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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhat happens when you die?
This question is from the (Stephen) Colbert questionaire that he asks guests.
I like Bad Bunny's answer: They bury you.
Me, we cease to exist. No Heaven, no Hell, and no reincarnation. Whatever essence that composes our "soul" dissipates into nothingness.
What your opinion.
surfered
(12,166 posts)I believe that when youre dead, you wont know youre dead.
cbabe
(6,336 posts)Irish_Dem
(80,315 posts)We don't know what happens to us after we die.
Grim Chieftain
(1,391 posts)That's a very heavy but important question, especially as one gets older. I'd like to think I will see my loved ones again in a place of peace, love and grace.
multigraincracker
(37,114 posts)We rise to the top and then explode into the vastness.
mitch96
(15,700 posts)."All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain"...
All our conscious thoughts will be gone...
Back to the space and time before you were born, before you were aware..
m
ms liberty
(11,041 posts)Doodley
(11,745 posts)is a universal energy that we do not understand.
BlueTsunami2018
(4,910 posts)Oblivion.
Coventina
(29,404 posts)In New Orleans.
Iykyk
gab13by13
(31,516 posts)Deuxcents
(25,847 posts)mitch96
(15,700 posts)Norrrm
(4,283 posts)
True Dough
(26,017 posts)When you die, you wind up here:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=inmemoriam
Rest assured, you'll be in good company.
Deuxcents
(25,847 posts)NJCher
(42,665 posts)I know, but I'm not telling.
The answer means nothing unless you figure it out yourself.
lpbk2713
(43,253 posts)Everything comes to an end.
Intractable
(1,732 posts)Did I get that right?
debm55
(57,261 posts)and bought yarn in all shades and tints of the warm family-yellow, orange, and red. I also bought white and black. I started my weaving in the center with white in the center, I next came around the center white with the very palest of yellow. then a slightly darker version, then the next would be a little darker, then a pale orange and so on . I finished with the orange with a very dark shade of orange in a circular shape. Finally I did the circular weaving with the red hues, until I reached burgundy. Then a dark burgundy, Then the last color woven was black. Mind you the weaving frame I made was 6 ft by 8 ft. Going out from the center the color forms had different
circumferences. It was my idea of heaven and hell. My church believes in the concept of heaven or hell. I don't. I believe that no one is totally good or totally bad. The very small weaving is God, the nearing to the one weaving you are. the better person you were in life. The farther away the worse you were in life. But you still have some light to show you had some goodness in your soul. So animals could be there too. As a child of abuse, it gave me a sense of spirituality mixing my Art Ed. background with my Psychology classes.
I am so sorry this is so long.
Coventina
(29,404 posts)I once had a really vivid dream of the afterlife.
I even posted about it here on DU, years ago.
I dreamed it was kind of like a health spa, or a ski resort during the summertime.
Quiet, beautiful, surrounded by nature.
It wasn't a final destination, I somehow knew.
It was a temporary place for newly dead people to adjust to their new reality, and come to terms with any "unfinished business" they'd left behind.
Not that they could do anything about it, it was more a mental adjustment about letting the past go.
There were opportunities to resolve hurts or other forms of unhappiness.
At some point, it was known that you would move on. To what, I never found out. Another life? A "heaven"? I really had no idea.
It was a dream that really stuck with me. As you can see, it still has, even after all these years.
Skittles
(170,033 posts)and be a decent human being because it's the right thing to do, not because you expect some kind of reward in the end
this is it
Inkey
(492 posts)I really hope for a next level of existence. But I will also accept returning into matter again.
Skittles
(170,033 posts)as long as they leave that stuff out of politics
Niagara
(11,633 posts)If at all possible I would like the following to occur upon my death.
It's most likely unsanitary and not legal due to various environmental laws but set my dead ass on one of those funeral pyres that some of the indigenous tribes use to donto say goodbye to their loved ones.
If this isn't legal or lawful in any way, maybe cremate me using the aquamation AKA alkaline hydrolysis. It's fairly inexpensive and legal in 28 states.
If not I suppose a regular fire cremation will have to do, this will be my last chance to have a smoking hot body!
Then there's going to be a gathering of people with food, drink with music and dancing out in the middle of the woods or a forest.
Don't consume too much food and drink because you all will be required to dance naked around a colossal bonfire 🔥 at least one full turn. No one cares what you look like naked, just do it for me and in my honor.
For the Fourth of July, everyone should buy some pet food, blankets or pet toys and donate them to the SPCA or a local animal shelter instead of purchasing fireworks. If you don't do this, I will haunt you.
Also, someone will have to take over the Halloween Countdown threads in the Lounge. The overseer of the threads will have to remind people that Halloween isn't always cute but at times creepy.
I haven't really dwelled on it for long time but the thought has crossed my mind that I may get sick, disabled or die at some point. I'm making notes in a specific notebook so that my family can access my online accounts and information that my vehicle is paid for so they don't have to worry about that.
I haven't updated this specific notebook in awhile so I should look at it this weekend.
Thank you for the reminder.
Enjoy today and dream for today. 🌞
LogDog75
(1,145 posts)The Forensic Anthropology Center at the University of Tennessee has a Body Farm where they study how bodies decompose under varied conditions. Here's the link to the Body Farm.
https://fac.utk.edu/
sestina
(512 posts)Last edited Fri Jan 30, 2026, 01:05 AM - Edit history (1)
that we all experience, it becomes absurd.
People arrive and people leave in an infinite rotation of the future covering up the past, all within a limited time frame, everyone on their own unknown journey to somewhere, maybe contributing something along the way for future generations, but for what real purpose?
I don't know what to believe about what happens after we die. I imagine that nothing happens at all.
But if we could feel an incredible moment of relief that our life is finally over, that would be the greatest gift.
Iggo
(49,722 posts)so I try not to worry about it.
Doodley
(11,745 posts)Shambala
(267 posts)We are all stardust. And all that energy that exists on a molecular level in each of us is released upon our death to wait for the cosmic cycle of collapsing stars, black holes, and big bangs creating new stars and new worlds and new galaxies and new universes. It may not be next week or next month - but I believe Ill be back again.
markodochartaigh
(5,183 posts)I do not fear death. I had been dead for billions and billions of years before I was born, and had not suffered the slightest inconvenience from it.
Life was not a valuable gift, but death was. Life was a fever-dream made up of joys embittered by sorrows, pleasure poisoned by pain; a dream that was a nightmare-confusion of spasmodic and fleeting delights, ecstasies, exultations, happinesses, interspersed with long-drawn miseries, griefs, perils, horrors, disappointments, defeats, humiliations, and despairs--the heaviest curse devisable by divine ingenuity; but death was sweet, death was gentle, death was kind; death healed the bruised spirit and the broken heart, and gave them rest and forgetfulness; death was man's best friend; when man could endure life no longer, death came and set him free.
catbyte
(38,776 posts)"Those who love us will miss us."
I think it's like a light switch turning off.
highplainsdem
(60,646 posts)religious beliefs, or lack of belief, matters.
I'm saying that based on near death experiences that I've heard and read about, and paranormal experiences (really the wrong word, since they're normal and pretty common) that I've had, that people I know have had, or that I've learned about. If you've ever been in a grief support group, you've probably heard of such experiences. You're likely to hear about them, too, from hospice workers, or from nurses. You usually won't hear about them, though, unless people feel that it would be OK to talk about their own experiences.
https://www.businessinsider.com/near-death-experiences-research-doctor-life-after-death-afterlife-2023-8
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Long
There have been some threads in the Lounge about paranormal experiences.
You can run across stories of paranormal experiences in biographies and autobiographies. The Johnny Cash autobiography cowritten by Patrick Carr, for instance. Producer Tony Visconti's autobiography.
You can always try to dismiss the stories...but I've heard stories like this from people in lots of different occupations, from different religious backgrounds, or with no religious beliefs at all. It often took a personal experience to end their skepticism. The people I've found most unwilling to.accept these experiences are avowed atheists and people with very set religious beliefs who don't feel paranormal experiences can fit with their church's teachings.
Some links you might find interesting:
https://med.virginia.edu/perceptual-studies/
https://youtube.com/@uvadivisionofperceptualstu9909
You'll see some videos with John Cleese on that YouTube channel, and here: