This is the fourth book and it continues the author’s astral adventures with Albert, his Spirit Guide. As with the first three books, Albert had a carefully-planned agenda all mapped out—designed to teach me (and all of humankind) a lesson or to provide us with a nugget of wisdom to help us understand who we are and why we are having a human journey on this planet.
Garnet Schulhauser is a lawyer who practiced corporate law for over thirty years with two blue-chip law firms in Calgary until he retired in 2008. Since then, he has published five books in the spiritual/metaphysical genre: Dancing on a Stamp, Dancing Forever with Spirit, Dance of Heavenly Bliss, Dance of Eternal Rapture, and Dancing with Angels in Heaven, which recount his dialogue and astral travels with his spirit guide, Albert, who confronted him on the street one day disguised as a homeless man. His books answer the eternal questions of life, as he reveals the truth about our existence as eternal souls, the cycle of reincarnation and the role of karma, the splendor of the afterlife that awaits us all, and the diversity of life in our vast universe.
Since the release of his first book, Garnet has been active with book signing tours and conference presentations and has been interviewed on over one hundred seventy radio talk shows broadcast from studios around the world. In addition, Garnet is a Level 2 Quantum Healing Hypnosis Technique (QHHT) Practitioner, a modality that guides clients to experience past lives and connect with their Higher Selves.
This was a very interesting book and I enjoyed reading it. Much of it confirmed similar books I've read about the after-world and reincarnation and how things "work" after we die. This book has an uplifting message of hope and love and all of us can count on an eternal life; we will just change forms and continue to evolve. I plan to read his other books too.
My favorite book so far by Garnet. I hope what he says is true. We will see when our time on earth is up. There was a part where he says Buddha was just as described as a fat, bald happy man, however, the first Buddha was not fat but quite skinny. He may have meant Budai, but other than that I loved this book.