do tell.
4/17/2012 1:37:52 AM
Circle of Life yo. Embrace it.
4/17/2012 2:51:59 AM
I'm going to die. Everyone does. Doesn't bother me and I rarely think about it.Every once in a while I think about things I have done that were dangerous and/or stupid.I carry a gun for long winded reasons related to this topic.
4/17/2012 2:56:00 AM
4/17/2012 3:25:40 AM
I'm not at all afraid of dying, in fact I'm incredibly curious. I would rather die a grizzly death doing something I loved, like riding my motorcycle, than pass quietly. That does not mean I want to die young -- there is a lot I want to accomplish and experience in these few short years on this planet, but as long as I'm living well I'm not afraid to die young because I suspect that, upon my death, all mortal concerns are precisely moot. However, I don't want my parents to have to bury me or my loved ones to see me go before they were ready. So for that reason I am taking the precautions that generally "sane" people take to preserve my existence, within the context of still living a fulfilling life. Hopefully, if all goes well, I'll leave the place a little better than I found it. I carry a gun because I think they're cool and maybe one day I'll have the opportunity to save a life. Also for other long winded reasons related to this topic.]
4/17/2012 4:39:19 AM
I think I'd be fine with dying as long as 1) it's on my terms, and 2) I have time to prepare for it. Like getting my affairs in order and saying my goodbyes to make it as easy as possible for my loved ones.I just don't want to die some gruesome or unexpected way like in a collapsing building or a sinking ship where my final moments are filled with panic.
4/17/2012 6:54:38 AM
Personally this is something I think about a lot.For one, I really want to see my daughter grow up. She is the coolest thing I have ever seen, and I would be missing out big time if I didn't get to see her play sports, graduate, get married, etc. On the same token, I don't want her to have to grow up without her daddy, because from my experience, things often do not turn out well for girls that grow up without a dad or with a shitty dad.I also constantly think about mortality and what will happen after I die. I have pretty much convinced myself that most of modern religion is fabricated in order to support personal interests and such. However I can make no claim as to being nearly as sure about the origins of the universe, and the possibility of a creator existing. There are a lot of compelling arguments both for and against the existence of some kind of creator, and I am not the type of person who can dismiss either side as being 100% wrong. So yeah, while if I had to guess, I'd say once we die, we just die - to say that I am not quite curious and constantly thinking about the possibilities of an afterlife would be a lie.
4/17/2012 7:01:27 AM
The older I get the less I think about it, also the less it bothers me. I'm not one to dwell on it either.
4/17/2012 7:10:43 AM
I really worry about it more for my family sake. I don't want to die, but while it used to be purely for selfish reasons, now it is not so much about shit I haven't done, but about how would my boys grow up without their father to teach them right and wrong, lead their scout group, take them to see cool stuff, give them their first beer, etc. I want to be there for that shit, not some other guy my wife picks up after I'm gone.I'm honestly glad I had kids earlier because I want them to get to know and learn from my dads parents, because my grandmother is very sweet, but my grandfather is probably the coolest grandfather ever. I really like my dad don't get me wrong, but even in his late 70s and early 80s my grandpa builds computers, makes all kinds of furniture, runs a business that he repairs appliances, frames pictures, and does so many things that other people his age no longer have the ability to do, if they ever could. When we are in town my kids are more interested in my mother-in-law (she lives around the corner) who feeds them a diet of 100% candy and says she has no rules because that is not a grandmothers job, I hope that my grandparents live long enough for my children to appreciate them and remember them when they grow up.
4/17/2012 7:32:42 AM
4/17/2012 7:48:02 AM
I'm just trying to stay alive until the singularity, at which point I will have my consciousness uploaded to the cloud.
4/17/2012 8:11:48 AM
4/17/2012 8:24:50 AM
I'm not afraid of dying. I just really don't like the idea of not being alive.
4/17/2012 8:52:46 AM
if i make it to a point where i cant take care of myself my plan is to go on a permanent hunger strike. i dont want to live in the old folks home. that aint livin i really only think about dying when i hop on my motorcycle. but of course i rationalize it by believing that it is about 37 times more fatal per mile than driving a car and i drive my truck about 37 times more miles. so its a toss up statistically.
4/17/2012 1:26:38 PM
hakuna matata?
4/17/2012 1:49:05 PM
Do they have TWW in heaven?
4/17/2012 1:54:45 PM
death freaks me out. i try not to think about it.
4/17/2012 1:55:54 PM
It's curious how the people who have come to grips with their mortality are the ones who are confident that they won't be going on afterwards.Myself, it's clear that no part of the consciousness will survive the destruction of my brain so that'll be the end of me. It's also certain to happen. I try to remind myself about my mortality daily if only to let my family know that I appreciate the time that we have together.I think of it like going to sleep only not waking up. I think we really would get sick of existing eternally but would have appreciated more than <100 years to contemplate it.
4/17/2012 3:20:24 PM
4/17/2012 8:36:31 PM
^not certain, but very very likely [Edited on April 17, 2012 at 8:45 PM. Reason : a]
4/17/2012 8:40:38 PM
4/17/2012 8:42:59 PM
^my badbased on the lack of evidence[Edited on April 17, 2012 at 8:49 PM. Reason : a]
4/17/2012 8:46:14 PM
4/17/2012 8:55:13 PM
^i tried to say there nothing to base your opinion on
4/17/2012 8:59:29 PM
4/17/2012 9:00:06 PM
4/17/2012 9:03:21 PM
It's not the death part I'm worried about. It's the dying part.
4/17/2012 9:17:09 PM
4/17/2012 9:17:50 PM
I used to never think about death until I started taking classes for my bio degree and realized how many ways you could die easily. Also a bunch of people I am acquainted with started dying. I'm just terrified about the fact that it could be coming at any time and I won't have any idea. My life could be 99% over with right now and I'm just blissfully unaware. Also I'm really afraid that it's gonna be horribly painful, like if I die in a car wreck or drown or something.
4/17/2012 9:18:33 PM
4/17/2012 9:21:28 PM
4/17/2012 9:43:46 PM
I think about it fairly regularly. From the current perspective, it's no big deal. It's inevitable. If I've gotten the religion thing right, it shouldn't be a big deal. If I got it wrong, well, it's not like I'll be upset after I'm worm food. All of these are good reasons to not get worked up about it.But (contrary to what might be said of those with a less flattering view of religion) I'm also realistic. It's easy to be nonchalant about it right now. If I were bleeding out on a sidewalk or sitting in a hospital bed with metastatic cancer destroying all my vital organs, I might sing a very different tune. I'd like to think I'd face the inevitable with some grace and a sense of humor, but neither I nor anybody else can rule out the prospect of screaming like a coward at the end.For now, the refrain whenever I do something stupidly dangerous (like lighting a cigarette or charging into the middle of a South American riot to see what's going on) is "Everybody's gotta die of something."
4/17/2012 10:33:39 PM
4/17/2012 11:13:51 PM
4/17/2012 11:46:36 PM
4/18/2012 12:34:32 AM
There are worse things than dying. Seems like a waste though.
4/18/2012 12:41:27 AM
4/18/2012 1:11:32 AM
4/18/2012 2:20:40 AM
4/18/2012 4:28:19 AM
I'm around dying people pretty often in the hospital, and can't say it bugs me that much. Usuallythe people I see dying have been slowly at it for awhile, and their families can't let them go (i.e. 85 year oldgrandma has all kinds of tubes in addition to the usual post-op drains and IV fluids, and was barely stable enough to have undergone that operation to fix her broken hip,and her family still hasn't filled out the damn advance directive, and she's oriented maybe half the time, and in a lot of pain, and the staff knows she ain't gettin any better).I'm getting an advance directive by the time I'm 45, for sure, to prevent the above scenario.
4/18/2012 5:45:32 AM
It amazes me that no matter how many times through the course of history the world and scientific community has been turned on it's head by a new discovery, man can still be so arrogant to think that we have it all figured out.Science and human ingenuity has taught us many things, but in the end I have to believe the vast majority of theories we have are either partially wrong or complete horseshit. For everything we know on a subject, it's only a sliver of what there is to know. Hell, all of the scientific community could spend the next 1000 years studying our immune system alone and still fall hopelessly short of knowing everything there is to know about it.This is why I find it hilarious when a person smugly says, "But look at the science!" Just because you've chosen to base the entirety of your opinion on the little crumbs of scientific fact and/or theory we have at the moment doesn't make you smart; it makes you a simple minded lemming.
4/18/2012 8:47:39 AM
4/18/2012 8:53:02 AM
Wish you guys wouldn't turn this into a religion thread.I don't really think about it that much. Can't say I'm afraid of it. I just hope it's not a long, drawn out, painful death. I would like to go quick. I could also care less about going early, but I would worry about how that would affect my loved ones...so I'd rather not for their sake.I do think, in general, life is too short unless you're really really rich. The world is a big place and there are so many things to do and see. But in general, it takes too much time and money to see and do those thing (unless, of course, you're loaded)...especially if you really want to have the traditional family as well.Oh well...
4/18/2012 9:03:25 AM
4/18/2012 11:50:34 AM
^ I get it...but it should be focused more on your living life, not your afterlife. Obviously your opinion on your living life will be affected by what you think happens afterwards, I would just rather it not take over 100% of the thread.
4/18/2012 11:53:35 AM
I found out yesterday a friend of mine committed suicide Sunday night, it's definitely given me something to think about along these lines. I'll be back in a week with more insight into this, I'm still in shock over the whole thing right now.
4/18/2012 4:06:52 PM
Memento mori, all.
4/18/2012 4:20:15 PM
There's a limited time to find happiness and to make a lasting difference.Though there are a lot of ways to try to have an impact, it's part of what attracts me to the arena of legislation and elections, especially at the state and local level where you can make a difference in who is elected and what legislation or resolutions are passed. It's something that can make a positive difference in peoples lives now, and makes at least a few footnotes in history.
4/18/2012 6:35:06 PM
Only a politician would be vain enough to view politics as an easy path to immortality.
4/18/2012 7:27:58 PM
A friend of mine recently died unexpectedly. Most of the funeral wasn't at all what he would have wanted. This motivated me to plan my funeral, so that the people who really knew me wouldn't have to sit through stupid songs and threatening sermons. Also, my own death doesn't scare me as much as my loved ones dying. I think that is mainly because no one needs me. The biggest inconvenience would be my place of employment having to hire someone new and my boyfriend having to find a new girlfriend. If I have kids, I think that would change.
4/18/2012 10:53:11 PM