What happens to us when we die?
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Nothing .
everyone cry for us.
our heart doesn't work.
hey mate aise samaj mein nhi aayega ek bar mar ke dekh
shreya504:
nope
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Science can predict what happens after you die. First, as parts of your neural net starts to shut down due to oxygen deprivation, some zonal potential will start to decay. Random regions will fire due to inhibitory regions shutting down, while other networks resort to emergency prevention procedure. As death takes over more and more regions (assuming that the heart has stopped working for a while now) parts of the mind quickly transition between shock, quickly bypassed into euphoria as the body compensates for the shock by releasing all the enzymes and ions in a last ditch effort to function. It's literally trying to stimulate itself back to continued function. The effort is moot. As these final regions fire, memories and visions flood the mind in a deluge of noise as the last remaining sections attempt to rewire itself. Think of a city losing power and the inhabitants moving batteries around to try and keep the lights on. More and more of the individual fades into the deep silent sleep of death, returning once more to the blank nothingness that our consciousness came from before we were born, now quickly becoming unborn. If measured in an IQ sense, we quickly devolve into a primordial state where only basic senses and perception is present, and when those final flickers dwindle, only small static sparks of circuitry fire with nowhere to connect to. Does an earthworm care if it dies? Like a meaningless voice in a dark ocean. The silence finally claims those too. Then the chemicals begin to break down as decomposition and new microbe life takes over. We are no longer an organism and become an environment for life much smaller than our own. We become like the rocks and trees, and soon rejoin the Earth. Want to know what it's like to die? Ask dirt.
Like the earthworm or an amoeba, it doesn't worry about dying, and neither will you. You, who cared so much about the afterlife, will soon no longer care about death. You, who a decade or two ago cared about certain TV shows or music, are a completely different person today. When you're an earthworm in terms of intelligence during death, you'll no longer care about death at all. Are you still you? What happened to the you that was a kid so long ago? Every cell in your body is replaced every 7 years, or so. Every neuron is replaced one ion and molecule at a time. That's nearly EVERY atom. You've died already, many times, constantly. You'll die again and again until you devolve into an earthworm, then into dirt. This is what death truly is. It is not kind, and it is not unkind, but it certainly isn't eternal torture of pain or pleasure. It is what it is. Why not just appreciate the beauty of life for what it is while we are who we think we are. Like a brush of paint on an epic painting, we started at some point, and ended at some other point. We existed, isn't that enough?
On a related note. It is my opinion that death should remind us that we are not gods. By our definition, a god exists always, eternally. Scientists ask to know more and be more of a person and embrace more of the world while they exist, knowing that it all goes away at some point. Those who are religious seek to exist forever, to seek eternity, is to seek being like a god. Isn't that a bit pretentious? Maybe death is a reminder from eternal forces that we are not like them, that we are not gods. Maybe if we live a good life and be a good example, the universe will bestow a longer existence. Think of Jesus and Newton. They set an example, and in a way, parts of them lived on in their name. Perhaps that is the gift of living a good life to the best of our abilities, not some abstract promise to ease us in our fears.
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