by jboogy » Tue 01 Apr 2008, 00:58:29
zensui wrote
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f what is immortal is the soul, then after one death it will teleport to other place. And you have not even considered immaterial existence, which has only mind or consciousness. Living for eons can be quite a blessing... if you're in Nirvana. I've felt a glimpse of it, and I'm quite certain that this is the Path. While not meditating on jhannas, or being one with the respiration of the universe, then it will be nice to help those still in Samsara...
Most of the immortals you run into in novels or movies are tired of life and would like to die. Done it and seen it all and just want to rest. This seems plausible to me. Everyone you know eventually dies and the monotony of life becomes exhausting. Eternal sleep and nothingness starts to sound good.
How will this supposed heaven be that different? Will it be bearable because you're surrounded by loved ones? None of my friends or relatives is the born-again type, if I get "born-again" and re-baptized, and no one I know is in heaven, then will I be happy, surrounded by strangers? And even for those who's families are steeped in heaven-lore, how can you be sure you won't be sick and tired of them after a few thousand years? My Mom starts to get on my nerves after a few days visiting. If drinking is heaven to my step-dad, I know damn well I don't want to listen to his drunken bullshit for all of eternity. What is Nirvana Zensui? I like to play poker and French food, cold beer and chubby mature brunettes, I like music and reading, going fast and laughing. But I get tired of any one of these things if I indulge too much in too short a time, even a perfectly timed rotation of these favorite things will get old, so how does Nirvana/Heaven deal with this?
Perhaps the population would be less swayed to socialism if we had fewer examples of socialism from our "Free Market Capitalists". -----fiddler dave