Others prefer a different, but related analogy. Dying, they say, is like forgetting.
When one dies, one forgets all one’s woes; all one’s painful and troubling memories are obliterated.
As old and as widespread as they may be, however,
both the “sleeping” and the “forgetting” analogies are ultimately inadequate in so far as comforting us is concerned.
Each is a different way of making the same assertion. Even though they tell us so in a somewhat more palatable way,
both say, in effect, that death is simply the annihilation of conscious experience, forever.
If this is so, then death really doesn’t have any of the desirable features of sleeping and forgetting.
Sleeping is a positive, desirable experience in life because waking follows it.
A restful night’s sleep makes the waking hours following it more pleasant and productive.
If waking did not follow it, the benefits of sleep would not be possible.
Similarly, annihilation of all conscious experience implies not only the obliteration of all painful memories, but of all pleasant ones, too.
So upon analysis, neither analogy is close enough to give us any real comfort or hope in facing death.
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