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Saturn’s rings are disintegrating and Jupiter’s great red spot is shrinking and the ice caps on Mars are sublimating and our very own Moon is slowly untethering itself from Earth’s gravity. In eight billion years, the Sun will turn red and swell up like a toddler on the verge of tears, and incinerate Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars— all of our histories and fossils, our legends and loves, our monuments and our ruins. You and I will be long gone by then, of course— nonexistent to the extent that we’re not even aware of our own nonexistence. Some people may think of death as an inky void, but it must be far more final than that— an inky void would be copious by comparison. What if there is simply nothing on the other side of the curtain? Perhaps it would be for the best. For I never was able to avert my gaze while driving past a smoldering wreck, and you never could build up the courage to take a look.
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Aug 10, 2019
Aug 10, 2019 at 3:55 AM UTC
The Curtain
Saturn’s rings are disintegrating and Jupiter’s great red spot is shrinking and the ice caps on Mars are sublimating and our very own Moon is slowly untethering itself from Earth’s gravity. In eight billion years, the Sun will turn red and swell up like a toddler on the verge of tears, and incinerate Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars— all of our histories and fossils, our legends and loves, our monuments and our ruins. You and I will be long gone by then, of course— nonexistent to the extent that we’re not even aware of our own nonexistence. Some people may think of death as an inky void, but it must be far more final than that— an inky void would be copious by comparison. What if there is simply nothing on the other side of the curtain? Perhaps it would be for the best. For I never was able to avert my gaze while driving past a smoldering wreck, and you never could build up the courage to take a look.
Ira-Desmond
Written by
42/M/American
Aug 10, 2019
Aug 10, 2019 at 3:55 AM UTC
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