I have often come upon the belief that to believe in an afterlife is to believe in weakness. That in order to escape the fear of death, one props up an imagined afterlife. Yet tonight I have finally asked a question that I ought to have asked from the beginning:
Is this so?
For what is strength but the desire for more life? And what is weakness but the desire for annihilation? One cannot be strong if one says "I do not want life!" for it is the fundamental foundation of weakness to cry out for reprieve from this stunningly wonderful (and terrible, also!) life in which we live. So to imagine - or to actually have - an afterlife which retains an individual ego either in a heaven or in reincarnation, would seem to be more desirous-of-life and thus, far more stronger than the alternative. That is to say, strong people would want this to be so. That it might not be so isn't changed one bit, but at the very least, if one is strong, it would seem one would want an afterlife.
Is this so?
For what is strength but the desire for more life? And what is weakness but the desire for annihilation? One cannot be strong if one says "I do not want life!" for it is the fundamental foundation of weakness to cry out for reprieve from this stunningly wonderful (and terrible, also!) life in which we live. So to imagine - or to actually have - an afterlife which retains an individual ego either in a heaven or in reincarnation, would seem to be more desirous-of-life and thus, far more stronger than the alternative. That is to say, strong people would want this to be so. That it might not be so isn't changed one bit, but at the very least, if one is strong, it would seem one would want an afterlife.