What do some spiritual traditions believe about what happens when you visit the grave of a loved one?
When someone we love leaves this world, we lose not only their physical presence, but also a silent question that accompanies us day and night.
Can you still hear me?
Does he/she know that I remember him/her?
Does he see me when I go to his grave?
For many, the cemetery becomes a sacred place. A space where silence seems to speak and where the heart finds a way to cry without words. For others, however, that place is too painful, an open wound difficult to address. Both reactions are valid.
But there's a spiritual truth that's often not clearly expressed: love doesn't live in a tomb; it lives in the energy that unites two souls.
The body remains, the soul continues.
When a person dies, their body returns to Earth, but their essence does not disappear. The soul is not made of matter; it is not enclosed in a coffin or trapped in a tombstone.
The body was simply an instrument for living on this plane, but the soul continues its journey to other levels of existence.
It's like taking off your old clothes: what matters is not the garment you wear, but the person wearing it.
This is why our loved ones aren't tied to the place where their remains rest. They can be with us at home, on the road, in our memories and our most intimate thoughts.
Why do we feel their presence in the cemetery?
To learn more, read the next page >>
To see the full instructions for this recipe, go to the next page or click the open button (>) and don't forget to share it with your friends on Facebook.

