"THE RAMPA
STORY"
Part 4
Opens with The
Akashic Record - that was
used for mapping the life of the person he should take over the body
from.
The Akashic Record! What a wonderful source of knowledge that was.
What a tragedy that people did not inyestigate its possibilities
instead of meddling with atom bombs. Everything we do, everything
that happens, is indelibly impressed upon the Akasha, that subtle
medium which interpenetrates all matter. Every movement which has
taken place on Earth since Earth first was, is available for those
with the necessary training. To those with their "eyes" open, the
history of the world lies before them An old prediction says that
after the end of this century scientists will be able to use the
Akashic Record to look into history. It would be interesting to know
what Ceopatra really said to Anthony, and what Mr. Gladstone's
famous remarks were. To me it would be delightful to see my critics'
faces when they saw what asses they really are, when they had to
admit that I wrote the truth after all, but, sad to say, none of us
will be here then.
But this Akashic Record, can we explain it more clearly? Everything
that happens "impresses" itself upon that medium which
interpenetrates even air. Once a sound has been made, or an action
initiated, it is there for all time. With suitable instruments
anyone could see it. Look at it in terms of light, or the
vibrations, which we call light and sight. Light travels at a
certain speed. As every scientist knows, we see stars at night which
may no longer be in existence. Some of those stars are so very far
away that the light from them which is now reaching us may have
started on its journey before this Earth came into being. We have no
way of knowing if the star died a million or 50 years ago because
the light would still reach us for perhaps a million more years. It
might be easier to remind one of sound. We see the flash of
lightning and hear the sound some time later. It is the slowness of
sound, which makes for the delay in hearing it after seeing the
flash. It is the slowness of light, which may make possible an
instrument for "seeing" the past.
If we could move instantly to a planet so far distant that it took
light one year to reach it from the planet which we had just left,
we would see light which had started out one year before us. If we
had some, as yet imaginary, super-powerful, super-sensitive
telescope with which we could focus on any part of the Earth, we
would see events on Earth which were a year oh Given the ability to
move with our super telescope to a planet so far distant that the
light from Earth took one million years to reach it, we should them
be able to see Earth as it was one million years ago. By moving
further and further, instantly, of course, we should eventually
reach a point from which we would be able to see the birth of Earth,
or even the sun.
The Akashic Record enables us to do just that. By special training
we can move into the astral world where Time and Space do not exist
and where other "dimensions" take over. Then one sees all. Other
Time and Space? Well, as a simple example, suppose one had a mile of
thin 'thread, sewing cotton if you like. One has to move from one
side to the other. As things are on Earth we cannot move through the
cotton, nor around its circumference. One has to travel all along
the surface to the end a mile away, and back the other side, another
mile. The journey is long. In the astral we should just move
through. A very simple example, but moving through the Akashic
Record is as simple, when one knows how!
The Akhasehic Record cannot be used for wrong purposes, used to gain
information which would harm another. Nor without special
dispensation, could one see and afterward discuss the private
affairs of a person. One can, of course, see and discuss those
things which are properly the affairs of history. Now I was going to
see glimpses of the private life of another, and then I had to
finally decide; should I take over this other body to substitute for
mine? Mine was failing rapidly, and to accomplish my allotted task,
I had to have a body to "tide me over" until I could change its
molecules to mine.
I settled myself, and waited for the blind lama to speak.
CHAPTER EIGHT
SLOWLY the sun sank behind the distant mountain range, outlining the
high peaks in the late effulgence. The faint spume streaming from
the towering pinnacles caught the fading light and reflected a
myriad of hues which changed and fluctuated with the vagaries of the
soft evening breeze. Deep purple shadows stole from the hollows like
creatures of the night coming out to play. Gradually the velvet
darkness crept up along the base of the Potala, climbing ever
higher, until only the golden roofs reflected a last gleam before
they too were submerged in the encroaching darkness. One by one
little glimmers of light appeared, like living jewels placed upon
blackness for greater display.
The mountainous wall of the Valley stood out hard and austere, with
the light behind it diminishing in intensity. Here, in our rocky
home, we caught a last glimpse of the declining sun as it
illuminated a rocky pass. Then we too were in darkness. No light for
us, we were denied all for fear of betraying our sanctuary. For us
there was naught but the darkness of the night and the darkness of
our thoughts as we gazed upon our treacherously invaded land.
"Brother," said the blind lama, whose presence I had almost
forgotten while thinking my own unhappy thoughts. "Brother, shall we
go?" Together we sat in the lotus position and meditated upon that
which we were going to do. The gentle night wind moaned softly in
ecstasy as it played around the crags and pinnacles of rock and
whispered in our window. With the not unpleasing jerk which SO often
accompanies such release, the blind lama - now blind no longer (only
the physical instrument was "blind") - and I soared from our earthly
bodies into the freedom of another plane.
"It is good to see again," said the lama, "for one treasures one's
sight only when it is gone." We floated along together, along the
familiar path to that place which we termed the Hall of Memories.
Entering in silence, we saw that others were engaged in research
into the Akashic but what they saw was invisible to us, as our own
scenes would be invisible to them.
"Where shall we start, Brother," said the old lama. "We do not want
to intrude," I replied, "but we should see what sort of a man with
whom we deal."
For a while there was silence between us as pictures sharp and clear
formed for us to see. "Eek !" I exclaimed, jumping up in alarm. "He
is married. What can I do about that? I am a celibate monk! I am
getting out of this." I turned in great alarm and was stopped by the
sight of the old man fairly shaking with laughter. For a time his
mirth was so great that he simply could not speak.
"Brother, Lobsang," he managed to say at last, "you have greatly
enlivened my declining days. I thought at first that the whole
hierarchy of devils had bitten you as you sat, you jumped so high.
Now, Brother, there is no problem at all, but first let me have a
friendly 'dig' at you. You were telling me of the West, and of their
strange beliefs. Let me quote you this, from their own Bible:
'Marriage is honourable in all' (Hebrews, Chapter Thirteen, Verse
Four)." Once again he was attacked by a fit of laughter, and the
more glumly I looked at him, the more he laughed, until in the end
he stopped from exhaustion.
"Brother," he continued, when he was able, "those who guide us and
help us had that in mind. You and the lady may live together in a
state of companionship, for do not our own monks and nuns live at
times under the same roof? Let us not see difficulties where none
exist. Let us continue with the Record."
With a heart-felt sigh, I nodded dumbly. Words for the moment were
quite beyond me. The more I thought of it all, the less I liked any
of it. I thought of my Guide, the Lama Mingyar Dondup, sitting in
comfort somewhere up in the Land of the Golden Light. My expression
must have become blacker and blacker, for the old lama started
laughing again.
At last we both calmed down and together watched the living pictures
of the Akashic Record. I saw the man whose body it was hoped I would
take. With increasing interest I observed that he was doing surgical
fitting. To my delight it was obvious that he certainly knew what he
was doing, he was a competent technician, and I nodded in
involuntary approval as I watched him deal with case after case.
The scene moved on and we were able to see the city of London, in
England, just as if we mingled with the crowds there. The huge red
buses roared along the streets, weaving in and out of traffic and
carrying great loads of people. A heffish shrieking and wailing
broke out and we saw people dart for shelter in strange stone
buildings erected in the streets. There was the incessant "crumpcrump"
of anti-aircraft shells and fighters droned across the sky.
Instinctively we ducked as bombs fell from one of the planes and
whistled down. For a moment there was a hushed silence, and then
whoom! Buildings leaped into the air and came down as dust and
rubble.
Down in the deep subways of the underground railways, people were
living a strange, troglodytic existence, going to the shelters at
night, and emerging like moles in the morning. Whole families
apparently lived there, sleeping upon makeshift bunks, and trying to
obtain a little privacy by draping blankets from any available
protrusion in the smooth tiled walls.
I seemed to be standing on an iron platform high above the'
roof-tops of London, with a clear view across to the building which
people called "The Palace". A lone plane dived from the clouds, and
three bombs sped down to the home of the King of England. I looked
about me. When seeing through the Akashic Record one "sees" as did
the principal character, so the old lama and I both saw as if both
of us were the chief figure. It seemed to me that I was standing on
a fire escape stretching across the rooftops of London. I had seen
such things before, but I had to explain the use of it to my
companion. Then it dawned on me, he - the figure I was watching-was
doing aircraft spotting in order to give warning to those below if
imminent danger should threaten. The sirens sounded again, the All
Clear, and I saw the man climb down and remove his Air Raid Warden's
steel helmet.
The old lama turned to me with a smile, "This is most interesting, I
have not watched events in the occident, my interests have been
confined to our own country. I now understand what you mean when you
say that 'one picture is worth a thousand words'. We must look
again."
As we sat and watched the Record we saw the streets of London
blacked out, with motor cars fitted with special headlamp shields.
People bumped into posts and into each other. Inside the subway
trains, before they came to the surface, the ordinary lights were
switched off, and dismal blue bulbs were switched on. The beams of
searchlights probed into the night sky, sometimes illuminating the
grey sides of the barrage balloons. The old lama looked at the
balloons in absolute fascination. Astral travelling he well
understood, but these grey monsters, tethered on high, shifting
restlessly in the night wind really amazed him. I confess that I
found my companion's expression as interesting as the Akashic
Record.
We watched the man get out of the train and walk along the darkened
streets until he reached a large block of flats. We watched him
enter, but did not enter with him; instead we looked at the busy
scene outside. Houses were wrecked by bombs, and men were still
digging in order to recover the living and the dead. The wail of the
sirens interrupted rescue operations. Far up, like moths fluttering
in the lamplight, enemy bombers were caught in a cross-cross of
searchlight beams. Glinting light from one of the bombers attracted
our curious gaze, and then we saw that the "lights" were the bombs
on their way down. One dropped with a "crump" into the side of the
big block of flats. There was a vivid flash and a shower of
shattered masonry. People came pouring out of the building, came out
into the doubtful safety of the streets.
"You have had worse than this, my Brother, in Shanghai?" asked the
old lama.
"Much worse," I replied. "We had no defences and scant facilities.
As you know, I was buried for a time in a wrecked shelter there, and
escaped only with great difficulty."
"Shall we move on a little in time?" asked my companion. "We do not
need to watch endlessly for we are both enfeebled in health."
I agreed with the utmost alacrity. I merely needed to know what sort
of person it was from whom I was going to take over. For me there
was no interest whatever in prying into the affairs of another. We
moved along the Record, halted experimentally, and moved on again.
The morning light was besmirched (tilsvinet) by the smoke of many
fires. The night hours had been an inferno. It seemed that half
London was ablaze. The man walked down the debris-littered street, a
street that had been heavily bombed. At a temporary barricade a War
Reserve policeman stopped him. "You cannot go any farther, sir, the
buildings are dangerous." We saw the Managing Director arrive and
speak to the man whose life we were watching. With a word to the
policeman, they ducked under the rope and walked together to the
shattered building. Water was spraying over all the stock from
broken pipes. Plumbing and electric wires were inextricably
entwined, like a skein of wool with which a kitten had played. A
safe hung at a precarious angle still teetering on the very edge of
a large hole. Sodden rags flapped miserably in the breeze, and from
adjacent buildings flecks of burnt paper floated down like flakes of
coal-black snow. I who had seen more of war and suffering than most,
was still sickened by the senseless destruction. The Record went
on...
Unemployment, in war-time London! The man tried to enlist as a War
Reserve Policeman. Tried in vain. His medical papers were marked
Grade Four, unfit for service. Now, with his employment gone,
through the dropping of the bomb, he walked the streets in search of
work. Firm after firm refused to take him. There seemed to be no
hope, nothing to lighten the darkness of his hard times.
At last, through a chance visit to a Correspondence School with whom
he had studied - and impressed them with his mental alertness and
industry, he was offered employment at their war-time offices
outside London. "It is a beautiful place," said the man who made the
offer. "Go down on the Green Line bus. See Joe, he should be there
by one, but the others will look after you. Take the Missus for the
trip. I've been trying to get shifted there myself" The village was
indeed a dump! Not the "beautiful place" he had been led to suppose.
Aircraft were made there, tested, and flown to other parts of' the
country.
Life in a Correspondence College was boring indeed. So far as we
could see, watching the Akashic Record, it consisted of reading
forms and letters from people and then suggesting what Course of
postal instruction they should take. My own personal opinion was
that correspondence teaching was a waste of money unless one had
facilities for practical work as well.
A strange noise like a faulty motor-cycle engine came to our ears.
As we watched, a peculiar aeroplane came into view, a plane with no
pilot or crew. It gave a spasmodic cough and the engine cut, the
plane dived and exploded just above the ground. "That was the German
robot plane," I said to the old lama, "The V.1 and the V.2 seem to
have been unpleasant affairs." Another robot plane came over near
the house in which the man and his wife lived. It blew windows in at
one side of the house, and out at the other side and cracked a wall.
"They do not appear to have many friends," said the old lama "I
think they have possibilities of the mind which the casual observer
would overlook. It seems to me that they live together more as
brother and sister than as husband and wife. That should comfort
you, my Brother!" the old man said with quite a chuckle.
The Akashic Record went on, portraying a man's life at the speed of
thought. We could yet move from one portion to another, ignoring
certain parts or seeing other incidents time after time. The man
found that a series of coincidences occurred which turned his
thoughts more and more to the East. "Dreams" showed him life in
Tibet, dreams which, really were astral travelling trips under the
control of the old lama. "One of our very minor difficulties," the
old man told me, "was that he wanted to use the word 'master'
whenever he spoke to one of us."
"Oh!" I replied, "that is one of the common mistakes of the Western
people, they love to use any name which implies power over others.
What did you tell him?"
The old lama smiled and said, "I gave him a little talk, I also
tried to get him to ask less questions. I will tell you what I said,
because it is of use in deducing his inner nature. I said: That is a
term which is most abhorrent to me and to all Easterners. 'Master'
infers that one is seeking domination over others, seeking supremacy
over those who have no right to use 'master'. A school master
endeavours to inculcate learning in his pupils. To us 'Master' means
Master of Knowledge, a source of knowledge, or one who has mastered
the temptations of the flesh. We - I told him - prefer the word
Guru, or Adept. For no Master, as we know the word, would ever seek
to influence a student nor to impose his own opinions. In the West
certain little groups and cults there are who think that they alone
have the key to the Heavenly Fields. Certain religions used tortures
in order to gain converts. I reminded him of a carving over one of
our lamaseries - 'a thousand monks, a thousand religions'.
"He seemed to follow my talk very well," said the old lama, "so I
gave him a little more with the idea of striking while the iron was
hot. I said: In India, in China, and in old Japan, the student-to-be
will sit at the feet of his Guru seeking information, not asking
questions, for the wise student never asks questions lest he be sent
away. To ask a question is proof positive to the Guru that the
student is not yet ready to receive answers to his questions. Some
students have waited as long as seven years for information, for the
answer to an unspoken question. During this time the student tends
the bodily wants of the Guru, attends to his clothing, to his food,
and to the few other needs that he has. All the time his ears are
alive for information, because by receiving information, perhaps
hearing that which is being given to other people, the wise student
can deduce, can infer, and when the Guru in his wisdom sees that the
student is making progress, that Guru, in his own good time, and in
his own suitable way, questions the student, and if he finds some of
the pupil's accumulated store of knowledge is faulty or incomplete,
then the Guru, again in his own good time, repairs the omissions and
deficiencies.
"In the West people say- 'Now, tell me this. Madame Blavatsky said -
Bishop Ledbetter says - Billy Graham says -What do you say ?
-I think you are wrong!' Westerners ask questions for the sake of
talk, they ask questions not knowing what they want to say, not
knowing what they want to hear, but when perhaps a kindly Guru
answers a question, the student immediately argues and says, 'Oh
well, I heard so-and-so say this, or that, or something else.'
"If the student asks a Guru a question, it must imply that the
student does not know the answer, but considers that the Guru does,
and if the student immediately questions the answer of the Guru, it
shows that the student is ignorant and has preconceived and utterly
erroneous ideas of decorum and of ordinary common decency. I say to
you that the only way to obtain answers to your questions is, leave
your questions unasked and collect information, deduce and infer,
then in the fullness of time, provided you are pure in heart, you
will be able to do astral travelling, and the more esoteric forms of
meditation, and will thus be enabled to consult the Akashic Record
which cannot lie, cannot answer out of context, and cannot give an
opinion or information coloured by personal bias. The human sponge
suffers from mental indigestion and sadly retards his or her
evolution and spiritual development. The only way to progress? That
is to wait and see. There is no other way, there is no way of
forcing your development except at the express invitation of a Guru
who knows you well, and that Guru, knowing you well, would soon
speed your development if he thought that you were worthy."
It seemed to me that most Westerners would benefit by being taught
that! But we were not here to teach, but to watch the unfolding of
vital scenes from a man's life, a man who would shortly vacate his
earthly shell.
"This is interesting," said the old lama, drawing my attention to a
scene on the Record. "This took much arranging, but when he saw the
desirability of it, he made no demur." I looked at the scene in some
puzzlement, then it dawned upon me. Yes! That was a solicitor's
office. That paper was a Change of Name Deed Poll. Yes, that was
correct, I remembered, he had changed his name because that which he
had had previously had the wrong vibrations as indicated by our
Science of Numbers. I read the document with interest and saw that
it was not quite correct, although it was near enough.
Of suffering there was plenty. A visit to a dentist caused much
damage, damage which necessitated his removal to a nursing home for
an operation. Out of technical interest, I watched the proceedings
with considerable care.
He - the man whose life we were watching - felt that the employer
was uncaring. We, watching, felt the same, and the old lama and I
were glad the man gave notice of the termination of his engagement
in the postal training school. The furniture was loaded on a van,
some of it was sold, and tile man and his wife left the area for an
entirely fresh district. For a time they lived in the house of a
strange old woman who "told fortunes", and had an amazing idea of
her own importance. The man tried and tried to obtain employment.
Anything which would enable him to earn money honestly.
The old lama said, "Now we are approaching the crucial part. As you
will observe, he rails against fate constantly. He has no patience
and I am afraid that he will depart his life violently unless we
hurry."
"What do you wish me to do?" I asked.
"You are the senior," said the old man, "but I would like you to
meet him in the astral, and see what you think."
"Certainly," was my rejoinder, "We will go together." For a moment I
was lost in thought, then I said, "In Lhasa it is two o'clock in the
morning. In England it will be eight o'dock in the evening, for
their time lags behind ours. We will wait and rest for three hours,
and will then draw him over to the astral."
"Yes," said the old lama. He sleeps in a room alone, so we can do
it. For the present let us rest, for we are weary."
We returned to our bodies, sitting side by side in the faint
starlight. The lights of Lhasa were extinguished now, and the only
glimmers came from the habitations of monks and the brighter lights
from Chinese Communist guard posts. The tinkling of the little
stream outside our walls sounded unnaturally loud against the
silence of the night. From high above came the rattling of a small
shower of pebbles dislodged by the higher wind. They rattled and
bounced by us, jarring loose bigger stones. Down the mountainside
they rushed, to end in a noisy heap by a Chinese barracks. Lights
flashed on, rifles were discharged into the air, and soldiers ran
wildly around, fearing attack from the monks of Lhasa. The commotion
soon subsided, and the night was peaceflil and still once again.
The old lama laughed softly, and said, "How strange to me that the
people beyond our land cannot understand astral travelling! How
strange that they think all this is imagination. Could it not be put
to them that even changing one's body for that of another is merely
like a driver changing from one automobile to another? It seems
inconceivable that a people with their technical progress should be
so blind to the things of the spirit."
I, with much experience of the West, replied, "But Western people,
except for a very small minority, have not the capacity for
spiritual things. All they want is war, sex, sadism, and the right
to pry into the affairs of others."
The long night wore on, we rested and refreshed ourselves with tea
and tsampa. At last the first faint streaks of light shot across the
mountain range behind us. As yet the valley at our feet was immersed
in darkness. Somewhere a yak began to bellow as if sensing that a
new day would soon be upon us. Five in the morning Tibetan time.
About eleven o'clock by the time in England, I judged. Gently I
nudged the old lama who was dozing lightly. "Time we went into the
astral!" I said.
"It will be the last time for me," he replied, "for I shall not
return to my body again."
Slowly, not hurrying at all, we again entered the astral state.
Leisurely we arrived at that house in England. The man lay there
sleeping, tossing a little, on his face there was a look of extreme
discontent. His astral form was encompassing his physical body with
no sign yet of separation.
"Are you coming?" I asked, in the astral. "Are you coming?" repeated
the old lama. Slowly, almost reluctantly, the man's astral form rose
above his physical body. Rose, and floated above it, reversed, head
of astral to feet of physical, as one does. The astral body swayed
and bobbed. The sudden roar of a speeding train nearly sent it back
into the physical. Then, as though a sudden decision had been
reached, his astral form tilted, and stood before us. Rubbing his
eyes as one awakening from sleep, he gazed upon us.
"So you want to leave your body?" I asked.
"I do, I hate it here!" he exclaimed vehemently.
We stood looking at each other. He seemed to me to be much
misunderstood man. A man who, in England, would not make his mark on
life, but who in Tibet would have his chance. He laughed sourly, "So
you want my body! Well, you will find your mistake. It does not
matter what you know in England, it is who you know that matters. I
cannot get a job, cannot even get unemployment benefit. See if you
can do better!"
"Hush, my friend," said the old lama, "for you know not to whom you
are speaking. Perhaps your truculence may have impeded you from
obtaining employment."
"You will have to grow a beard," I said, "for if I occupy your body,
mine will soon be substituted, and I must have a beard to hide the
damage to my jaws. Can you grow a beard?"
"Yes, Sir," he replied, "I will grow a beard."
"Very well," I said. "I will return here in one month and will take
over your body, giving you release, so that my own body may
eventually replace that which I shall have taken. Tell me," I asked,
"how were you first approached by my people?"
"For a long time, Sir," he said, "I have hated life in England, the
unfairness of it, the favouritism. All my life I have been
interested in Tibet and Far East countries. All my life I have had
'dreams' in which I saw, or seemed to see, Tibet, China, and Other
countries which I did not recognize. Some time ago I had a strong
impulse to change my name by legal deed, which I did"
"Yes," I remarked, "I know all about that, but how were you
approached recently, and what did you see?"
He thought a bit, and then said, "To tell you that, I should have to
do it in my own way, and some of the information I have seems to be
incorrect in view of my later knowledge."
"Very well," was my reply, "tell it to me in your own way and we can
correct any misconceptions later. I must get to know you better if I
am to take your body, and this is one way of so doing."
"Perhaps I may start with the first actual 'contact'. Then I can
collect my thoughts better." From the railway station up the road
came the braking judder of a train, bringing late-comers back from
the City of London. Shortly there came the sound of the train
starting off again, and then 'the man' got down to his story while
the old lama and I listened carefully.
picture of the "former
inhabitant"
"Rose Croft, Thames
Ditton," he started, "was quite a nice little place. It was a house
set back from the road with a garden in front, a small garden, and a
much larger garden at the rear. The house itself had a balcony at
the back which gave quite a good view across the countryside. I used
to spend a lot of time in the garden, particularly in the front
garden because for some time it had been neglected and I was trying
to put it in order. The grass had been allowed to grow so that it
was several feet high and clearing it had become a major problem. I
had already cut half of it with an old Indian Gurkha knife. It was
hard work because I had to get on my hands and knees and take swipes
at the grass and sharpen the knife on a stone at every few strokes.
I was interested also in photography, and for some time I had been
trying to take a photograph of an owl which lived in an old fir tree
nearby, a fir tree well encased in climbing ivy.
My attention was distracted by the sight of something fluttering on
a branch not far above my head. I looked up and to my delighted
surprise I saw a young owl there, flapping about, clutching at the
branch, blinded by the bright sunlight. Quietly I put down the knife
which I had been using and made my way indoors to fetch a camera.
With that in my hands and with the shutter set, I made my way to the
tree and silently, or as silently as I could, I climbed up to the
first branch. Stealthily I edged along. The bird, unable to see me
in the bright light but sensing me, edged flirther away out towards
the end. I, quite thoughtless of the danger, moved forward and
forward, and with each movement of mine, the bird went further
forward until it was almost at the end of the branch, which was now
bending dangerously beneath my weight.
"Suddenly I made a precipitous movement and there was a sharp crack
and the odorous smell of powdered wood. The branch was rotten and it
gave beneath me. I catapulted head first towards the earth beneath
me. I seemed to take an eternity to fall those few feet. I remember
the grass never looked greener, it seemed larger than life, I could
see each individual blade with little insects on it. I remember,
too, a ladybird took off in fright at my approach, and then there
was a blinding pain, and a flash as if of coloured lightning, and
all went black. I do not know how long I lay a crumpled inert mass
beneath the branches of the old fir tree, but quite suddenly I
became aware that I was disengaging myself from the physical body, I
was seeing things with a greater perception than ever before.
Colours were new and startlingly vivid.
"Gingerly I got to my feet, and looked about me. To my horrified
amazement I found that my body was lying prone upon the ground.
There was no blood to be seen, but certainly there was evidence of a
nasty bump just over the right temple. I was more than a little
disconcerted, because the body was breathing stertorously and
showing signs of considerable distress. 'Death,' I thought, 'I have
died; now I shall never get back.' I saw a thin smoky cord ascending
from the body, from the head of the body to me. There was no
movement in the cord, no pulsation, and I felt sickening panic. I
wondered what I should do. I seemed to be rooted to the spot in
fear, or perhaps for some other reason. Then a sudden movement, the
only movement in this strange world of mine, attracted my eye, and I
nearly screamed, or should have screamed if I had had a voice.
Approaching me across the grass was the figure of a Tibetan lama
dressed in the saffron robe of the High Order. His feet were several
inches from the ground, and yet he was coming to me steadily. I
looked at him with utter stupefaction.
"He came towards me, stretching out his hand, and smiled. He said,
'You have nothing to fear. There is nothing here to worry you at
all.' I had the impression that his words were in a different tongue
from mine, Tibetan maybe, but I understood it, and yet I had heard
no sound. There was no sound at all. I could not even hear the sound
of the birds, or the whistling of the wind in the trees. 'Yes,' he
said, divining my thoughts, 'we do not use speech, but telepathy. I
am speaking to you by telepathy.' Together we looked at each other,
and then at the body lying on the ground between us. The Tibetan
looked up at me again, and smiled, and said, 'You are surprised at
my presence? I am here because I was drawn to you. I have left my
body at this particular instant and I was drawn to you because your
own particular life vibrations are a fundamental harmonic of one for
whom I act. So I have come, I have come because I want your body for
one who has to continue life in the Western world, for he has a task
to do which brooks no interference.'
"I looked at him aghast. The man was mad saying that he wanted my
body! So did I, it was my body. I wasn't having anyone take off my
property like that. I had been shaken out of the physical vehicle
against my wish, and I was going back. But the Tibetan obviously got
my thoughts again. He said, 'What have you to look forward to?
Unemployment, illness, unhappiness, a mediocre life in mediocre
surroundings, and then in the not too distant future death and the
start all over again. Have you achieved anything in life? Have you
done anything to be proud of? Think it over.'
"I did think it over. I thought of the past, of the frustrations,
the misunderstandings, the unhappiness. He broke in on me, 'Would
you like the satisfaction of knowing that your Kharma had been wiped
away, that you had materially contributed towards a job of the
utmost benefit to mankind?' I said, 'Well, I don't know about that,
mankind hasn't been too good to me. Why should I bother?'
"He said, 'No, on this Earth you are blinded to the true reality.
You do not know what you are saying, but with the passage of time,
and in a different sphere, you will become aware of the
opportunities you have missed. I want your body for another.' I
said, 'Well, what am I going to do about it? I can't wander about as
a ghost all the time, and we can't both have the same body.'
"You see, I took all this absolutely literally. There was something
compelling about the man, something absolutely genuine. I didn't
question for one moment that he could take my body and let me go off
somewhere else, but I wanted more information, I wanted to know what
I was doing. He smiled at me, and said-reassuringly, 'You, my
friend, shall have your reward, you shall escape your Kharma, you
shall go to a different sphere of activity, and you shall have your
sins erased because of what you are doing. But your body cannot be
taken unless you are willing.'
"I really did not like the idea at all. I had had my body some forty
years, and I was quite attached to it. I didn't like the idea of
anyone else taking my body and walking off with it. Besides, what
would my wife say, living with a strange man and knowing nothing
about it? He looked at me again, and he said, 'Have you no thought
for humanity? Are you not willing to do something to redeem your own
mistakes, to put some purpose to your own mediocre life? You will be
the gainer. The one for whom I act will take over this hard life of
yours.'
"I looked about me. I looked at the body between us, and I thought,
'Well, what does it matter? It's been a hard life. I'm well out of
it.' So I said, 'All right, let me see what sort of place I will go
to, and if I like it, I'll say yes' Instantly I had a glorious
vision, a vision so glorious that no words could describe it. I was
well satisfied, and I said I would be willing, very willing, to have
my release and go as soon as possible."
The old lama chuckled and said, "We had to tell him that it was not
that quick, that you would have to come and see for yourself before
you made a final decision. After all, it was a happy release for
him, hardship for you."
I looked at them both. "Very well," I finally remarked, "I will come
back in a month. If you then have a beard, and if you then are sure
beyond all doubt that you want to go through with this, I will
release you and send you off on your own journey."
He sighed with satisfaction, and a beatific expression stole over
his face as he slowly withdrew into the physical body. The old lama
and I rose up, and returned to Tibet.
The sun was shining from a blue cloudless sky. Beside me, as I
returned to my physical body, the empty shell of the old lama
slumped lifeless to the floor. He, I reflected, had gone to peace
after a long and honourable life. I - by the Holy Tooth of Buddha -
what had I let myself in for?
Messengers went forth into the high mountain lands to the New Home
carrying my written affirmation that I would do the task as
requested. Messengers came to me, bringing me as a graceful gesture
of friendship some of those Indian cakes, which had so often been my
weakness when I was at the Chakpori. To all intents I was a prisoner
in my mountain home. My request that I be permitted to steal down,
even in disguise, for a last visit to my beloved Chakpori was denied
me. "You may fall victim to the invaders, my brother," they told
me,, "for they are remarkably quick to pull the trigger if they have
any suspicion."
"You are sick, Reverend Abbot," said another. "Should you descend
the mountain side your health may not permit you to return. If your
Silver Cord be severed, then the Task will not be accomplished."
The Task! It was so amazing to me that there was "a task" at all. To
see the human aura was to me as simple as for a man with perfect
sight to see a person standing a few feet away from him. I mused
upon the difference between East and West, thinking how easy it
would be to convince a Westerner of a new labour-saving food, and
how easy it would be to convince an Easterner of something new in
the realms of the mind.
Time slipped by. I rested extensively, more extensively than ever in
my life before. Then, shortly before the month was up, shortly
before I was to return to England, I had an urgent call to visit
again the Land of the Golden Light
Seated in front of all those High Personages, I had the somewhat
irreverent thought that this was like a briefing during the war
days! My thought was caught by the others, and one of them smiled
and said, "Yes, it is a briefing! And the enemy? The Power of Evil
which would stop our task from being accomplished."
"You will meet much opposition and very much calumny," said one.
'Your metaphysical powers will not be altered or lost in any way
during the change-over," said another.
"This is your last Incarnation," said my beloved Guide, the Lama
Mingyar Dondup. "When you have finished this life you are taking
over, you will then return Home-to us." How like my Guide, I
thought, to end on a happy note. They went on to tell me what was
going to happen. Three astral-travelling lamas would accompany me to
England and would do the actual operation of severing one free from
his Silver Cord, and attaching the other - me! The difficulty was
that my own body, still in Tibet, had to remain connected as I
wanted my own "flesh molecules" to be eventually transferred. So, I
returned to the world and together with three companions journeyed
to England in the astral state.
The man was waiting. "I am determined to go through with it," he
said.
One of the lamas with me turned to the man and said, "You must allow
yourself to full violently by that tree as you did when we first
approached you. You must have a severe shake, for your Cord is very
securely attached."
The man pulled himself a few feet off the ground and i then let go,
falling to the earth with a satisfying 'thud'. For a moment it
seemed as if Time itself stood still. A car which had been speeding
along halted on the instant, a bird in full flight suddenly stopped
motionless - and stayed in the air. A horse drawing a van paused
with two feet upraised and did not fall. Then, motion came back into
our perception. The car jumped into motion, doing about thirty-five
miles an hour. The horse started to trot, and the bird hovering
above flashed into full flight. Leaves rustled and twisted and the
grass rippled into little waves as the wind swept across it.
Opposite, at the local Cottage Hospital, an ambulance rolled to a
stop. Two attendants alighted, walked round to the back, and pulled
out a stretcher upon which was an old woman. Leisurely the men
manoeuvred into position and carried her into the hospital. "Ah!"
said the man. "She is going to the hospital, I am going to freedom."
He looked up the road, down the road, and then said "My wife, she
knows all about this. I explained it to her and she agrees." He
glanced at the house and pointed. "That's her room, yours are there.
Now I'm more than ready."
One of the lamas grasped the astral form of the man and slid a hand
along the Silver Cord. He seemed to be tying it as one ties the
umbilical cord of a baby after its birth. "Ready!" said one of the
priests. The man, freed of his connecting Cord, floated away in
company with the priest who was assisting him: I felt a searing
pain, an utter agony which I never want to feel again, and then the
senior lama said, "Lobsang, can you enter that body? We will help
you."
The world went black. There was an utterly clammy feeling of
black-redness. A sensation of suffocating. I felt that I was being
constricted, constrained in something too small for me. I probed
about inside the body feeling like a blind pilot in a very
complicated aeroplane, wondering how to make this body work. "What
if I fail now?" I thought miserably to myself. Desperately I fiddled
and fumbled. At last I saw flickers of red, then some green.
Reassured, I intensified my efforts, and then it was like a blind
being drawn aside. I could see! My sight was precisely the same as
before, I could see the auras of people on the road. But I could not
move.
The two lamas stood beside, me. From now on, as I was to find, I
could always see astral figures as well as physical figures. I could
also keep even more in touch with my companions in Tibet. "A
consolation prize'," I often told myself, "for being compelled to
remain in the West at all."
The two lamas were looking concernedly at my rigidity, at my
inability to move. Desperately I strained and strained, blaming
myself bitterly for not having tried to find out and master any
difference between an Eastern body and a Western. "Lobsang! Your
fingers are twitching!" called out one of the lamas. Urgently I
explored and experimented. A faulty movement brought temporary
blindness. With the help of the lamas I vacated the body again,
studied it, and carefully re-entered. This time it was more
successful. I could see, could move an arm, a leg. With immense
effort I rose to my knees, wavered and tottered, and fell prone
again. As if I were lifting the whole weight of the world I rose
shakily to my feet.
From the house came a woman running, saying, "Oh, what have you done
now? You should come in and lie down." She looked at me and a
startled expression came upon her face, and for a moment I thought
she was going to scream in hysteria. She controlled herself, and put
an arm round my shoulders and helped me across the grass. Over a
little gravel path, up one stone step, and through a wooden doorway
and into a small hallway. From thence it was difficult indeed, for
there were many stairs to climb and I was as yet very uncertain and
clumsy in my movements.
The house really consisted of two flats and the one, which I was to
occupy, was the upper. It seemed so strange, entering an English
home in this manner, climbing up the some-what steep stairs, hanging
on to the rail to prevent myself from falling over backwards. My
limbs felt rubbery, as if I lacked full control over them-as indeed
was the case, for to gain complete mastery of this strange new body
took some days. The two lamas hovered round, showing considerable
concern, but of course there was nothing they could do. Soon they
left me, promising to return in the small hours of the night.
Slowly I entered the bedroom which was mine, stumbling like a
sleepwalker, jerking like a mechanical man. Gratefully I toppled
over on to the bed. At least, I consoled myself, I cannot fly down
now! My windows looked out on to both the front and the back of the
house. By turning my head to the right I could gaze across the small
front garden, on to the road, across to the small Cottage Hospital,
a sight which I did not find comforting in my present state.
At the other 'side of the room was the window through which, by
turning my head to the left, I could see the length of the larger
garden. It was unkempt, coarse grass growing in dumps as in a
meadow. Bushes divided the garden of one house from the next. At the
end of the grassy stretch there was a fringe of straggly trees and a
wire fence. Beyond I could see the outlines of farm buildings and a
herd of cows grazing nearby.
Outside my windows I could hear voices, but they were such "English"
voices that I found it almost impossible to understand what was
being said. The English I had heard previously had been mostly
American and Canadian, and here the strangely accented syllables of
one of the Old School Tie Brigade baffled me. My own speech was
difficult, I found. When I tried to speak I produced just a hollow
croak. My vocal cords seemed thick, strange'. I learned to speak
slowly, and to visualize what I was going to say first. I tended to
say "cha" instead of "j", making "chon" for John, and similar
errors. Sometimes I could hardly understand what I was saying
myself!
That night the astral travelling lamas came again and cheered away
my depression by telling me that now I should find astral travelling
even easier. They told me, too, of my lonely Tibetan body safely
stored in a stone coffin, under the unceasing care of three monks.
Research into old literature, they told me, showed that it would be
easy to let me have my own body, but that the complete transfer
would take a little time.
For three days I stayed in my room, resting, practising movements,
and becoming accustomed to the changed life. On the evening of the
third day I walked shakily into the garden, under cover of darkness.
Now, I found, I was be-ginning to master the body, although there
were unaccountable moments when an arm or a leg would fail to
respond to my commands.
The next morning the woman who was now known as my wife said, "You
will have to go to the Labour Exchange today to see if they have any
job for you yet" Labour Exchange? For some time it conveyed nothing
to me, until she used the term "Ministry of Labour" then it dawned
on me. I had never been to such a place and had no idea of how to
behave or what to do there. I knew, from the conversation, that it
was some place near Hampton Court but the name was Molesey.
For some reason which I did not then comprehend, I was not entitled
to claim any unemployment benefit. Later I found that if a person
left his employment voluntarily, no matter how unpleasant or
unreasonable that employment, he was not entitled to claim benefit,
not even if he had paid into the fund for twenty years.
Labour Exchange! I said, "Help me get the bicycle, and I will go."
Together we walked down the stairs, turned left to the garage now
stuffed with old furniture, and there was the bicycle, an instrument
of torture which I had used only once before, in Chungking, where I
had gone flying down the hill before I could find the brakes.
Gingerly I got on the contraption and wobbled off along the road
towards the railway bridge, turning left at the 'forked road. A man
waves cheerily, and waving back, I almost fell off. "You don't look
at all well," he called. "Go carefully!"
On I pedalled, getting strange pains in the leg. On, and turned
right, as previously instructed, into the wide road to Hampton
Court. As I rode along, my legs suddenly failed to obey my commands,
and I just managed to free-wheel across the road to tumble in a
heap, with the bicycle on top of me, on a stretch of grass beside
the road. For a moment I lay there, badly shaken, then a woman who
had been doing something to her mats outside her front door came
storming down the path, yelling, "You ought to be ashamed of
yourself, drunk at this time of the day. I saw you. I've a mind to
ring up the police!" She scowled at me, then turned and dashed back
to her house, picked up the mats and slammed the door behind her.
"How little she knows!" I thought. "How little she knows!"
For perhaps twenty minutes I lay there, recovering. People came to
their doors and stared out. People came to their windows and peered
from behind curtains. Two women came to the end of their gardens and
discussed me in loud, raucous voices. Nowhere did I detect the
slightest thought that I might be ill or in need of attention.
At last, with immense effort, I staggered to my feet, mounted the
bicycle, and rode off in the direction of Hampton Court.
CHAPTER NINE
The exchange was a dismal house in a side street. I rode up,
dismounted, and started to walk in the entrance. "Want your bike
stolen?" asked a voice behind me. I turned to the speaker. "Surely
the unemployed do not steal from each other?" I asked.
"You must be new around here; put a lock and chain round the bike or
you will have to walk home." With that the speaker shrugged his
shoulders and went into the building. I turned back and looked in
the saddle-bag of the machine. Yes, there was a lock and chain. I
was just going to put the chain round the wheel as I had seen others
do when a horrid thought struck me -where was the key? I fumbled in
those unfamiliar pockets and brought out a bunch of keys. Trying one
after the other, I eventually found the correct one.
I walked up the path and into the house. Cardboard signs with black
inked arrows pointed the way. I turned right and entered a room
where there were a lot of hard wooden chairs packed tightly
together.
"Hello, Prof!" said a voice. "Come and sit by me and wait your
turn."
I moved to the speaker and pushed my way to a chair beside him. "You
look different this morning," he continued. "What have you been
doing to yourself?"
I let him do the talking, picking up stray bits of information. The
clerk called names, and men went up to his desk and sat before him.
A name was called which seemed vaguely familiar. "Someone I know?" I
wondered. No one moved. The name was called again. "Go on - that's
you!" said my new friend. I rose and walked to the desk and sat down
as I had seen the others do.
"What's the matter with you this morning?" asked the clerk. "I saw
you come in, then I lost sight of you and thought you had gone
home." He looked at me carefully….
End of extract from this book
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