Elysiumfire
Ex Member
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Hi Shorty, After reading your post, and the replies it has thus received, I thought I'd chip in with a few comments of mine own. My first thought is to wonder why someone as young as yourself at the beginning of their adult-life, should be thinking about its conclusion; but then I remembered that I was pondering upon death even earlier. Not upon death, per se, but like you, wondering if there was a continuation, or was it simply a case of fading into total oblivion? Many accept this world to be a plane of learning for spirit. A plane of 'being' in which the rough and the smooth of the physical life experience imbues an appreciation of others on the same journey (they suffer the same storms and calms as one does) . Many again, accept the life experience as a means for the 'part' to find a way to re-assimilate back into the 'Whole' (whatever you consider this 'Whole' to be, God, Source, Universal Conscious, etc). If you do not follow one of the ritualistic doctrines of one of the so-called 'organised' religions (as I don't), it can leave one feeling disconnected, bewildered, aimless, and unsure of perceiving a meaning to one's life. Man is a spiritual being (having an 'inner' and 'outer' conscious experience), and as well as seeking meaning to his physical life experience - the why and wherefore of it, he also seeks meaning to its ending. By possessing the attribute of memory, he is able to look back to the earlier parts of his life, and by the same attribute, he is able to anticipate intuitively forward to the later parts, perhaps in the calm moments reflecting upon the day when his life will terminate. Ergo, it is natural that he might ask questions of his mortality, and in the asking seek some comforting enlightenment that will help to ease his anxious mind.
You have received good advice from the earlier posters, and their advice carries the common theme of 'seek and ye shall find'; I'll echo their sentiments by counseling you to seek life, for therein lay your answers. They will not be answers of definity, but of realisations, inklings of a post-mortem continuation within a brighter, more loving Consciousness. Whatever you discern that Consciousness to be, might depend upon what you encounter throughout your life, for experiences will come upon you thick and fast. They will test and challenge you, worry and trouble you, but as they do, in all of them is a growth and shaping that will help to mould the man you will come to be.
Remember always, the counsel Polonius offered to his son Laertes, "..to thine own 'self' be true..", and by this you will come to know the purpose of life as inscribed above the temple entrance in New Dehli...'Know Thy Self'! It is a covenant we all make as we step into existence.
As a rather famous Mr. Spock often stated...'Live long and prosper'.
Regards
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