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Dan Sebastianelli's avatar

Thank you for sharing such a deeply personal and profound reflection. Your perspective on grief, loss, and atheism is both moving and thought-provoking.

In a world where religious narratives often dominate discussions about bereavement, your honest and articulate account offers an important and often underrepresented viewpoint. Your ability to find solace in reason rather than faith is a powerful testament to the resilience of the human spirit.

Wishing you and Bonnie strength, support, and continued compassion from those around you. Your words will undoubtedly resonate with and comfort many.

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JOrtiz's avatar

Being an atheist myself and having recently lost the love of my life I'm afraid I'm not buying the general message here. While it's true that suicide is a special case (and it's the only way this argument has any weight at all) I envy the religious people who can -ultimately - take some small level of solace in the belief that there are things that God does that we are not meant to understand. Or even better, the belief that I might see my love again in the afterlife. And religion isn't as strict as it was in Lewis' time. As Christopher Hitchens wrote, we now take things a la carte. So I'm sure you can be religious now and still believe your loved one can commit suicide and still go to heaven. Is it inconsistent? Yes, but that's besides the point with religion: to make death and loss feel slightly more tolerable. As for being wracked with guilt: there is no way that this author isn't just as wracked by guilt - not because he believes it's a sin but because, like myself, he and his wife will imagine what they could have done differently to prevent this tragedy. They may well know on a deep level that it's not their fault, but that doesn't stop the human mind from thinking "What could I have done differently...? Maybe this...? Maybe that...?" In the end, sincerely, my deepest condolences. I know how bad this is, atheist or not. Like me, he and his wife are now part of a club that no one wants to be a part of - losing someone well before their time.

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