I'm sorry to say that our longtime commenter Bruce Siegel passed away this week.
As I understand it, Bruce, who was in his seventies, had suffered from serious cardiovascular problems since at least 2016.
Though I never met Bruce, I got to know him online through his many comments here and through occasional emails. After his book on precognitive dreams came out, we sometimes exchanged stories of possibly precognitive dreams we'd had. Most of mine, for some reason, involved animals — scary ones, like sharks.
I reviewed Bruce's book here. Bruce also maintained a blog of his own.
One of his last emails to me touched on the work of Stanislav Grof, who had influenced Bruce profoundly. He quoted Grof in The Cosmic Game: "The divine does not create something outside of itself, but rather by subdivisions and transformations within the field of its own being … The various manifestations of evil are expressions of the energy that makes the split-off units of consciousness feel separate from each other. Since the divine play is unimaginable without individual protagonists, the existence of evil is absolutely essential.”
Then he added:
I love that last insight! It’s really all we need to know about suffering: without the dark side, there is no separation, no individual actors. You and I go back to Oneness. Ecstatic, but after a while, boring (evidently).
Good luck, Bruce, in the next phase of your adventure. I'm sorry we won't have you with us anymore.
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