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Agroboy

Agroboy

I am not quite the man you take me for
Apr 30, 2026
36
The strange conviction that it is possible to exist again after death is something that often occupies my mind. Everything in nature seems to be recycled. What we are today is merely a manifestation of what Schopenhauer called the "Will": a blind force that does not care about individual beings, but constantly seeks new expressions, a new life, a new chemical reaction.

In the end, we are only one manifestation among many, moving toward death because we will eventually be recycled into something else. This leads me to wonder whether the universe itself may one day reboot. There is even a theory in physics that touches on this possibility: the cyclical universe.

The matter that composes us will continue to exist after our death. Our consciousness may fade away, but the actions we take during our lives can influence people who have not even been born yet. For example, I once read Carlo Michelstaedter, who took his own life and never expected his work to become widely known. In the preface, he writes that he did not believe anyone would take his writings seriously. Yet reading his reflections on rhetoric made me think about how society can become a veil of deception, one that seeks to use the individual until nothing remains.

A similar idea can be found in Max Stirner's concept of "spooks" or "phantoms": abstract ideas that people treat as sacred realities. Political and religious ideologies, for example, can subordinate the individual's will to blind ideals that often serve only the power, comfort, and interests of a privileged few.

With all this in mind, within this vast web of causality, we continue to exist even after death through the consequences of our actions. The people we influence go on to influence others, creating a chain reaction that extends far beyond our own lives. Our matter continues in new forms and new beings. And perhaps, on an even greater scale, the universe itself may one day recycle, since absolute emptiness or true nothingness appears to be impossible according to our current understanding of physics.

What unsettles me most is the possibility of existing through infinite lives, where death is never truly a final rest, but only the beginning of another possibility

From my perspective, even suicide can be seen as an act of faith, because not even death can guarantee a definitive end. For the consciousness of the one who dies, it may indeed become a form of rest. Yet the deeper fear—one that many people have likely felt at some point—is the possibility of ending one's life only to awaken somewhere else, in another existence, perhaps one even worse than the last.

If there is no certainty about what follows death, then death itself cannot offer certainty. It may be an ending, but it may also be a transition. The unsettling thought is that, in seeking escape from suffering, one might merely be stepping into another form of it. In that sense, the fear is not death itself, but the possibility that existence continues beyond it in ways we cannot imagine or control.

--
No matter how much I think about it, and no matter how much I have studied and tried to understand what life is, I have come to realize that I have nothing meaningful to contribute here. I see that, even with the best intentions, any words of mine are ultimately futile and insignificant in the grand scheme of things. Life goes on with or without me.

So, take care, everyone. I have been here before, but this is definitely the last time. I consider any questions concerning life and death to be settled for me. Ironically, I feel nothing—no fear at all. Instead, a profound sense of peace and acceptance is with me, something that once seemed impossible.

"Uma morte para uma verdadeira vida"
 
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Aknu132

Aknu132

Tenha um bom dia!
Dec 25, 2023
235
Entropy will eliminate any chance of life in the universe. The "Big Freeze" is the most accepted science theory of the destiny of the universe.
 
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mawsonia

I don't hate myself, I tolerate myself.
Mar 27, 2026
7
Honestly I've had a similar thought about infinite lives in the form of reincarnation. To me it feels sort of intuitive that because there always has to be some form of consciousness created to form new life, and the fact that I was granted that consciousness at least once, I feel like it could definitely happen again given enough time and given the amount of creatures being born not only on earth, but potentially anywhere in this universe. I mean sure the universe might end one day but who knows how long that would take.
I don't really understand or want to think about the implications of what happens after I pass because at this point I'm too tired to. It's scary, sure, but sometimes it feels kind of "alright" to take the gamble.

It's pretty interesting that you mention the consequences of our actions long after our deaths, and honestly it's a reason I'm kind of nervous to ctb since I'm scared of the consequences of that. Like, I know I won't be around but I'd feel sorry for my parents. I know they love me but still. I'm nervous of how my outer family would judge them, of having a son that ctb'd and that potential shame that it brings. Aside from that I really don't care about whatever legacy I leave or how I've influenced others.
 
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