velvetechos (
velvetechos) wrote2003-11-16 12:57 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(no subject)
I don’t think it’s possible for the human mind to fully understand the concept of death. To grasp the idea of no longer existing. To see a point to life, when all the “Changes” they work towards, all the goals they wish to accomplish, are all in vain. There is no future, the cycles just keep repeating themselves. The actions are the same, the same basic problems are at the root of it all. Only the faces change.
I remember walking down a long dusty road, between my own home, and a friend of mine’s home, with two guys. There was a small bird, a magpie, hopping around in some bushes. It wouldn’t have taken a scientist to tell us that the bird was wounded, and being the animal lover that I am, I decided to stop and pick the bird up. The bird was on the other side of a fence, out by a river, and in my clunky heels I couldn’t climb the fence, so it was up to Tyler and Martin to retrieve animal. The bird was screeching, and hopping about, beating it’s wings, but unable to fly away. Finally they caught him, and brought him back to me. I started talking about how we needed to get him to a veterinarian. I carried the bird carefully, yet firmly enough to where he couldn’t get away, and watched him, to make sure he was alright, and we continued on to my friend’s house.
After about five minutes, the bird started gulping for air. He gave one last twitch, and then his little body went stiff in my hands. It was the most frightening feeling in the world. I felt a cold wave pass through my palms, and I started screaming for Tyler to take the bird. All I could say was “The bird! The bird died! I don’t like to touch dead things!”
Now the weird part about this, is that I had held my dead friend’s hand, I had held deceased pets, I had even held my father’s hand after he passed away. There was just something different, something about feeling the life exit this bird’s body, that was like nothing I’d ever felt before. At that moment, had I believed in spirits, and in the afterlife, I would have sworn that the strange cold feeling was his spirit leaving his body.
I remember walking down a long dusty road, between my own home, and a friend of mine’s home, with two guys. There was a small bird, a magpie, hopping around in some bushes. It wouldn’t have taken a scientist to tell us that the bird was wounded, and being the animal lover that I am, I decided to stop and pick the bird up. The bird was on the other side of a fence, out by a river, and in my clunky heels I couldn’t climb the fence, so it was up to Tyler and Martin to retrieve animal. The bird was screeching, and hopping about, beating it’s wings, but unable to fly away. Finally they caught him, and brought him back to me. I started talking about how we needed to get him to a veterinarian. I carried the bird carefully, yet firmly enough to where he couldn’t get away, and watched him, to make sure he was alright, and we continued on to my friend’s house.
After about five minutes, the bird started gulping for air. He gave one last twitch, and then his little body went stiff in my hands. It was the most frightening feeling in the world. I felt a cold wave pass through my palms, and I started screaming for Tyler to take the bird. All I could say was “The bird! The bird died! I don’t like to touch dead things!”
Now the weird part about this, is that I had held my dead friend’s hand, I had held deceased pets, I had even held my father’s hand after he passed away. There was just something different, something about feeling the life exit this bird’s body, that was like nothing I’d ever felt before. At that moment, had I believed in spirits, and in the afterlife, I would have sworn that the strange cold feeling was his spirit leaving his body.
no subject
A few years ago I was in my Mom's bedroom sitting on her bed in the dark, watching a Robbie Williams video on MTV. It was "Millenium." All of a sudden I got a big lump in my throat and I panicked. I started having an anxiety attack.
These attacks were nothing new to me, I've had them before. But this time was different.
As I was sitting there I started crying. No reason. I looked at everything in my life and was so happy with it all. I loved the people in my life dearly and they loved me back, I had treasured everything I had and gone through. And I was proud of who I became.
But that wasn't why I was crying.
I felt sick like I wanted to throw up or something, but I couldn't. I felt a little paralyzed and then crying turned into balling. I felt like the video was making me sick in a weird way but I coudn't turn away from it, and it seemed to go on forever.
I thought about death. And not suicide, but what happens to us after we die. I've always wanted to believe in certain things, but nothing helped here. I mean, I've thought of death a million and a half times before, but this was different. It was like all my beliefs went out the window. Like I was wrong. Like I now knew how it really was. But more than anything, I was really scared.
I just had all these thoughts on how death would be without life. I was sickened and couldn't stop crying. It seemed painful.
Ever since that night I've had more experiences like this. Jim and I had run to Starbuck's one day and I waited in the car. All these feelings came over me again and I started crying. It's happened a few times now. But maybe they're just a different type of panic attack. Maybe that's what it feels like to be afraid of death. I forget the term, but maybe that's what it is. XOXO
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
And it doesn't help that soon I'll see myself at 30 and still single trying to get a career started, and then my brain races from there as I try to see myself at 40, 50, 60, etc. Then my mind hits death and it's just impossible to fathom not existing anymore. It's scary to think that this is it and there's no afterlife, but then even our basic science says that you can't destroy energy, which is what we're made of. So when the body ceases to be, the energy has to go somewhere. Our consciousness and our energy go somewhere else. Whether we have a choice on where it goes is still another matter to figure out.
And I babbled. :)
(no subject)
(no subject)