
AN1V
♱ v ♱ v ♱ v ♱
- Jun 14, 2025
- 4
Does anyone have any insight or plausible idea what comes after death?
I know it's a dumb question because it can never be answered, but the fear of the unknown and what might be after keeps me from CTB
I've had a near death experience so I know roughly what it feels like, or at least how it did for me.
I had a brain tumor for most of my life which went undetected until I broke down in a seizure around 2016. The memory is foggy in my head, but I remember laying on my back in a very shallow body of water. I didn't have a body so I couldn't touch, see, or smell but I could sense and visualize everything around me. wherever I was, it was pitch black like I was in a void. I felt cold and empty before slowly feeling like I was being wrapped in a warmest blanket or being warmly held and In the moment I knew I was dying but I didn't care and I just accepted that this was it.
I don't know how I transitioned to standing up. In my head the memory is as foggy as a dream. I was up standing on the edge of a cliff, the water I was laying in before was behind me and calmly and slowly flowing down beneath my feet and into a dark abyss, the warmth of before was also gone. I was teetering on the edge and balancing between falling down or falling backwards but I was completely calm or not at all in control, I assume this is all normal for near death experiences but what absolute terrifies me is that beyond the void and cliff, I felt something staring at me and into my soul. sort of like that gnawing feeling you get when someone is staring at you. so far I had felt calm but when I was face to face with whatever it was, I felt the most unbridled and pure primal fear fill me. but at the same time, whatever it was felt uncaring and neutral, just kind of watching me and staring with no clear motive.
I don't fear dying (except for the pain) but I miss how warm I had felt flowing to the edge. has anyone else had similar experiences? was it just my brain playing tricks on me and panicking? I want to CTB but I fear whatever might come after.
I would love to hear your stories
I know it's a dumb question because it can never be answered, but the fear of the unknown and what might be after keeps me from CTB
I've had a near death experience so I know roughly what it feels like, or at least how it did for me.
I had a brain tumor for most of my life which went undetected until I broke down in a seizure around 2016. The memory is foggy in my head, but I remember laying on my back in a very shallow body of water. I didn't have a body so I couldn't touch, see, or smell but I could sense and visualize everything around me. wherever I was, it was pitch black like I was in a void. I felt cold and empty before slowly feeling like I was being wrapped in a warmest blanket or being warmly held and In the moment I knew I was dying but I didn't care and I just accepted that this was it.
I don't know how I transitioned to standing up. In my head the memory is as foggy as a dream. I was up standing on the edge of a cliff, the water I was laying in before was behind me and calmly and slowly flowing down beneath my feet and into a dark abyss, the warmth of before was also gone. I was teetering on the edge and balancing between falling down or falling backwards but I was completely calm or not at all in control, I assume this is all normal for near death experiences but what absolute terrifies me is that beyond the void and cliff, I felt something staring at me and into my soul. sort of like that gnawing feeling you get when someone is staring at you. so far I had felt calm but when I was face to face with whatever it was, I felt the most unbridled and pure primal fear fill me. but at the same time, whatever it was felt uncaring and neutral, just kind of watching me and staring with no clear motive.
I don't fear dying (except for the pain) but I miss how warm I had felt flowing to the edge. has anyone else had similar experiences? was it just my brain playing tricks on me and panicking? I want to CTB but I fear whatever might come after.
I would love to hear your stories