I've heard that we bury our dead deep in the ground so that they don't get dug up and to avoid the smell.
Egyptians would mummify the dead in order to assist the soul in successfully traversing to the afterlife, which would take approximately 50 days according to the Book of Life / Book of the Dead.
Burying in a coffin would prevent the body from naturally decomposing and the energy being used to feed microbial and plant life though wouldn't it? On the other hand, being buried in a coffin means that you wouldn't feel the weight of dirt crushing you if we can feel anything after death.
In saying that, if we can feel anything after death, I'm not sure that feeling your body contort as it goes through rigor mortis whilst being preserved in a coffin is good juju for the soul. Maybe it's better to be buried without a coffin with the weight of the dirt crushing you so that you can decompose naturally and without having to feel the rigor mortis.
If any anons have studied about the spiritual consequences of cremation, being buried in a coffin or being buried in dirt I'd love to hear it.
I'm pretty sure that cremation would extend the amount of time the soul needs to go through a healing process before it's capable of reincarnation again, having regard to what the law of one says. But it also says that painful deaths or deaths which are not accepted easily cause an extended healing process before the soul is capable of reincarnation again.
I'd love to hear more about this widely under discussed topic
if your remains are salted and burned then your spirit leaves earth and doesnt linger
Adam Hughes
this. abrahamic religion have been coopted by daemonists. maybe even created by them.
Ian Robinson
I'm pretty sure I was reincarnated after being disintegrated in Atlantis approximately 10,000 years ago though user.
Don't ask how I know this, I've seen it play like a film before my eyes and no dream or imagination compares because this made sense, and I was hyper aware like I was living it or watching a film. It also explained why I had a fear of sudden death for most of my childhood.
Justin Long
From my understanding is the attachments and regrets, remorse and desires, obsessions which create karma and act as a pulling force for us to come back here and reincarnate. Karma is like an emotional knot which acts as a catalyst for us to create our reality unintentionally (or intentionally if we choose), and due to those attachments our essence remains here and reincarnates here again.
However, depending on how you died (whether it was peaceful and if you accepted it) and what happened to your body after death, it may take a longer amount of time before the soul is capable of reincarnation (this is why the Chinese do the Death of 1000 cuts, because mutilation was said to prevent the body from being able to reincarnate quickly, possibly because the healing process needs to be extended if one dies a painful death)
Ryder Garcia
Yes. Karm keeps you binded, indifference is the key to moksh
Charles Gomez
There some cemeteries that allow you to do a "natural" burial with biodegradable coffins and no embalming.
John Hall
I was meant to return to the Earth, not lie in a plastic tub putrifying and rotting. Drop me in the sea and let the ecosystem consume me as nutrition.
Ian Walker
Immortalization is a jewish thing.
Carson Lee
Take the parsi pill then. They have sky tombs.
Julian Reyes
Being buried without a coffin 6' deep would very much slow decomposition. When you shit in the woods it is preferable to only scratch a shallow hole so the feces will stay in the top layer of soil that is most bioactive to speed decomposition. At least that's what I tell my female camping partners so I can sneak out at night and admire their feminine logs.
Jason Brown
I'm a little on the fence, I believe that the soul leaves almost immediately, can be brought back if revived. I would prefer a wooden pyre personally, but I suppose cremation is fine. None of this applies to the soulless (npcs) of which there are many (1000-1 at least)
Jackson Collins
Abrahamic traditions bury their dead because of the belief that the messiah will come to raise them from the dead. There's a passage in the bible about it. Not sure how so many Christians got the idea that the rapture will involve them being dragged up to heaven, rather than earthly resurrection. Anyway, no remains, no resurrection.
If you want your soul to be preserved as long as possible and last until the end of days, have your body preserved. If you want to reenter the cycle, choose decay or cremation. Common sense really.
Jackson Ward
I have felt souls leave the body. >neck hair standing on end >chills begin >walk through door into unit >hear doctor announcing they will call the time of death right now I felt the guy passing before I even made it in the room and/or knew someone was in a critical condition. >t. Hospital employee
Xavier Long
The culture of death in the west is evasive and designed for the sole purpose of dehumanizing the dead and inflicting trauma on the public via the process of complex bereavement. It is natural to handle your dead, to spend time with dead bodies, to process and mourn your dead as a community. Unnatural to pay shekels for Corpsestein Bros. to take grandma to the oven ten thousand other people have been through today. Coffins were always a thing, but the process before and after entombing has greatly degraded and has made the “resting place” that is a coffin into a Walmart affair.
Nathaniel Price
To continue in response to the OP, not only is the current death culture dehumanizing and traumatic, it is spiritually dead. Our communities are spiritually sick, and so the honor of the dead is missing. We do not honor the dead, the process of death. The culture’s relationship to death is displays directly the culture’s inner belief, their relationship to Soul, God, and the afterlife. If they nurture, protect, and believe in those things, they will demonstrate this most vividly in their death practices. Culturally, this world is overrun with it religion - there is no belief, and so there is no death practice that we can point to and say, “here - here is the work that benefits the Soul.” That being said, all Good and charitable deeds, including honoring and respectfully processing the dead, are gems in Man’s crown and an edification to his Soul.
Jonathan Walker
I don’t think it matters to the dead
Nicholas Gomez
Cremation is preferable to avoid voodoo niggas using your remains in their magic spells
Whilst its definitely been a practice of many cultures, including those who believe in an afterlife, to bury their dead in coffins or sarcophagus, I'm not convinced that this process is beneficial to the soul.
The reason embalming and mummification was done in Egyptian culture was to assist the body in traversing through the afterlife. But the matter of fact remains, doing so subjects the body to putrification and experiencing a prolonged rigor mortis, rather than experiencing a natural decomposition where the body decays and feeds new life, and the energy in your body transfers to plants to be a host for new life.
You could say that putrification allows the body to become food for fungus, but do you think that it's necessarily beneficial for the soul to be subject to an unnatural practice such as the preserving of the body? If we can feel anything after death, surely a prolonged sensation of rigor mortis may not be pleasurable to experience at all. This makes me question whether a burial without a coffin would be more beneficial for the souls passing.
Noah Phillips
Burying in the west is from Gaul. Cremation is Roman.
Zachary Murphy
This is now a log thread
Luis Jenkins
No you didn't. You felt some made-up booga wooga bullshit because you're a puss that can't handle death.
Xavier Hill
>Burying in a coffin would prevent the body from naturally decomposing and the energy being used to feed microbial and plant life though wouldn't it? What do you think happens to that coffin long term? Its lacquered wood. That coat will degrade from time and the elements, exposing the wood to the same, eventually only the metal trim will be left, that takes a while longer to go to powder, but it also will. Thats if we are talking about third world countries as in any "developed" shithole they usually dig them up again once the relatives stop forking over money for the stupid ass plot. Thats my only will, dispose of my cadaver however you see fit, i wont care anymore, but DONT pay a single cent to any of these kike-like gayops. The only wage they deserve is the one for their sin of greed.
Aiden Bennett
Doesn't matter what you do with your body after you die. Christians have adopted this burying six feet under and embalming so it will be easier to be resurrected when Christ comes again. The reality is everyone's getting resurrected, including the wicked and including the people who are eaten by sharks and have no remains. So don't worry about what happens to your body when it's dead.
Personally, I'd rather not inconvenience strangers for an indefinite period while they are required to tend my grave site. So I will be cremated.
Dominic Stewart
There's always that one guy in this time it's you.
Just because you're blind to spiritual experience doesn't mean others aren't. In most likely hood you've had plenty of spiritual opportunities but you chose to harden your heart and dismiss it as "fission" or psychosomatics
Dylan Turner
You're not wrong, but the decomposition of the coffin occurs far later than the putrification of the body and it still prevents the body from decomposing naturally, as well as being a catalyst for the body to be subjected to a prolonged experience of rigor mortis. After someone I know had passed, I've felt that they may have experienced a not so pleasurable sensation of prolonged rigor mortis as a result of the burial. It made me question the practice of burial in coffins that we commonly do.