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Musician’s Ghost

Early in the morning on April 28, 2022, three persons came to me on the astral side. There was Sir Paul Castagna, Bhaktivedanta Swami and Jimi Hendrix. Each is deceased.

Sir Paul discussed his fame situation, where after his body became unusable, someone was supposed to manage his paintings. He wondered about it and asked me to check on it the previous day.

I did that but I reported to him that it appears that the website which was established to display his work was somewhat stagnant. I also checked with TerriAnn Stokes, an artist colleague of Sir Paul and a dear friend of both of us. She said that the person managing the site recently stated that next summer things will happen.

It is interesting how when one becomes deceased and looses the footing on physical history, that one becomes concerned about how people remember and assess one in the physical world. From the astral side, the hereafter, one pries to find out if anyone remembered one and if such memories are favorable.

This is a strong tendency. All yogis should adjust themselves so that they do not become victims of this fame addiction habit.

After talking to Sir Paul, I perceived that Bhaktivedanta Swami was nearby. He was in another dimension which was adjacent to the place where I spoke to Sir Paul. Bhaktivedanta was near to someone else, whose subtle body was like a shadow. Then that person manifested. It was Jimi Hendrix the famous guitarist, who passed from his body at the apex of his career.

Bhaktivedanta wanted Hendrix to speak up but Hendrik said nothing, as if he was embarrassed to be there with the swami. Seeing the situation of Hendrix’ silence, Bhaktivedanta said this,

“Show him the pranayama. That would be the process for him. Chanting Hare Krishna did not work for the others. How will it work for him? He apologized for putting himself as Krishna in the Vishvarupa. That is fine. Now he should practice yoga to make advancement. But what I taught did not work for many like him who joined. I can no longer promise that it will do anything.”

After Bhaktivedanta said that Hendrix lost his shyness and spoke. It was not speech like physical talking. It was mental communication. What he expressed was this, “I feel miserable. I am a ghost. I am not getting happiness. What can be done about this?’

After that, Hendrix expressed a desire to learn breath infusion (pranayama). I told him he could come when I practice or see Sir Paul otherwise.

A person like Jimi Hendrix becomes a ghost because of massive karmic returns from the popularity he had while using a physical body. Nature becomes displeased with anyone who becomes more famous then necessary, especially those who cannot properly manage the fame. One does many things as a celebrity and the repercussions from that may be unfavorable towards the self.

Here is the album cover where Jimi Hendrix got himself portrayed instead of Lord Krishna. There were many lawsuits towards Hendrix and his album/products/producers concerning the use of the original image.

https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2014/06/05/jimi-hendrixs-1967-album-with-hindu-god-cover-art-not-allowed-says-home-min/682113

 

https://bravewords.com/news/converse-pulls-shoe-portraying-jimi-hendrix-as-hindu-god

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    • Interesting!

      Fame is a slow poison!

      It will catch up later!

      • Hmmm. So how much fame is “necessary”? Is it not better to be unknown anyway? 

        • I'd say yes, being unknown would have it's advantages. It actually may not have much of a downside at all, IMO.

          But I'd also need to be satisfied with being unremarkable and avoid getting personal with life, or taking its jabs the wrong way.

          That attitude or tendency will also be necessary even if I should have fame somehow. My baseline consideration of my false ego or my social individuality has to be consistent with sense of humility.

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