Diana Chaves, Costarrican Entrepreneur, co-founder Jungle Project and Community Developer
Live Until You Die
Is life dominated by chance?
Some changes are as subtle as the morning mist,
while others are giant beasts with the inevitable destiny to touch our paths.
Instead of resisting, what if we became receptive?
The essence of our human existence is simply to continue living, to thrive.
Perhaps the main obstacle that prevents us from understanding death
is that our unconscious is unable to accept that our existence must end.
Let’s be willing to listen to our inner voice,
which tells us with certainty when to step into the unknown.
To lead a good life and thus die a good death,
we must make our decisions with unconditional love,
asking ourselves, "What service am I going to render with this?"
Do what feels right, not what is expected of you.
Instead of being afraid, let’s know ourselves
All the hardships that we suffer in life, all the tribulations and nightmares,
are opportunities to grow.
We cannot heal the world without first healing ourselves.
Each person chooses whether to emerge from difficulty crushed or perfected.
Our today depends on our yesterday, and our tomorrow depends on our today.
Have you loved yourself today?
Have you admired and thanked the flowers, appreciated the birds, and contemplated the mountains, invaded by a feeling of awe, reverence, and respect?
We all come from the same source and return to that same source.
This is the ultimate lesson.
We must all learn to love and be loved unconditionally.
We must live until we die.
Let us live fully.
At the end of our days, we will bless our life, because we have done what we came here to do.
Death is only a transition from this life to another existence
in which there is no more pain and anguish.
The only thing that lives forever is love.”
Diana Chaves, Costarrican Entrepreneur, co-founder Jungle Project and Community Developer
Special contributions were featured in Regenerate your Reality, Book
Chapter 7: Exploring the connections between death, bacteria and fungi—death and rebirth.