Processing Grief As An Atheist

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  • Опубликовано: 23 июн 2024
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Комментарии • 54

  • @adamplentl5588
    @adamplentl5588 4 дня назад +31

    It's like The Wonder Years said, "I'm sure there ain't a Heaven, but that don't mean I don't like to picture you there."

    • @themajesticspider-man6116
      @themajesticspider-man6116 4 дня назад +2

      That's how I think about a close friend of mine I adore who passed away in December of 2022. I still grieve heavily for them. Miss them a lot.

    • @adamplentl5588
      @adamplentl5588 4 дня назад +2

      @@themajesticspider-man6116 May they rest in power. Sorry for your loss.

    • @NGScoob
      @NGScoob 4 дня назад +3

      ⁠@@themajesticspider-man6116man, my best friend passed a month after yours.. May they both rest in peace.

    • @themajesticspider-man6116
      @themajesticspider-man6116 4 дня назад

      @adamplentl5588 thanks for that ❤️

    • @themajesticspider-man6116
      @themajesticspider-man6116 4 дня назад +1

      @@NGScoob thank you ❤️

  • @theharlequin3088
    @theharlequin3088 4 дня назад +16

    So many people conceptualize some form of reward after death, and have no idea that death can be a relief unto itself.
    I look forward to not having to exist anymore, no more pain or hunger or sadness.
    I've cared for people who've had terrible suffering and died horribly, and people who've had good lives and good deaths.
    We live in a dystopian hellscape nightmare, and it is comforting to know that no matter how bad things get it will stop eventually.

  • @christophertablante7680
    @christophertablante7680 4 дня назад +11

    Thank tou for going over this Jake, because Bro, I have been grappling with fear that I will die someday, and have been dreading the death of my loved ones. Ive been haunted at the reality that no matter how much I savour the moment... when the time comes I know ill yearn for more time and regret every wasted moment. I dont get to talk through these feeling often, so this segment gave me a much needed pick-me-up. Stay golden, Lord Kernal of the Bretheren Cob!

  • @The_Horse-leafs_Cabbage
    @The_Horse-leafs_Cabbage 4 дня назад +6

    I've grappled with grief before and after I became an agnostic atheist--and I've grappled with different kinds of death as well.
    Whether it's someone I know, or it's someone I never met, but look up to-- the most painful aspect is the loss of that connection, of not hearing what they'll say next, of not seeing what they'll do next. I don't know if there's an afterlife--
    But I do know their legacy exists, and is something I cherish. In a way, a person's legacy is like an afterlife. An echo that you'll do your best to hold onto.
    As much as you'd wish there was more than an echo.

  • @thrillhouse4151
    @thrillhouse4151 4 дня назад +5

    I think “closure” is something that cannot be achieved if you truly love someone, and that’s why religion is so big cause it takes the guesswork away and acts like a prescription for grief.

  • @FrozEnbyWolf150
    @FrozEnbyWolf150 4 дня назад +1

    I recently lost my best friend and emotional support cat, Meadow. She means the world to me and has gotten me through the most difficult times and important milestones in my life. I suffer from complicated grief on top of this, which means the loved ones I've lost in the past still hurt as much today as back then. I don't believe in any kind of afterlife or deities. I still talk to her as though she's still around, in the spaces we inhabited together and during the activities we shared together. When you lose someone, you still have the memories of them, the lessons they taught you, and the mark they've left on your life. It's perfectly understandable to address them to reinforce these memories, and remind yourself how important they have been to you.

  • @radicalagnostic
    @radicalagnostic 4 дня назад +2

    one of the greatest disservices of Christianity is that if someone is to start believing something different or happens to lose their faith, it makes the process of grieving or conceiving death extremely difficult for some people. Growing up Catholic, I always assumed an eternal paradise. Upon seeing death and realizing the horrific possibility of hell within a christian framework, i was terrified. Upon abandoning religion and picturing nothingness at the end of my life, I feel hopeless that I may forever lose my consciousness that I like. No “live every moment” matters, because I may not even remember it anyway. I now have to start from the bottom to process all of these emotions, whilst being pulled back and forth by the nurturing of a Christian background that did not prepare me to discuss or understand death in a meaningful way

  • @hilliard665
    @hilliard665 4 дня назад +2

    I lost my dad last unexpectedly year. First close person I've lost.
    I struggled to grieve, but I don't think religion of any sort would have helped, I was just sad and needed to accept he is gone. Still hurts but I didn't need a pretend sky daddy to miss my real daddy 😢

  • @meggerz5687
    @meggerz5687 День назад

    I witnessed a terrible car accident a couple months back. When I went to check on the passengers one of them was in really bad shape. She unfortunately did not make it and I later learned she was only 19 years old.
    I was telling my aunt-in-law about it and her response was that her spirit was with me.
    It made me super uncomfortable because I wouldn’t want her stuck with a stranger. Religion can really bring the narcissistic side out of people sometimes.

  • @iRetneprac
    @iRetneprac 4 дня назад +5

    Have always wanted to hear you talk about this subject, and honestly, would really enjoy if I could ever sit down and chat with you about it. Thanks as always for doing what you do, Papa Jake!

    • @josh-oo
      @josh-oo 4 дня назад

      This isn't the first time he's talked about it.

  • @user-tr9of6sl4p
    @user-tr9of6sl4p 4 дня назад

    The fact that theres nothing after we die is exactly why i make sure to live life to the fullest every day.
    Ive become a bit of an adrenaline junkie
    Ive ridden dirt bikes, built myown firearms, ridden vehicles on frozen lakes, im going skydiving soon, ive held every venomous spider barehanded, ive held a viper barehanded, ive gone cliff diving, climbed a waterfall with no ropes
    I wanna go on crazy adventures while i have the chance. Im not gonna waste my life in church hoping for some boring eternal church service in the afterlife.
    I dont wanna survive. I wanna LIVE.

  • @kenpatchiramasama1076
    @kenpatchiramasama1076 3 дня назад

    Thank goodness i underwent trauma at an early age and no longer feel grief in general

  • @TheRoboBro1513
    @TheRoboBro1513 4 дня назад +2

    I think it's really hard to articulate the absolute abject dread I experience when thinking about death. Logically, i know that I can't experience death because I will simply cease functioning, but there is still always this lingering terror of everything coming to an end and not being able to experience anything anymore. Ive tried coming to an acceptance of death, especially with the amount of friends and family I've lost in my short time on this planet, but it still sends me into a panic attack to think about it. I hope some day I'll be able to find acceptence and peace, and I don't think I'll ever stop trying, its just very difficult. Being an ape who is painfully aware of it's own existance and mortality isn't exactly great for someone with severe anxiety lol.

    • @radicalagnostic
      @radicalagnostic 4 дня назад +2

      i felt every single word of this, and every ounce of terror. I live with dread about this every day and hope the same for you and myself that we can come to terms. It feels a little sad but i’m also slightly relieved at the same time, to know other people feel the same way as I do

  • @PuppyLuver256
    @PuppyLuver256 4 дня назад +1

    Well said, Jake. I lost my uncle in the past couple months after a steady mental and physical decline, and while I know and accept the fact that he as a person is gone, he remains in the form of his loved ones' memories and stories of him. You could say the man lives on in the imagery of, among many other things, a deconstructed Jimmy Dean breakfast biscuit sizzling in a frying pan and topped with far too much cayenne. (and in the upcoming finally-officially-translated Ace Attorney Investigations 2 I guess, if only because I have no doubt the character formerly known as Raymond Shields via the fan translation will still insist on Edgeworth calling him uncle, making him "uncle Eddie" now... a bittersweet localization decision for me tbh)

  • @user-tr9of6sl4p
    @user-tr9of6sl4p 4 дня назад +1

    The fact that life must end one day is the reason we must live life to the fullest every day.
    A religious person has no reason to actually ever do anything cool in life because theyre too busy waiting for an afterlife that almost certainly will not happen.

  • @KyLeon0130
    @KyLeon0130 4 дня назад

    I work as a hospice nursing aide (trying to become an RN) because helping someone pass on to whatever happens after we die comforts me a lot. I'm an agnostic atheist and have some spiritual ideas. It's my way of being happy.

  • @unclegumbald989
    @unclegumbald989 4 дня назад

    I just watch Doctor Who’s S9E11 episode “Heaven Sent”

  • @eveofthewood
    @eveofthewood 3 дня назад

    I feel like telling people "you'll see them again in heaven" is essentially enabling them to never let go of that hope. Which sounds nice, but it could prevent them from doing the work of letting go and truly healing. It's just putting on blinders.

  • @mistorWhiskers
    @mistorWhiskers 3 дня назад

    I got lucky having parents that weren't particularly religious so I only had to pretend like twice a year to make grandma happy. I wasn't really burdened with all that baggage I guess.

  • @n0etic_f0x
    @n0etic_f0x 4 дня назад +7

    You know one thing I have noted? As a Christian... you just often don't process grief. My grandma died this year and my grandpa is still deeply upset. He has at most 10 more years, I get how sad it is but like... you _do_ believe she is in paradise yeah?
    Several months later he is doing well but not over it. Why not though? You are going to see her again are you not? That is what you believe yeah?
    But they never act like it! Why? If I believed in Heaven if my SO and best freind both died I would just follow them into the dark. Why would you not want to?

  • @jackmcglion8337
    @jackmcglion8337 4 дня назад +2

    Well, technically, atheist could believe in heaven, just no God. Atheism is just not believing or lack of belief in a God. Now, I understand that there's no evidence for heaven. All I'm saying is technically (though unlikely) an atheist could believe in an afterlife.

    • @radicalagnostic
      @radicalagnostic 4 дня назад

      it’s an interesting thought that I think some atheists could benefit from. I think Buddhism is technically atheist for its lack of an overarching deity. The existence of a positive afterlife for all people would be the ideal in my eyes, but I’m not very hopeful

  • @PaulYates-nf7vx
    @PaulYates-nf7vx 4 дня назад

    God is good and the devil is evil