Cosmic Mandala of Spiritual Harmony

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Prompt

Part 1. Is this possible for an awakened person? Being aware that one's consciousness is being reborn for the last time, and after death it will rejoin the Divine consciousness. ------ What you’re describing is a very old and widely shared idea across spiritual traditions—but whether it’s literally possible to know this about oneself is where things get more nuanced. In traditions like Nirvana in Buddhism, or Moksha in Hinduism, there is indeed the idea that a being can reach a final liberation—no more rebirth, no more individual cycle, and a merging or dissolution into ultimate reality. Similarly, in some mystical branches of Christianity or Islam (like Sufism), there’s the idea of union with the Divine—sometimes described as losing the separate self in God. However, here’s the important distinction: These traditions often say that awakening brings deep insight, including freedom from fear of death and the sense of separateness. But they are usually very cautious about claims like “I know this is my last rebirth” or “I will merge with the Divine after this life.” Why? Because making that claim can subtly come from the ego—the very thing awakening is supposed to dissolve. For example: In Buddhism, even advanced practitioners are warned against prematurely claiming final enlightenment. In many traditions, true realization is described as quiet, humble, and not self-declaring. So is it possible? Experientially: Yes—people can reach states where the boundary between self and “everything” dissolves, and death no longer feels like an end. Certainty about the future (“this is my last life”): Most traditions would say that kind of narrative certainty is not reliable, and possibly a subtle illusion. A more grounded way to phrase genuine awakening would be: > Not “I know what will happen after death,” but “the need to know what happens after death has fallen away.” If you want, I can break down how different traditions specifically describe this “final stage” and how they tell the difference between real realization and self-deception.

More about Cosmic Mandala of Spiritual Harmony

Part 1.
Is this possible for an awakened person?
Being aware that one's consciousness is being reborn for the last time, and after death it will rejoin the Divine consciousness.
------
What you’re describing is a very old and widely shared idea across spiritual traditions—but whether it’s literally possible to know this about oneself is where things get more nuanced.
In traditions like Nirvana in Buddhism, or Moksha in Hinduism, there is indeed the idea that a being can reach a final liberation—no more rebirth, no more individual cycle, and a merging or dissolution into ultimate reality.
Similarly, in some mystical branches of Christianity or Islam (like Sufism), there’s the idea of union with the Divine—sometimes described as losing the separate self in God.
However, here’s the important distinction:
These traditions often say that awakening brings deep insight, including freedom from fear of death and the sense of separateness.
But they are usually very cautious about claims like “I know this is my last rebirth” or “I will merge with the Divine after this life.”
Why? Because making that claim can subtly come from the ego—the very thing awakening is supposed to dissolve.
For example:
In Buddhism, even advanced practitioners are warned against prematurely claiming final enlightenment.
In many traditions, true realization is described as quiet, humble, and not self-declaring.
So is it possible?
Experientially: Yes—people can reach states where the boundary between self and “everything” dissolves, and death no longer feels like an end.
Certainty about the future (“this is my last life”): Most traditions would say that kind of narrative certainty is not reliable, and possibly a subtle illusion.
A more grounded way to phrase genuine awakening would be:
> Not “I know what will happen after death,” but “the need to know what happens after death has fallen away.”
If you want, I can break down how different traditions specifically describe this “final stage” and how they tell the difference between real realization and self-deception.

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