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On the subject of life and death

Name: Anonymous 2007-01-28 2:32

I've been thinking lately about death. I've grown into a state of depression over the subject.

Before we were born into life, we did not have a concept of time because we did not have brains to acknowledge time. There wasn't complete darkness or anything. As we grow older and develope our brains have now understood this and it's own consciousness.

Is this what it will be like after death?
No complete darkness, no heaven, no hell, no reincarnation, nothing.
We will die and our brains will stop working and that will be the end of it.

It's an incredibly scary thought, but fear is just a primitive emotion in response to a human's environment to flee a situation for survival.

I just see no reason for going on.
Do I get a high paying job, so I can be happy? But happyness itself is just another emotion. When a human's environment and surroundings are suitable they take joy in these things and have a desire to keep them, much like loved ones.

So my sole purpose in life is to just pass on my genetic material to the next generation to form a more perfect species. I will die and there will be no concept of time. Life just seems so incredibly pointless and I have no desire to continue it.

Name: Anonymous 2007-02-13 12:39

>>61
i can cook up some copypasta from the dictionary too.

re·dun·dant      /rɪˈdʌndənt/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[ri-duhn-duhnt] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–adjective
1.    characterized by verbosity or unnecessary repetition in expressing ideas; prolix: a redundant style.
2.    being in excess; exceeding what is usual or natural: a redundant part.
3.    having some unusual or extra part or feature.
4.    characterized by superabundance or superfluity: lush, redundant vegetation.
5.    Engineering.
a.    (of a structural member) not necessary for resisting statically determined stresses.
b.    (of a structure) having members designed to resist other than statically determined stresses; hyperstatic.
c.    noting a complete truss having additional members for resisting eccentric loads. Compare complete (def. 8), incomplete (def. 3).
d.    (of a device, circuit, computer system, etc.) having excess or duplicate parts that can continue to perform in the event of malfunction of some of the parts.
6.    Linguistics. characterized by redundancy; predictable.
7.    Computers. containing more bits or characters than are required, as a parity bit inserted for checking purposes.
8.    Chiefly British. removed or laid off from a job.

Mudkip
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This Source

are one of the fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar Pokémon media franchise – a collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. Mudkip are famous for being one of the three species of Pokémon players can choose from at the beginning of their adventure in the Pokémon Ruby & Pokémon Sapphire and Pokémon Emerald versions of the Pokémon series. The purpose of Mudkip in the games, anime and manga, as with all other Pokémon, is to battle both wild Pokémon, untamed creatures encountered while the player passes through various environments, and tamed Pokémon owned by Pokémon trainers.

Mudkip's name is a portmanteau of mud, being a surrounding of its natural habitat, and Kip, which refers to Skip, relating to the Mudskipper, the fish it resembles. The name Mudkip refers to both the overall species, and to individual Mudkip within the games, anime and manga series.

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