TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Chill Out Room
-- Thinking about your own death
Pages (3): [1] 2 3 »
Thinking about your own death
How often do you think of your own death? Most people, perhaps intuitively, think that something perceivable is going to happen to them after their own death (i.e. they will go to some other dimension/plane, they will reincarnate, they will hang out in a jacuzzi with the Big JHC drinking wine all night long, et cetera). So far, so good.
It's not bizarre to think that something will happen to you, but it's somewhat bizarre that so many different cultures imply that some sort of life-after-death exists, and that whatever happens after death, it's not "the end".
Thus, I think we could draw one of the following conclusions from this: either there is indeed an afterlife (life itself is already bizarre, why wouldn't there be another life just as absurd as ours?), or we're so important to ourselves that we can't even think of what it would be like not to exist. I tend to favour the latter due to my affinity with materialism and the impossibility of going anywhere my body isn't, but no matter how hard I think about it, death seems to be as puzzling as being thrown in a black hole: if you ceased to perceive time, wouldn't your mental activities cease as well? In that sense, you'd tend to imagine that you'd be stuck within your last memory, but that memory has to span for some time, and if you cannot perceive time, what are you going to retain in your perception? Moreover, reason why I thought about it in the first place, can you imagine something you can't talk about, like an absolute death?
This morning, I felt relief in knowing that I wasn't alone [pdf - Imagination and Immortality by Shaun Nichols] in most of my pondering, and I decided it would be a nice topic to discuss here with you guys.
How often do you think about a possible absolute death?
I think about my own death a lot. Always have. What comes after life, whether it be something or nothing, is of little/no importance to me. However, I'm open to either possibility, and feel prepared for both. I've always been an optimist. 
| quote: |
| Originally posted by jennypie I'm open to either possibility, and feel prepared for both. I've always been an optimist. |
Good Question!!
I was thinking about this last night when I was sucking cock, since I'm gay.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Barbino Good Question!! I was thinking about this last night when I was sucking cock, since I'm gay. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Barbino Good Question!! I was thinking about this last night when I was sucking cock, since I'm gay. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Barbino Good Question!! I was thinking about this last night when I was sucking cock, since I'm gay. |
I never think about my own death ![]()
I come home from work every night at 1am, so I'm always scared of getting murdered by black people.
Also, getting sucked into a black hole's singularity, I'd imagine you'd be thinking about pain for an infinite amount of time, seeing as you become ripped in half down to the smallest amounts of matter.
On a side note, one thing I thought about the other day, is would you even feel a significant amount of pain if you lept feet first into a black hole? With time distortion, would the electrical signals of "pain" reach your brain as you watch yourself become halved?
I tend to dwell more on the "how" of death and less on the after. I always wonder how I will die - disease, car crash, or more recently, snake bite! Will my death be quick and unexpected, or long, painful, and drawn out? Death by orgasm might be the best to hope for.
Also, alts are cock suckers.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Barbino Good Question!! I was thinking about this last night when I was sucking cock, since I'm gay. |
After working with old/sick/miserable people...I hope I die of a heart attack before my body gets consumed by arthritis or some other shit and I spend my end days in aching pain and misery.
Incentive to keep smoking, imo.
Re: Thinking about your own death
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Lira How often do you think of your own death? |
| quote: |
| Thus, I think we could draw one of the following conclusions from this: either there is indeed an afterlife (life itself is already bizarre, why wouldn't there be another life just as absurd as ours?), or we're so important to ourselves that we can't even think of what it would be like not to exist. |
Thinking of how many unrelated religions there are that believe in some sort of afterlife, I would think they might be onto something.
Especially seeing all the small tribes in the jungle, and the indians - the american ones, not the ones with the holy cows - where they would speak with the spirits of their ancestors.
Its hard for me to believe that so many unrelated civilisations just have grasped the thought of an afterlife out of thin air.
yeah yeah
I don't care a lot about what will happen after death, but sometimes i find myself scared about death itself-will it be painful? Is there going to be a terrible choking sensation or something? Ofcourse it will all depend on the cause...but for all situations it seems scary. I guess that in the case of-no-life-after-death you'll loose consciousness, time will stop (for you) and hence you will stop to exist (so it will not matter!). In the case of after-life it depends whether it is heaven or...hell lol 
i dont think about it at all really. it's in the future, not now, and cannot happen any other way from the way it will. no use resisting, fearing, or thinking about it.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Barbino Good Question!! I was thinking about this last night when I was sucking cock, since I'm gay. |
I think about it, but more of a "there's nothing I can do about it, if it's my time it's my time" kind of way. But I also don't think I'll live to be 85. I just think you never know what can happen... especially recently. So I try to live every day like it's my last day (as lame as that sounds)... always tell people I care about I love them and I've been doing things I've always wanted to (white water rafting, fishing, tubing, sky diving lol).
I worry more about if anything happened to my bf. It wouldn't be right to finally be happy and have it taken from me. 
The more I think about death, the more I want to live NOW.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Clovis The more I think about death, the more I want to live NOW. |
Re: Thinking about your own death
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Lira How often do you think of your own death? Most people, perhaps intuitively, think that something perceivable is going to happen to them after their own death (i.e. they will go to some other dimension/plane, they will reincarnate, they will hang out in a jacuzzi with the Big JHC drinking wine all night long, et cetera). So far, so good. |
| quote: |
| Thus, I think we could draw one of the following conclusions from this: either there is indeed an afterlife (life itself is already bizarre, why wouldn't there be another life just as absurd as ours?), or we're so important to ourselves that we can't even think of what it would be like not to exist. I tend to favour the latter due to my affinity with materialism and the impossibility of going anywhere my body isn't, but no matter how hard I think about it, death seems to be as puzzling as being thrown in a black hole: if you ceased to perceive time, wouldn't your mental activities cease as well? In that sense, you'd tend to imagine that you'd be stuck within your last memory, but that memory has to span for some time, and if you cannot perceive time, what are you going to retain in your perception? Moreover, reason why I thought about it in the first place, can you imagine something you can't talk about, like an absolute death? This morning, I felt relief in knowing that I wasn't alone [pdf - Imagination and Immortality by Shaun Nichols] in most of my pondering, and I decided it would be a nice topic to discuss here with you guys. |
I had a dream last night that I was riding my bike in a "ghetto" area. All of a sudden a gang of youths surround me, take my bike, and try to stab me. Death always comes to me in my dreams.
Re: Re: Thinking about your own death
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Arbiter He correctly identifies the difficulty created by attempting to imagine one's own non-existence from a first-person perspective only. |
it's impossible for the mind to imagine it's self non-existence.. i can hardly think of anything but a global and eternal "blank screen"
I'd better be in a jacuzzi with 10 jailbaits though
Re: Re: Re: Thinking about your own death
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Project-K I think that sums up why us non-believers find it so mind-boggling to think of death. There isn't much sense in trying to imagine something you won't be around to perceive. When we imagine things we tend to base ourselves on our experiences and memories, but in this case we have no point of reference. It's like being AustraliaCQ and wondering what it's like to have sex. |
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.