As the first heaven is located in the Desire World,—which is the
realm of light and color,—where matter is shaped most readily by thought, the little ones
are given wonderful toys impossible of construction here. They are taught to play with
colors which work upon their moral
character in exactly the manner each child requires. Anyone who is at all
sensitive is affected by the color of his clothing and surroundings. Some colors have a
depressing effect, while others inspire us with energy, and others again soothe and comfort
us. In the Desire World the effect of colors is much more intense, they are much more potent
factors of good and evil there than here, and in this color play, the child imbibes
unconsciously the qualities which it did not acquire on account of accident or lamentations
of relatives. Often it also falls to the lot of such relatives to care for a child in the
invisible world, or perhaps to give it birth and see it die. Thus they receive just
retribution[pg 179]for the wrong committed. As wars cease, and man learns to be more careful
of life, and also how to care for the dying, infant mortality, which now is so appalling,
will decrease.
The
Second Heaven.
When both the good and evil of a life has been extracted, the
spirit discards its desire body and ascends to the second heaven. The desire body then
commences to disintegrate as the physical body and the vital body have done, but it is a
peculiarity of desire stuff, that once it has been formed and inspired with life, it
persists for a considerable time. Even after that life has fled it lives a semi-conscious,
independent life. Sometimes it is drawn by magnetic attraction to relatives of the spirit
whose clothing it was, and at spiritualistic seances these shells generally impersonate the
departed spirit and deceive its relatives. As the panorama of the past life is etched into
the shells they have a memory of incidents in connection with these relatives, which
facilitates the deception. But as the intelligence has fled, they are of course unable to
give any true counsel, and that accounts[pg 180]for the inane, goody-goody nonsense of which these things deliver
themselves.
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