The image is an allegorical engraving from the 17th century entitled Omnis dies, omnis hora, qvam nihil sumus, ostendit, ‘Every day, every hour shows us how insignificant we are’, which makes us see our own nothingness. The work is part of the famous Thesaurus Philo-Politicus series, published by Daniel Meisner and Eberhard Kieser in Frankfurt from 1623 onwards.
The student will sit in a comfortable position. In this exercise, the student will try to relive his past lives, scenes from his past existences. The key to remembering past lives is in the retrospection exercise.
I am writing you a few lines about a question that deserves to be answered: Why is the phenomenon of death so intimidating to us in the Western world?
Man is contained in Nature and Nature in man; and if we do not discover the Laws of Nature inside of us, we will never discover them outside of us. The Tragedy of Nature and the Spiritual Salvation of Man
Man is a trio of body, soul and Spirit. The soul has an ultra-sensitive and material body with which it travels through space called the astral body.
If those poor people understood the lamentable state which they are in, they would tremble with horror. Such people always think the best of themselves; they boast about their virtues, they feel perfect, kind, obliging, noble, charitable, intelligent, fulfillers of their duties, etc.
It is urgent to comprehend in depth and in all the terrains of the mind what death in itself really is, only in this way…









