• @GreenKnight23
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    32 days ago

    it’s been at least 15 years since I saw this last.

    thank you.

    • @ThePyroPython
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      1 day ago

      Don’t worry, it’s just there until your bofy decomposes and is eaten by the worms. Then over enough time, the wood will rot away leaving your skeleton which in turn will slowly fossilise and then when the sun expands in 5 million billion years time, the earth will be scorched and then obliterated and your remnants will return to the stars until the universe keeps expansion until no atom of matter can interact with another and the universe fades out.

      Just enjoy the absurdity of it all or get believing in a sky daddy. Either way you won’t have to worry about the forever box.

      Edit: whoops, was off by 1 3 orders of magnitude.

      • @[email protected]
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        83 days ago

        Bones often degrade pretty fast once they are unprotected. If the soil is acidic, those bones are gone, just a matter of time.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 days ago

          Wait really? I wanted to be tied to a young tree and have my skeleton be merged with it:

          The Moriori people of the Chatham Islands placed their dead in a sitting position … strapped to young trees in the forest. In time, the tree grew into and through the bones, making them one.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excarnation

          I was kind of hoping my descendents would be able to find the tree and see my skull staring out at them from halfway inside a tree. Are you saying this won’t work?

          • @[email protected]
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            103 days ago

            If the conditions are right it can work. But there is a reason we aren’t tripping over the bones of billions of people and animals.

      • @ameancow
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        2 days ago

        yay for infinite nothingness! (Except that infinite stretches of time in a probability-oriented universe tend to lead to funny effects down the road and even the most remote chances of literally anything possible happening practically become 100% instantaneously when dealing with such time-spans, so more likely than not, the moment you die you wake up in some entirely new, equally improbable and inscrutable type of reality with no memory of what happened before, and there’s no guarantee that such an experience will be better or worse than your present one. I mean, it happened at least once before that we know of, so it stands to reason this is normal.)

  • @son_named_bort
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    142 days ago

    I don’t have to get in the forever box because I’m Homer Simp-

  • @Noodle07
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    12 days ago

    I’m just coming back from someone’s funerals, he’s in the box and he didn’t even do anything

  • @jpreston2005
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    92 days ago

    Box is looking real comfortable, AND I don’t have to get back up once I find a good position??

    • @aeronmelon
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      133 days ago

      “There’s that word again; heavy. Is there something wrong with Earth’s gravitational pull in the future?”

      • @[email protected]
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        2 days ago

        Omg, imagine how you don’t have to work or eat etc anymore, how people just leave you alone! … well, perhaps not all people leave you alone then, but still ‘had sex, doesn’t matter’.

        Oohh, and the possibility of some hot goth chick reviving you for her skeleton army, hell yeah!