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Chris Watkins

April 27, 1957 - July 21, 2021

Thinking back, I've had my successes and my failures too, both have taught me lessons and should not be ignored. Truth be told, gambles often come out even at best. We make our choices and we abide by them

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Steve Watkins 2021-08-14 17:10:04 wrote:

Words by Neil Watkins: We are here today to celebrate the life of Chris, my dad. A man whose wings of love spread far and wide to a great number of people over his 64 years on planet earth. Dad was someone who always had time for the people he knew and would go to no end to improve their lives. A deep and considered individual, sometimes he was loud and the life and soul of the party. Other times he was silent and absorbing the perspective of the moment while considering a way to capture an idea into a future work of writing. Many of the people that knew my dad knew him here at his house and that is why we have chosen this as the most appropriate place to celebrate him. Dad was not brought up religious and as a young man didn’t follow any religion. But then in his early 30s he did gain a keen interest in Christianity and became obsessed with the bible. He would sit us 3 down and read us passages of an evening and then explain to us his own interpretation of them. We hated it but he enjoyed sharing his wisdom through those interpretations. A few years later he moved on from Christianity and decided that the information offered did not provide a complete understanding of reality. So he began to study Hinduism. Again he became very obsessed in his pursuit of truth and at one point he did think about officially becoming a Hindu. He believed that their book, “The Bhagavad Gita” did contain within it the truth of all things. He maintained until the very end of his life that everybody must read this book. He was so passionate about it, he once invited the Jehovah witnesses in to educate them. He hammered his point home so well, it was them edging towards the door trying to get out as fast as possible… In the last few years of his life I had the opportunity to discuss the greater spiritual principles of life and we agreed that following any religious doctrine made no sense versus searching for your own moral code in simply trying to be the very best human that you can be. Reaching any point of static truth can only generate an inability to evolve that truth. But we did both very much agree on something my dad would quote from the “Bhagavad Gita”. That all things that are generated by consciousness, eventually return to it and that returning by the conscious knowledge of the process is the purpose. To remember your own divine origin and overcome the illusion of separation that is this life. Birth and death are merely an illusory principle of this momentary experience. Energy is never created nor is it destroyed. It can only transmute from one form to another. In his last few days I reminded him of this truth and he responded “I know”. One of the most difficult experiences that we have to go through in this life is how we cope with the loss of someone that we love. Most of what causes us to struggle so much is a lack of awareness as to what death is. Causing a fear of the unknown and a lack of acceptance of the process. But accepting without denial that death is inevitable, is a perspective that allows us to comprehend the preciousness of life. After all it is the fragility of life that makes it so special. Allowing ourselves to understand that death, while it is the end of this physical cycle, is not the end of the soul brings us comfort in knowing that the ones who go before us are now pain free and really are resting in a more peaceful existence. We go out the way we come in, with a purity that gets forgotten in the middle. And it’s our recognition of mortality that gives us an opportunity to remember that pure and humble state of mind and to remember that it is the greatest lesson we can take from our loss. When we strip away that which occupies our busy minds we are left with a silence and a stillness. A peaceful acceptance of the whole of the moment that we are experiencing unhindered by distractive desire. There is nothing that we really need greater than a deep seated feeling of appreciation for what stands before us in this now moment. And that feeling is a choice that we ourselves can make in any second. It is the lack of the choice to feel this way that allows us all of our mistakes that form regrets. It is the only reason we allow ourselves to mistreat another. Because we forget that one day this person will be gone. No aspect of reality can or will remain as it is and in time all people and all things will return to where they came from. This is not morbid or negative thinking. It is the antidote to complacency and the catalyst to heartfelt appreciation. Death is a reminder that time is short and we must take responsibility for keeping our thoughts and actions pure. We must remember that what is important is not to chase an illusory concept of success but to be successful in cultivating our humanity and having the courage to perceive the beautiful mundane instead of reducing it to less than what could be, in an idealistic future.

Steve Watkins 2021-08-14 17:10:04 wrote: Words by Neil Watkins: We are here today to celebrate the life of Chris, my dad. A man whose wings of love spread far and wide to a great number of people over his 64 years on planet earth. Dad was someone who always had time for the people he knew and would go to no end to improve their lives. A deep and considered individual, sometimes he was loud and the life and soul of the party. Other times he was silent and absorbing the perspective of the moment while considering a way to capture an idea into a future work of writing. Many of the people that knew my dad knew him here at his house and that is why we have chosen this as the most appropriate place to celebrate him. Dad was not brought up religious and as a young man didn’t follow any religion. But then in his early 30s he did gain a keen interest in Christianity and became obsessed with the bible. He would sit us 3 down and read us passages of an evening and then explain to us his own interpretation of them. We hated it but he enjoyed sharing his wisdom through those interpretations. A few years later he moved on from Christianity and decided that the information offered did not provide a complete understanding of reality. So he began to study Hinduism. Again he became very obsessed in his pursuit of truth and at one point he did think about officially becoming a Hindu. He believed that their book, “The Bhagavad Gita” did contain within it the truth of all things. He maintained until the very end of his life that everybody must read this book. He was so passionate about it, he once invited the Jehovah witnesses in to educate them. He hammered his point home so well, it was them edging towards the door trying to get out as fast as possible… In the last few years of his life I had the opportunity to discuss the greater spiritual principles of life and we agreed that following any religious doctrine made no sense versus searching for your own moral code in simply trying to be the very best human that you can be. Reaching any point of static truth can only generate an inability to evolve that truth. But we did both very much agree on something my dad would quote from the “Bhagavad Gita”. That all things that are generated by consciousness, eventually return to it and that returning by the conscious knowledge of the process is the purpose. To remember your own divine origin and overcome the illusion of separation that is this life. Birth and death are merely an illusory principle of this momentary experience. Energy is never created nor is it destroyed. It can only transmute from one form to another. In his last few days I reminded him of this truth and he responded “I know”. One of the most difficult experiences that we have to go through in this life is how we cope with the loss of someone that we love. Most of what causes us to struggle so much is a lack of awareness as to what death is. Causing a fear of the unknown and a lack of acceptance of the process. But accepting without denial that death is inevitable, is a perspective that allows us to comprehend the preciousness of life. After all it is the fragility of life that makes it so special. Allowing ourselves to understand that death, while it is the end of this physical cycle, is not the end of the soul brings us comfort in knowing that the ones who go before us are now pain free and really are resting in a more peaceful existence. We go out the way we come in, with a purity that gets forgotten in the middle. And it’s our recognition of mortality that gives us an opportunity to remember that pure and humble state of mind and to remember that it is the greatest lesson we can take from our loss. When we strip away that which occupies our busy minds we are left with a silence and a stillness. A peaceful acceptance of the whole of the moment that we are experiencing unhindered by distractive desire. There is nothing that we really need greater than a deep seated feeling of appreciation for what stands before us in this now moment. And that feeling is a choice that we ourselves can make in any second. It is the lack of the choice to feel this way that allows us all of our mistakes that form regrets. It is the only reason we allow ourselves to mistreat another. Because we forget that one day this person will be gone. No aspect of reality can or will remain as it is and in time all people and all things will return to where they came from. This is not morbid or negative thinking. It is the antidote to complacency and the catalyst to heartfelt appreciation. Death is a reminder that time is short and we must take responsibility for keeping our thoughts and actions pure. We must remember that what is important is not to chase an illusory concept of success but to be successful in cultivating our humanity and having the courage to perceive the beautiful mundane instead of reducing it to less than what could be, in an idealistic future.

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