I never really spend much thought on the idea of "Being birth alone, dying alone" to be honest.
When it comes to discussing what happens afterwards, I actually find the norse variant to be the most interesting. The norse people have an entirely different perception of time. Where time for us is a linearity without an foreseeable end, for the old norse, it was actually a circle.
Not going into the colorful details here, but basicly, life and time as we know it are fluidity and nutrients that the world tree absorbs with his roots that end up being dropped off later by it's leaves back to the foundation where it get's reabsorbed again.
I really like the idea of this concept because I think that it works quite well with how scientists are connecting time to tachyons. But an actual scientist could tell you more about that.
Sounds interesting, doesn't it?
RE: Thoughts in my head # 73 or we come to this world alone and leave it alone too...