methylatedghosts
Can't brain. Has dumb.
Even thin brick walls would be effective, I imagine!Well, perhaps as long as one insists on beating ones head against rather thick, brick walls, I suppose.
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Even thin brick walls would be effective, I imagine!Well, perhaps as long as one insists on beating ones head against rather thick, brick walls, I suppose.
The "fear" of death comes from the knowledge that one will be forever separated from those they love, certainly a rational fear.
Why dwell on the here-after like a theist if you're an atheist?
I agree that we should enjoy life fully. I don't think 60-80 years is all that long, however. Unfortunately, I can do nothing but accept this. Or, I guess I could hide behind the comforting veil of an afterlife, but the rational part of me could never do that.A life time is a long time, enjoy it fully and thoroughly.
That doesn't make death any nicer. Existing rocks!Plenty enough time to worry when you're laying in your death bed.
No, I don't fear death. There is nothing to fear.
My consciousness briefly discontinues existence each time I sleep at night. And it experienced eternal nonexistence before I was born. It's peace in its most extreme form.
Depending on the circumstances, I might fear the dying part. Where there's blood and pain and all that... But after that, the death part is the easy part.
I also fear death. I suspect that the people who say they don't are full of it.
As an atheist, of course there is the fear of nonexistence, but eternal existence could be something much more to be feared.
Some eight months ago I was hospitalised with the Swine Flu. As it turns out I had also contracted a rather nasty infection in my lungs to top it off. As I lay under surveilance I was well aware that people of exactly my age and group had already died under very similar conditions.
When it became clear that the oxygen levels in my blood were, despite their efforts, steadily declining and they told me that they had to "put me under" to have any hope of containing the infection, I was far from sure that I would ever wake up again.
I was not afraid. And while I certainly wish to live as long as possible I can come up with no logical reason for why I should be spared and not another. So with that in mind I agree to enter the artificial coma, not that I had much choice, seeing as it was the best chance they had of battling the infection.
Thankfully it all worked out and after about a week in a coma and a total of three weeks of hospitalisation I am now alive and well, with only a scar on my troath where the oxygen tube was fitted, to show for it.
But I can, with some confidence and without "being full of it", say that I am not afraid of dying.
I don't dwell on it for the most part. But the thought of it is obviously inevitable. And then you realize how much it sucks.
I agree that we should enjoy life fully. I don't think 60-80 years is all that long, however. Unfortunately, I can do nothing but accept this. Or, I guess I could hide behind the comforting veil of an afterlife, but the rational part of me could never do that.
That doesn't make death any nicer. Existing rocks!
Sure you are, it's just that your fear of death isn't always apparent.
If you suddenly found out you were on a hijacked plane and the terrorists announced their plans to crash it into a building, how would you feel? Bored? Impatient?
The fear of death is hardwired into every human being. That's how we've survived as a species for all this time.
Sure you are, it's just that your fear of death isn't always apparent. If you suddenly found out you were on a hijacked plane and the terrorists announced their plans to crash it into a building, how would you feel? Bored? Impatient?
The fear of death is hardwired into every human being. That's how we've survived as a species for all this time.
No, I haven't.Ever gone under general anesthesia? How did you feel while you were unconscious? Didn't feel anything, did ya. That was nothingness. When your mind doesn't exist, you obviously can't experience anything. Just like the billions of years before you were born, so it will be after you die. Nothing to be afraid of, love. Don't worry about it. :beach:
People who have a strong fear of nothing are probably confusing it with something.