I'm just not sure living a life of near-constant anxiety is something practical, — Erik
I will start by saying both that this is a topic that has interested me (personally and I have dealt with anxiety related to death as well), and also that I side mostly with Spinoza - and strongly disagree with Heidegger.According to Spinoza, a free man thinks of nothing less than death. — Erik
Indeed it can be. While we think about death, we're certainly not concerned with how we can make our condition better, how we can help our family, or how we can do something for our society or for our world. We're stuck just considering what is ultimately an inevitability, which isn't in our control. So we're effectively throwing away the time which has been granted to us, instead of gratefully using it for higher purposes. I know you probably are not religious, but I will take this moment to explain why Christianity condemns anxiety as a sin - and this is precisely the reason, namely that when one is anxious, one is ungrateful - and wastes their time dealing with what is ultimately not in their control. They could've used this same amount of time doing more useful activities.Regarding Spinoza's point, thinking about death can be debilitating. — Erik
This is possible and it is very unfortunate - but many times there are warning signs that people ignore or simply don't know how to check. It is also significant to note that in today's world people are relying on doctors with the same absurd faith that they used to place in the priest. In the end we alone are responsible for our health - we must be well informed, we must have adequate knowledge about potential conditions, we must be able to read our own blood tests for example, understand how to assess liver function, understand the body's vital functions and how to measure them, etc. Most people do not bother though - they leave it all to the doctor, they don't even know what AST (SGOT) test result on their blood tests measures or indicates. They go to their doctor, and their doctor's word is law. This is not a safe approach though. Your health is your responsibility, a doctor is to be used as a tool to help you, but you must have some knowledge yourself. Firstly, routine blood tests (complete blood count, electrolytes, liver function, thyroid function, kidney function, lipids/cholesterol/triglicerydes, prostate tests if you're a man) these are things you can do yearly. Second there's lots of tests which you can buy and do at home - you can do glucose test (blood sugar), blood pressure check, urine test (to check urinary tract, bladder, kidney - it will also check things like blood in the urine that you cannot see with the naked eye), stool test (will check blood in the stool water, which you cannot check with the naked eye - and which will very likely be present in either bowel cancer or stomach cancer), check your blood oxygen levels by acquiring a pulse oximeter. These are just a few options and there are more. Obviously you won't do these every day - but you can set say 1 weeks a year when you undertake all these tests on a daily basis to see and understand your condition. Blood pressure and pulse you can check weekly - in fact it's good that you do. Third - one needs to understand symptoms of disease, and be able to spot if there likely is a problem, or the symptoms are due to anxiety, etc. Fourth - one must have a 12-lead EKG, probably once a year, to check that everything is alright with the heart. In addition, every few years you can have an echocardiogram as well, to check how your heart beats. A doctor should also listen to your lungs once a year. If there are signs something is wrong with your heart, have a Holter monitor it for awhile. You can learn to read the EKGs yourself too - doesn't take that long to understand.First, I had a good friend - one much younger and seemingly healthier than myself - inexplicably drop dead about three years ago. — Erik
It is very unfortunate - nothing much we can do except being next to the person and helping them through the struggle though... And always have faith - there always is a small chance of recovery - and if there is a small chance, then you must play it, and play it to the maximum - your salvation may cling on it.Then, about six months after that, my 43-year-old sister was diagnosed with stage IV cancer after complaining of abdominal cramps. A death sentence, basically. — Erik
Life is indeed very uncertain - there are things that we can do to minimise the uncertainty - such as I have recommended above. But there will always be some uncertainty. The fact is that - despite trying to sound like they know - even doctors have relatively little knowledge and understanding of the human body. It is very complicated. Doing our best is simply all we can do.These traumatic events precipitated a an unhealthy dwelling on death, or, more specifically, on the precariousness of life. — Erik
Ok time to have a way to separate your subjective state of your health from the objective state of your health. Anxiety can make you feel any symptom - if you are anxious about your heart, you will have palpiations, you will be short of breath when climbing stairs, you will be dizzy when getting up, etc. It is important to be able to understand the physical origin of this sensation if there is any, and if there is none, then attribute it to anxiety. What could cause this list of symptoms that you have experienced - an issue with the heart - an arrhythmia. A heart attack. An issue with your lungs. Anemia (low hemoglobin or iron levels). Wrong levels of electrolytes. Low/high blood sugar. Problems with your thyroid gland.I started to feel extremely anxious and began experiencing some troubling physical symptoms, like shortness of breath, heart palpitations, and frequent light-headedness. — Erik
Yes - so you have to take your life back. Take responsibility for your conditions and take practical steps to improve it. Understanding the objective state of your body is the first step. Then you have to understand your mind - why it gets anxious, when it gets anxious, and how to control it or simply ignore the feeling when it is present. This requires a bit of practice - I found mindfulness helpful. But over time you can somewhat detach yourself from your anxious mind and have a more clear eyed view. Not always possible. Just sometimes. But that is better than nothing. Don't fight the thoughts - let them be there, disprove them rationally when you can, form a plan for dealing with uncertainty. And for the uncertainty that cannot be eliminated, one must learn to ignore it and live with it. Have confidence that regardless if what you fear happens, you will be able to deal with it.These, along with frequent intrusive thoughts, led to a paradoxical situation in which an all-consuming fear of death led to an inability to cope with life, which led to suicidal thoughts (as the only way to overpower the fear of dying), and the downward spiral began. — Erik
Even if we did not know that our mind is eternal, we would still regard as of the first importance morality, religion, and absolutely all the things we have shown to be related to tenacity and nobility [...] The usual conviction of the multitude seems to be different. For most people apparently believe that they are free to the extent that they are permitted to yield to their lust, and that they give up their right to the extent that they are bound to live according to the rule of the divine law. Morality, then, and religion, and absolutely everything related to strength of character, they believe to be burdens, which they hope to put down after death, when they also hope to receive a reward for their bondage, that is, for their morality and religion. They are induced to live according to the rule of the divine law (as far as their weakness and lack of character allows) not only by this hope, but also, and especially, by the fear that they may be punished horribly after death. If men did not have this hope and fear, but believed instead that minds die with the body, and that the wretched, exhausted with the burden of morality, cannot look forward to a life to come, they would return to their natural disposition, and would prefer to govern all their actions according to lust, and to obey fortune rather than themselves. These opinions seem no less absurd to me than if someone, because he does not believe he can nourish his body with good food to eternity, should prefer to fill himself with poisons and other deadly things, or because he sees that the mind is not eternal, or immortal, should prefer to be mindless, and to live without reason. These [common beliefs] are so absurd they are hardly worth mentioning [...] Blessedness is not the reward of virtue, but virtue itself; nor do we enjoy it because we restrain our lusts; on the contrary, because we enjoy it, we are able to restrain them — Benedictus de Spinoza
I disagree very strongly about this. Death is not needed. One must not be moral out of fear. That is an inadequate idea per Spinoza. If one is moral because of death - because of fear, then one is just deceiving oneself - cheating himself that he is moral, when in fact he isn't. One must be moral because of one's love and thirst for the Good. Because of Amor Dei Intellectualis. Spinoza would disagree with the modern conception of freedom "doing whatever we want". That to him is bondage to our lusts - not freedom. The only freedom is the freedom to approach our fulfilment - which is precisely in Christian terms doing the will of God, ie being moral. We are all free to be moral - not all of us achieve that freedom though. We are all free to drop the chains of greed, of ambition, of lust, and to be entirely self-directed as Spinoza would say. And we are self directed when we act in accordance with the law in our hearts, which is the same law that governs the whole of nature. One Substance.It allows us to 'become who we are' through the call of conscience, which can draw us away from the empty chatter and distractions of the anonymous crowd and towards possibilities of existing that we find more meaningful for ourselves. It has a positive function in that we no longer chase after the approval of others, and therefore gain a sense of freedom much more significant than the ability to do whatever we want, free of external constraints. In short, it makes life much more profound and meaningful, even in its seemingly mundane and trivial aspects. — Erik
I don't see any pathological thing about understanding your own body, and taking responsibility over your own body. This should be something taught to everyone in schools. You don't have faith in your priest for your spiritual health - but then you go having complete, blind faith in your doctor for your body - that's a bit crazy. As for Wittgenstein and Heidegger - probably they wouldn't give such advice, though they were philosophers. A philosopher's job is not to give life advice generally. For that YOU John read Dale Carnegie don't you? ;)And I believe that neither Wittgenstein nor Heidegger would recommend the kind of obsessive, even pathological, preoccupation with gaining control over our own physical destinies that Agustino seems to be advocating. — John
I think this is where ritual can help. The Stoics recommended once a day, preferably at the same time, briefly but deeply reflecting on one's mortality and that of those we love. I think I read about it in William Irvine's wonderful book 'A guide to the good life: The ancient art of Stoic joy'. That practice seems to work well for me.I think I'm looking for some Aristotelian golden mean between the extremes — Erik
I find this interesting. Typically though I tend to associate beliefs in reincarnation with those who somehow want to sugar-coat death, but I am certain that since you are very rational based on your posts and you have used Stoic practices and are at peace with the idea of death as final end, this isn't the case here. So I feel the need to ask you if you don't mind... how have you arrived at such a belief in reincarnation? I am interested in the journey and evolution of your thought towards this idea, including reading or experiences that have led to it if you don't mind sharing of course. I'm not asking to criticise I'm just curious about such experiences, and changes of belief from the belief of death as final, to a conviction that something like reincarnation is true.I don't know if this is relevant but recently I've been finding my idea of death - which we can never understand in any complete rational way - gravitating towards an idea of reincarnation. Not as far as having conscious memories of a past life but in the sense of one's consciousness somehow merging with a universal consciousness which then re-emerges in particular ways in new consciousnesses. — andrewk
Do you feel there's any significant difference between our death and our own nothingness? This may sound completely unsophisticated and outdated, but I'm inclined to think of my body as a sort of vehicle which is intimately linked to something higher or more spiritual which animates it — Erik
The question now is whether to persist in the turbulence (Heidegger) or strive to attain some sort of stoic detachment from it (Spinoza). I'm not quite sure these two possible responses to our predicament can be reconciled. In fact the more I think about it the more they seem radically opposed. — Erik
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