Let’s Talk About Death: Consciousness, the Great Death, and the Illusion of Separation
Death is one of the few subjects that almost everyone avoids, yet it is the only experience guaranteed to every human being. In this profound conversation on TheAlexShow.TV, Alex welcomes back José Luis Cortés Peñafiel from Mexico for a deep, uncompromising exploration of what death really is, what it is not, and why understanding it may be the most important preparation we can make while we are alive.
This discussion is not about morbidity, fear, or a fascination with dying. On the contrary, it is about clarity, consciousness, and freedom. Talking about death does not mean wanting to die. It means wanting to understand existence itself. Throughout the conversation, Alex and José Luis dismantle common religious narratives, cultural taboos, and fear-based beliefs, replacing them with a radically different perspective: death as a transition of experience, not the end of being.
Why Death Is the Last Great Taboo
In most societies, death is something whispered about, postponed, or hidden behind rituals and euphemisms. People avoid the subject because it confronts them with uncertainty. From childhood, we are taught that life begins at birth and ends at death, with everything meaningful happening in between. This narrow framing creates fear, attachment, and resistance.
As Alex explains, even speaking openly about death often triggers concern from others. If you talk about preparing for death, people assume something is wrong, that you are depressed or suicidal. This misunderstanding reveals how deeply conditioned we are to see death as an enemy rather than a natural transition.
José Luis emphasizes that avoiding the topic does not protect us. It leaves us unprepared. Understanding death, on the other hand, can radically change how we live. It can dissolve fear, reduce attachment, and bring clarity to what truly matters.
Physical Death vs. the “Great Death”
A central theme of the conversation is the distinction between physical death and what José Luis calls “the great death.” Physical death is the end of the body and the personality known as “me.” It is the moment when the character we have played in this life comes to an end.
The great death, however, is something entirely different. It is not the death of the body but the dissolution of all identification, memory, and impurity. It is the final return to the source, the absolute, where even consciousness as we know it dissolves into pure being.
Most human beings, according to José Luis, do not experience the great death immediately. Instead, consciousness continues, carrying memories, impressions, and unresolved attachments. These impurities are what lead to continued experiences, cycles, or returns.
The Tunnel, the Light, and the Void
Many near-death experiences describe tunnels, lights, beings, or loved ones. José Luis offers a striking interpretation of these phenomena. He explains that what one experiences after physical death depends largely on the level of consciousness cultivated during life.
Those who have not entered deep silence or inner stillness tend to encounter images, symbols, and familiar forms. These experiences can be beautiful and comforting, but they are still part of the mind’s imagery. They belong to the realm of form.
Those who have touched profound silence may encounter something else entirely: the void. This void is not emptiness in the sense of nothingness. It is the absence of form, identity, and thought. It cannot be described because description requires objects, and in the void there are none.
As Alex shares through personal conversations with people who have had near-death experiences, those who reach this void often describe it as total detachment, total absence of judgment, and an indescribable sense of completeness. They frequently say they did not want to return.
Consciousness Is What Is Immortal
One of the most important ideas repeated throughout the discussion is that what is immortal is not the personality, the body, or the story we tell ourselves about who we are. What is immortal is consciousness itself.
Thoughts, memories, and identities are not personal possessions. They are collective patterns. When the body dies, these patterns dissolve. What remains is the awareness that was always present, observing the experience.
José Luis uses a powerful metaphor: consciousness is like a movie screen. The images on the screen change constantly, but the screen itself remains untouched. Life is the movie. Death is the end of one film, not the destruction of the screen.
Why Memory Prevents Final Liberation
According to José Luis, memory is the key factor that prevents consciousness from returning fully to the absolute. Memory creates continuity, identity, and attachment. As long as memory remains, there is still a sense of “someone” who experienced something.
This is why many traditions speak of purification, silence, or emptiness. These are not moral concepts. They are descriptions of a state in which memory loses its grip. When all memory dissolves, there is nothing left to return. That is the great death.
Until then, consciousness continues to experience, not as punishment or reward, but as expression.
Religion, Judgment, and Fear
The conversation also challenges traditional religious views of death, judgment, heaven, and hell. Alex questions how a supposedly loving and infinite source could operate through punishment, reward, or eternal judgment.
Justice, as José Luis points out, is a human concept. Nature does not judge. Water does not discriminate between good and bad. Existence simply allows.
The idea that suffering is punishment for past actions, or that children suffer because of karmic debt, is rejected as a projection of human morality onto the infinite. From this perspective, suffering is not imposed by a higher power but arises from ignorance, attachment, and identification.
Attachment, Grief, and Letting Go
One of the most emotionally grounded parts of the conversation addresses grief and attachment. When loved ones die, people naturally ask: Where are they now? Will I see them again?
Alex acknowledges how difficult these questions are and emphasizes compassion. At the same time, he invites a radical reframe: the experience has ended. The character has dissolved back into consciousness.
This does not mean love disappears. Love, in this view, was never about possession or continuity. It was an expression within the experience. Honoring loved ones means living fully, loving deeply while they are here, and letting go when they are not.
The Illusion of Separation
A recurring theme is the illusion of individuality. We feel separate because we identify with the body and the story. But at a deeper level, there is only one consciousness expressing itself through countless forms.
Alex uses metaphors like pixels on a screen or pieces of a puzzle. Each piece looks separate, but none exist independently of the whole. Separation is functional, not real.
Understanding this does not make life meaningless. It makes it sacred. Every interaction becomes consciousness meeting itself.
Silence as the Direct Path
José Luis repeatedly returns to silence as the direct path to understanding death. Silence does not mean absence of sound. It means absence of inner movement, judgment, and duality.
Practices like breath awareness, meditation, and mantras are not techniques to control thoughts but ways to let them pass. In silence, the sense of self begins to loosen.
Silence burns impurities, not through effort but through clarity.
Life Has No Purpose Because Life Is the Purpose
Perhaps one of the most radical statements in the conversation is that life has no external purpose. There is no goal to achieve, no lesson to complete, no final exam.
Life exists because existence must include everything. The absolute must contain both the highest and the lowest, the most refined and the most dense. Humanity matters because it contains all levels at once.
Fulfillment arises not from achieving something but from realizing what you already are.
Living Differently When Death Is Understood
When death is no longer feared, life changes. Competition, pride, resentment, and fear lose their grip. Relationships become more honest. Love becomes less conditional.
Alex closes the conversation by inviting viewers to discover their true self, not through belief but through inquiry. Asking simple questions like “Who am I?” and “What is aware right now?” can begin a profound transformation.
Death, in this understanding, is not an ending to dread but a truth to embrace. The great death is not something to rush toward but something to recognize as inevitable and beautiful.
When the time comes, it will not be a loss. It will be a return.
For more deep conversations like this one, visit TheAlexShow.TV on YouTube and explore additional episodes that challenge reality, consciousness, and everything we think we know about existence.
