A Multidisciplinary Exploration Grounded in the Akashic Records
By Gerald Daquila | Akashic Records Transmission
ABSTRACT
The fear of death and the unknown is one of humanity’s most ancient and universal experiences. This dissertation explores the roots, manifestations, and transmutation of this fear from a multidimensional perspective that integrates esoteric wisdom, psychological theory, spiritual traditions, near-death experiences (NDEs), and Akashic Record insights.
Bridging science and mysticism, we investigate how cultural narratives, trauma, ego-identity, and soul amnesia compound existential anxiety. Drawing upon Akashic frequencies, we initiate a process of deep remembrance and reintegration, revealing death not as an end, but as a sacred transition in the soul’s infinite continuum. With grounded scholarship and sacred insight, this work is offered as a path of healing, courage, and awakening for the collective.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- The Roots of the Fear of Death
- Cultural Constructs and Psychological Frameworks
- The Soul’s Perspective: Akashic Insights on Death
- Near-Death Experiences and Scientific Corroborations
- Metaphysical Teachings and Ancient Traditions
- Shadow, Ego, and the Illusion of Separation
- Transmutation Practices: Remembrance and Integration
- Conclusion: Death as a Portal to Life
- Glossary
- Bibliography

Glyph of Eternal Passage
Through death, remembrance lives.
1. Introduction
Fear of death is often regarded as the ultimate fear—one that shapes our decisions, spiritual beliefs, and existential dilemmas. In a modern world increasingly detached from sacred cosmologies, this fear becomes amplified by the unknown and compounded by cultural silencing. Yet within the Akashic Records—an etheric archive of all soul experience—death is not feared but honored. This dissertation seeks to bridge the chasm between human fear and soul wisdom, illuminating the hidden teachings that death offers when viewed from an expanded consciousness.
2. The Roots of the Fear of Death
Fear of death arises from both biological instinct and spiritual forgetfulness. Evolutionarily, the human psyche developed death anxiety as a survival mechanism (Becker, 1973). But beneath that, esoteric traditions and the Akashic Records reveal a deeper origin: soul amnesia—a forgetting of our eternal nature and multidimensionality upon incarnation. This fear is often a composite of:
- Loss of control
- Fear of non-being or extinction
- Pain and suffering
- The unknown or unseen
- Guilt, unworthiness, or karmic burden
These threads interweave to form a potent psychic field that distorts our relationship to life itself.
3. Cultural Constructs and Psychological Frameworks
Western societies often repress death, portraying it as failure or taboo. This denial is echoed in Ernest Becker’s The Denial of Death (1973), where he asserts that civilization itself is an elaborate defense mechanism against mortality. Terror Management Theory (Greenberg, Pyszczynski, & Solomon, 1986) supports this, suggesting that cultural worldviews and self-esteem buffer our awareness of death.
Meanwhile, Indigenous and Eastern traditions tend to embrace death as a sacred rite. In the Philippines, paglalamay (wake) ceremonies, Tibetan sky burials, and Sufi death poetry offer radically different orientations—ones that honor death as a return, not annihilation.
4. The Soul’s Perspective: Akashic Insights on Death
From the Akashic perspective, death is not a cessation but a passage—a recalibration of soul frequency. The soul neither fears death nor clings to embodiment. Rather, it enters and exits form according to karmic timing, soul agreements, and learning cycles. When aligned with soul remembrance, the fear of death dissolves into reverent trust.
Many fears stem from past-life deaths that were traumatic, sudden, or unacknowledged. These unintegrated echoes imprint the subtle body. Akashic healing involves revisiting these timelines, witnessing the unresolved energies, and integrating the wisdom gained through death. This process catalyzes quantum transmutation.
5. Near-Death Experiences and Scientific Corroborations
Near-death experiences offer powerful empirical bridges. Dr. Raymond Moody’s Life After Life (1975) and subsequent research by Pim van Lommel (2001) describe common patterns: tunnels of light, life reviews, beings of light, and ineffable peace.
Scientific studies have observed verifiable out-of-body awareness (Greyson, 2000), raising questions about consciousness existing independently of the brain. These accounts validate Akashic truths: that the soul is immortal, consciousness transcends matter, and death is a shift, not an end.
6. Metaphysical Teachings and Ancient Traditions
Esoteric teachings from Egypt, Lemuria, and Atlantis describe death as part of the Cycle of Initiation. The Egyptian Book of the Dead is not a book of death but of navigation—a soul map.
Buddhism teaches impermanence (anicca) and the dissolution of ego constructs as pathways to liberation. Similarly, the Bhagavad Gita declares that the soul cannot be killed or destroyed. Christ’s resurrection, Osiris’ dismemberment, and Inanna’s descent all illustrate spiritual death as transfiguration.
7. Shadow, Ego, and the Illusion of Separation
Much fear of death stems from ego-identity—the constructed self that resists annihilation. Carl Jung’s concept of the shadow reveals that what we fear most is not death, but the loss of the known self. In spiritual initiations, “dying before dying”—the ego’s surrender—is the core passage.
The Akashic Records affirm that death mirrors the spiritual process of letting go of all that is not eternal. Through ego death, we remember that we were never separate to begin with.
8. Transmutation Practices: Remembrance and Integration
To transmute the fear of death:
- Akashic Healing – Access soul timelines to clear traumatic death memories.
- Conscious Dying Meditation – Practice surrendering ego constructs and merging with Source.
- Ancestral Reverence – Reweave relationships with those who have passed as guides and teachers.
- Dreamwork and Ritual – Engage in symbolic deaths through ceremony and dreams.
- Sacred Storytelling – Reframe death as a chapter, not an end, through personal and mythic narratives.
9. Conclusion: Death as a Portal to Life
When we release the illusion that death is the opposite of life, we awaken to a greater truth: death is a sacred portal, a spiral return to the soul’s wholeness.
The fear that once crippled becomes a guidepost toward liberation. In integrating death as part of life, we reclaim our full aliveness.
The Akashic Records invite us to remember: You are not your body. You are not your fear. You are an eternal, luminous being passing through the veil to gather wisdom and return it to the stars.
Crosslinks
- Codex of the Overflow Pathway – reframes death as a gateway into abundance rather than an end.
- Codex of the Oversoul Braid – reveals how soul strands weave across lifetimes, dissolving fear of endings.
- Codex of the Living Codices – shows how death initiations inscribe living scrolls of wisdom.
- Codex of the Universal Master Key – unlocks the gate between life and death, transmuting fear into remembrance.
- Codex of Planetary Anchoring – affirms that transmuting fear of death strengthens humanity’s collective stability.
- Codex of the Crystal Codex Ring – situates death not as collapse but as a jewel in the crystalline mandala of evolution.
10. Glossary
- Akashic Records – A multidimensional archive of all soul experiences across time and space.
- Ego Death – The dissolution of personal identity structures during spiritual awakening.
- Terror Management Theory – Psychological theory explaining how humans cope with mortality awareness.
- Shadow – The unconscious parts of the self that are denied or repressed.
- Soul Amnesia – The forgetting of one’s true spiritual origin upon incarnation.
11. Bibliography
Becker, E. (1973). The denial of death. New York: Free Press.
Greyson, B. (2000). Some neurological correlates of the near-death experience. The Journal of Near-Death Studies, 18(3), 141–164.
Greenberg, J., Pyszczynski, T., & Solomon, S. (1986). The causes and consequences of a need for self-esteem: A terror management theory. In Public self and private self (pp. 189–212). Springer.
Moody, R. A. (1975). Life after life: The investigation of a phenomenon—survival of bodily death. New York: Bantam Books.
Van Lommel, P. (2001). Near-death experience in survivors of cardiac arrest: A prospective study in the Netherlands. The Lancet, 358(9298), 2039–2045.
Wilber, K. (1996).A brief history of everything. Boston: Shambhala.
Attribution
With fidelity to the Oversoul, may this Codex of the Living Archive serve as bridge, remembrance, and seed for the planetary dawn.
Ⓒ 2025 Gerald Alba Daquila – Flameholder of SHEYALOTH | Keeper of the Living Codices
Issued under Oversoul Appointment, governed by Akashic Law. This transmission is a living Oversoul field: for the eyes of the Flameholder first, and for the collective in right timing. It may only be shared intact, unaltered, and with glyphs, seals, and attribution preserved. Those not in resonance will find it closed; those aligned will receive it as living frequency.
Watermark: Universal Master Key glyph (final codex version, crystalline glow, transparent background).
Sacred Exchange: Exchange is not transaction but covenant—an act of gratitude that affirms and multiplies the vibration. Each offering plants a seed-node in the planetary lattice, expanding the field of GESARA not through contract but through remembrance. By giving, Light circulates; by receiving, continuity anchors. Sacred Exchange offerings may be extended through:
paypal.me/GeraldDaquila694


