The thought of death (especially what comes after) was terrifying to me for a long time, but I've become so accustomed to the fear that its pretty numb at this point.
One of the most comforting things I've read on the subject has actually been Plato's
Phaedo. I recommend it highly to anyone who cares. The tl;dr is this: we'll assume your goal in life is to have complete knowledge of the universe, but we also know that our senses are inadequate for a full understanding of literally anything. Because our bodies intrinsically rely on our senses, this means that our mind/soul cannot possibly reach this understanding during the lifespan of our bodies. The two possible results of this are that either total knowledge is impossible, in which case death would be a release from striving towards an impossible goal, or the knowledge that is sought is only achievable after death. In either case, death is a positive outcome.
My personal belief is that probably nothing happens when you die, but whatever man at least I'll be done with having a body which is actually pretty annoying to have when you think about it. You have to like eat breathe sleep go to the bathroom etc all the fucking time in order to not die, its like you keep getting distracted from things you want to focus on because your stupid body fucking sucks.
Anyway here's a semi-related quote that I like:
“O my soul, do not aspire to immortal life,
but exhaust the limits of the possible.”
-Pindar
Last edited by Larfen; Jul 28, 2016 at 05:38 PM.