GoodPersonEffed
Brevity is my middle name, but my name was TL
- Jan 11, 2020
- 6,727
Dying well was important to the Stoics. So important, they would not judge someone until they'd died, because if one faced death well when it came, having done so made up for a multitude of weaknesses and faults in life. Even the weakest person could show a surprising and unprecedented strength when facing death.
For those who are afraid of dying alone, I thought the following quote might be helpful, but don't take the last sentence as an admonishment. After the quote, I'll add a kinder and more helpful perspective, one that even aligns with Stoic philosophy if you're a purist.
What multitudes doomed to death will follow you, what multitudes will accompany you! You would feel more brave, I suppose, if many thousands were to die with you; and yet there are many thousands, both humans and animals, who at this very moment, while you are irresolute about death, are breathing their last in their various ways.
Seneca, Epistles 77.13
While you are dying, many others are dying at the same time. You are not entirely alone. There will be at that moment countless others who are frightened, uncertain, hopeless, relieved, ready -- such a broad spectrum of ways one can feel about death when it comes! You can draw on that which you need, because surely at least one person also dying at that moment is experiencing certainty, calm, determination, peace, or whatever state you desire for yourself. A Stoic would say that if they as a fellow human are capable of that, the possibility is also within you, for we all are capable of the best and the worst of human behaviors.
You can imagine that person -- who surely feels as you desire, who surely exists, and may even be dying at the same moment as you -- is right there with you, bringing all the comfort, companionship, and qualities that you seek.
(Such a meditation, btw, also fits within the Stoic framework, similar to how the meditation to envision the ideal wise man, who was not real, but yet possible, because they believed all humans had the capability for all things. No perfectly wise and infallible human existed any more than a perfectly evil human, only that we each have the potential for a measure of every human quality.)
For those who are afraid of dying alone, I thought the following quote might be helpful, but don't take the last sentence as an admonishment. After the quote, I'll add a kinder and more helpful perspective, one that even aligns with Stoic philosophy if you're a purist.
What multitudes doomed to death will follow you, what multitudes will accompany you! You would feel more brave, I suppose, if many thousands were to die with you; and yet there are many thousands, both humans and animals, who at this very moment, while you are irresolute about death, are breathing their last in their various ways.
Seneca, Epistles 77.13
While you are dying, many others are dying at the same time. You are not entirely alone. There will be at that moment countless others who are frightened, uncertain, hopeless, relieved, ready -- such a broad spectrum of ways one can feel about death when it comes! You can draw on that which you need, because surely at least one person also dying at that moment is experiencing certainty, calm, determination, peace, or whatever state you desire for yourself. A Stoic would say that if they as a fellow human are capable of that, the possibility is also within you, for we all are capable of the best and the worst of human behaviors.
You can imagine that person -- who surely feels as you desire, who surely exists, and may even be dying at the same moment as you -- is right there with you, bringing all the comfort, companionship, and qualities that you seek.
(Such a meditation, btw, also fits within the Stoic framework, similar to how the meditation to envision the ideal wise man, who was not real, but yet possible, because they believed all humans had the capability for all things. No perfectly wise and infallible human existed any more than a perfectly evil human, only that we each have the potential for a measure of every human quality.)
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