spooky2
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Hi Cole,
You've already heard the logical answer regarding the fear of nothingness: There is nothing to fear. That's logical. But, I also saw a different thing in your post: You feel that it would be such senseless if there really would be nothing beyond physical death. I must say, these thoughts are logical too. I wonder why not more people have these thoughts, must be a sort of well armored thought-protection that you apparantly do not have. Indeed, before the background of nothing after physical death, life would just make no sense- at least to me.
There are two ways I see for you, you can go both:
Seek for evidence for the existence after (and before) the physical death. That is mainly through reports of near-death-experiences, through other reports of experiences in altered states of awareness, and experiences in own meditations (I've tried it and it changed my life, and I'm not a freak, really). You don't need to become a monk and sitting hours every day. The key is relaxation, to shutdown the senses as much as possible, maybe to ask (or ask for) something and to pay attention, and to write down the experiences.
See the logic of philosophy. "Scientists" who are telling everyone there is nothing after death don't tell what is scientifically proven, they tell about their own belief system and cover it with science. They are no good scientists, they misuse science to promote their own beliefs. There's in my opinion a simple psychologic rule behind it. They are uncertain about this belief, and when they make others convince of their own doubted beliefs, then their own doubts diminish for a while; but because they're not soluted, they remain and come back and that's why many of this materialistic scientists are so busy to repeat their oh so "scientific" view, which isn't scientific at all (this of course is also true for other doubting belief system fighters, for example religious, the more urge and force one spend on promoting a belief system, the more doubt and fear is involved, that's my opinion). You already have philosophied a bit. There is this theoretical assumption that all you are experiencing is in your mind (not in your head, because your head also would be part of this mind-world). This must be true, because perception is in your mind right? If not, you wouldn't perceive. (If you are the only one or not of course no one could prove that to be wrong or to be true.) Let's play around with it. If your world is (or is in) your mind, then it is a world of consciousness. Physical death then loses it's specialty, because everything is consciousness. There is no evidence that your consciousness would end because your body falls off. And see, this world in your mind, how much possibilities do occur from this point of view. There is no fundamental gap between dreams, imagination, and sensual perception. There could be people who live in exactly the same circumsdances, the one is happy, the other depressed. See how much depends on everyones own way to approach the world.
Did you ever see "nothing"? I did not. How comes that many people think there is nothing when they never have seen something like "nothing"? Fear, I thought sometime ago, always is about something not yet here (and mostly never ever here), if something is here, present, happening, it could maybe hurt you, shock you, or whatever, but you then can deal with it, but fear always is about something you imagine. If you realize this, you can better influence it.
Spooky
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