Robert Kopecky is an American author, speaker, essayist, and artist who explores and teaches about the spiritual lessons he learned from surviving three separate near-death experiences, including meditation, service, compassion, and kindness.
CLEAR ALL
Kindness, tolerance, and acceptance are kind of like the Three Musketeers of spiritual protection.
1
What is the nature of the Near Death Experience and what can we learn from them? Michele Granberg, host of Positive Energy on Princeton Television, interviews Robert Kopecky, author of "How to Survive Life & Death." Robert survived three near-death experiences.
When you nearly die three times, you learn a thing or two about how to live . . .
"Like certain timeless wisdom, there’s a sutra right at the very beginning of The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali—that wonderful collection of wisdom from Hindu philosophy—that defines my ongoing mental struggles so simply, I can actually find it a little aggravating." - Robert Kopecky
On Wednesdays we will be focusing on Meditation. We will explore different types of meditations, share our meditation practices, discuss benefits of meditation, discuss meditation books, and help each other cultivate and strengthen our own meditation practices.
A lot of people have an idea of what the term “synchronicity” means in popular use, but in a lot of cases, they confuse it with the simple fact that sometimes, all of us experience extraordinary, timely coincidences. Accidents that seem as though they were by design.
After living through three very different near-death experiences, Robert Kopecky discovered a remarkable fact about life and death: You don't have to die to go to Heaven. This book shows how to engage with a paradise that is always present in your life.
When we’re sitting outside in a beautiful place surrounded by greenery with a delicious soundtrack provided by singing birds, and perhaps the sound of rustling leaves and moving water, it’s a whole lot easier to experience sensations of transcendent unity, isn’t it?
2
Love is the current of compassion running through life.
What if we used our imaginations and pretended to be an angel, standing in front of another human being, completely liberated from our ego-mind, compassionate and non-judgmental—how would we perceive a person, meeting them for the first time?