Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2010

What Happens When We Die?

Andrew Sullivan has been hosting a spirited back-and-forth on the topic of faith, religion, and death, with readers of his blog and Kevin Drum's chiming in with their thoughts. Nothing like a game of philosophical volleyball between atheists, believers, and everyone in between to illustrate my speck of existence within the galaxies, guys.

Judging from reader contributions, few are on the fence when it comes to what happens when we transition from the living to the dead. There are a lot of comments like, "I'm not sure what occurs, but here's what I hope it all means."

From it all, I see demonstrated an undercurrent of hope (or futility) that what we believe while alive somehow influences events when we're not. That seems to infer an element of control over the universe that I'm not willing to acknowledge, regardless of which side you're on. I can't even get the dog to poop in the back yard consistently, so what makes me think that I get a vote in my afterlife?

This reader observation struck a chord:

Sharing Kevin's sense of never having felt the need to believe in God, perhaps my answer will be of interest.

I have always felt that when I die, I am dead and gone, my conscious life will end, my interactions with others will end, and I will be simply GONE. I don't know what causes consciousness (call it spirit, call it soul, I don't mean to pick sides with my words), but I expect that it will end. My afterlife will be in the memories of those I knew, those who loved me, those who carry me on in their hearts. I, myself, cease to exist.

This gives me a beautiful, shockingly beautiful sense of the Now. Being in the present, the here and now, is the ultimate reward of life. I am constantly gobsmacked by the minutiae of life; I stand in awe of the things around me right fucking now. There's no reward, no judgment, no heaven, no hell. I live right fucking now.

That pretty much sums up where I stand on the topic, although it's arrogantly presumptuous to assume that anyone gives a rat's ass what I think. But it's my site, and you came here voluntarily (or via some Google magic), so there it is.

Image via Wikimedia Commons

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Prius Hearse

I can't imagine a time when I'll care less about the environment and global warming than the day they stick me in the ground and cover me with sod.

So a Prius hearse isn't part of my funeral pre-planning - sorry to disappoint Ed Begley Jr. and Larry David.

Besides, I want to be cremated so that little pieces of me waft into the atmosphere and fall onto your head with the gentle rains of spring.

Hearses to be made from Priuses , via BoingBoing


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Beam Me Down, Scotty

Gene Roddenberry had his ashes rocketed into space.

If you're not into being burned to a crisp upon your demise, but you have a Roddenberry-esqe desire to carry your geek factor with you into the afterlife, perhaps a Star Trek casket is perfect for you.

I have a sneaking suspicion that the only thing getting transported into a new dimension is your cash into the salesman's pocket, but live long and prosper, gullibility.

Oh, look - they have an urn, too, so you get to choose. Hot or not.


Monday, June 8, 2009

Fatigue - A Poem of Dying

A few weeks ago I stumbled on a very special blog, written by Michael, that was about photography, life, and for the last several years, the act of dying.

Michael was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer in 2002, and his blog continued to be a multi-facet view of his existence.

If you want to read more and explore, please visit his blog, One Foot In Front Of The Other and peruse his works. For now, please take a moment to read this poetry that Michael posted shortly before he left the bounds of this Earth. The comments are worth a read, too - at least most of them.

Looking in my bathroom mirror
I see the steady progress of death
as he moves like an eclipse
across my face

My skin grows more taut
my beard is shot through with gray
my eyes are increasingly bloodshot
I can't recognize this person staring back at me --
in fact
this stranger is scaring me

My physical weakness astounds me
my arms don't listen anymore
my sense of balance has forsaken me

But, blessing of blessings
I can still feel the life spark
I can still feel the life spark