“Living begins with the fear of not existing.”
….When humans first come into this world, our first struggle is to fight against non-existence. I am sure that your teachers who taught you about the system of childbearing
You said that the first minute is more important than the next forty years.
It’s true. Because the first minute before death is the biggest change in life.
Surely your teachers taught you this when a baby is born.
It’s about focusing on the impact that improper breathing has on brain development, but for me it has more to do with it. That is, the good things that a person is used to when they are born are completely changed.
In the mother’s womb there is fullness, there is no hunger; in the mother’s womb there is warmth;
There is no cold; but above all, there is no taste in the mother’s womb.
There is no work; it is just a comfortable breeze and floating in soft water.
All this joy changes the moment we are born; we need to breathe; we need to hunger.
We start to sweat to relieve ourselves; we feel cold. We turn to others for warmth.
We gather to live.
Otherwise, there is no life. Starving, freezing, and dying are the root of all our fears.
In our mother’s womb, we only know existence. But giving birth is an indication of non-existence.
This fear continues throughout our lives. At every stage, at every age, we continue to be exposed to the threat of non-existence.
The world we live in is also a place where humanity can avoid the threat of extinction for centuries.
He has a lifestyle built on desire; this system is innate from birth.
“It takes over; the world of parents, relatives, neighbors, neighborhoods, nations, languages, cultures, religions, and experiences awaits us before us. We are born into a world where all this exists, and we are imprisoned in these pre-established systems in order to escape from non-existence and live.”
Taken from the book of nonexistence .