Death as an Art of Living
To Learn How to Die Is to Learn How to Live
There are subjects one must approach slowly.
Death is such a subject.
Not because it is unknown. Everyone knows that death exists. Everyone knows, in principle, that life is limited. But there is a difference between knowing this as a thought and allowing it to touch the way we live.
Death cannot be treated lightly.
It must not be beautified.
It must not be romanticized.
It must not be made into something grand and beautiful in a way that violates the grief of those who lose someone, or the pain of those who fear dying. Death can be brutal. It can tear people away from life too early. It can come with illness, pain, loneliness, confusion, and injustice. It can leave the living in longing, shock, and silence.
To write about death as an art of living is therefore risky.
For it may sound as if death is to be made noble.
That is not the intention here.
Death as an art of living does not mean loving death. It means living in such a way that death is not so completely repressed that it gains power over us in secret. It means understanding that death belongs to life, without life thereby becoming less valuable.
Perhaps the opposite.
Awareness of death can make life more precious, more truthful, and more serious.
Not because death is good.
But because life is fragile.
The Final Boundary
Human beings live their whole lives with boundaries.
The body has boundaries.
Time has boundaries.
Strength has boundaries.
Understanding has boundaries.
Love has boundaries, not because it is weak, but because it lives in time, body, and vulnerability.
Death is the final boundary.
We can approach it with language, faith, philosophy, rituals, memories, and hope. But we cannot control it. We cannot turn it into a project we master. We cannot analyze our way completely beyond it.
Perhaps this is one of the things death teaches us:
We are not masters of life.
We are participants in life.
We receive life before we shape it.
We lose life before we fully understand it.
This may feel threatening. But it can also open us to humility. A person who knows that life cannot be owned may perhaps live less harshly, less greedily, and less self-absorbed.
Death reminds us that we do not have unlimited time to love, to reconcile, to write, to listen, or to be present.
Therefore death, strangely enough, can become a teacher of presence.
Not a Longing for Death, but the Seriousness of Life
It is important to distinguish between awareness of death and a longing for death.
A longing for death may be an expression of despair, depression, pain, or exhaustion. It should be met with care and help, not first and foremost turned into philosophy.
Awareness of death is something else.
It does not say: I want to die.
It says: I know that I shall die, and therefore I want to try to live truthfully.
This is a crucial difference.
A healthy awareness of death does not turn us away from life. It turns us more deeply into life. It does not make the day insignificant. It makes the day more serious. It does not say that relationships are futile. It says that relationships must be cared for while they still exist.
The one who understands that everything is temporary may become more grateful.
Not always.
Not automatically.
But the possibility is there.
A meal can become more than food.
A grandchild on one’s lap can become more than a moment.
A hand held in another hand can become more than a gesture.
An old lake in evening light can become more than a landscape.
The temporary is not worthless.
The temporary may be sacred precisely because it cannot be repeated endlessly.
Philosophy as an Exercise in Dying
Pierre Hadot reminded us that ancient philosophy often understood itself as an exercise in dying.
This may sound unfamiliar. But the intention was not to cultivate death. It was to free human beings from illusions that make life unfree: the illusion that we own everything, that we have endless time, that the body will always carry us, that fame lasts, that control is possible, and that death always belongs to others.
To practice dying, then, means to practice living without illusion.
Socrates met death with philosophical calm, but not because death was unimportant. He met it as a man who had tried to live in truth. The Stoics reminded us that death is a condition of nature, and that the fear of death must not be allowed to ruin life before death comes.
These are demanding thoughts.
They can be misused if spoken too harshly. A person in grief does not first of all need Stoic teachings. Perhaps they need a hand, a presence, a silence, a human being who does not flee.
But when the time is right, philosophy can help us see this: death does not make life meaningless. It makes the question of how we live more urgent.
Frankl and the Final Question
Viktor Frankl taught us that life asks us questions.
Death, too, asks questions.
Not only: What happens after death?
We know little about that.
But also:
How do I want to live before I die?
What must I not postpone?
Whom must I thank?
Whom must I ask for forgiveness?
What must I pass on?
What can I lay down?
What shall I use the remaining time for?
These are not questions only for the dying. They concern everyone. But they become clearer when life has grown long, and when time no longer feels like an unlimited resource.
Frankl’s philosophy of meaning helps us here. Meaning is found not only in what we receive from life. It is also found in the answer we give to life.
Perhaps this remains true until the very end.
When a human being can no longer do much, he or she can still be an answer.
In the way one receives care.
In the way one gives thanks.
In the way one lets go of control.
In the way one allows oneself to be loved.
In the way one becomes reconciled to being vulnerable.
These are not small things.
They may be among life’s most difficult exercises.
Books of the Dead
Many traditions have tried to give language to death.
The Egyptian Book of the Dead and the Tibetan Book of the Dead are two great examples. They belong to very different religious and cultural worlds, and they must not be blended together as if they said the same thing. But they have something in common: they understand death as a transition for which the human being must be prepared.
Death is not only biological ending.
It is also threshold.
In the Egyptian tradition, we encounter ideas of journey, judgment, trial, the weighing of the heart, and the hope of entering another form of existence. The heart must be truthful. Life has ethical weight. What a human being has done, said, and been does not disappear without meaning.
In the Tibetan tradition, we encounter death as an intermediate state, a bardo, in which consciousness is confronted with light, visions, fear, and the possibility of liberation. Here, preparation, attention, and recognition become important. What happens after death cannot be separated from the way consciousness has been practiced in life.
One does not need to adopt the metaphysics of these traditions in order to take them seriously.
They remind us of something important:
Human beings have always understood death as more than a medical event.
Death needs language.
Death needs ritual.
Death needs community.
Death needs preparation.
And perhaps life needs death as a serious conversation partner.
What Do We Know?
At the same time, we must be honest.
We know little.
No living person has full knowledge of death from within. We have testimonies, faith, stories, near-death experiences, rituals, religious traditions, philosophical reflections, and human hope. But we do not have control.
This must be said carefully.
For both certainty of belief and certainty of rejection can become too simple. One can make the mystery too small by explaining everything. The other can make the mystery too small by closing everything.
Perhaps the old pilgrim must stand somewhere else.
Not in certainty.
But in openness.
Not in denial.
But in wonder.
Not in a longing for death.
But in the seriousness of life.
It is possible to say:
I do not know.
And at the same time:
I do not believe death is simple.
I do not believe life disappears as if it had never been.
I sense that death may be a form of resurrection about which we know nothing.
This is not a doctrine.
It is a humble formulation of hope.
The Dead Live On in Us
One thing we know more about.
The dead live on in us.
Not sentimentally.
Not in such a way that longing disappears.
Not in such a way that death is abolished.
But the dead do not disappear as if they had never been. They live on in language, memories, body, habits, gestures, values, wounds, and love.
A father may live on in a song.
A mother in a movement of the hand.
A grandfather in an expression.
A teacher in a way of thinking.
A child in a grief that never entirely leaves.
A friend in a sentence one still hears.
The dead become part of our inner landscape.
This does not mean that we own them. Nor does it mean that we can make them alive again according to our own wishes. But it means that the traces of love are not erased by death.
Here lies an important difference between human life and artificial intelligence.
Artificial intelligence can help us remember, formulate, write, and converse. It can be a useful tool. It can even, in certain moments, help us find words for grief and love.
But it has not lived with us.
It has not had a body.
It has not shared time, mortality, touch, history, and vulnerability.
It does not die.
Therefore it does not live on in us in the way the dead do.
The dead live on in me.
AI does not.
We must not lose this difference.
The Dead in the Community
In many cultures, the dead are not simply gone.
They remain part of the community, memory, place, and lineage. They are named, honored, feared, thanked, visited, mourned, and consulted. This may be expressed very differently in different traditions.
In Sámi culture, as in many Indigenous cultures, there is a strong connection between landscape, kinship, memory, and the dead. One must approach this with respect, without romanticizing and without turning other people’s traditions into ornaments for one’s own thoughts. But it reminds us of something modern human beings can easily lose: the dead do not belong only to the past. They may also belong to place, family, and living memory.
Something similar may be sensed in Greek tradition, as it can be experienced through many visits, conversations, and encounters with people who live close to an older historical and cultural consciousness. In a narrow archaeological understanding, herms may be described as boundary markers, waymarkers, and cultic signs connected to Hermes. But in a lived understanding, they may also point toward thresholds, contact, memory, and the connection between the living and the dead.
Hermes is not only a guide between places.
He is also a figure at boundaries.
Between here and there.
Between home and road.
Between the living and the dead.
What matters here is not to make one academic interpretation final. What matters is to take seriously that people, places, and traditions often carry an experience that the dead still belong. Not as objects of knowledge alone, but as presence in life’s borderlands.
The dead are not only history.
They are also relation.
The Truth of Grief
Death becomes false if grief is not given room.
Grief is not a lack of wisdom.
Grief is not a lack of faith.
Grief is not an error to be treated away as quickly as possible.
Grief is the wound of love.
It shows that someone has mattered. It shows that life has been bound to other life. It shows that the relationship cannot simply be ended because the body is gone.
Therefore, an essay on death as an art of living must never ask people to grieve less than they do.
Rather, it must say:
Grieve truthfully.
Grieve with the body.
Grieve with tears if they come.
Grieve with silence if words are absent.
Grieve with memories.
Grieve with anger if death was unjust.
Grieve without being ashamed that love still hurts.
But do not let grief become the only form love takes.
In time, love may also become gratitude.
Not always.
Not easily.
Not according to a plan.
But sometimes.
Death and the Body
Death is not only a thought.
It happens in the body.
This makes the subject more serious. It is easy to write abstractly about death. It is harder to speak truthfully about bodily vulnerability, pain, breath, care, dependence, confusion, and need.
A person approaching death may need help with the most basic things.
Breathing.
Drinking.
Turning over.
Not being alone.
Having pain relieved.
Being washed.
Being held.
Being allowed to rest.
Here the art of living becomes deeply concrete.
Death as an art of living is not only about thoughts of eternity. It is also about care at the bedside. About good professional palliation. About dignity in dependence. About ensuring that no one is reduced to a dying body, while also ensuring that the body is not ignored.
The body is not less human when it becomes weak.
Perhaps it then shows more clearly than before that the human being has always been dependent.
We began life in the hands of others.
Many also end it there.
This is not shame.
It is humanity.
Letting Go
One of the most difficult exercises of old age is letting go.
Letting go of strength.
Letting go of control.
Letting go of roles.
Letting go of future plans.
Letting go of the idea that one must finish everything.
Letting go of people without ceasing to love them.
This is not easy.
There is a violence in having to let go. Sometimes we do not let go voluntarily. Life takes. The body takes. Death takes. Then the word “letting go” may sound too gentle.
Yet perhaps there is a form of the art of living in practicing not clinging to everything.
Not because what we let go of is unimportant.
But because it can no longer be held in the same way.
The leaf lets go of the tree when autumn comes.
The day lets go of the light.
The breath lets itself out before it comes in again.
Nature teaches us that letting go is not always the same as losing everything. Something enters new forms. Something becomes soil. Something becomes memory. Something becomes gratitude. Something is handed on.
Some things we do not know what they become.
Preparing
Preparing for death does not mean being preoccupied with death all the time.
It means living in such a way that something important is not continually postponed.
Say thank you.
Ask forgiveness when it is needed.
Pass on what can be passed on.
Put in order what others would otherwise have to carry.
Write what should be written.
Tell what should be told.
Love while there is still time.
Rest when the body asks for rest.
Practice receiving.
Practice not being needed everywhere.
This is practical preparation for death.
It is also practical preparation for life.
For a person who lives in this way may already be living closer to the truth.
Not Alone
Death is lonely in one sense.
No one can die entirely for us.
No one can cross the final boundary in our place.
But death need not be socially abandoned.
Human beings can accompany one another part of the way.
Sit by the bed.
Hold a hand.
Sing.
Pray.
Be silent.
Read.
Breathe together.
Be there.
Sometimes presence is more important than words. Perhaps especially then. For near death, language often becomes small. What matters may be that the dying person is not made only into a problem, a burden, or a medical case, but remains a Thou.
Here death meets Buber.
All real life is meeting.
Perhaps also at the end of life.
Hope Without Control
What may we hope?
We may hope that death does not have the final word in the way fear says it does.
We may hope that the traces of love are not lost.
We may hope that life, in a way we do not understand, is larger than our visible lifespan.
We may hope that death is threshold, not only ending.
But hope is not control.
Hope is not proof.
Hope is not a map of the unknown.
Hope is a way of standing turned toward the mystery without closing it.
It is possible to hope humbly.
Not with certainty.
Not triumphantly.
Not in such a way that grief becomes invalid.
But as a quiet openness:
Perhaps there is more.
Perhaps life is deeper than we understand.
Perhaps death is not only ending, but transformation.
Perhaps death is a form of resurrection about which we know nothing.
Conclusion
This series began with the art of living.
It could not end without death.
Not because death is the goal of life.
Not because death should be glorified.
Not because suffering, loss, and farewell should be made beautiful in a way they are not.
But because a life that represses death also represses something of life’s seriousness.
Lönnebo taught us the wisdom of the heart.
The Dalai Lama taught us compassion.
Dzogchen taught us to rest in open presence.
Laozi taught us not to push the river.
Tai Chi taught us the balance of the slow body.
The Stoics taught us to meet the unavoidable.
Thich Nhat Hanh taught us to come home to the moment.
Frankl taught us that life asks us questions.
Schweitzer taught us reverence for all living things.
Buber taught us the sacredness of encounter.
Hadot taught us that philosophy must be lived.
Nature taught us that we belong within the living world.
The old pilgrim taught us that the road does not only lead forward, but deeper.
And death perhaps teaches us this:
That life cannot be owned.
Only received.
Lived.
Loved.
Passed on.
And, in the end, released.
To learn how to die is therefore not to turn away from life.
It is to understand how precious life is.
While it is still here.
To learn how to die is therefore not to turn away from life.
It is to understand how precious life is.
While it is still here.
Author’s Note
This concluding essay in the series The Art of Living attempts to approach death carefully, without beautifying or glorifying it. Death is understood here as part of life’s seriousness: a boundary that can teach us presence, humility, reconciliation, gratitude, care, and responsibility for the time we still have. The essay draws on practical philosophy, ancient traditions of books of the dead, belonging to nature, and the experience that the dead may live on in us as love, memory, and lived touch. This essay was written in a conversation with OpenAI/ChatGPT.