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Law of Life Indestructibility · Friendly Edition

What Are You Actually Afraid of Losing?

Most of us, if we are honest, are afraid of death. Not just the pain — the disappearance. The idea that everything we are simply stops.

But Lifechanyuan begins with a question: what exactly do you think will disappear?

Your body — yes, that will go. Your memories and the social identity you've built — those too. But the thing that carries your consciousness, your awareness, your inner life — that invisible, intangible core that makes you you — that is a different matter entirely.


LIFE's Essence Is Not the Body

Dr. Chris Langton, director of the Los Alamos National Life Laboratory in the United States, made a striking observation: "The essence of life lies in form, not in specific matter."

Lifechanyuan takes this further: LIFE is an antimatter structure endowed with spirituality.

The physical body is made of matter — it decays, it disperses. But the structure that carries your LIFE — that invisible, spiritually animated core — belongs to a different order of existence. Antimatter, by its nature, cannot be destroyed the way matter can.

Think of a melody. If the violin it was played on is smashed, the melody doesn't cease to exist. Think of a program: the hardware it ran on can be discarded, but the program itself can run on another machine. The vehicle changes. The LIFE continues.


What Is Death, Then?

Lifechanyuan offers a precise answer:

"LIFE is eternal. What we call death is merely the exchange of one LIFE vehicle for another."

Picture a Möbius strip — that strange loop of paper twisted once before its ends are joined. Walk along its surface and you'll reach what seems like an edge, only to find yourself continuing on the other side. Death is that twist point: you leave one vehicle, enter another dimension, and continue — in a different form, in a different space, but continuing.


Five Reasons LIFE Cannot Be Destroyed

Lifechanyuan provides five distinct arguments:

First: The universe does not perish, so LIFE does not perish

The universe exists for LIFE. The two are bound together: "If the universe perishes, LIFE ceases; if LIFE dies, the universe disappears." As long as the universe maintains its ordered existence, LIFE has its foundation.

Second: The universe's morality is eternal, so LIFE endures

The law of cause and effect — that what you sow, you reap — is not a human social agreement. It is a structural feature of the universe itself. For this moral mechanism to operate, the beings who acted must persist long enough to receive the consequences of their actions. The cosmic moral order requires the continuity of LIFE.

Third: LIFE transforms through reincarnation, so it does not cease

The total amount of water on Earth is fixed — it simply moves between ocean, glacier, river, cloud, and rain. In the same way, the total quantity of LIFE in the universe is a constant. What we observe as population growth or species decline is LIFE flowing between the thirty-six-dimensional spaces — from heaven-realms to the human world to lower realms and back. No LIFE is ever created from nothing or destroyed into nothing.

Fourth: The Dao is permanent, so LIFE is permanent

LIFE's spirituality originates in the Dao — the Spirit of the Greatest Creator, which flows through all times and all spaces. LIFE and the Dao are one. "We can kill our own body, but we can never kill our own LIFE, because LIFE and the Dao — the Spirit of the Greatest Creator — are one." Since the Dao is eternal, the LIFE that is inseparable from it cannot perish.

Fifth: The antimatter structure cannot vanish, so LIFE cannot vanish

Physical matter can change form and eventually disperse. But spiritual consciousness belongs to the antimatter realm — and antimatter cannot simply disappear. "There are spirits above every person's head — what are spirits? They are a form of antimatter — invisible, yet existing, and impossible to eliminate." LIFE's antimatter structure is therefore indestructible.


A Self-Defeating Argument

Someone once wrote an essay titled "Refuting the Law of Life Indestructibility." In the course of refuting it, they wrote: "Some lives undergo reincarnation…"

Xue Feng's response: "Since you have acknowledged that 'some lives undergo reincarnation,' how can you then deny life indestructibility? If LIFE can be destroyed, where does reincarnation come from?"

The same writer invoked the theory of relativity to argue that death is inevitable — "if there is life, there must be death." Xue Feng turned the argument around: by the same relational logic, if there is death, there must be life. "It dies and is born again; it is born and dies again — has LIFE been destroyed?"


What This Actually Changes

This is not an invitation to be careless about your life. It is the opposite.

If "death" is simply a transition — a vehicle exchange — then the most important question is not "how do I live longer?" but "where does my LIFE go from here, and what determines that?"

"LIFE does not perish. Living in a different environment, era, and way of life is not necessarily worse than the current situation."

When fear of annihilation loosens its grip, something else becomes possible: genuine attention to the quality of your LIFE — your consciousness, your choices, your character — because those are what carry forward.


Related reading: Antimatter Structure · Reincarnation of LIFE · Thirty-Six-Dimensional Space · Dao · Characteristics of LIFE