Life flows in cycles, just like nature. Day turns into night, and seasons change from spring’s bloom to winter’s rest. Each period has its own beauty and purpose. In the same way, relationships experience different phases—joy, misunderstanding, growth, and healing. No harvest is the same every season, and neither are the emotions we feel with others. This is the design of life: a balance of change and constancy, struggle and peace. Accepting this rhythm helps us find patience in pain, gratitude in joy, and hope in uncertainty. Life is not meant to be static—it is meant to evolve.
In every culture, death is more than an end—it's a transformation. Among the many rituals humans perform to honor the departed, cremation is one of the most ancient and symbolic. But beyond tradition lies a deeper, almost mystical truth: when a body is cremated, its physical form is released, and the energy it held is not lost, but simply returned to the universe. According to the law of conservation of energy, energy can neither be created nor destroyed—it only changes form. This means the warmth, motion, and life force that once animated a body doesn't disappear in fire. It transforms. The heat from the flames, the smoke in the sky, the glowing embers—all of these carry fragments of a life once lived. They disperse into the air, the soil, and the stars. Cremation becomes, in this way, a cosmic act. The fire is not just an end, but a release. What was once confined within skin and bones now returns to the great continuum. Some call it spirit. Some call it soul. Science calls...
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