Remember the principle of conservation

Existence is eternal.
We just move between
universes and bodies.

When something is terminally dysfunctional, We have to stop the support and let them collapse instead. They are damaged beyond repair. Saying that they can still be repaired is just a pretense, it doesn't help. Letting them naturally collapse provides more benefits than forcing them to endure excruciating pains under the cover of maintaining their existence. (Nobody likes pain, and "no pain no gain" is a self-defeating and uninspiring statement.) We don't need to mourn such a circumstance, as a more deserving new one will replace the old one that collapsed. Existence is not always precious—remember the axiom of "ups and downs."

When people speak of destruction, they highlight its negative, which is loss of valued materials. Destruction is not always a bad thing or about determining who's the strongest. Positively speaking, it's about giving way to more deserving new creations. Notice the concepts of conservation and recycling: they both imply that everything changes forms. Conservation states that everything changes forms, is neither really created nor destroyed. Recycling implies that a perceived useless object, called garbage or trash, can be transformed into a useful object. Recycling is a form of conservation. Anything that becomes useless in one context can be repurposed for another context. In biology, death creates life: decomposers and plants benefit from decaying bodies, which gradually become fertile soil.

Applying the principle of conservation, We will always exist in some form and some universe. When our life episode comes to an end, We move to other universes and occupy new bodies, thus starting a new life episode. This process continues forever. There is neither a "higher" nor a "lower" place of existence; there is instead a dynamic and lively matrix of infinitely numerous universes. While existence is not always precious, it is eternal. The natural force of immortality resides outside the bodies that We occupy.

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