Friday 28 December 2018

Lifeless times

Is life after death important by itself or the continuation of our memories is what really matters?

If I continue in an afterlife but have no recollections of who and what I was in the previous life, does that count as a real afterlife?

Just as if we had a different life(or many different lives) before this one, but had no memories of it(them). Would it(they) still have any significance??

Isn't it then, the memories, that we desperately want to keep more than the life itself?

Timeless Lives

Towards what does the "time" move so fast? What is ALL the rush for?

And the more we try to keep up, the less we do.

Whether it is a failure in design or a cruel joke, can I unlearn it?

I guess a whole bunch of words and grammatical structures that come with "time" should be eliminated from our semantic network first, like, "getting old", or "being young", also using structures like "I think" instead of "I am thinking" or "I thought", along with similar actions need to be done first to see whether we start to unlearn it, or not.

What else? 

And would unlearning linguistic aspects of "time" make it any less prominent in our minds?

Will we become more mindful once we stop using the concept of time in our speech and thought, or our brains are hard-wired to experience it and there's no way out of it?