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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 17:00:31 wrote:

Words by Neil Watkins: Following one of our countless conversations where we tried to pin down the foundation truths that this reality is constructed upon. My dad sat and wrote the following piece of writing. I remember when I went to see him soon after. He was bursting with pride to show me how he had encapsulated that truth onto paper. “In life we all keep searching for the right answer, but there is no right answer. Everything is relative rather than absolute, that is the truth of the matter. When we meditate we strive to keep going deeper and deeper peeling away the layers until we reach the centre. As we peel away the layers we unmask our many personas. First we peel away the layer of the body, then we unmask the mind, going deeper we unmask the psyche. We all have so many masks its as if every day of our life has been halloween. But when we remove our masks we shed our fantasies about ourselves, others and the world and eventually we can know and see what we actually are. By doing this it helps us to empty ourselves of illusion to see realistically and lighten up when the ego is taking itself too seriously. In this way we can dissolve our deluded view of ourselves and the universe until we arrive at the radiant infinite openness of our original unprocessed natural state, our genuine being that is aware and empty of fantasy.” We found the following piece within the hundreds of pages of his work. Power of positivity “If you have food in the fridge, clean clothes on your body, a roof over your head and a place to sleep. Then you are richer than 70% of this entire world. If you have money to spend and can go wherever you want, you are among the 18% of the worlds wealthiest people. If you are alive and have more health than illness, you are more blessed than the million people who will not survive this week and will die. If you are able to read and understand this message, you are more fortunate than the 3 billion people who cannot see, cannot read, or suffer mental retardation. Life is not about the stress of our pain and our sorrows. Its about the thousands of reasons we have to be grateful that we are so very blessed. When we are content with what we have; rejoice in the way things are. When we realise there is nothing lacking, the whole world belongs to us. But then, what if I’m wrong? What if being positive makes no difference? Then we still become better people. Can you think of a better way to live, than in gratitude? Can you think of a better way to be than to be kind, loving, compassionate, respectful, courageous, truthful and forgiving. Even if I’m wrong can you think of a better way to live your life? I couldn’t, I can’t, I continue…” Although it is true that we have lost a good friend. In the last few weeks me and my brothers have talked about the ability to seek out the positives in the matter, instead of focussing only on what feels unfair. There are people in this world who lose someone in such a manner that they are not given time to make sure that the person knows how they felt. We are thankful to have had at least some time with him to show him with action that we love him. We are thankful that this has happened when we are not in lockdown anymore and can share this celebration of his life with all of his friends. We are thankful to have shared a million laughs and that my dads life was rich and complete. In the last few days at one point as he lay down with his eyes closed I leaned over him and said “we had some good times didn’t we dad, and we laughed until it hurt” A smile came across his face and he said “Oh fuck me didn’t we just” My dad was a huge Monty Python fan. So now we will sing the song, always look on the bright side of life.

Steve Watkins 2021-08-14 17:00:31 wrote: Words by Neil Watkins: Following one of our countless conversations where we tried to pin down the foundation truths that this reality is constructed upon. My dad sat and wrote the following piece of writing. I remember when I went to see him soon after. He was bursting with pride to show me how he had encapsulated that truth onto paper. “In life we all keep searching for the right answer, but there is no right answer. Everything is relative rather than absolute, that is the truth of the matter. When we meditate we strive to keep going deeper and deeper peeling away the layers until we reach the centre. As we peel away the layers we unmask our many personas. First we peel away the layer of the body, then we unmask the mind, going deeper we unmask the psyche. We all have so many masks its as if every day of our life has been halloween. But when we remove our masks we shed our fantasies about ourselves, others and the world and eventually we can know and see what we actually are. By doing this it helps us to empty ourselves of illusion to see realistically and lighten up when the ego is taking itself too seriously. In this way we can dissolve our deluded view of ourselves and the universe until we arrive at the radiant infinite openness of our original unprocessed natural state, our genuine being that is aware and empty of fantasy.” We found the following piece within the hundreds of pages of his work. Power of positivity “If you have food in the fridge, clean clothes on your body, a roof over your head and a place to sleep. Then you are richer than 70% of this entire world. If you have money to spend and can go wherever you want, you are among the 18% of the worlds wealthiest people. If you are alive and have more health than illness, you are more blessed than the million people who will not survive this week and will die. If you are able to read and understand this message, you are more fortunate than the 3 billion people who cannot see, cannot read, or suffer mental retardation. Life is not about the stress of our pain and our sorrows. Its about the thousands of reasons we have to be grateful that we are so very blessed. When we are content with what we have; rejoice in the way things are. When we realise there is nothing lacking, the whole world belongs to us. But then, what if I’m wrong? What if being positive makes no difference? Then we still become better people. Can you think of a better way to live, than in gratitude? Can you think of a better way to be than to be kind, loving, compassionate, respectful, courageous, truthful and forgiving. Even if I’m wrong can you think of a better way to live your life? I couldn’t, I can’t, I continue…” Although it is true that we have lost a good friend. In the last few weeks me and my brothers have talked about the ability to seek out the positives in the matter, instead of focussing only on what feels unfair. There are people in this world who lose someone in such a manner that they are not given time to make sure that the person knows how they felt. We are thankful to have had at least some time with him to show him with action that we love him. We are thankful that this has happened when we are not in lockdown anymore and can share this celebration of his life with all of his friends. We are thankful to have shared a million laughs and that my dads life was rich and complete. In the last few days at one point as he lay down with his eyes closed I leaned over him and said “we had some good times didn’t we dad, and we laughed until it hurt” A smile came across his face and he said “Oh fuck me didn’t we just” My dad was a huge Monty Python fan. So now we will sing the song, always look on the bright side of life.

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