>>103417
>A man who thinks of death all day will be depressed, poisoned by the world he has "created" (intelectuals, athiests, edgelords, etc.)
Yet a man who avoids the problem of death, rather than slogging through the angst and fear and overcoming it, is vulnerable and under-prepared for when death manifests to him in the world.
The man who's completed this transition, or is well underway with it, may reflect on death and its mysteries all day without worry, and be wiser and stronger for it.
>>In Summary: we could all be imaginary
'Could' is pretty weak. Your 'self', after all, is unavoidably subject to change, whether considered as a totality or divided as you please. We are each certainly nothing more than Being abstracted to the point of being labelled 'person', 'self', 'child', 'parent', etc, for the convenience of society and the security of ego.
The only thing about yourself (or myself, in my case) that is consistent across all available reference points is consciousness. It seems to recede and emerge, translate across time and space, or even fracture under the right conditions, but this is mainly a bias of the individual mind, for which consciousness is and shall remain a mystery (for many of us, anyway).
A beautiful and boundless mystery. Cough cough.