And why? How?
“Each night, when I go to sleep, I die. And the next morning, when I wake up, I am reborn.”
― Mahatma Gandhi
"Every evening I died, and every evening I was born again, resurrected."
― Fight Club
It makes sense to think of death as a gradual process rather than an abrupt occurrence, even though we tend to focus on the latter
The gradual part is 'dying', while the abrupt part is 'death'. Through the former we experience life, and through the latter we are one with The Void, devoid of the capacity for experience much like pre-conception.
It makes sense to think of death as a gradual process rather than an abrupt occurrence, even though we tend to focus on the latter
The gradual part is 'dying', while the abrupt part is 'death'. Through the former we experience life, and through the latter we are one with The Void, devoid of the capacity for experience much like pre-conception.
So is living just the process of dying before death?
It makes sense to think of death as a gradual process rather than an abrupt occurrence, even though we tend to focus on the latter
The gradual part is 'dying', while the abrupt part is 'death'. Through the former we experience life, and through the latter we are one with The Void, devoid of the capacity for experience much like pre-conception.
So is living just the process of dying before death?
Living and dying are the same word essentially, in a glass half full/glass half empty kind of way.
It makes sense to think of death as a gradual process rather than an abrupt occurrence, even though we tend to focus on the latter
The gradual part is 'dying', while the abrupt part is 'death'. Through the former we experience life, and through the latter we are one with The Void, devoid of the capacity for experience much like pre-conception.
So is living just the process of dying before death?
Living and dying are the same word essentially, in a glass half full/glass half empty kind of way.
I love that, thanks