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Predicting the Future

January 16, 2022

Heaven, Hell, or Purgatory?

According to neuroscientist David J. Linden, who is dying from cancer, in a piece written by him for The Atlantic, the brain is constantly making predictions about the near future, the next few moments of it. These predictions are automatic and subconscious and can not be controlled at will, because they are hardwired to protect us from envisioning the devastation of our death. If you keep reading, you’ll find out that he himself can not imagine this world without him. He is a non believer, but now that he is dying, he understands the religious promise and appeal of an afterlife or of a come back to earth in another capacity, as an animal of a different species, or anything else in nature.

When I was studying psychology, among a myriad of other subjects, I took different courses related to learning, adaptation, death and dying, and the way we cope. In the four years I went to school full time, I learned an important number of discoveries that serve me to this day to look at life from a scientific and positive perspective. One of the elements, that I remember to this day, is that we can’t possibly predict the future, that everything we imagine is made up by our brain to produce stability in its functioning, including our dreams. The other, very important element, is that, according to research, religious people have more comfortable lives because they are surrounded by people who think alike, and who can provide reassurance when things go wrong.

Like everyone else, I can not predict the future either, but I can imagine this world without me, despite the fact that I know everyone is important in someone else’s quality of life, because people have a natural way of coping with the hardest of truths, and they don’t need me to find their own way.

Some of the strategies to cope with pain are maladapting, like the use of drugs or alcohol, but the majority of our coping mechanisms to confront life’s worst experiences are quite positive and healthy.

One of the healthiest ways to shield yourself from pain is that of creating a strong, honest connection with others, the ones who can catch you when you can not longer sustain yourself on your feet, and, in exchange, you can do the same for them when you are strong again—everybody goes through highs and lows at some point in their lives.

These support systems, that help us to cope and to keep going, are not found online, they are real, personal connections that we create in anticipation of what might happen to us in the future. Because the map in our head is not very precise and can not preview every possible outcome, we need to prepare ourselves in advance. However, I’m not talking about self-serving tricks that men like Charles Chaplin, Frank Sinatra, and more recently George Clooney, have used choosing much younger wives, who can take care of the household, you know, of the “unimportant things”.

In the case of Charles Chaplin, after a string of relationships with young women he mistreated, he married later in life Oona O’Neill, thirty-six years younger, whom he uprooted, making her live isolated in a foreign country, where he became the center of her attention for the rest of her life.

Frank Sinatra’s last wife, who had been the widow of one of his friends, was treated poorly by him, a man from a generation that called women, “broads”.

And last, George Clooney, who finally solved all his image problems by marrying a much younger, rich woman (before he made it big with his tequila brand), so that now she has to do the heavy lifting in his old age. Correct me if I’m wrong, in this particular case, but this is not what I’m talking about.

In order to be effective, support systems between people need to be free, loving, and mutual, where each one of their members are respected, protected, and none of them are manipulated or taken advantage of.

On the other hand, the idea of the afterlife comes from our religious upbringing and we use it because it makes of death something easier to swallow, less traumatic, and more sensible.

I don’t think there is an afterlife that can make sense of all our suffering in this world. Moreover, I don’t think we should try to make sense of our suffering, because it does not make any sense at all, period. We don’t learn anything from it and it does not make of us better people.

I don’t believe in the afterlife in the same way I don’t believe in Santa (spoiler alert: It does not exist). Santa has always been an invention created by big businesses to make people buy stuff they don’t need, or feel bad about not being able to afford that kind of lifestyle.

A religion, just like a political party, can be a double-edge sword, it can provide affirmation of your own set of beliefs and values, but the price you have to pay is too high, because you need to return the favor with the degradation of your own individualism and your personal freedom of thought. Belonging to an organized religion is like being in a sorority, a fraternity, or, in extreme cases, a cult that would support you in your times of need to only exploit it later one way or another by asking you to behave according to its leaders’ rules, where there is no place for personal freedom. In this master-slave relationship the only beneficiaries are the ones at the top.

According to neuroscientist David J. Linden, our brains are hardwired to make predictions about our near future because it presupposes that there will be a future, so that we can function knowing that at some point we are irremediably going to die.

The way I cope is based on what my grandmother said over and over throughout her life: “We live our hell, our purgatory, and our heaven right here on this earth, so that when we are gone, we are simply gone.” If you think about it, it really helps.

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Posts by date

 2025

Jan 23   The War of the Words V

 2024

Oct 09   Kamala and The Tree of Knowledge

Jul 11   About Writing III

Jul 11   Actresses 101

Mar 06   What Linklater Got Wrong

Feb 09   Techno-Heaven

 2023

Dec 25   Peter Panish

Sep 01   Pleasure or Paradise?

Aug 21   The War of the Words IV

Aug 16   Indicted

Mar 11   Witch Hunt

 2022

Sep 15   Optics II

Jul 16   The War of the Words III

Mar 26   Irrational Minds

Feb 05   Ursula's Path

Jan 16   Predicting the Future

 2021

Sep 11   Con-Science

May 26   The War of the Words II

May 26   Halston

Mar 19   The War of the Words I

Jan 12   January 6th, 2021

 2020

Nov 02   Separated

Aug 26   Optics I

Jul 27   Name Calling

Jul 13   About Writing II

Jul 04   Mr. Shallow

Jun 11   Hidden Figures

Jun 03   9 Minutes

Apr 21   Signaling

Feb 18   ToKyoTokyo Series Part III

Jan 16   ToKyoTokyo Series Part II

 2019

Dec 20   ToKyoTokyo Series Part I

Nov 04   Mr. Power

Oct 10   Today Is a Good Day

Sep 05   Inspiration Point

Aug 08   The Ones Who Walk Away

Jul 25   On Feminism

Jun 16   Marie Colvin in a Private War

Jun 12   About Writing I

Jun 06   Nureyev

May 31   Nora and Her Neck

Apr 24   Home Less

Apr 11   The Passion Side of Love

Mar 25   Gloria Bell

Mar 03   Mary Shelley

Jan 12   Mr. Fart

 2018

Dec 15   My Orson

Dec 15   Ping-Pong

 2017

Dec 05   Breaking Away

Nov 30   Julieta and the Despair of Being a Woman

Oct 24   Stupro

Oct 04   The Painter

Aug 05   A Quiet Passion… No More

Jul 27   Worst-Case Scenario

Jun 15   Catfight 2016

May 17   From Girl to Woman Boss

Apr 17   South

Mar 29   The Forgotten

Mar 03   In

Feb 22   Lost

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 2016

Nov 10   Hillary Lost

Oct 10   Trump, Trumpettes, and the Politics of Hate

Sep 11   September 11th, Laura Rodríguez, and the Haunting Past

Aug 19   Hillary

Aug 13   Striking Gold

Jul 25   What Is in the Name

Jul 09   Free in Dallas

Jul 02   Carol and Orlando

May 31   Reality and Reality Perception

Apr 22   Il Sorpasso

Apr 19   Lena Dunham and Kitty Genovese

Feb 25   December in California

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Nov 29   Three Different Geographical Points; One Basic Premise

Nov 28   I’m a Woman

Nov 23   From My Childhood to Our Last Day

Nov 22   Paris

Nov 22   Films, Filmmakers, and Writers

Nov 18   I Live in Texas


Posts by series

 About Writing

Jun 12, 19  About Writing I

Jul 13, 20  About Writing II

Jul 11, 24  About Writing III

 Optics

Aug 26, 20  Optics I

Sep 15, 22  Optics II

 The War of the Words

Mar 19, 21  The War of the Words I

May 26, 21  The War of the Words II

Jul 16, 22  The War of the Words III

Aug 21, 23  The War of the Words IV

Jan 23, 25  The War of the Words V

 ToKyoTokyo

Dec 20, 19  ToKyoTokyo Series Part I

Jan 16, 20  ToKyoTokyo Series Part II

Feb 18, 20  ToKyoTokyo Series Part III

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