Rail Tracer
Freaking Ratchet
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2010
- Messages
- 3,031
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/so
It is probably easier. In a way, religion fills that "missing" spot in a person's life.
What happens when we die? Do we just rot in the ground? Do we go up to heaven? What is that purpose other than to live in this place? Is there even a purpose?
At the same time, if there are people who truly follow a religion to it's best extent (people who actually follow it, not the one's who don't follow it but say they are of "this" religion")
It is like a monk practicing Theravada/Tibetan Buddhism and living in Tibet.
What happens when we die? Do we just rot in the ground? Do we go up to heaven? What is that purpose other than to live in this place? Is there even a purpose?
At the same time, if there are people who truly follow a religion to it's best extent (people who actually follow it, not the one's who don't follow it but say they are of "this" religion")
It is like a monk practicing Theravada/Tibetan Buddhism and living in Tibet.