Irrelevance
mentalcel
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2026
- Posts
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FOR THE TLDR/DNR FAGGOTS: You hallucinate your whole afterlife indefinitely.
People have been fighting over this for as long as humanity has existed (probably). But I just had an idea that could very well be the solution to this question.
As we all know, our consciousness itself exists outside of time and space. This can be proven by experiences such as people living for decades as an object or as another person while tripping on salvia. Now that this is proven, why can't it be that our mind itself disconnects itself from time while we die. There is no infinite blackness, there is no actual hell. You just escape time itself.
This would mean that you hallucinate indefinitely which could mean something interesting. Maybe, there is no "Afterlife" that is the same for everybody. Maybe instead, our "Afterlife" (meaning the infinity hallucinations during death) is shaped by our experiences and anticipations. Let me explain:
A Person who has been a devote christian their whole life might hallucinate their existence in heaven. Someone who believes in rebirth might hallucinate an infinite series of new lifes. There is no limit to this, as it is all a construction of our imagination.
This aligns with countless stories of people who have been dead for a short time, talking about how time stopped and the experience feeling much longer than it actually lasted.
What is your thought about this?
People have been fighting over this for as long as humanity has existed (probably). But I just had an idea that could very well be the solution to this question.
As we all know, our consciousness itself exists outside of time and space. This can be proven by experiences such as people living for decades as an object or as another person while tripping on salvia. Now that this is proven, why can't it be that our mind itself disconnects itself from time while we die. There is no infinite blackness, there is no actual hell. You just escape time itself.
This would mean that you hallucinate indefinitely which could mean something interesting. Maybe, there is no "Afterlife" that is the same for everybody. Maybe instead, our "Afterlife" (meaning the infinity hallucinations during death) is shaped by our experiences and anticipations. Let me explain:
A Person who has been a devote christian their whole life might hallucinate their existence in heaven. Someone who believes in rebirth might hallucinate an infinite series of new lifes. There is no limit to this, as it is all a construction of our imagination.
This aligns with countless stories of people who have been dead for a short time, talking about how time stopped and the experience feeling much longer than it actually lasted.
What is your thought about this?