What happens when you die?
There are numbers of reasons this question prays on my mind right now, involved as I am with the dead, the dying, survivors and inquiring minds, so I’ve been giving the guaranteed outcome of life a good deal of thought lately.
There are, of course, a hell of a lot of theories, and any number of them make a lot of sense when contemplated from one direction or another, and I tend to go through the list from time to time, not that I expect much of any answer until my time comes.
That, in fact, is one of the possibilities … that at the moment the bucket is kicked we become enlightened. In shuffling off this mortal coil (Hamlet – iii. i. 67) all the information kept from us during our lifetimes is once more available … it being either more than we can bear while busy drawing breath or outside the “need-to-know” limits that coil thing bars us from catching on to … and suddenly it all makes sense.
From what lessons we were supposed to learn to why we died a certain way, we see the patterns, the reasons, and judge for ourselves how well we did … and what classes we may have to repeat.
Another involves a “higher power” who does the judging for us, then sends us off toward either eternal damnation or an infinity of happy harp-strumming. Although very popular, this one doesn’t fly with me, as there seems to be something ungodly petty about condemnation after only one short course, and even those who manage to hang around for 100 years have still only managed an eye-blink of time in the big picture.
There is also the idea that when we die, we’re just dead. The staunch atheistic approach insisting we are biological beings, pure and simple; we’re born, we live, we die and that’s that.
It makes a lot of sense and science goes a long way to back this up. Every week there’s some new study out on some biochemical process that causes dishonesty or various personality traits or love or the inability to love (And I’m sorry, but I’m so not in the frame of mind to dig up links to this stuff right now, so if you’re looking for references try Google.)
This could very well be exactly the case, but it seems rather pointless.
Not only pointless to live a lifetime with worries of no more than doing your bit to ingest enough nutrients to reproduce … the prime biological mandate … but also to assume the position that this is all there is … ever.
It also seems a rather unimaginative stance.
I prefer something that could include parallel universes and essence of being that is made up of energy, rather than flesh and bone and brain. An existence that doesn’t begin and end with … and, okay, I admit I’m quoting Yoda here, but that little guy made a point I like … “this crude matter”.
If crude matter is the be all and end all, the point escapes me, and if there is no point … well, there is no point. If being dead amounts to no more than compost we’ll certainly not be aware of that state of having become, and I guess that’s okay, too. It does rather put the kibosh on any growth and learning and leaving a mark, though, if the only mark to be left could be called skid.
There is either a reason for being born, for living and for dying that goes beyond making more to be born, live and die, or there isn’t, and it seems a flagrant waste of energy if that’s the whole circle. Fleeting moments of joy, plunges into the depths of suffering, decades of acquiring knowledge, flashes of brilliance, art, music, literature, war, starvation, cruelty, benevolence … all the stuff we get up to that plants don’t … they seem to indicate we might expect something more.
On the science front, it’s pretty clear that although at any given moment in time the answers seem set in stone they aren’t and new discoveries come up. Is it possible one day it will be scientifically proven that we are, indeed, luminous beings encased, for a while, in this crude matter? That we are here as we are for reasons we aren’t supposed to know until the bell rings, the fat lady sings and we graduate from this class and pass along to another level?
I could say I hope this is the way it is, and I do, but if it’s not … if this is all there will ever be … well, I’ll be disappointed if there’s anything left of me to be disappointed with.
If, however, there is some “me” left … energy me, next-life me, other-universe me, hang-around-and-visit-loved-ones me … I will feel better about the whole dead thing.
As I put on Jaren’s funeral “program”:
Seeing death as the end of life is like seeing the horizon as the end of the ocean.
_ David Searls
The Japanese notion of kami has sometimes interested me. I’m not sure I correctly understand the concept, Sandra, but I think the idea is that kami are something like a cross between spirits and gods, but impersonal. As I recall, at least some of us after death become kami. Maybe it’s all of us.
I’ve been writing a series that, I hope, builds as relentlessly as a father’s worries for his offspring on prom night, to a climatic ending on a topic almost identical to yours. I hope I can make that series as lively, yet thoughtful as your post. Wish me luck!
I look forward to following your series, Paul, and thank you for the kind words …
Oh, for goodness sakes don’t follow it, Sandra! I’d rather you still might possess some meager doubts I’m not a complete fool.
Silly man …
Jesus said to Judas: “You will exceed all of them. For you will sacrifice the man that clothes me” – The Gospel of Judas Iscariot. The only Gospel that has ever made sense to me.
~smiles~ Beautiful post, I liked it so much that I am not even going to share what I believe in because in many ways it already tells what I want to say
I prefer death over Weiner (hehehe), death is more interesting. What happens when you die is a fascinating topic. I too, hope that we are luminous beings. Several years ago, I came across child prodigy, Akiane Kramarik who is a self-taught artist. Since the age of 4 she has had visions of other dimensions/worlds.Her art is an expression of what she sees, hears and experiences in those worlds. Akiane has an amazing story and her art is breathtaking. She has a younger brother who has amazing gifts as well. I wrote about Akiane and posted a video with a link to her blog on my new blog miracle mama.Akiane is only sixteen, but to hear her during an interview that is posted on her website, she seems much much older. The question that comes to my mind is; are these other worlds available for others to see or are they specific to the individual who sees them. I wish I could see other worlds, but then again, maybe it would scare me into thinking I was going crazy (to which those who know me would respond; what do you mean going….).
http://miraclemama.com/2011/04/22/the-miracle-of-akiane-a-link-to-divinity/
P.S. If we are just meat bodies, then how do we explain extraordinarily gifted individuals like Akiane. I surely, don’t know.
no one has ever been able to explain death to me. or why bad stuff happens. it sure would be nice tho, if there is more. there are a bunch of people it would be fine to see again.
The only explanation that has ever made any sense to me is that thing about lessons. I’m so with you on the “fine to see again” bit …