
Nirrend
The important is not how long you live ...
- Mar 12, 2022
- 400
I'll start by saying that this subject is not meant to incite anyone and the objective here is just to pour out our fears, to philosophize and to live our daily life more serenely.
I know that among the things that allow people to free themselves from their fears, the discussion, the liberation of emotions as well as the acceptance are part of what allows to live calmly with these themes.
What would be ideal, therefore, would be that people who wish to discuss their fears and put them into perspective, in the greatest possible empathy, do so here.
DEATH in theory
Plato said that "to philosophize is to learn to die". In the sense that death is inevitable and to know how to question oneself, to reason oneself, to expose oneself to fears, is a way to accept this inevitability, because finally to live, makes it possible to train oneself to have to die, like a jump that the human would repeat of the years before arriving there. We could even play it down by seeing it as a skill, a capacity to be acquired.
I also think that death is not to be feared in the sense that millions of people before us have passed through it, many people up there (according to a religious approach), whether they are close to us or not, are watching us and waiting patiently, watching us proudly acquire this skill.
Epicurus presented death as the end of everything and even of consciousness, whereas Plato thought that the soul, freed from the bodily envelope, became everything in the end. For him suffering would be somehow linked to the imprisonment of the soul and both thought that death would be the abolition of suffering.
From a purely biological point of view, death is characterized by a stop in the functioning of the Central Nervous System. However, with hindsight, the human body represents only a tiny part of what death is,
Finally, it is the thought that characterizes this death, it is the cultural and genetic fears.
The fear of « Nothingness »
I think that the fear of the postmortem void is actually a condensation of two things.
1) The survival instinct, which is a biological reflex
2) A parallel made between the emptiness experienced consciously or not, in everyday life (death, loss, mood, failure, Acrophobia) which, by several mechanisms, condenses into an abstract and frightening concept which would be the state of death.
But if we think about it, this fear is unfounded, because it depends on an automatic reflex, which anticipates a serious event in an exaggerated way (e.g.: screamers in movies) and devoid of rational (Instinct of Survival) and this fear of the void is not founded either if it is explained by a parallel made between something that we lived in the daily life and something never lived, it is to compare the incomparable.
So, we could ask ourselves, "Wouldn't the fear of death be unjustified ?"
The fear of suffering
The individual focuses more on the negative than on the positive. If we make the connection, we focus more on the time before death than after.
It is therefore clear that mental ruminations and over-interrogation promote anxiety and fear.
In itself, suffering is defined by three dimensions:
1) Physiological (this is pain as it actually exists)
2) Behavioral (it is the reaction to it)
3) Cognitive (it is the thought, and the idea that one has of it)
In reality, pain is defined more by what we think of it, than by what we actually feel. An anxious person will say to themselves more "this is serious", this worrying thought will create behavioral agitation and the perceived pain will be increased tenfold.
"So thinking would be suffering ?"
Finally, in some cases of brain injury, if the pain fibers are affected, patients no longer suffer. They may cut themselves, they may fracture themselves, but they won't be in pain. Only, for them, let's take the example of the placebo effect. If I'm a doctor and I give them a powder (sugar here) and make them think it's a drug that makes them feel pain again, and I pinch their hand, they'll be able to feel the pain but only because what I've told them has influenced their thinking.
So the belief determines the perception
The Survival Instinct
The survival instinct is the genetic tendency present in every species of living being (it seems to me). This instinct just determines a will to subsist but with the only motivation to not disappear. It is an uncontrollable reflex that is difficult to modulate.
The survival instinct is divided into 3 distinct phases :
1) Escape : if, for example, a lion runs into me, my brain will activate the emotional networks and I will run away without knowing why. Because if reason had been activated first, I would have to analyze, evaluate the risks and finally act. In instinct, only the emotional part is activated, which is what allows us to act without needing to think to act.
2) Riposte : if escaping is futile, the body will automatically put the individual in a posture of counter-attack, which gradually involves the reason to evaluate if the chances of surviving or winning are possible. If victory is possible, the fight begins, if all is lost in advance, the body can decide to run away again or to abdicate, which leads to the 3rd point.
The 1st and 2nd dimensions constitute what is called the "Fight-Flight Response".
3) Inhibition : behavioral responses are abolished. In animals, for example, one lets oneself be eaten, terror is the because most animals only act or function on their instinct. Conversely, inhibition can cause the abolition of anguish and the acceptance of fate (in terminally ill patients, death comes, they are terrorized and then abdicate and even prefer to disappear).
Conclusion
On the whole, to think is to be afraid, because thinking creates the spectacular and has difficulty conceiving the abstract. What is interesting is that studies show that the lower the IQ of people is, the less likely they are to become depressed, because they ask few questions and act rather than think. Learning to think less, or to accept the few thoughts that do occur, is both a possible redemption towards recovery, but also a way to live with fate more serenely.
The survival instinct depends biologically on the presence of a threat, but if thought no longer determines the abstract and death as a threat, perhaps this instinct no longer has any reason to exist and anguish will be reduced. To live is to learn to philosophize and to philosophize is to learn to die, let's not forget that there is one thing we know, this is that we don't know and therefore, to live death or to react to the concept of death as if it were a word in the language that we didn't know yesterday, would be a way of no longer reacting severely to it.
Some Ways to Accept
-Avoid thinking too much and learn to just contemplate without thinking
-Adapt the breathing to decrease the heart rate (e.g.: I count 1,2,3 in my head while breathing in, I freeze for 1 second, I breathe out while counting 1,2,3 in my head while breathing out and I repeat this several times a day to calm my heart and my anxiety. Do this for at least 5 minutes each time).
Exposing yourself to fears (closing your eyes and imagining yourself in a hospital bed and dying, exposing yourself to situations that frighten you) and at the same time, thinking and de-dramatizing death, thinking rationally and calmly. If you do that, do it entirely without interrupting it and be sure to have confidence in you doing that.
-Talk about it, write about it, meditate on it
-Live the emotion that death arouses until the end (if you wake up anxious because death is frightening, you should stop for a moment, dig into what is creating this emotion and let the thoughts and emotions come without holding them back, then, once you have calmed down, you can reason and play it down).
-Get information and read up on the subject, so that this concept becomes concrete and no longer abstract.
Finally, I hope that everyone here sees this post as a way to recover and regain the will to live, I sincerely hope so. In any case, I hope that the debates and the outpouring of emotions will take place here,
I hope this topic doesn't seem encouraging, I don't know if I should leave it here
In any cases, I wish you all a good evening !
I know that among the things that allow people to free themselves from their fears, the discussion, the liberation of emotions as well as the acceptance are part of what allows to live calmly with these themes.
What would be ideal, therefore, would be that people who wish to discuss their fears and put them into perspective, in the greatest possible empathy, do so here.
DEATH in theory
Plato said that "to philosophize is to learn to die". In the sense that death is inevitable and to know how to question oneself, to reason oneself, to expose oneself to fears, is a way to accept this inevitability, because finally to live, makes it possible to train oneself to have to die, like a jump that the human would repeat of the years before arriving there. We could even play it down by seeing it as a skill, a capacity to be acquired.
I also think that death is not to be feared in the sense that millions of people before us have passed through it, many people up there (according to a religious approach), whether they are close to us or not, are watching us and waiting patiently, watching us proudly acquire this skill.
Epicurus presented death as the end of everything and even of consciousness, whereas Plato thought that the soul, freed from the bodily envelope, became everything in the end. For him suffering would be somehow linked to the imprisonment of the soul and both thought that death would be the abolition of suffering.
From a purely biological point of view, death is characterized by a stop in the functioning of the Central Nervous System. However, with hindsight, the human body represents only a tiny part of what death is,
Finally, it is the thought that characterizes this death, it is the cultural and genetic fears.
The fear of « Nothingness »
I think that the fear of the postmortem void is actually a condensation of two things.
1) The survival instinct, which is a biological reflex
2) A parallel made between the emptiness experienced consciously or not, in everyday life (death, loss, mood, failure, Acrophobia) which, by several mechanisms, condenses into an abstract and frightening concept which would be the state of death.
But if we think about it, this fear is unfounded, because it depends on an automatic reflex, which anticipates a serious event in an exaggerated way (e.g.: screamers in movies) and devoid of rational (Instinct of Survival) and this fear of the void is not founded either if it is explained by a parallel made between something that we lived in the daily life and something never lived, it is to compare the incomparable.
So, we could ask ourselves, "Wouldn't the fear of death be unjustified ?"
The fear of suffering
The individual focuses more on the negative than on the positive. If we make the connection, we focus more on the time before death than after.
It is therefore clear that mental ruminations and over-interrogation promote anxiety and fear.
In itself, suffering is defined by three dimensions:
1) Physiological (this is pain as it actually exists)
2) Behavioral (it is the reaction to it)
3) Cognitive (it is the thought, and the idea that one has of it)
In reality, pain is defined more by what we think of it, than by what we actually feel. An anxious person will say to themselves more "this is serious", this worrying thought will create behavioral agitation and the perceived pain will be increased tenfold.
"So thinking would be suffering ?"
Finally, in some cases of brain injury, if the pain fibers are affected, patients no longer suffer. They may cut themselves, they may fracture themselves, but they won't be in pain. Only, for them, let's take the example of the placebo effect. If I'm a doctor and I give them a powder (sugar here) and make them think it's a drug that makes them feel pain again, and I pinch their hand, they'll be able to feel the pain but only because what I've told them has influenced their thinking.
So the belief determines the perception
The Survival Instinct
The survival instinct is the genetic tendency present in every species of living being (it seems to me). This instinct just determines a will to subsist but with the only motivation to not disappear. It is an uncontrollable reflex that is difficult to modulate.
The survival instinct is divided into 3 distinct phases :
1) Escape : if, for example, a lion runs into me, my brain will activate the emotional networks and I will run away without knowing why. Because if reason had been activated first, I would have to analyze, evaluate the risks and finally act. In instinct, only the emotional part is activated, which is what allows us to act without needing to think to act.
2) Riposte : if escaping is futile, the body will automatically put the individual in a posture of counter-attack, which gradually involves the reason to evaluate if the chances of surviving or winning are possible. If victory is possible, the fight begins, if all is lost in advance, the body can decide to run away again or to abdicate, which leads to the 3rd point.
The 1st and 2nd dimensions constitute what is called the "Fight-Flight Response".
3) Inhibition : behavioral responses are abolished. In animals, for example, one lets oneself be eaten, terror is the because most animals only act or function on their instinct. Conversely, inhibition can cause the abolition of anguish and the acceptance of fate (in terminally ill patients, death comes, they are terrorized and then abdicate and even prefer to disappear).
Conclusion
On the whole, to think is to be afraid, because thinking creates the spectacular and has difficulty conceiving the abstract. What is interesting is that studies show that the lower the IQ of people is, the less likely they are to become depressed, because they ask few questions and act rather than think. Learning to think less, or to accept the few thoughts that do occur, is both a possible redemption towards recovery, but also a way to live with fate more serenely.
The survival instinct depends biologically on the presence of a threat, but if thought no longer determines the abstract and death as a threat, perhaps this instinct no longer has any reason to exist and anguish will be reduced. To live is to learn to philosophize and to philosophize is to learn to die, let's not forget that there is one thing we know, this is that we don't know and therefore, to live death or to react to the concept of death as if it were a word in the language that we didn't know yesterday, would be a way of no longer reacting severely to it.
Some Ways to Accept
-Avoid thinking too much and learn to just contemplate without thinking
-Adapt the breathing to decrease the heart rate (e.g.: I count 1,2,3 in my head while breathing in, I freeze for 1 second, I breathe out while counting 1,2,3 in my head while breathing out and I repeat this several times a day to calm my heart and my anxiety. Do this for at least 5 minutes each time).
Exposing yourself to fears (closing your eyes and imagining yourself in a hospital bed and dying, exposing yourself to situations that frighten you) and at the same time, thinking and de-dramatizing death, thinking rationally and calmly. If you do that, do it entirely without interrupting it and be sure to have confidence in you doing that.
-Talk about it, write about it, meditate on it
-Live the emotion that death arouses until the end (if you wake up anxious because death is frightening, you should stop for a moment, dig into what is creating this emotion and let the thoughts and emotions come without holding them back, then, once you have calmed down, you can reason and play it down).
-Get information and read up on the subject, so that this concept becomes concrete and no longer abstract.
Finally, I hope that everyone here sees this post as a way to recover and regain the will to live, I sincerely hope so. In any case, I hope that the debates and the outpouring of emotions will take place here,
I hope this topic doesn't seem encouraging, I don't know if I should leave it here
In any cases, I wish you all a good evening !