Life After Death: The Final Illusion Explained
Humanity believes that death is a movement.
That the body ends, but she continues.
That someone leaves this world
and enters another.
This is the final illusion.
When the body falls away,
the idea of a person falls away with it.
Not because it is destroyed,
but because it was never there.
There is no you that goes on.
No individual who remembers.

No one standing on the other side saying,
“I lived.”
Even the idea of an “after”
is shaped by the assumption that someone is there.
But there is no someone.
What remains
is not a continuation of life,
not a higher version of the individual,
not a consciousness that owns experience.
It is before life and before death.
Before birth and before memory.
It does not know that it lived,
because knowing requires a knower.
And no knower has ever existed.
This is not emptiness as nothingness.
Nor is it something.
It is what was here
before the idea of “I” arose
and what remains when that idea dissolves.
When this is seen,
there is no one who dies
and no one who survives.
Only what always is.
And for that reason alone:
total freedom.