Immediately after WHAT? Death, falling asleep, anesthesia during surgery, taking a psychedelic drug, etc? I assume that you might be asking about death, so the answer is ‘It depends”. If the person was old, sick, and ready to die - yes, the soul would jump out of the body quickly and usually crosses over into Spiritual Reality right away, without going to the funeral or lingering around the family. But if the person dies young and unexpectedly, - they usually linger in the physical reality for a while, trying to console loved ones, making sure kids are OK (especially women who died in childbirth and the baby survived) or finishing any unfinished business. But it is very rare for a soul to get stuck in the dead body - I only had a couple of cases like that in past life regression sessions, and we had to help this soul during the session with their ‘future life” personality to exit the past life body and cross over into the Spiritual Reality. However, there are many situations when a soul leaves the dead body but does not cross over into the Light - these are ghosts, and there are a lot of them around. These Earthbound spirits can attach to a building, a natural place or another person and have to be rescued by their Spirit Guides or Angels, or by a psychic medium, or their future reincarnation. We reincarnate from the Oversoul, as most of our energy stays in Spiritual Realms, and the Oversoul can send another part of itself to incarnate in a physical life even if a part of its energy got stuck as a ghost.
A
Mismatch explains another tendency that puzzled our alien friend:
Why aren’t our fears properly apportioned to the risks in our environment?
Why, when we decorate our houses for Halloween, do we opt for plastic
snakes and spiders, rather than plastic cigarettes or condoms – things that
are now much bigger threats to life, limb, and reproductive success? And
why, when we try to teach our children to fear roads and electrical outlets,
do they stubbornly insist on fearing snakes and monsters instead? To be
clear, the mystery is not that we fear certain things more than we need to. A
little excess fear is exactly what evolutionary principles predict. As Randy
Nesse and George Williams put it, “the cost of getting killed even once is
enormously higher than the cost of responding to a hundred false alarms.”
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That’s why most animals are neurotic: why they’re more anxious and easily
spooked than a rational, Spock-like assessment of the evidence would
warrant. Thus, the mystery isn’t that we worry too much; the mystery is that
the rank order of our worries is jumbled up. People are more likely to
develop phobias of snakes and large predators than they are of things in
their environment that are much more likely to kill or harm them, such as
handguns, speeding cars, and rising sea levels.
A
Human beings are not exempt from sexual selection, but the situation
is somewhat different for us. In most species, males compete for mates and
females choose from among the competing males; as a result, males have
ornaments and weapons, whereas females tend to be drab and less well
armed. Occasionally, the roles are reversed, but it’s not particularly
common. In our species, however, and a handful of others, the asymmetries
are far less pronounced. Both sexes are choosy about their mates, and both
compete with members of the same sex for access to the best mates. As a
result, human beings are a special case: a species in which males and
females both have their equivalents of the peacock’s tail, and their
equivalents of the deer’s antlers.10
A
Every human being is special. The drive of every
individual is to defend what lies at their inner core—call
it dignity, personality, uniqueness, or even ego—against all
enemies.
a
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