Pomegranate
"To die is gain."
- Jan 21, 2022
- 78
Like many others, I was indoctrinated to believe in a particular belief system. Now that I've grown up and read arguments for and against God, as well as learned how ambiguous his existence and identity are, I've become agnostic. But the primal fear of hell still carries on. I'm scared I may be the main character in some higher power's movie or video game, or perhaps God is testing me. Other times, I worry if this whole world is a simulation. I know had I not been taught religion at a young age that I wouldn't have this fear; I enjoy the bliss of not having to think about the hell of Buddhism or Hinduism. But I can't do it for my family's religion of Islam.
Does anyone have any tips or pieces of advice that worked for them? Here are some statements that make my day a little easier, but they're not enough for me:
Does anyone have any tips or pieces of advice that worked for them? Here are some statements that make my day a little easier, but they're not enough for me:
- There are so many differences even within the same sect, let alone religion, that I'm bound to go to a hell no matter what I believe in.
- Had I grown up in a Christian family, I would've feared Jesus's hell. Had I grown up in a Hindu family, I would've feared Naraka.
- I'll never know with absolute certainty the ultimate truth (if there is one). I'm only a human being.
- If I won't know the ultimate truth until I die, then I can either live a life full of philosophical worries or life without too much philosophical worry. I may as well live the latter.
- Lots of things we take for granted we aren't 100% sure of. I don't know if I'll get into a crash when I'll drive to the grocery store tomorrow. I don't know if I'll be hit by a meteorite by 2030. Yet people still drive all the time. Doesn't look like we'll get hit by a meteorite anytime soon. The world goes on.