Two very emotional and powerful moments seem to frame most people’s lives. One is the
exhilarating experience of looking at the newborn baby swaddled in a warm blanket with a
face of innocence, wonder, total trust and in need of unbound love to survive.
The second experience, probably the most dramatic, is being present at the moment of
someone’s death, be it a relative, a close friend, a colleague of arms, even a complete stranger.
Regardless of who might that person be, the lifeless expression of his or her face, the coldness
of her skin, the absolute inertness confirms that their vital energy is no longer present
animating the body.
This experience of death as a definite and permanent state has been present in our human
reality since man took his/her first baby steps on our planet and became aware that this reality
was ever present when a loved one, a dear brother, the mother that cannot be replaced by any
other woman, the exemplary father, or the especial relative that departed leaving an empty
void that cannot be filled.
Death’s grip is inexorable, no matter how well we take care of ourselves, how we judiciously
choose our healthy food, how much exercise we do to keep the body’s functions at top
efficiency, how well we manage stress, how deep our spiritual beliefs are, or how positively we
create thoughts of wellbeing, peace, and happiness. There comes a time when disabling age
takes away our most basic organs’ functions, an unforeseen car accident happens, a stray bullet
kills you; a tsunami, an earthquake, a cyclone, a hurricane, or a flooding river unexpectedly
takes away your life.
We will explore as many aspects of this undeniable experience we all humans must face
with the aid of science, philosophy, and religion to see if we can find some reassuring and
illuminating answers that will serve us as we steer through the undeniable experience of not
knowing experientially beforehand what happens after we make this earthly transition.