What I find interesting about people who believe in reincarnation, is that we usually picture ourselves coming back as another person or animal... something native to Earth. But when you think about it, why should the pool of life be limited to what you find on earth? It would make sense to me that you could come back as anything living in the Universe. I should be able to come back as an extraterrestrial life that lives in another galaxy.Yeah, I'm coming to the realization that all of this theorizing is just a way for me to convince myself that I'm gonna live on somehow. It's a survival mechanism of some sort. Nothingness is totally fine, because then I won't even care about being reincarnated.
We live on a planet with a fuckton of other animal species, including mammals. We're mammals. What happens to mice, cats, dogs, whales, and apes when they die? Probably exactly the same thing that happens to us.That alone I cannot fathom.
After reading these yesterday, I started looking up stories of people who've died and came back, and they're pretty interesting. A lot of them were similar as well.It's hard to my brother, I have a hard time accepting it myself. But once we die it won't be hard because it's only consciousness that allows us to fear death.
I absolutely love this. So, so true.It's hard to my brother, I have a hard time accepting it myself. But once we die it won't be hard because it's only consciousness that allows us to fear death.
Ok so what about the soldiers being shot? Do their brain release feel good chemicals? I don't think so, you never hear the shot that kills you.The brain releases all kinds of crazy feel-good chemicals when you die, possibly as a way to smoothen the transition to death. This has been proven in studies. People who have had near-death experiences talk about reuniting with lost ones at the end of some long dark tunnel, etc. Maybe that's what heaven really is; just one last incredible hallucination that the brain gives you before it shuts itself down.
I always wondered how different types of deaths would affect this process. For instance if you die by gunshot wound to the head, would it be the same as dying of old age? What I mean is will the brain react differently to these different causes of death? A headshot to the head would probably completely shut down your brain, as opposite to a natural death, where the brain will still probably be alive for some minutes after the heart stops beating.The brain releases all kinds of crazy feel-good chemicals when you die, possibly as a way to smoothen the transition to death. This has been proven in studies. People who have had near-death experiences talk about reuniting with lost ones at the end of some long dark tunnel, etc. Maybe that's what heaven really is; just one last incredible hallucination that the brain gives you before it shuts itself down.
I think it depends. If it's a headshot and instant death, then maybe not, but if the brain has just enough time to process the dying then maybe.Ok so what about the soldiers being shot? Do their brain release feel good chemicals? I don't think so, you never hear the shot that kills you.
Except death is nothing like dreaming, at least when you are dreaming you can still experience things, during death you can't even experience nothing because nothingness can only be grasped by consciousness."The one thing I can't understand, I can't grasp my head around, is I feel when you die, there's just nothing; it's like when you're asleep and you're dreaming. But, I can't imagine nothingness lasting forever. That is the thing that I cannot get."
- Stan Lee
That's actually really comforting. Likewise, the desire to be reincarnated and have another experience is also something that can only be in consciousness.nothingness can only be grasped by consciousness.