The Beginning
On the way home I kept thinking
about the mysterious phone call. It had been weeks since I last heard from Pépé
(which is what I call my granddad). What could be that important that he’d call
me at work? He sounded different. Excited.
‘You’re ready, Eedoo,’ he had told
me eagerly. ‘It’s time for you to learn The Truth. Could you stop by, tonight?’
What did it mean? What on earth was
on his mind?
Was he just looking for company?
After all, he was ninety one. Whatever his reasons were, he had made me
curious.
As I took the exit from the highway,
I looked up his number and called him.
‘This is me,’ he answered. ‘Who am I
speaking to?’
‘Pépé, it’s me, Eedoo. Is it alright
with you if I come over already? We could go grab a bite, or I could buy some
takeout from the Chinese and bring it along?’
‘Let’s go and eat something
together. That sounds like an excellent idea. When will you be here?’
‘I’m at the Concert Hall at the
moment. I should be there in about five minutes. I assume you still live at the
same address?’
‘I do. Next time I’ll be moving, it
will be to the graveyard,’ he joked.
It was getting hotter in the car. A
ray of sun had made its way through the dark barrage of gray clouds that had
been covering the country all day. A female police officer was smiling as
people haphazardly crossed the wide avenue on their way to some concert.
Pépé was waiting for me at the door.
His face was beaming. While I was parking the car, I noticed he was impatiently
rubbing his hand, and talking to himself.
‘Come on in, come,’ he said as he
strode backward. ‘How are things at work? Busy?’
‘Yes,’ I replied slightly irritated
because I didn’t feel very good in my new job.
I walked into the living room and
took a seat at the table. ‘We’ve got a partner meeting tomorrow, for which they
will need many reports. Hard to believe how those people can juggle statistics.
And what is it good for? Anyway... it’s their company.’
‘I thought you were a programmer.’
‘I’m starting to think I should have
stuck to that.’
‘Time for a change,’ Pépé chuckled.
‘I have just changed jobs. I don’t
get it. I’m working for a great company, but somehow I just can’t seem to fit
in. Even though I had imagined it would be right up my alley.’
‘And you really don’t know why?’
‘No. I can’t put my finger on it. I
have a decent income, a smart looking company car, great colleagues –
everything you could ask for in a job. And yet I feel I don’t belong there.
It’s as if I’m not supposed to be there; as if I’d have to be doing something
else, but I don’t know what. It doesn’t make any sense.’
‘I said you were ready!’ Pépé had a
twinkle in his eyes.
Suddenly I felt a wave of warmth
rolling over me. Time seemed to stand still. An image flashed through my mind.
A being, filled with love, light and warmth was standing behind me, and put its
hand on my shoulder. I felt a gentle sensation, electric-like, flow through my
body. When I turned around, it had disappeared.
‘Did you see that?’ I exclaimed as I
put my hands on the table and pushed the chair backwards with my legs.
Pépé just continued grinning, but
didn’t say a word.
What had just happened? Was stress
getting the better of me? Or was it my imagination? It couldn’t have been. It
seemed so real. Surely I couldn’t muster such feelings. Or could I?
Pépé turned around and put his coat
on. ‘Let’s go and get something to eat first.’
‘Do you have any tables available?’
he asked the young lady who had come to welcome us as we entered the Chinese
restaurant.
‘Do you have any reservations?’ she
inquired very politely, while gently bowing.
‘De Wulf,’ he replied. ‘Two people.’
‘Table sixteen,’ she said promptly.
‘Next to the fish tank. Please follow me.’
The restaurant was almost empty. The
young lady guided us to our table, and then took our coats.
‘Would you like anything to drink?’
she asked as she handed us our menus.
‘We’ll have a bottle of Champaign,’
Pépé answered dryly.
There was a short silence, as we
studied the menu.
‘Your Champaign,’ the young lady
said, as she solemnly leaned forward. ‘Have you made your choice yet?’
‘We’ll take the Chinese Rice Table
for two,’ Pépé replied without consulting me. ‘And may The Truth prevail.’
I shook my head, raised my glass,
and took a sip.
‘Now do tell me what in Heaven’s
name you are going on about?’
‘Where do I start” he asked himself
out aloud. ‘It all started the day your grandmother died.’ He paused for a
while. A tender, loving smile appeared on his face.
‘I’ll never forget the moment she
died. One morning, the doctor called. He told me she could leave any moment now.
As fast as I could I got into my car and drove over to the hospital. When I
arrived, she was staring at the ceiling. A radiant expression covered her
face.’
‘Mum is here,’ she said and turned
her head toward me.
I was a bit shocked when she said
that, since her mother had passed away more than twenty years before.
‘She’s asking me to join her,’ she
whispered. ‘I asked her to wait a while longer, until you were here.’
My throat clammed up. She lay there
so peacefully and relaxed.
The ceiling had caught her attention
again. ‘I’m coming,’ she said as she turned her head once more to me. ‘You’ve
been a good husband.’ She smiled, as she looked for my hand, and pressed her
lips. I promptly gave her a kiss.
‘I can feel your love, really feel
it,’ she continued. ‘You’re a handsome man, and I will always love you. But
there is one thing I want you to promise me.’
She looked me straight in the eyes,
and I started to melt.
‘Please try and get to know more
about spirituality and the realms of spirits. Mum told me you could learn to
communicate with me, if you’d like to.’ She put her head on the pillow as if
she was preparing to go to sleep, and peacefully closed her eyes.
‘I’m ready now,’ she whispered
softly, as she breathed her last breath.
‘And what happened next?’ I blurted
out, without thinking.
‘I talked about it to several
people. Everybody thought I was mad. Your mother thought I had lost the plot.
She told me I was going senile and that I shouldn’t raise false hopes in people
like that.’
There was a short silence.
‘At a given moment, I decided to
attend a séance which was being conducted in a local pub,’ Pépé said, as if
awaking from a nap.
‘In a local pub?’ I repeated
laughingly.
‘It happens. Many of those pubs have
a room in the back that can be used.’
‘A room in a pub doesn’t seem like
the ideal place to be conducting a séance to me.’
‘It doesn’t really matter where it
is done. What’s important is the medium,’ Pépé responded. ‘During the séance
the medium pointed at me. She said I had the gift of automatic writing. She
told me to try it out a couple of times so I could understand what she meant.
The next evening I sat down with a pen in my hand, staring at an empty sheet of
paper. After a while my hand started moving, but the only thing that appeared
was a line filled with little u’s. I felt so ridiculous that I nearly decided
to never try again. The only reason I ended up trying again anyway, is because
I had promised your grandmother.’
‘And did you succeed?’ I asked with
a mocking undertone.
‘One evening, I was sitting at the
table when once again my hand started moving. Only this time, a sentence
appeared, “I am here, Helen.” I thought I was deceiving myself. Maybe,
subconsciously, I was pulling my own leg. My hand instantly started moving
again, and this time the text “No, not your subconscious. Helen.” appeared on
the sheet. I thought I was losing it. I couldn’t believe that your grandma was
writing. But again my hand moved. ‘You’re not losing it. It is me, Helen.”
Angrily I pushed my pen away, and it
rolled over to the other side of the desk. How could I be kidding myself like
that? Why would I be inflicting hurt on myself by believing nonsense like
this?’
His eyes drifted off to the
Champaign glass he was twirling between his fingers.
‘You probably think I’m insane,’ he
said. ‘Most people do. I even thought so on occasions. Nobody ever wanted to
listen. Let the old fool carry on, they must have thought. But I never should
have gone to Eddy. That has been my biggest mistake.’
‘What do you mean?’ I asked, confused.
‘Well, after a while I started
writing down several messages a day.’
‘You’re still talking about that
automatic writing, right?’
Pépé put down his glass on the
table. ‘Right! At first I doubted the authenticity of the messages. I asked
your grandmother to give me some proof that she was writing the texts, and that
they were not merely the figments of my sick imagination. So she gave me a lot
of information that only she and I could have known. But of course that still
didn’t exclude the possibility that I had been writing the texts all along. And
then she wrote, “In the attic there is an old casket. In that casket, at the
bottom, on the right, you’ll find the red scarf you gave me for my twenty first
birthday.” ’
‘So, did you check it out?’
‘Of course, I did.’
‘And?’
‘She was right. The casket was
underneath several cardboard boxes. When I opened it, I could see a glimpse of
red on the right. I pushed some of the content to the side, and there was the
red scarf.’
‘Yeah, right,’ I reacted, half-mockingly.
‘Wait, I’m not finished yet,’ he
continued. ‘I still had my doubts. And then the next day she wrote “The bottom drawer
of the dresser has a false bottom. You have to pull it out as if it is a drawer,
too. There you’ll find twenty diaries, all mine.”
‘I don’t believe it.’
‘It’s true. I opened the dresser,
found the hidden compartment, complete with the twenty diaries; all written by
your grandmother.’
I leaned backward. ‘So you can
communicate with spirits?’
‘I know it’s hard to believe,’ Pépé
said.
‘Well, it’s taken me by surprise,’ I
responded. ‘I had all these questions running around in my head, and here you
are, telling me you are a medium.’
‘I said you were ready,’ Pépé uttered
while grabbing his glass of Champaign. ‘They asked me to tell you The Truth.’
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’ I
asked, irritated.
Pépé leaned forward. ‘After I had
received a number of messages from your grandmother, I started getting the
knack of automatic writing. By then I had also received messages from my father
and my grandmother, Ann. My evenings had gotten quite busy. The only thing I
did was communicate with all of them. Until that fateful evening.’
Pépé leaned forward even further,
and looked around to make sure nobody was near.
‘I don’t really know how to tell you
this,’ he whispered. ‘I’m afraid you’ll think I’m completely insane.’
‘Why would you assume something like
that? You haven’t even told me anything yet.’
‘I know for how long I had my
doubts.’
‘You just told me that they had
asked you to tell me the truth. If they, whoever “they” may be, would have
thought that I wouldn’t believe you, why would they have asked you to tell me
in the first place?’
Pépé looked at me from head to toe.
He remained calm and folded his hands. ‘All right, then,’ he began. ‘That night
I got a message from Jesus.’
I burst out laughing. ‘Form Jesus?’
‘I said you wouldn’t believe me,’
Pépé replied, severely disappointed.
‘Are you serious?’ I tried to change
the tone of the conversation.
‘Do you enjoy being ridiculed?’ he
asked very seriously. I shrugged, and then shook my head.
‘Do you think I enjoy being ridiculed?’
I didn’t have to answer to know he
was serious about this.
‘He told me he needed me to convey
important information to humanity. He asked me to let go of my prejudices, and
that he would tell me all about the Way of The Truth.’
‘So what did you do?’ I asked, with
growing interest.
‘I continued to doubt,’ he said quietly.
‘In the end it was your grandmother who persuaded me. She asked me to get over
my doubts. She told me not to be afraid, that this wasn’t some spirit playing a
game on me. What really convinced me was a message that went something like
this, “Do you remember what you hated the most? That people would judge you or
jump to conclusions without hearing your side of the story. Aren’t you doing
the same thing now?” ’
‘So, if I understand correctly,
that’s when you started getting a series of messages that were called “The
Truth”?’
‘That’s correct.’
‘Have you got them on hand,
somewhere?’ I inquired with growing curiosity.
‘No,’ he said. ‘The reason for that
is simple.’ Pépé took the bottle of Champaign and topped up our glasses.
‘After a while I couldn’t contain my
enthusiasm anymore and started talking to some friends about the messages.
Pretty soon, they got obsessed with The Truth as well. Word started spreading
that séances were being held at my home, and that messages were being received
from Jesus and other well-known people.’
‘Other well-known people?’ I
repeated enthusiastically.
‘I’ll get into that later,’ Pépé
continued. ‘Anyway... One day I received a letter in the mail. It was an invitation
Eddy had sent. “Very important” the envelope mentioned. Blissfully ignorant, I
went to the rendez-vous the next day, only to find out that Bishop Jacobs was
there as well...’
‘Mister De Wulf,’ the bishop said.
He was wearing a long purple robe, as if he had just performed a funeral mass.
His attitude was authoritarian. He indicated with his hand that I should sit
down. ‘I’ve learned from Eddy that séances are being held at your home.’
‘That is correct,’ I responded. ‘Is
there anything wrong with that?’
‘I was told that you claim to
receive communications from Jesus. Is that correct?’ the bishop continued
without paying any attention to my question.
‘From Jesus and from many others. Is
there anything wrong with that?’ I repeated my question.
‘Could I have a look at those
communications?’
His attitude was getting on my
nerves.
‘Why? Do you think I’m doing
something wrong?’
‘I’m just curious about the content
of these communications. Does that surprise you?’
‘No,’ I answered, somewhat shaken
because he kept ignoring my question.
‘So could I have a look at them?’ he
reiterated his question.
‘Sure,’ I answered politely. ‘When?’
‘I am here, right now. It makes sense
to do it now, rather than having to come back for it, doesn’t it?’
The bishop got up and pointed at
Eddy to open the door.
He put his hand on my shoulder.
‘Let’s go. I am eager to find out what those communications are all about.’
Some minutes later we were standing
in my living room, and I gave him some texts to look at. He took them, and
placed them in his lap, without paying any further attention to them.
‘Aren’t you going to read them?’ I
asked with a frown.
‘Not at all,’ he smirked.
‘So you had no intention whatsoever
to learn about The Truth,’ I sighed. ‘All you wanted was to get your hands on
the texts.’
The bishop burst out laughing.
‘Right you are. These texts of yours are causing too much commotion, Mister De
Wulf. People are starting to ask questions. If I were you, I’d put an end to
those séances.’
I was taken aback. ‘Why?’ I asked.
The bishop put the texts in a
plastic bag. ‘The world doesn’t need this, Mister De Wulf. There is already too
much separation among the different beliefs. Let us stick to what we know, and
agree on that. That’s already hard enough as it is.’
‘That’s exactly where The Truth can
play an important role.’
The bishop got up and made his way
to the door. ‘I disagree. We think you are possessed and that you are trying to
steer the faithful off the right track. That is the message that I personally
will spread in town.’
‘You can’t keep people from learning
The Truth.’
The bishop stopped in his tracks,
turned around briskly and looked me straight in the eyes. ‘The truth? Who says
this is the truth? And even if it was, people don’t want to know about the
truth. They only want to hear what they want to hear. Do you honestly think
people will choose your side, a deluded freak who claims to receive messages
from spirits? What do you think they’d prefer, to become the target of mockery
themselves, or to join in mocking you?’
‘Don’t you want to know The Truth?’
I asked.
‘I know the truth,’ he responded.
‘And it’s not up to me to question it.’
‘You had better’ I reacted promptly.
‘I hope I did get through to you,
Mister De Wulf, and that you got the message,’ the bishop said with menace in
his voice. ‘Goodbye.’
Eddy shoved me roughly aside, causing
me to fall down heavily on the floor; then he closed the door.
I gave Pépé a puzzled look. ‘Didn’t
you get up and run after them?’
‘Why would I?’ he asked with a grin.
‘To get the texts back, of course,’
I countered upset.
Pépé burst out laughing. ‘Now you
didn’t believe for one second that I would actually be stupid enough to give
the original texts, did you? I gave them some of your grandmother’s old
diaries. I suspected all along something wasn’t right.’
‘So where are the texts now?’ I
asked with an inquisitive smile.
‘They’re scattered all over the
place. Some are kept by some interesting spiritual friends.’
‘Some interesting spiritual
friends?’ I repeated.
‘Yes. One is in the hands of a
psychic, another with a healer, one with a public speaker, and one with Jean,
my best friend. He has helped a lot of people with their transition.’
‘Aha,’ I said, both amused and
intrigued. ‘And did the bishop ever return?’
‘Both he and Eddy have threatened me
on several more occasions. And they have tried to obtain the texts, but thus
far, they haven’t succeeded.’
‘So who is this Eddy character,
anyway?’
‘Eddy used to be a friend of mine.
We exchanged ideas on The Truth on a regular basis. He had asked me to publish
the texts, and wanted me to hand them over to him for that purpose.
I felt something wasn’t right about
his request and told him I’d sleep on it, and let him know. When, later that
evening, I asked for advice, Jesus told me it was better not to go ahead
because Eddy lacked the right motivation. He wanted to publish it under his own
name and get all the credit as well as the profits. When I confronted him the
next morning, he threw a tantrum and went straight to the bishop.’
I shook my head. ‘Some friend!’
Pépé just shrugged. ‘Can’t do
anything about it. It’s his life, not mine.’
‘What’s the first chapter about?’ I
asked, as Pépé was slurping up his last spoon of soup.
‘The first chapter is about Jesus.
He thought it would be a good idea to tell a bit more about himself. That way,
I could get to know him better, as well as learn how to open up to him.’
I stared blankly at Pépé. ‘Learn how
to open up to him?’
‘Yes,’ Pépé replied. ‘You understand
that these messages don’t just manifest by themselves. If somebody from the
spirit world wants to communicate with you, there has to be a rapport between
you and that person.’
‘A rapport?’
‘There is a law that governs the
communications between man and spirit. It’s called “The Law of Rapport and
Communication.” You can compare it to the principle of “like attracts like.”
Within the spirit world, thoughts are very important. What you must realise is
that we, as human beings, consist of three different parts, a physical body, a
spiritual body and a soul.’
‘Where does that leave the astral
body or the etheric body?’ I asked.
‘Let’s just call those “spiritual
body”.’
‘All right. So what is the soul
then?’
‘Over the ages, the actual meaning
of the word soul has faded and has been generalized, and as a result most
people use the word without really knowing what it truly means. The most
important thing to comprehend is that the soul is something completely separate
and independent of any other body.’
I didn’t get it, and the look on my
face gave me away.
‘It is the most important thing we
have. Just wait until you read the chapter on the soul. I’ll give you further
details then.’
Pépé paused. He could see I was
reflecting on what he said.
‘Let me try and explain the law in a
different way. Imagine I’m a musician. I love music, but that doesn’t mean I’m
interested in finding out how musical instruments work, from a technical point
of view. At a party, I’m introduced to two people, one is a musician, and the
other a technician. Who do you think will draw my attention?’
‘The musician.’
‘Exactly. And why?’
‘Because you are more interested in
music than in the technical aspects of it.’
‘Makes sense, doesn’t it? It’s the
same way between man and spirit. If, as a man, you are interested in spiritual
matters, you will attract spirits that are interested in spiritual matters. If,
as a man, you are interested in sciences, you will attract spirits who share
that interest in sciences. Spirits enjoy sharing their knowledge with others,
and because of that they also talk to people. They know they will get through
as long as they share an affinity for the subject at hand.’
In a way, this made sense, but I
still thought the whole thing was ludicrous. It must be quite a carnival, then,
with all those spirits constantly hopping around us.
‘Does that also apply to interests
that are less positive?’
‘Of course. Like attracts like. If
you enjoy inflicting pain on others, you will attract spirits that will
encourage you to do so. After all, they enjoy it as well, and they take
pleasure in the fact that you’re willing to do it with them.’
‘So why do these people get the gift
of being a medium?’
‘Did you think spirits only interact
with mediums?’ Pépé asked laughingly.
‘Yes,’ I replied hesitantly.
‘You silly pumpkin!’ he laughed.
‘Mediums have the gift of hearing or perceiving what spirits say or do. But
that doesn’t mean that spirits only talk to mediums. Every day, everybody is
influenced by the spirit world.’
‘What?’ I shouted out. ‘Do you mean
to tell me that all of us are under the influence of spirits that presumably
wander around among us?’ I couldn’t believe my ears. That simply couldn’t be
true.
‘I know it’s hard to believe,’ he
replied.
‘Hard to believe,’ I snapped. ‘Now
that’s an understatement!’
‘Many people refuse to believe it
because it undermines their quiet little lives. It takes away their sense of
security. The idea that we’re never really alone, and that there might be a
spirit around, talking to us, is terrifying to most people.’
I shook my head. ‘Don’t you think
you’re taking this a bit too far, Pépé?’
‘No, but I can perfectly understand
your reaction. I won’t hold it against you.’
Pépé glanced at the ceiling,
carefully weighing his words.
‘If spirits really exist, then what
do you think they are?’
‘People who died,’ I shrugged.
‘You remember I mentioned it was
important to bear in mind that we consist of three different parts?’
‘Yes.’
‘Do you remember which ones?’
‘A physical body, a spiritual body
and a soul,’ I replied, feeling as if I was taking a test.
‘Keeping that in mind, what would
you say a spirit is?’
‘A spiritual body and a soul.’
‘Exactly,’ Pépé replied. ‘The only
difference between us and them is that we still have our physical bodies, and
they don’t. Then why would it be so hard to accept that they can talk to us and
can have influence on us? They’re just the same as us.’
‘Then why can’t we all see them or
hear them?’ I retorted, hoping he wouldn’t be able to give me an answer.
‘Because we’ve become too
materialistic,’ he commented casually. ‘Each of us has the potential to
communicate with the spirit world. We just don’t remember how to. Throughout
the ages, people have been burned at the stake, or have been killed in other
ways. So out of fear we haven’t developed those abilities, even rejected them. Just
mentioning them was no longer allowed. If you did, you ran the chance of being reported.
Or people would stop interacting with you, fearing they might be considered a
witch or some weirdo. That fear is still very prevalent among people. It has
become our habit to ignore those matters, and to ridicule those who don’t. Man
is a creature of habit. It requires courage and sacrifices to break habits.
We tend to consider our habits a
good thing, for no other reason than that we’ve grown accustomed to them. How
often don’t you hear, “We’ve been doing it for years, so it can’t be that bad.”
It has become customary to label mediums as freaks. But if you have the courage
to closely examine the past, you’ll learn that most habits have more negative
effects than positive. Habits often are obstacles to our growth.
What you’ll notice, is that each
time we broke with a specific custom, the world became a better place. Just as
an example, take human sacrifices to the gods. These days, everybody is filled
with horror just thinking about it, yet at some stage in our past, it was
considered normal. It’s when we learn to break with traditions and customs that
we help make the world a better place.’
What Pépé said was right, yet
something in me objected to what he was saying. I sat upright, and sighed
deeply. ‘This is beyond me, Pépé! I’m not saying you’re not telling the truth,
but it’s all very confusing.’
‘I know the feeling,’ he smiled.
‘But once you start investigating, you’ll keep on getting confirmations of the
underlying Truth. Take, e.g., the power of positive thinking. Once we’re
familiar with the law, it doesn’t sound ridiculous at all anymore. When you think negative thoughts, you attract
those who will strengthen that negativity. If you’re able to transform your
thoughts into positive thoughts, you attract those who will strengthen
positivity. Because of that, those who had a negative impact on you lose their
influence, and disappear.’
‘Enjoy your meal,’ Pépé said as the
young lady put four different dishes on the table.
The dishes were garnished with
vegetables that were cut in the shapes of animals and flowers. The food smelled
delicious. We both enjoyed our meal, without uttering a single word.
As soon as I had my fill, I
continued with my questions. ‘Can you give me any proof with regard to what
you’ve told me, or will still tell me, for that matter?’
‘Of course, I wouldn’t dare tell you
anything that you couldn’t verify yourself.’
‘So where is the proof?’ I asked.
‘I can’t really explain. You’ll have
to experience it by yourself; otherwise you won’t believe it, anyway. It’s
something that requires practice, not theory.’ Pépé smiled.
‘You have to learn to walk before
you can run. First you should consider whether you’re really willing to find
proof. Your whole life will be turned upside down. Nothing will ever be the
same again. Are you willing and ready to kiss your cosy little life goodbye and
discover The Truth? Or do you prefer to avoid taking any risks so that you are
not ridiculed and just blindly accepted by the crowd?
I believe it was Einstein who once
said that the loudest critics typically are the ones that are most ignorant
about a matter. He was right about that. It’s not because millions or even
billions of people don’t know The Truth that it doesn’t exist or wouldn’t be
The Truth. Copernicus was exposed to enormous criticism when he expanded upon a
theorem of Pythagoras to conclude that the earth rotated around the sun. He
even risked capital punishment for going against the established order of
things. And today we can hardly believe people could have been so stupid as to
believe that the sun rotated around the earth. In the same way, it is
sufficient that even one person knows The Truth. If that one person provides
proof the whole worldview changes. And that’s why you should never rely solely
on what others tell you. You must find your own proof. Until you do, you must
question what others tell you. If Copernicus had listened to what others told
him, without looking for proof, he would never have found the proof he did.’
We finished our desserts, I took
Pépé home, and filled the bath.
It has been a strange day. It had
left me with a slight headache. As I got into the bath, I remembered a conversation
I once had with a colleague. He told me he had noticed that many people are
looking for alternatives for the faith they’ve lost. People had turned their
backs on religions because those didn’t provide the answers they were looking
for. He had noticed how they started looking for something else and how all of
them felt attracted to spirituality. What struck him was that people didn’t
dare talk about it in public. But as soon as he would bring the topic up, they
would listen intently and questions would start arising. He said he had started
to question his own sceptical attitude. The reason was simple. The fact that so
many people had doubts, and felt that there must be something more than what we
know or see, had made him doubt as well. There must be something to it. More
and more people had the courage to talk about their Near-Death-Experiences, or
other spiritual experiences. Granted, some of them probably were hoaxers or
frauds. But they couldn’t all have been.
So what if my colleague was right?
Would that imply that mankind really was ready to learn about The Truth, and
had I gotten myself an invitation with a front-row seat to this event? Or was I
getting carried away?
I rested my head on the side of the
bath tub and relaxed. I saw a scene where my grandmother was walking through a
meadow. She was holding my hand firmly and looked at me lovingly. I could smell
the poppies and the wet grass. The sun was shining on our faces. For as far as
we could see, there wasn’t a cloud in the sky. To our left there was a little
pond where Pépé was fishing. Grandma took both my hands and gently started
spinning me around. I looked at the ground and saw the colours meld into big
patches.
I closed my eyes, and it felt like
the bath tub was spinning. Suddenly I got the impression I could hear Grandma whisper.
‘Give him the benefit of the doubt. What have you got to lose? Just imagine
that he really can give you The Truth? Would you ever be able to forgive
yourself later on, should you decide not to listen to him?’
Whether
it was a figment of my imagination or not, the little voice was right.
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