Good Morning
I'm glad. Such is good as even if you eventually reject it as being "not quite your fit" it will take you further down the road to self actualisation :-0
The problem is of course communication with words. I have an idea in my head and say a word you think something different (but close).
Thank you for your kindness. While I have written much on the topic (to express myself to myself) I still come back to the fact that there are no words : only tears.
I'm glad that expressing my journey and my discoveries about what I knew unconsciously (into the conscious) helps anyone. That's part of why I wrote it.
I guess that I subscribe to Soticism. Perhaps just reading this link will clear up that point
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoicism
Perhaps this point clarifies the view succinctly:
The ancient Stoics are often misunderstood because the terms they used pertained to different concepts in the past than they do today. The word "stoic" has come to mean "unemotional" or indifferent to pain, because Stoic ethics taught freedom from "passion" by following "reason". The Stoics did not seek to extinguish emotions; rather, they sought to transform them by a resolute "askēsis" that enables a person to develop clear judgment and inner calm.[SUP]
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Logic, reflection, and concentration were the methods of such self-discipline.
yes, and I feel that book intersects with my view significantly.
I expect that it came as a shock and that you are still struggling with how to incorporate that knowledge into yourself. Perhaps you are still rejecting it at some level, perhaps you are now no longer concerned by the shock but simply now dealing with the shock as a thing itself. Like throwing a stone into a pond, the stone settles before the ripples end.
I suspect the person you spoke to knew nothing (the term Grok from Stranger in a Strange Land comes to mind) and was just repeating them to you. Many who would teach are actually empty and simply echo like a taught bird.
I would say "accept them" for what they are, identify them as not having anything for you and discard them like a packaging. The message (you are mortal) has been delivered, no need to focus on the box.
exactly
it sounds like you already have found a place
The point now is to keep moving in that positive direction.
Each person is different (although we are all the same), but enough of this has been written about by people over the centuries that there is plenty of material out there.
I would say that one of the maladies of American Lifestyle is that people are so distracted by the plethora of messages sent in media and advertising products that the real values of life are often lost. Aldus Huxley made the point that "people act as if death was an unfounded rumor".
The "shock" of mortality to me stems from the denial from all levels that this is the case.
Knowing that you will die has always been a good thing for me. It focuses me on living my life now. On sharing it with those living and treasuring it in case that is something I can take with me to my friends who have passed before me and to my wife and we can share in it somehow there.
If it happens that death is just "off" and nothingness, then I have lost nothing in this philosophy because I have lived as I wish to now.
Yes, Dune is indeed the first book of the series, its a pithy book but if you have time then read it.
Best Wishes