Vishva Vidya — Vedanta Tradicional
Vedanta

Fear of Death: The Vision of Vedanta

By Jonas Masetti

The fear of death — as seen by Vedanta — is not a fear of the unknown. It is a fear of ceasing to exist. And it is precisely this fear that Vedanta resolves.

medo da morte vedanta
medo da morte vedanta

Why We Fear Death

The fear of death is not irrational. It is logical — if you believe you are the body. The body is born, ages, and dies. If you are the body, you end.

But Vedanta asks: are you the body?

You were a baby, a child, a teenager, an adult — the body changed completely multiple times. But you continued. What remains?

The Vision of Vedanta

Vedanta is not a belief about life after death. It is an investigation into the nature of the self.

The Bhagavad Gītā (2.20) says:

Na jāyate mriyate vā kadācit — "It (ātman) is never born and never dies"

Ātman — the consciousness that you are — is not affected by the birth or death of the body. Just as the space inside a pot is not destroyed when the pot breaks.

medo da morte vedanta - reflexao
medo da morte vedanta - reflexao

Does This Resolve the Fear?

Not as information — but as assimilated knowledge, yes. When you understand (not just believe) that your nature is consciousness without birth and without death, fear loses its object.

It's not that you become courageous in the face of death. It's that death ceases to apply to who you truly are.

The Path

This understanding does not come from casual reading. It requires: 1. Systematic study with a qualified teacher 2. Deep reflection on what has been taught 3. Assimilation — the knowledge becomes a part of you

It is not faith. It is investigation. And it is the most important investigation of human life.

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