Little Johnny Acres

At the tender age of nine, Little Johnny Acres witnessed the death of his father. Family, friends, and neighbours labelled what occurred as “passing over” or “going to a greater reward;” but Johnny knew the facts. He had witnessed his father clutch his chest, take his last breath, and die. The father that he loved so dearly was dead and gone. Afterward, Johnny pretended (as he assumed the rest of his family was pretending) that his father was in a wonderful place called Heaven. But deep in his heart, Johnny doubted that such could be true.

In the coming years, Johnny’s interpretation of his father’s death coloured his attitude about many of his experiences. He chose to live now, for tomorrow you may die. He believed, as the majority of persons still do, that you only live once, so make the best of it! Time seemed like an enemy that could strike anyone down without warning. An adult now, he preferred to be called John; but he still clutched the childhood wound like a prized possession that somehow kept his father close. If he let it go, it would seem like giving up on his father; and he wasn’t about to do that. Until…

Years later, John discovered an esoteric book entitled The Master Key System, by Charles F. Haanel. He read it several times; gleaning what knowledge he could from its content. Upon one such reading, the following leapt out at him:

The spirit of a thing is that thing; it is necessarily fixed, changeless and eternal.

The spirit of you is — you; without the spirit you would be nothing.

It becomes active through your recognition of it and its possibilities.”

Over the coming months, John’s understanding grew by leaps and bounds as he re-read The Master Key System. The tumblers of his locked view of a “material world” were clicking open. Haanel’s message was that we are spiritual beings, here and now. Through daily meditation, he realized that his experience on Earth was occurring within the waking-state dream. With this knowledge, he was finally able to peacefully set the memory of his father to rest. He also knew the meaning of Acts 17:28:

For in Him we live and move and have our being.”

***

Dear Readers: I know that many of you may have experienced the death of a loved family member or friend. If it feels right to do so, please contemplate the words that helped to free Little Johnny Acres from his emotional suffering: “The spirit of a thing is that thing.” Appearances are, indeed, deceiving. We aren’t who we appear to be. We are Spirit. “In Him [Consciousness] we live and move and have our being.” The description of our essential nature is related in the following quote from the Bhagavad Gita, one of the Hindu holy books:

Weapons cannot cut It, nor can fire burn It; water cannot wet It, nor can wind dry It.”

Let not your heart be troubled. (If you’re curious, I offer more information in my YouTube video entitled “The Incarnate I Am.”)

Dare to dream (and care for one another).

With heartfelt regards,

Art

Copyright © – 2026 – R. Arthur Russell

P.S. Please share this article if you enjoyed it. If you’d like to view my latest book (This Taste of Flesh and Bones), press here. My YouTube videos can be found at Think2wice@I-Am-Aware. May the content of either or both help you along your spiritual journey. Thank You” & “Note to Publishers 🙏🏻🧡

The Fraud Called “Death”

The title of this article isn’t intended as click bait, nor am I attempting to instill a belief system about death. I’m employing the title because it relates to my direct experience of life, itself. Let’s begin with the following stanza from The Psalm of Life, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow:

Life is real! Life is earnest!
   And the grave is not its goal;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
   Was not spoken of the soul
.

So, Mr. Russell, “How can you possibly claim that death is a fraud, especially when we see evidence of it on a daily basis?” If that’s what you’re thinking, please know that I “hear” and respect you. Out of love, I humbly offer the following: I’m not denying that bodies die–obviously, they do. Anything that has an apparent beginning will also have an apparent end. To make sense of the information I’m sharing, it requires that we investigate the essential nature of our “Being”…beyond the superficial assumptions that we’ve been conditioned to accept as true. If we believe (as the majority do) that the sum of all that we are is contained within the body-mind, this article may not only seem insensitive, but also the product of a delusional mind.

Our investigation of our “I”-ness (that sense of “me” which knows our experience) requires that we challenge a collective set of beliefs to which the masses currently subscribe. You may or may not realize that Science can’t explain how biological processes give rise to consciousness. Why? Because Consciousness doesn’t arise from them. Science also states that matter, as conceived by humankind, has no independent existence–it’s actually rendered by the mind. In 1911, Ernest Rutherford proved that atoms, which were once believed to be the foundational “stuff” from which things were made, are actually 99.999% empty space. The following quote from Max Planck, a great theoretical physicist, adds to this understanding:

I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness. Everything that we talk about, everything that we regard as existing, postulates consciousness.”

The key to understanding more about the nature of death is by knowing more about the “reality” in which we apparently live. We never perceive a discrete “world.” We perceive perception–in a similar way that we perceive a “world” in our nighttime dreams. Could it also be, therefore, that the waking-state “world” is made of the same dream stuff? In Who Am I?, the following question was asked of Sri Ramana Maharshi (a realized sage who awakened to his true nature at sixteen):

Are you daring enough to challenge the current interpretation of “reality?” Could Consciousness, indeed, be fundamental and Universal? Is it not true that before you can have any experience that Consciousness must be present? To lend credibility to the information I’m sharing, I offer the following five quotes, which I’ve collected during years of reading:

(From I Am That, Talks with Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj):

(From Open Secret, by Wei Wu Wei):

(From The Abundance Book, by John Randolph Price):

(From The Physics of Consciousness, by Ivan Antic):

(From A Course in Miracles, by Helen Schucman):

Several years ago, I remember reading the following: “We’re not human beings having an occasional spiritual experience; we’re spiritual beings having occasional human experiences.” I actually scoffed at the idea; but such only revealed my own lack of understanding. Could this explain why ancient Grecians inscribed “Know Thyself” on the frontispiece of the Temple of Apollo in Delphi? Yes, most certainly.

To have any experience–of a world, a cup of coffee, or our body-mind–awareness must be present. How else could anything be known? The linchpin of our Being is Awareness. We are That in which the body and the mind appear. Yes, the body dies; but we never were what appeared. We are That which can’t be known via the senses. Buddha referred to It as emptiness. This dramatic change in the way of interpreting reality is often referred to as The Shift.

The body-mind arises out of Consciousness. Through misidentification (which is still being preached by those who believe in a materialist model of the world), we–Spirit–are relentlessly conditioned to believe that we are nothing more than name and form. We are so much more! We are Awareness, having an apparently human experience. It’s impossible to be separated from That which we actually are. It’s why Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj stated:

You can only be what you are in reality. You can only appear to be what you are not.”

I support this through the following verses from the Bible:

(Psalm 46:10):

Be still, and know that I am God:

I will be exalted among the heathen, I will be exalted in the earth.”

(Isaiah 45:5):

I am the Lord, and there is no other;
    apart from me there is no God
.”

Consciousness is the only reality. There’s only one “I Am.”

Dare to dream (and care for one another).

With heartfelt regards,

Art

Copyright © – 2025 – R. Arthur Russell

P.S. Please share this article if you enjoyed it. If you’d like to view my latest book (This Taste of Flesh and Bones), press here. My YouTube videos can be found at Think2wice@I-Am-Aware. May the content of either or both help you along your spiritual journey. Thank You” & “Note to Publishers 🙏🏻🧡