The One Who Does Not Die

March 1, 2025 Life Lessons No Comments

A quiet moment.
The smell of rain on warm earth. You’re sitting at your window, watching it fall in gentle waves. A bird pauses in a nearby tree — not flying, not singing, simply being.
For a moment, time seems to step aside. You too pause.

The question behind the question

We live knowing we will die. Yet how often do we actually feel that knowledge?

Not in fear or resistance, but in quiet acceptance — the kind that makes everything somehow more vivid, more intimate. A falling leaf, a smile from someone who doesn’t know they’re smiling. The soft rhythm of your breath when you’re not thinking about it.

We are taught to think of death as a full stop. But what if it’s more of an ellipsis…?

The thought isn’t new. It lives in poems, in spiritual traditions, in the subtle intuition you might have had as a child — that maybe there is something in you that doesn’t end, because it didn’t really begin.

Not mystical — just deeply human

Let’s stay rational. Not superstitious, not escapist.

This isn’t about believing in heaven or reincarnation. It’s about depth. About the layers in you that are not constructed but discovered. Not invented, but remembered.

These layers don’t shout. They whisper.
They don’t demand belief.
They invite you to feel.

In the presence of someone you love deeply, or when truly listening to music, or while watching the rain — have you never felt that you are part of something… ongoing?

Not forever, not in some cosmic sense — but now, as if something in you was always here, not limited by your usual sense of self.

The wave and the ocean

You are like a wave.
A beautiful, singular form. You rise, crest, and return.

But the wave is never separate from the ocean. Even at its peak, it is the ocean — just shaped differently for a little while.

When you feel this — not as a theory, but as a moment of recognition — something in you softens. You stop needing so much. You stop fearing quite as much.

This isn’t resignation.
It’s relief.

You realize: perhaps you do not need to cling to life so tightly to cherish it. Perhaps the one who clings is not the one who is.

Living as the one who does not die

To live as the one who does not die is not to ignore death.

It is to see through it.
To live fully in each moment — not because it might be the last, but because it is complete.

This doesn’t mean you won’t feel pain, or sadness, or fear.

But something in you will know how to stay, even when everything else wants to run.

You may find yourself smiling at a speck of dust on the wall.
And it may become — just for you — the most important thing in the universe.

A last breath… of the blog

So then, who dies?

Maybe not the one who smiled at the dust.
Maybe not the one who pauses in the rain.

Maybe — just maybe — that one is still sitting quietly,
waiting for you
right now.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

Time Does Not Pass Here

You’re listening to a piece of music.It’s not loud. Not especially grand. But at some point, you notice that everything else has fallen away — your plans, the time of day, even your name a little bit.You are not ‘using time.’ You’re not ‘in a moment.’You are the moment.And the strange thing is… it’s not Read the full article…

When Nothing Happens

A late afternoon.You’re sitting in a chair, maybe with a cup of something warm. No one’s calling. No task needs your attention. Outside, the sky changes softly — light folding into itself.You look around. Nothing is happening. The discomfort of stillness We are trained, gently but persistently, to fill.Fill the silence. Fill the calendar. Fill Read the full article…

The Leaf That Didn’t Fall

It’s the middle of winter.You walk past a tree. Its branches are stripped bare by wind and frost — all except one.One small leaf still clings to a twig near the top ― brown, curled, silent.It doesn’t seem stubborn. It just is. Not letting go — yet There’s something quietly moving about that leaf. Everything Read the full article…

Translate »