TLDR: In this episode of Here & Now with Ram Dass, the teacher explores how nature and mortality function as direct pathways to fundamental truth. Rather than abstract philosophy, nature and the reality of death serve as embodied teachers that awaken us to the interconnectedness of existence, the impermanence of individual forms, and the deeper consciousness underlying all phenomena. This discussion draws on decades of Ram Dass's work bridging Eastern spiritual traditions with Western consciousness, suggesting that our relationship with nature and mortality directly shapes our capacity for presence, compassion, and liberation.
How Does Nature Reveal Spiritual Truth?
Ram Dass frames nature not as scenery or resource, but as a direct transmission of wisdom about the nature of reality itself. When we observe the natural world—the cycling of seasons, the birth and death of organisms, the intricate interdependence of ecosystems—we encounter truths that no intellectual teaching can fully convey. Nature operates without ego, without resistance to what is. A tree does not argue with winter or cling to spring; it moves with the cycles of growth and dormancy.
This non-resistance is instructive for consciousness work. In Hindu and Buddhist traditions that inform Ram Dass's teaching, the natural world exemplifies satya—truthfulness—because it cannot pretend to be other than what it is. When we sit in nature with genuine attention, we are not receiving information about truth; we are being shown truth directly. The forest teaches ecology not through words but through presence. Water teaches the law of gravity and the principle of finding the lowest place. Mountains teach stability and perspective.
Ram Dass's approach here reflects his foundational insight: knowledge must be integrated through the body and senses, not merely intellectualized. Nature provides that integration. A person who intellectually understands impermanence may still resist change and cling to stability. A person who watches a forest fire, then sees new growth emerge in the burned area, has a somatic understanding of destruction and renewal that rewires the nervous system toward acceptance.
What Does Death Teach Us About Living?
Death is the ultimate teacher in Ram Dass's framework because it is the one certainty that cannot be negotiated, delayed, or reframed into comfort. Unlike intellectual teachings, death commands complete honesty. It strips away pretense. When we genuinely contemplate our own mortality—not morbidly, but directly—we encounter the impermanence of every identity, relationship, and possession we cling to.
This is not morbid; rather, it is liberating. In Buddhist practice, death meditation (maranasati) is a foundational contemplation precisely because it clarifies values and priorities with unmatched precision. When you truly acknowledge that you will die, perhaps sooner than you assume, the petty resentments, status anxieties, and postponed presence that dominate ordinary consciousness lose their grip. What actually matters becomes visible.
Ram Dass, who worked extensively with dying patients through his companion Stephen Levine and through his own encounters with death in spiritual practice, learned that those facing mortality often achieve a clarity and peace that eluded them for decades of ordinary life. They report seeing the beauty they took for granted, feeling genuine gratitude for simple presence, and releasing the stories they had constructed about who they were supposed to be. Death, paradoxically, teaches the art of living.
This does not mean death should be sought or welcomed prematurely. Rather, integrating the reality of death into daily consciousness shifts the entire context of life. We move from unconscious scrambling (the "default mode" of ego-driven survival) to conscious choice about what truly merits our finite attention and energy.
How Are Nature and Death Connected in Spiritual Practice?
Both nature and death point to the same fundamental truth: the illusion of separate, permanent selfhood. In nature, we see constant cycling—nothing is static, everything passes, and all forms are temporary expressions of underlying creative process. In death, we face the endpoint of our individual form, which naturally raises the question: if the body and mind dissolve, what am I really?
This question, when genuinely asked, opens the possibility of identifying with something larger than the individual ego. Ram Dass's teacher Neem Karoli Baba, and the lineage of Advaita Vedanta from which much of Ram Dass's philosophy derives, point to consciousness itself as the unchanging ground of all change. We are not separate witnesses observing nature and awaiting death; we are temporarily localized expressions of the aware presence that animates all forms.
Spending time in nature with this understanding can catalyze direct experience of non-duality. The boundary between "self" and "forest" becomes less solid. The birds, the soil, the air—all are recognizable as expressions of the same consciousness looking out through different windows. This is not poetic metaphor; it is reportable phenomenology that arises when ego-boundaries dissolve.
Similarly, preparing for death by letting go of attachments and identifications in small ways throughout life—through meditation, through voluntary simplicity, through serving others without ego investment—is preparation for the ultimate dissolution. Each small death (letting go of a grudge, releasing a fantasy about the future, accepting a loss) trains consciousness for the final loosening of the body-mind.
What Is the Practical Teaching Here?
Ram Dass's invitation is not to adopt these as abstract beliefs but to enter into direct relationship with both nature and mortality. This might mean:
- Regular time in wild nature: Not as escape or recreation, but as contemplative practice. Sitting in one place and simply observing without agenda. Noticing how you resist or cling or judge. Noticing the aliveness that doesn't require your permission.
- Death meditation: Regular, gentle contemplation of your own death. Not obsessive rumination, but clear acknowledgment: "I will die. I do not know when. Everything I cling to is temporary. What matters most?" Practices from Buddhist traditions offer structured approaches to this.
- Service and presence: Both the truth of nature (interconnection) and the truth of death (the preciousness and brevity of life) naturally orient consciousness toward service. If all beings are expressions of the same consciousness, and if time is limited, then presence with others becomes the most rational use of our days.
- Release of control: Nature teaches that much of existence unfolds without our direction. Death teaches that ultimately, we cannot maintain control. Rather than exhausting ourselves in the illusion of control, consciousness can relax into participation with life as it is.
How Does This Relate to Contemporary Spiritual Seeking?
In an era when much spiritual seeking can become ego-driven (collecting experiences, accumulating techniques, chasing states), Ram Dass's return to nature and death as teachers is grounding. These are not teachings you can commodify, optimize, or use to build a spiritual resume. Nature does not care about your meditation streak. Death does not negotiate with your portfolio.
This is precisely their power. They are non-negotiable mirrors. And they are available to everyone—not just to those who have access to teachers, technology, or specialized knowledge. A person sitting under a tree, genuinely present, is receiving the teaching. A person genuinely facing their mortality is in the deepest classroom.
Where to Go From Here
To deepen this work, consider: Identify a place in nature where you can sit regularly—a park, a forest, a river, even a garden. Not for exercise or social media documentation, but for contemplative presence. Sit for 20-30 minutes without agenda, and simply observe how the mind relates to what is. What do you resist? What do you cling to? What does the natural world reveal about non-resistance?
Second, explore death meditation through traditions that have refined it. Thich Nhat Hanh's teachings on impermanence, Stephen Levine's guided meditations on letting go, or traditional Buddhist maranasati practices offer structured entry points. The goal is not to become morbid but to become real—to live from the clarity that mortality brings.
Third, notice where these two teachings intersect in your own experience. When have you felt most alive? Often it is in moments of genuine presence with natural beauty or when faced with the fragility of life. These moments are not aberrations; they are glimpses of what is always true, now made visible by the two greatest teachers: nature and death.



