jajohnson7809 wrote:I know views will be varied, but I'd like to know how members deal with death and loss. Not knowing what comes after this life frustrates me sometimes. I want to believe those who suffered a lot in this life--maybe they were really poor or born with a disease--will have a chance to be whole and happy on another plane, or in another life on earth. I want to believe I'll see the people I love again, and that I'll survive the expiration of my body in one way or another. I'd like to think that my deceased dear ones know when I'm thinking of them and can hear when I talk to them. But I don't know that with any certainty, and that hurts, because then I'm just talking to air and walls.
I understand that death is a part of the cycle of things, just as birth and falling in love. Yet a part of me fears it, kind of like how I was scared on my first day of kindergarten. It's facing the unknown. The poem by Dylan Thomas called "Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night" comes to mind. "Rage, rage, against the dying of the light." How does that view of death compare with the Druid view, if there is a Druidic view of death?
I'd love to hear your thoughts.
I started to think that there are two parts - the physical part and the "soul" - but the more I think about the end result (for me anyway) it all becomes one - a mass of energy dissipating into other energy masses. That is, the physical body will break down and provide energy / food for other living things (such as plants) and the "soul" dissipates to another energy element (chi / awen / nwyfre). I think this reflects taoist thinking... or to be more correct, my interpretation of taoist thinking!
I guess that may be the challenge with "my thoughts" against any "official" druid line, as from this OBOD forum it is clear that there is no defined description of an after life, more concepts that have been considered. However, I do think that there is another aspect to this, which is irrespective of what happens to us when we die, it is also how we are thought of by those that remain. For some, they may choose to think that the soul of the departed is in some "heaven construct", looking down on us (or perhaps in a burning pit of Hell in torment...

). To me, a lot of what people think is derived from this aspect of death and mourning.
But that's my view.