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Many rich people such as Bryan Johnson have god-complex. They believe that they are so rich that they have transcended this world and are gods compared to everyone else.
Take for example this American millionaire fool from Minneapolis who was found dead on a rural roadside dressed in a fancy white tuxedo with a fatal wound in his chest.
This fool actually orchestrated and carried out his own death as part of a soul transfer ritual to achieve immortality. *LMAO*
The fool was all dressed up in his best fancy white tuxedo because he wanted to make a grand entrance into the other world.
Like Bryan Johnson and other rich people with god-complex, this rich fool believed his intellect was higher and he was a god who deserved to transcend this world into a higher plane of existence.
Take for example this American millionaire fool from Minneapolis who was found dead on a rural roadside dressed in a fancy white tuxedo with a fatal wound in his chest.
This fool actually orchestrated and carried out his own death as part of a soul transfer ritual to achieve immortality. *LMAO*
The fool was all dressed up in his best fancy white tuxedo because he wanted to make a grand entrance into the other world.
Like Bryan Johnson and other rich people with god-complex, this rich fool believed his intellect was higher and he was a god who deserved to transcend this world into a higher plane of existence.
The world wants me to die.
My incurable disease diagnosis became global news. It was omnipresent on social media and 1,900 articles were written in a matter of days.
Many were saddened.
However, joy dominated the commentary.
People pointed to schadenfreude, the pleasure of another's failure. Yes, there’s that. There is a special place in people’s hearts that loves to see others fail, especially when that person’s presence threatens their own psychological stability in some way or helps them feel better about themselves.
But, if you look over the social media commentary about me, you’ll see that pattern:
“he deserved it.”
I deserved it because I challenged death. The crowd was running a deeply rooted psychological script that represents the oldest, most deeply embedded stories of human culture.
This was the first story ever written down, 4,000 years ago. Gilgamesh sought eternal life after losing someone he loved, only to have the plant of youth stolen by a serpent as he bathed. Leaving him to accept his mortality.
Asclepius became so skilled at rejuvenation that he raised the dead. As punishment, Zeus struck him down with a thunderbolt to enforce life and death authority.
This is the story of Jesus. Pontius Pilate offered a choice between a thief and the immortalist, and the crowd demanded the execution.
People need this story conclusion to keep themselves sane. The challenger must lose and the loss must appear deserved. It’s a shield of self preservation.
For if death is inevitable, their existence and that of their loved ones is justified and unavoidable. If death is not inevitable, nothing about their reality is safe.
I occupy the same philosophical and archetypal position as Gilgamesh, Asclepius and Jesus.
This statement will draw outrage and accusations of blasphemy, hubris and narcissism. Nevertheless, it’s the pattern that has repeated itself for thousands of years.
Death has been the omnipresent concern of the human race. It encapsulates our greatest fears, joy and curiosities. The discourse around it changes over time; however, the fundamentals remain unchanged.
What’s different about this moment, that is unlike any other moment, is that physical death may no longer be inevitable.
What if I didn’t deserve it?
And what if I am your ally, and not a threat?
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