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Kevin E. McCarthy's avatar

Several things come to mind as I've just reached my seventies. Much harder than contemplating my own death is that of my loved ones - my wife, our cats, members of my extended family and close friends. Keeping in mind that some day I will no longer be here is a very beneficial exercise for me as it daily reminds me to savor and enjoy the wonderful simple things in my life while I am still alive that would be so easy to take for granted - the smell of freshly cooked food, the feel of water on my lips, the wind on my face, the amazing ability to still walk without pain and even play sports, the routines of taking out the garbage, brushing my teeth, making music with friends, enjoying the sound of my wife’s voice while she’s talking to me, the warmth of my cat on my lap. When I was in my 30s or 40s, the idea of 10, 20, 30 years hence was merely idle speculation but now it is very possible I may indeed never get there. And given that subjective time has really sped up as I’ve aged it becomes all the more sobering.


After much contemplation of death I’ve come to believe that we don’t disappear but that we simply are transformed into a different being of a type that is completely beyond our ability to comprehend hence not worth worrying about while I’m alive, sort of like a raindrop that falls into a pond or the ocean. How could that single drop ever comprehend what becomes of it as it completes its fall? It doesn’t cease to be water but it has entered a new realm entirely. Add to the fact that when we were born we had no idea what was happening to us and don’t have the slightest recall of whence we came. I’m not religious at all but I don’t see how any of that would conflict with serious religious teachings.


For now I conceive of death as being similar to being asleep. Every time I drift off at night I accept that I will completely lose control of what I will experience in my dreams and even more so when I reach deep sleep and effectively everything no longer exists for me. Maybe sleep is nature’s kind way to remind us of our coming death on a daily basis.

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Taegan MacLean's avatar

Some very helpful recommendations. I’d add Jung to the mix since much of his practice was preparing men and women in their twilight years for their death.

“Only if we know that the thing which truly matters is the infinite can we avoid fixing our interest upon futilities and upon all kinds of goals which are not of real importance.” - C.G. Jung

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