The Laws of the Spirit World — a book that comforts some, disturbs others, and refuses to be ignored

Some books entertain.
Some books educate.
And then there are books people read in silence at 2 a.m., usually after a personal loss, asking questions no religion answers clearly.

The Laws of the Spirit World belongs firmly to the third category.

This is not a “feel-good” spiritual quote book. It is a bold claim: that death is not the end, that the afterlife has structure, rules, hierarchy, learning systems — and that someone here has been allowed to document them.

Believe it fully, partially, or not at all — but you can’t read it casually.


Who wrote this book — and why it exists at all

The book is authored by Khorshed Bhavnagri, an Indian spiritual medium, along with her husband Rumi Bhavnagri.

The origin of the book is deeply personal and tragic.

In 1980, the Bhavnagris lost their two sons, Vispi and Ratoo, in a sudden incident. What followed was intense grief — and then, according to Khorshed, something extraordinary: communication from her sons from what she calls the Spirit World.

These communications did not come through séances or dramatic rituals, but through automatic writing and inner communication, which she carefully recorded over time. Those messages eventually formed the foundation of The Laws of the Spirit World.

This context matters.
The book is not written by a philosopher, priest, or academic.
It is written by a grieving mother who claims she was given answers when the world offered none.


What the book is really about (no mystic fog, plain English)

At its core, the book claims three things:

  1. Life continues after physical death
  2. The afterlife is organised, not chaotic
  3. There are laws governing spiritual growth, karma, and rebirth

According to the book, death is not a full stop. It is more like changing classrooms in a very long school called existence.

The Spirit World is described as:

  • Structured into multiple realms
  • Governed by moral and karmic laws
  • Focused on learning, correction, and evolution
  • Free from religious labels, rituals, and divisions

One striking claim repeated throughout the book is:

There is no religion in the Spirit World. There is only one God, and souls are judged by actions, not beliefs.

That line alone has made the book uncomfortable for many religious purists — and deeply comforting for others.


A complete, reader-friendly summary of the book

1. The beginning: grief as the doorway

The book opens with personal loss. Not philosophy. Not preaching.

The grief of losing children becomes the emotional anchor of the book. The authors describe how communication began — hesitant, confusing, emotionally overwhelming — and gradually became clearer.

This establishes the tone: emotional first, spiritual second.


2. The structure of the Spirit World

The Spirit World is described as having multiple levels or realms, often referred to as seven stages.

Each realm represents a level of spiritual awareness and moral development. Souls do not randomly float around. They are placed according to:

  • Their actions in past lives
  • Their intentions
  • Their capacity for learning

There is no eternal punishment, but there is accountability.

No hellfire — but no shortcuts either.


3. The Laws — the backbone of the book

The book repeatedly explains certain core principles:

  • Karma is precise, not emotional
    Every action creates a consequence, not as revenge, but as learning.
  • Suffering is educational, not punitive
    Pain exists to correct imbalance, not to torture souls.
  • Free will continues after death
    Souls choose whether to progress, stagnate, or return to Earth.
  • Reincarnation is purposeful
    Souls return to complete unfinished lessons, not by accident.
  • Earth is a training ground
    Life is difficult by design. Comfort teaches little.

These “laws” are not listed like commandments. They emerge gradually through explanations and conversations.


4. Conversations with departed souls

One of the most emotionally intense parts of the book is the recorded conversations with Vispi and Ratoo.

These dialogues discuss:

  • How they perceive their parents’ grief
  • What they learned after death
  • How earthly attachments look from the other side
  • Why excessive mourning can sometimes delay spiritual growth

For many readers, this section is either deeply healing — or deeply unsettling.


5. Practical lessons for the living

The book doesn’t stop at “what happens after death.” It constantly turns the mirror back to the living.

It urges readers to:

  • Live ethically even when no one is watching
  • Reduce ego-driven decisions
  • Treat suffering as information, not punishment
  • Focus on inner development rather than social status

In simple terms:
How you live now decides where and how you exist later.


Is this a famous book? Let’s be honest

This is not a global blockbuster like The Alchemist.

But within India’s spiritual and metaphysical reading circles, it is widely known, consistently reprinted, and translated into multiple Indian languages.

The book has been in circulation for decades, which is important. Spiritual books with no reader base quietly disappear. This one didn’t.

Exact sales numbers are not publicly disclosed by publishers, but its long publishing life, multiple editions, and continued demand strongly indicate thousands of copies sold over time, not hundreds.

Longevity, in this genre, is the real metric of success.


Who should read this book (and who should pause)

Recommended for:

  • People dealing with loss, grief, or unanswered questions about death
  • Readers curious about afterlife concepts beyond religion
  • Those interested in karma, reincarnation, and spiritual evolution
  • People who want comfort without rigid religious rules

Read carefully if:

  • You expect scientific proof or laboratory evidence
  • You are uncomfortable with mediumship claims
  • You prefer spirituality strictly within organised religion

This book is experiential, not experimental.


What readers say — real reactions, not marketing lines

Common positive experiences

  • “It changed how I see death.”
  • “My fear of dying reduced.”
  • “I stopped seeing suffering as meaningless.”
  • “It helped me heal after losing someone.”

Many readers describe emotional calm, clarity, and a shift in perspective rather than dramatic miracles.


Common criticisms

  • “How do we verify these communications?”
  • “Is this grief-driven interpretation?”
  • “Comforting, but not provable.”

Even critics often admit one thing:
The book is emotionally powerful, whether you believe its claims or not.


How to read this book intelligently (without losing your balance)

  1. Do not read it as gospel
  2. Read it as testimony
  3. Separate emotional truth from factual certainty
  4. Apply the ethical lessons even if you doubt the metaphysics

You don’t need to believe everything to benefit from something.


Final thoughts for Nishani.in readers

The Laws of the Spirit World survives because it speaks to a human fear no technology has solved:
What happens after we die?

Whether the Spirit World described here is literal or symbolic is a question each reader must answer alone.

But the book succeeds in one undeniable way:
It forces you to think about how you live now — not just where you go later.

And any book that makes you live more consciously has already done something powerful.

Comments

comments

 
Post Tags:

Hi, I’m Nishanth Muraleedharan (also known as Nishani)—an IT engineer turned internet entrepreneur with 25+ years in the textile industry. As the Founder & CEO of "DMZ International Imports & Exports" and President & Chairperson of the "Save Handloom Foundation", I’m committed to reviving India’s handloom heritage by empowering artisans through sustainable practices and advanced technologies like Blockchain, AI, AR & VR. I write what I love to read—thought-provoking, purposeful, and rooted in impact. nishani.in is not just a blog — it's a mark, a sign, a symbol, an impression of the naked truth. Like what you read? Buy me a chai and keep the ideas brewing. ☕💭   For advertising on any of our platforms, WhatsApp me on : +91-91-0950-0950 or email me @ support@dmzinternational.com