This is weird. I realize this. But I wanted to write to you, dear loved one. Namely, because I’ve been dead for some time now. And the way I left this world happened so fast. So unexpected.
I wasn’t expecting it to end like this. None of us got any closure. Especially not you.
The pain you went through after my death was much worse than the pain I went through by actually dying.
Dying, it turns out, wasn’t all that bad. In fact, I wish someone would have told me how beautiful the transition is. I would’ve never been so afraid of death if I’d known.
When I was alive, I was horrified of death. This unspoken fear hovers beneath human consciousness, motivating all decisions. Fueling everything from obsessively healthy eating, to elderly men buying Corvettes.
But it’s death they’re really afraid of. The fear permeates a human’s psyche, and makes us small. Paralyzes us. Other creatures do not fear death this way. Dogs do not wake up and say to themselves,
“Gee, I wish I had adequate life insurance.”
But we do. I think this fear has something to do with our logical brains. That human logic we use to problem solve; that same logic can also be our enemy.
Because this very intelligence makes us doubt what our heart is always saying. And what our heart is saying is: “This is not all there is.”
I know that now, dear loved one. When you pass, it’s like not like dying at all. It’s like waking up from a dream. There will be relatives you have never met, waiting for you. A massive cloud of witnesses, a stadium of souls who are all waiting to embrace you.
I will be at the front of this crowd. And when we…