What if death isn't the final room, but one of the smallest?
This contemplative story guides readers through an exploration of consciousness, reality, identity, and recognition. Drawing from nondual insight, mystical philosophy, and direct inquiry, it examines the foundations of experience itself: the undivided ground from which all things arise, and the play of differentiation, and the possibility of conscious liberation.
'Death Is One of My Smaller Rooms' draws readers into a process of seeing. Through a series of meditative reflections, it challenges assumptions about selfhood, separation, and mortality, pointing toward a deeper understanding of what remains when all appearances are allowed to fall away.
For seekers, contemplatives, mystics, and anyone who's wondered what lies beyond the boundaries of ordinary perception, these reflections suggest that what you truly are may be far larger than life, death, or any room that contains them.