Last update : 4 / 1 / 2020
7 / 1 / 2019
Spirituality is not an option
In the world we live, all things are created for a specific purpose. Even scientists, neurologists, atheists and materialists understand that. So why are we suffering, never happy, never satisfied, always searching for something else, for more ? Is suffering our best friend ?
4 / 1 / 2020
Fear of death
At the origin of all the fears, emotions, as much the best than the worst, feelings of insecurity, anxieties, depressions, neurosis, psychosis and psychological problems of all sorts is, of course, the ultimate fear of death, the most terrifying demon that constantly challenges our irrational survival instinct. As a matter of fact, it would be difficult to imagine immortal beings suffering from any mental disorder because they have the eternity to satisfy all their desires, even those the mortals would consider as the most insane.
But what do we really know about death, and especially what happens afterwards ? We clearly know nothing about it. It’s not a doctor in medicine or neuroscience, a priest or a New Age addict who could answer such a question. The proof is that they are all alive to speak of it, and they obviously cannot know for sure what they are really talking about.
As for the near death experiences or outside the body, the only evidence that could make us believe that life doesn’t end at the time of death, they will never convince a person who has never lived such experiences, if however they can really remove all possible doubts from those who have lived them, which we can sincerely doubt for the obvious reason that the one thinking about, namely the mind and the ego, have of course a living body and brain to wonder about what could happen after death.
This means that the fear of death relies actually only on our thoughts, i.e. what we think about what could happen afterwards. But the real question is why are we're afraid of this death, that is to say of our conscious or unconscious belief system – it goes without saying that the fear of death concerns as much the die-hard nihilist than the fanatic believer since it challenges the most natural survival instinct. And the answer is actually very simple, it could be formulated as follows : "What would happen if life indeed does not stop after death ?"
We can therefore easily infer that our instinctive fear of death doesn’t rely, in fact, on what will happen after death, but what happened before, in other words how we have lived and are still doing it.
In summary, we could easily say that our fear of death does not concern the unknown at all, but only the present and past that we know very well, and which somehow is still haunting us. Clearly stated, that topic is more about Karma and immanent justice that death that we know absolutely nothing about.
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