
Originally Posted by
Ray
This is something I have never felt before and the thoughts in my head at this time is that "One day I will die and will no longer exist" It was as if before I have this thought I was going around all day thinking I am somehow invincible to death.
Will Kabat Zinn had suggested sometimes sitting and repeating the words "I will die" over and over again. Sounds like lots of fun especially before the start of the weekend. I tend to just return to the blue sky. However, I can understand the benefit in occasionally accepting that we will one day die in a way where we are fully accepting of it. I guess dying is the only certainity in this life.
Thank you omai,
Your explaination is deep yet very practical and beautiful all at the same time.
Deep gassho
Ps my hero is from sweeden- henrick larsson
Thich Nhat Hahn suggests that meditating over dependant origination (interdependant co-arising in his case) is the key to understanding that death is only a notion, an illusion. But in my view, death is an idea that is hard coded into our brains throughout evolution, which makes it hard to get rid of completely. No fear of death was not a recipe for survival when there were sabre tooth tigres lurking behind every bush...

TNH often talks about the wooden table that couldn't exist without the carpenter, the lumberjack, the trees, the sunlight, the rain, the soil and so on. They are all part of the table. The table could not exist without them. It is not a separate entity. In a way, human life is like a wave rising from the sea, asking "Who am I? What am I doing here? What will happen when I die?" before being swallowed by the sea again. When the wave returns to the sea, does it die? Cease to exist? One way of realizing dependant origination and impermanence according to TNH is meditating on the image of your dead body (if you want an even better friday night!), watching it go pale and cold, rot, get eaten by maggots, crumble and wither down until only the bones remain, watch the bones turn into dust, that turns into soil, where plants start growing and so on.
/Pontus