kokosnight
Member
- Dec 27, 2020
- 25
missing the people you love or missing what you're gonna do in the future
Missing nature, sunsets, forests that kind of thing. But I don't have access to that now anyway.missing the people you love or missing what you're gonna do in the future
I feel like I've had 20 years getting used to that idea, It's just unpleasantness from the past now that I just want to move on from. Anyone else found that?knowing that you will never live the life you should've had.
this hit hardknowing that you will never live the life you should've had.
100% this.Leaving people who love me behind
The hardest part as someone said here is ensuring the reliability of my method of ctb. i just want to die and don't want to remain alive much less in a brain damaged state. Also i fear pain. the rest of the "hard" things are illusions imo that i can overcome.missing the people you love or missing what you're gonna do in the future
The hardest part as someone said here is ensuring the reliability of my method of ctb. i just want to die and don't want to remain alive much less in a brain damaged state. Also i fear pain. the rest of the "hard" things are illusions imo that i can overcome.
In 100 years from now i won't miss or know anything anyway or that i even existed much less that i thought i "loved" something. And time passes really really fast. 100 years will be here in no time at all ( this becomes more apparent the older you are). In 500 years no one will know or remember any of us existed or lived.
In a quadrillion years the only things remaining will be black holes and they won't remember that stars or planets or the Earth ever existed.
I believe there is nothing after Death for a human.It's funny this video mentions time being a human construct, because it ties into the theory about what waits (or rather doesn't) after CTB.
I've never believed in all that Land of Milk and Honey nonsense. Same BS as the Easter Bunny. But I think generations of NDE's produced enough anecdotal lore to produce beliefs of an afterlife. But I don't believe we actually have one. So what were those folks seeing/experiencing in those NDE's? A few ideas:
While this concept might be disturbing to some, I find it comforting. I believe there's a rational explanation for everything, and this one makes the most sense to me.
- One of the human body's greatest gifts is the dopamine dump the brain gets right before death. If anything would produce impressions of heaven, I think this would be it.
- In addition to the euphoria, there would also be a surreal yet familiar experience as the brain shuts down, merging a lifetime of memories with the transition the brain is making. This might make one feel like they're having a reunion with departed friends and family.
- Most importantly, the concept of time breaks down the closer the brain gets to death. So while our bodies are gone in minutes, that last second could last an eternity inside our dying minds.
The hardest part as someone said here is ensuring the reliability of my method of ctb. i just want to die and don't want to remain alive much less in a brain damaged state. Also i fear pain. the rest of the "hard" things are illusions imo that i can overcome.
In 100 years from now i won't miss or know anything anyway or that i even existed much less that i thought i "loved" something. And time passes really really fast. 100 years will be here in no time at all ( this becomes more apparent the older you are). In 500 years no one will know or remember any of us existed or lived.
In a quadrillion years the only things remaining will be black holes and they won't remember that stars or planets or the Earth ever existed.