas those with fewer attachments may experience a smoother transition. However, he cautions against simplistic moral interpretations of “good” and “bad” deaths, suggesting instead that psychological orientation plays a more important role than moral judgment.

Fenwick criticises the tendency in modern medicine to label such experiences as mere hallucinations. He argues that this term is often used to dismiss rather than explain phenomena, especially when some experiences are corroborated by multiple witnesses, including relatives and healthcare professionals. This, he suggests, warrants more serious investigation rather than automatic rejection.

Finally, he reflects on the broader cultural implications of his work. In contrast to earlier societies where death was a visible and shared part of life, modern Western culture tends to medicalise and conceal it. He argues that this avoidance contributes to fear and misunderstanding. Instead, he advocates for a cultural shift in which death is openly discussed, including in education, so that individuals can approach it with greater understanding and psychological preparedness. In his view, death is not an anomaly but a fundamental part of the continuum of life, and learning to engage with it more directly may lead to a healthier relationship with both living and dying.

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Here are 10 strong, representative quotes from the transcript:

  1. “The Ethics Committee said you can do a carer study but you can’t ask the dying.”

  2. “It’s allowed us to put together a measure of the sorts of things that you can expect.”

  3. “I’m a neuropsychiatrist and that means I’m trained in neurology and psychiatry… you’re between brain and mind.”

  4. “It directed you straight to the fundamental question of our time: what is consciousness?”

  5. “My own view is that it’s too limited to say it’s all brain function.”

  6. “I thought NDEs were rubbish… until one turned up in my consulting room.”

  7. “We came to the conclusion that they really happened and they had a lot to teach us.”

  8. “You don’t just stand up and talk to a dying child—you go and sit on the bed and hold their hand.”

  9. “What is quite clear is that as they come into the death process, they give up that idea (of nothingness) and start looking forward to what’s happening.”

  10. “Any culture which sweeps death under the carpet produces a society that is greedy and self-centered.”

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PAUL ROBERTSON , MEDICI QRTT, MESSAGE FOR PETER FENWICK X TELL PETER FENWICK ITS EXACTLEY AS WE DISCUSSED

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DTH BED VISIONS 50% IN HOSPICE 

Q

90% THRO IN AND OUT - ACCEPTING NON DUALITY - MONIKA RENZ STDY 

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ALT REALITY - DTH BED VISITORS 

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RIVER OF LOVE AND GOLDEN LIGHT IN HOSPICE 1 WK BEFORE DTH 

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A briht light outside the door is not only experienced by the relatives. it has also been reported by nursing hime staff

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ANESTHETIC NDE –Having been under GA for 1-6 hours during several major surgeries –The physical body is on the table, lungs breathing, heart pumping blood –The non-physical, sentient identity that had claimed that body did not exist, and did not return until after the brain had recovered from a drug-induced coma.

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LOSE NARRATIVE SELF

ALWAYS IN THE MOMENT

THIS IS IT

UNBELIEVABLY HAPPY

TENDING TO BE

BECOME NON DUAL

MORE SELF CENTRED HAVE MORE PRE DTH SPIRITUAL ANXTY

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NDE JAPANESE

Cats and dogs do appear. Also I'm European and yet in my dream I got the message that my father is going to die, black river was involved. Also my neighbor's father died during the surgery. He saw dead relatives on the other side of the black river. I don't think that tunnels and black rivers strictly show to certain groups of people.

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5 KOSHAS

Some layers of the field contain simple information about the solid matter of your body and its frequency, while other layers {contain information about} your spirit, your consciousness or, speaking from a human-religious point of view, your soul. Awareness or consciousness in this case is a simple energy matrix, divided into different layers of your field in the sphere of influence - nothing more, nothing less. The consciousness/awareness matrix, or soul, can also be separated from its field of rest. It can, despite its removal, continue to exist in a self-sufficient manner for a certain amount of time. The para-layer layer is not limited only to the individual, but rather as a part of a general information layer - you could call it in a prosaic sense the community soul - that is connected with all animate and inanimate matter and all consciousness which exist on this main level.

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YTC The mind creates a pattern called body that the body-ego complex gives stability to even it there is no longevity to the pattern so the body is a defence of separated mind to return to One Mind

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DTH X DMT

Research suggests that the human body may produce Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) in significant quantities just before or during death, potentially inducing the vivid hallucinations and near-death experiences (NDEs) reported by survivors. This theory, often linked to the pineal gland hypothesis, proposes that DMT acts as an endogenous psychedelic that shapes final moments of consciousness.

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Body is hardware, mind is its software, both matter only. Consciousness is the electricity that makes both work. .I believe it has no inside, outside... everywhere. Eastern Philosophy n Budhism if studied not intellectually but go deep in, it will be revealed

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Epicurus: "Why should I fear death? If I am, then death is not. If death is, then I am not."

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John 6:47 Jesus:"Most assuredly, I say to you, he who believes in Me has everlasting life."

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HELLISH NDE X ICU PSYCHOSIS ?

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FENWICK "Who will come for you when it's your time"

P FENWICK "Why do I believe that consciousness exists outside the brain rather than that it's secreted like bile in the brain?"