Julia Assante, Author of The Last Frontier - July 6, 2013
Where Did the Road Go?
Seriah Azkath
4.5 • 621 Ratings
🗓️ 7 July 2013
⏱️ 64 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
We talk with Julia Assante, Ph.D., author of The Last Frontier. Julia is an established social historian of the ancient Near East (PhD Columbia University). Yet for over three decades she has also been an active professional intuitive. In her book, The Last Frontier: Exploring the Afterlife and Transforming Our Fear of Death, she applies the insights and methodologies gained from both fields in order to present a uniquely rigorous investigation of where we go after we die. Quoted from her website(www.juliaassante.com)
"The Last Frontier explores all phases of death, dying, the afterlife and how to communicate with those who are living it. Above all it is a critical investigation of what happens when we die. That means it is not based on religious teachings or on spiritual traditions but on research drawn from several sources: from consciousness research, Near Death Experiences and Nearing Death Awareness studies; from physics, quantum biology and parapsychology; from the records of past-life therapists, medical personnel and bereavement counselors, and from the many thousands of published testimonies people have given of their personal communication with the dead. It is also based on my own experience working with the dying and the dead as a professional medium. The social historian side of me examines the various constructions of the afterlife from ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia to the present to show that cultures produced different versions of the afterlife to meet specific socio-political agendas. The afterlife religions currently teach are recent inventions in the course of humanity’s long history. So is sin, as we understand it today. In fact, the heaven-and-hell notion of the afterlife developed centuries after the Books of the New Testament were written.
One of its central questions The Last Frontier answers is why we know so shockingly little about what happens after death. Just asking people what they think happens is likely to cause discomfort, if not scorn. Others might say they don’t know and warn you not to think about it. Still others might recite the standard heaven-and-hell version, while the less orthodox will talk about joining deceased family members. Few dare to seriously reflect on life after death. Even fewer listen to what their intuitions tell them. We feel that thinking about death is macabre, unhealthy, somehow anti-life and brings the Grim Reaper one step closer. Most people keep their distance by taking the “I dunno” stance and leave it to science to figure it out.
Given that death is everyone’s final destination—our “last frontier,” you would think scientists would make every effort to discover what happens after we die. Instead, most of them will tell you nothing happens; when your body dies, it’s over. But how do they know? No scientist or skeptic to date has been able to provide a shred of proof that the end of the body spells the end of consciousness too. Even worse, they turn their backs on the enormous amount of evidence that does demonstrate postmortem survival."
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | The opinions expressed by the host and guests on Where Did the Road Go are their own and do not represent those of WVBR or its management. |
| 0:08.9 | Our aim is to explore the fringe, lost civilizations, alternative science, the paranormal, and much more. |
| 0:15.1 | Join us on the web at where did the road go.com where you can send us questions for our live or future guests by email or the |
| 0:22.2 | live chat room and remember to subscribe to us on iTunes. |
| 0:28.7 | And now welcome to this week's edition of Where Did the Road Go? |
| 0:34.1 | So tonight on Where Did the Road Go? We have Julia Asante. We're going to be talking about |
| 0:39.4 | all matters regarding life after death and life and death in general. Welcome to the show, |
| 0:45.8 | Julia. Welcome. Thank you. It's a wonderful welcome to get. |
| 0:50.9 | And want to give people a little bit of your history and then how you got into this field of research? |
| 0:59.0 | I was born into it. I was born into Deep Morning. I didn't realize that my, at the time, just before my grandfather died just after my birth, he was channeling. |
| 1:13.0 | I had no idea until years later when I was cleaning out my mother's effects after she died. |
| 1:19.2 | I had a very troubled childhood, which is one reason, as I explained in my book, one reason why I |
| 1:25.4 | maintained a lot of psychic skills that people allow to atrophy. |
| 1:30.3 | And in my early 20s, I started working as a professional psychic. |
| 1:37.3 | And soon after that, I started working with dead people because of someone who died and died in denial and in rage. |
| 1:47.2 | And it took me three days for her to get her to accept that she had in deep past. |
| 1:52.3 | It was nothing she could do to return. |
| 1:54.3 | She wouldn't be able to help her children if she reincarnated right away. |
| 1:58.6 | And that became a source of fascination for me. And I've also had tons of |
| 2:03.4 | deaths in my life. Okay. Yeah, you had a pretty large amount of deaths in your life from the sound of it. |
| 2:10.5 | Yeah. And do you think that was something that, almost like the universe pushing you down this road? |
| 2:23.3 | What pushed me down this road more than anything was the intolerable levels of grief that I carried? Fear for the deaths of animals, the deaths of, mostly animals, things that were babies. |
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