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got to do something about that |
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I'm such a fucking agnostic. The ghosts must be keeping me in suspense. |
someone should go into more depth here. |
congratulations spider and gee, the first sorabjiland marriage. |
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I had a sudden memory. The summer I was 9, I played with a girl named Laurie. She and I would play in her pool and sometimes another girl from up the street would play with us. We would make up stories and act them out while swimming around. Laurie was always the guy in the story, by her choice. I thought that was nice of her to let me be the girl. It's like when you played Barbies...no one ever wanted to be Ken. Ken was boring. The other girl from up the street never liked me, for some reason. Any time my character would talk to her character, she wouldn't listen. But she would grin at me, in a weird way. In an evil way. She was scary. I don't think I ever knew her name. Skinny, mousy little girl. Ick. |
I had a sudden memory. The summer I was 9, I played with a girl named Laurie. She and I would play in her pool and sometimes another girl from up the street would play with us. We would make up stories and act them out while swimming around. Laurie was always the guy in the story, by her choice. I thought that was nice of her to let me be the girl. It's like when you played Barbies...no one ever wanted to be Ken. Ken was boring. The other girl from up the street never liked me, for some reason. Any time my character would talk to her character, she wouldn't listen. But she would grin at me, in a weird way. In an evil way. She was scary. I don't think I ever knew her name. Skinny, mousy little girl. Ick. |
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i was in a conversation with cleo and her friend anabel the other day. anabel is our five year old neighbor. anabel was talking about when she died, she said she was going to be put in a box and buried. i told her and cleo that i wanted to be burned and have my ashes thrown somewhere, so i didn't take up any space on our already crowded planet. cleo immediately alligned with me, and said she wanted to be burned also. anabel found the whole thing disturbing and insisted on being buried in the box. i told her that the cool thing about dying was that you got to choose what you wanted to have done with your body, and that she was perfectly okay in wanting to be buried. it was a very surreal conversation. |
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when a priest tells him that he wants to be buried without pomp and circumstance as a way of exemplifying simplicity, prudence, piety and austerity, lynch answers "why wait?" and suggests the priest trade the caddy in for a chevette and quit spending his money on cashmere and steaks and give it to the poor. "he turned his wild eye on me in the way that the cleric must have looked on Sweeney years ago, before he cursed him, irreversibly, into a bird." a few pages later, he says: "once you are dead, put your feet up, call it a day, and let the husband or the missus or the kids or a sibling decide whether you are to be buried or burned or blown out of a canon or left to dry out in a ditch somewhere. It's not your day to watch it, because the dead don't care." this was page 8. nifty little book. |
just a gut feeling. |
i belive in reintarnation. |
That'd be ever so boring. No strip poker either. That'd just be disgusting. |
I think when you're dead, you're dead, and that's it. Nothing lives on. No heaven. No hell. Just. Dead. I don't believe in souls either. Chemicals. All of us. |
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And no one's reallt bothered ot come back and tell us, so who knows who's right? I think people invent the hereafter because they are afraid of the unknown (death), and want to feel comforted that there is something tangible and understandable once they rot. |
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need food. coherent skills dying |
Yes. I can tell when someone's about to die/is dead. Yes. I can see ghosts. (? Figment of imagination?) Can I explain it? No. Do I plan to figure out a way to explain this? Yes. Because I really don't believe in a hereafter. Perhaps one can have spooky experiences without there being a hereafter? Maybe you see a picture once of the former owner of your house, and one day you look out a window and think you see them...who knows. Confused. |
I'm just so excited that I finally get to be the girl. The last girl I married insisted I be the boy. |
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What is this like Isolde? I know a person who gets really bad stomach aches whenever someone close to her or close to someone she is close to dies. |
the whole concept of heaven/hell , to me, seems so blatently a tool for control. To yield against people, to instill fear, and offer an answer to one of the greatest unanswered questions of human existance. i absolutely have a hard time dealing with the rotting of flesh, the burning of flesh and so on....so I too create my personal "heaven".....that is a space capsule, my body intact and ready for alien rejuvination. I long to become a Borg, a friendly Borg anyway. I understand the human need to do this, i don't however accept any of the "answers" available. Perhaps i didn't receive enough churchin when i was a small. Church on sundays to repent the weeks sins was not on my single moms priority list......... in the meantime, lapd on foot, on bikes, in cars, in helicopters have swarmed the rosevelt hotel next door......i'll let you know when the gun shots fly |
I don't see heaven as a reward, either, and that you should do good things because they give you points towards your final prize. That's mercenary. This may put a smirk on all the cynics' faces, but the thought of heaven is a great comfort in the midst of suffering. It gives one hope that while it may seem as though things are never going to get better, one day you'll be somewhere where there won't be any suffering. Hope saves lives. This isn't *why* I believe in heaven, though. I don't think you can answer why you believe in anything. It's like answering why you love someone. You don't love people for reasons, you just do. It's just a movement inside yourself that you can't explain. And just because *you* can't explain it doesn't mean your love, or your faith, is blind. |
I'm not one to get into these pointless discussions, but this struck me. Based on available evidence, it would seem that believing in harps and brimstone would be more likely than that everything on its own will come out all good. Especially as you watch the intrepid LAPD in action. |
that was my point, I have no evidence of anything. (BANG! BANG!) |
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"Life *is* pain, Princess; anyone who tells you otherwise is trying to sell you something." |
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cop out. not believing in heaven is a cop out too. i'm distracted by life. |
Or the other one about the scientists who played with this guys' brain and ran electricity through his brain in impulses, to give him the sensation of being on a lake covered with ice in the middle of winter. Then accidently they dropped the brain, it split in two, so they hooked up wires between them, and gave the same impulses, at the same time. So they got this idea in their head to split it apart even more, and give radio signals between them, so it was in the same order. But then they thought 'hey, why do we need order? Just as long as we take turns.' So they did that, and it worked fine. The same feeling: being on the iced-over lake in the middle of winter. So who felt it? Is the guy still feeling it? And where is his consciousness located? I think that one is by David Hume. The first one definately is. |
About to die: people aout to die reek of fear and death. It's pretty obvious. They all stand out once you see what it is that distinguishes them. Not that wierd. |
V is a funny kid. Her family uses her to determine if people visiting the house are good or bad. Several times, V has expressed great dislike for someone who seemed very nice at first and then went on to hurt someone in the family. She can also see auras. She told me I look light blue. |
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I will agree with you that blind faith can be a bad thing. I like a person who questions their faith every once in a while. |
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Aura by computer? Whatever. I don't believe in auras. It's easy for someone to say they see something. I must believe that all things can be rationally explained. must. must. |
1. A person's body after they are dead does not really look like that person any more. Not like the person sleeping, it's like without their spirit/soul whatever to animate them, they become like a manniquin of themselves. Seeing a person's body after they die is important to me because then I can see that they are no longer in that space. 2. When my grandmother died she had a stroke. I went to the hospital before she died, and she was unconcious. Then I went to my aunt's house to wait and take calls from people wanting to know what was happenning. At the time that she died, I felt her go, and when my aunt called to tell me, I was not at all surprised. I don't know how else to describe the sensation, just a feeling of awareness that she had slipped away. I believe that there is more to us than just chemicals, but I don't have any specific religious beliefs such as heaven/hell, etc. I would like to believe in re-incarnation, because then I might meet those close to me in their next life. |
That's why I like to explain these things as chemicals. When we die, we are gone--nothing left, no soul, no--whatever. Just dead. Or, I should say, this is my belief. I don't like things to remain unexplained. |
It sounds like your explanations are a veil Isolde, and not really explanations. |
It's a good thing. I like it. The first couple of songs are nice and catchy and I'm fond of the lead's voice. |
But I'll keep denying it hotly, and we both know it. |
We found The Coolest apartment today in Olympia. $495. Not bad for 706 sq. ft. And it's directly center of our two destinations, college and work. Secluded, not right on the road, which I would have loathed. Right near downtown, which I think is the most beautiful part of Olympia. These were the only apartments that really spoke to me too. I'm happy. I'm excited. I might almost cream my panties. |
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