Thursday, January 01, 2026

Preliminary Notes on Yalom's "Staring at the Sun: Overcoming the Terror of Death"

I have been gone for quite some time. In the meantime, I did resurrect the ZZYZAX site (originally done in 1996/7). I also enjoyed a vacation in San DiegoThanksgiving in Nashville, and Christmas at home, all with family.

I've also been doing a lot of reading(1). I heard that Dan Brown had a new book out: Secret of Secrets, released September 9th, 2025. I quickly went to my web library app (Libby) and put a hold on the book. I finally got to check the book from Libby mid-December. Got me thinking about death (a major topic in the book).

I stumbled across Staring at the Sun: Overcoming the Terror of Death by Irvin D. Yalom. It was in a list of books I had asked ChatGPT to recommend on the topic of death many months ago. I was also drawn to read more about Dr. Yalom, since I went to high school with one of his children, Reid Yalom, who is one of my favorite photographers.

For now, I am just putting up my Kindle notes on the book. I hope to expand on these in a future post. 

Citation (APA): Yalom, I. D. (2025). Staring at the Sun: Overcoming the Terror of Death [Kindle Android version]. Retrieved from Amazon.com

Highlight (yellow) - Location 59
Epicurus practiced "medical philosophy" and insisted sisted that just as the doctor treats the body, the philosopher pher must treat the soul. In his view, there was only one proper goal of philosophy: to alleviate human misery. And the root cause of misery? Epicurus believed it to be our omnipresent fear of death. The frightening vision of inevitable death, he said, interferes with one's enjoyment ment of life and leaves no pleasure undisturbed. To alleviate leviate the fear of death, he developed several powerful thought experiments that have helped me personally face death anxiety and offer the tools I use to help my patients. in the discussion that follows, I often refer to these valuable ideas.
 
Note - Location 63
It does not surprise me that Yalom finds refuge in the roots of western civilization. This is the birthplace of self-worship and egocentric perspectives.
 
----- 
Highlight (yellow) - Location 80
Still others attempt to transcend the painful separateness of death by way of merger-with a loved one, a cause, a community, a Divine Being. Death anxiety is the mother of all religions, ligions, which, in one way or another, attempt to temper per the anguish of our finitude. God, as formulated transculturally, not only softens the pain of mortality through some vision of everlasting life but also palliates fearful isolation by offering an eternal presence, and provides a clear blueprint for living a meaningful life.
 
Note - Location 83
Yalom does not recognize the deeper truth of religion and the belief in God and afterlife. I don't agree, and find religion to be a form of transcendental philosophy that acknowledges the significance of a species over an individual, and the struggle an individual has in understanding the whole of vast time frames beyond an individual lifetime.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 116
confronting death allows us, not to open some noisome some Pandora's box, but to reenter life in a richer, more compassionate manner.
 
Note - Location 116
Yalom views death from the egocentric self. This is similar to my own cultural upbringing. But I wonder if this point of view resonates with other cultures, like far-eastern, African, or indigenous cultures.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 170
Freud and Breuer's 1895 Studies on Hysteria. A careful reading of that text reveals that the fear of death pervaded the lives of Freud's patients. His failure to explore death fears would be baffling were it not for his later writings, which explain how his theory of the origins of neurosis rested on the assumption of conflict flict between various unconscious, primitive, instinctual forces. Death could play no role in the genesis of neurosis, sis, Freud wrote, because it has no representation in the unconscious. He offered two reasons: first, we have no personal experience of death, and, second, it is not possible for us to contemplate our non-being.
 
 Note - Location 173
I don't understand. Need to read more about Freud's views on death.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 495
Heidegger once defined death as "the impossibility of further possibility."
 
Note - Location 496
Another very Western culture self-centered point of view?
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 623
Awakening experiences thus range from the deathbed experience of Ivan Ilych to the near-death experiences of many cancer patients to more subtle confrontations in everyday life (such as birthdays, grief, reunions, dreams, the empty nest) where the individual is primed to examine existential issues. Awakening consciousness can often be facilitated by the help of another-a friend or therapist-with a greater sensibility to these issues (obtained, it is my hope, from these pages). Keep in mind the point of these incursions: that a confrontation with death arouses anxiety but also has the potential of vastly enriching life. Awakening experiences may be powerful but ephemeral. The following chapters ters will discuss how we can make the experience more enduring.
 
Note - Location 627
Summary
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 638
How did Epicurus attempt to alleviate death anxiety? ety? He formulated a series of well-constructed arguments, ments, which his students memorized like a catechism. Many of these arguments have been debated over the past twenty-three hundred years and are still germane to overcoming the fear of death. In this chapter, I will discuss three of his best-known arguments, which I've found valuable in my work with many patients and to me personally in relieving my own death anxiety. 1. The mortality of the soul 2. The ultimate nothingness of death 3. The argument of symmetry
 
Note - Location 641
Epicurus on death
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 656
The Argument of Symmetry Epicurus's third argument holds that our state of non-being being after death is the same state we were in before our birth. Despite many philosophical disputes about this ancient argument, I believe that it still retains the power to provide comfort to the dying.
 
Note - Location 657
Epicurus argument of symmetry
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 670
Rippling refers to the fact that each of us creates-often often without our conscious intent or knowledge-concentric centric circles of influence that may affect others for years, even for generations.
 
Note - Location 671
Rippling
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 810
One of Nietzsche's favorite phrases is amor fati (love your fate): in other words, create the fate that you can love.
 
Note - Location 811
Is this what Nietzsche was saying?
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 890
Otto Rank posited a useful dynamic, an ongoing tension between "life anxiety" and "death anxiety," which may be exceedingly useful to the therapist. In his view, a developing person strives for individuation, growth, and fulfillment of his or her potential. But there is a cost! In emerging, expanding, and standing out from nature, an individual encounters life anxiety, a frightening loneliness, a feeling of vulnerability, a loss of basic connection with a greater whole. When this life anxiety becomes unbearable, what do we do? We take a different direction: we go backward; we retreat from separateness and find comfort in merger-that is, in fusing with and giving oneself up to the other. Yet despite its comfort and coziness, the solution of merger is unstable: ultimately one recoils from the loss of the unique self and sense of stagnation. Thus, merger gives rise to "death anxiety." Between these two poles-life anxiety and death anxiety, or individuation and merger-people shuttle back and forth their entire lives. This formulation ultimately became the spine of Ernest Becker's extraordinary book, The Denial of Death.
 
Note - Location 896
The realization of "I" has attached to it the fear of loss of "I"
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 922
When we finally know we are dying, and all other sentient beings are dying with us, we start to have a burning, almost heartbreaking sense of the fragility and preciousness of each moment and each being, and from this can grow a deep, clear, limitless compassion for all beings. SOCYAL RINPOCHE, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying
 
Note - Location 924
How does Buddhism fit?
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1033
But every living creature wishes to persist in its own being-Spinoza said that around 350 years ago.
 
Note - Location 1034
Spinoza on death
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1061
After all, we are all creatures who are frightened at the thought of "no more me." We all face the sense of our smallness and insignificance when measured against the infinite extent of the universe (sometimes referred ferred to as the "experience of the tremendum"). Each of us is but a speck, a grain of sand, in the vastness of the cosmos. As Pascal said in the seventeenth century, "the eternal silence of infinite spaces terrifies me."
 
Note - Location 1064
Western culture? What if I were to imagine I was a red blood cell? Or a cow? Or a tree? A boulder?
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1071
Alleviating the Loneliness of Death Although Everyman, the medieval morality play, dramatizes atizes the loneliness of one's encounter with death, it may also be read as portraying the consoling power of rippling. A theatrical crowd pleaser for centuries, Everyman man played in front of churches before large throngs of parishioners. It tells the allegorical tale of Everyman, who is visited by the angel of death and learns that the time of his final journey has arrived. Everyman pleads for a reprieve. "Nothing doing," replies the angel of death. Then another request: "Can I invite someone to accompany me on this desperately lonely journey?" The angel grins and readily agrees: "Oh, yes-if you can find someone."
 
Note - Location 1075
Read this play
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1078
Everyman's discovery that there is one companion, Good Deeds, who is able to accompany him is, of course, the Christian moral of this morality play: that you can take with you from this world nothing that you have received; you can take only what you have given. A secular interpretation of this drama suggests that rippling-that is, the realization of your good deeds, of your virtuous influence on others that persists beyond yourself-may soften the pain and loneliness of the final journey.
 
 Note - Location 1080
Not just good deeds make ripples.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1115
"Jill," I said, "you have a young daughter who's about nine. Imagine that she asked, `If we are going to die, then why or how should we live?' How would you answer?"
 
Note - Location 1116
Try this exercise
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1174
"How can you live now without building new regrets? What do you have to change in your life?"
 
Note - Location 1175
Possible use of regret
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1175
awaken to our mortality.
 
Note - Location 1175
Good summary phrase
  
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1180
I urge you not to distract yourself. Instead, savor awakening. Take advantage of it. Pause as you stare into the photograph of the younger you. Let the poignant moment sweep over you and linger a bit; taste the sweetness of it as well as the bitterness. Keep in mind the advantage of remaining aware of death, of hugging its shadow to you. Such awareness can integrate the darkness with your spark of life and enhance your life while you still have it. The way to value life, the way to feel compassion for others, the way to love anything with greatest depth is to be aware that these experiences are destined to be lost. Many times I've been pleasantly surprised to see a patient make substantial positive changes very late in life, even close to death. It's never too late. You're never too old. 
 
Note - Location 1185
Good summary, but misses the real point of service as the purpose of life (contributing to the survival of the family, the tribe, humanity, all life in this world, all life in the universe)
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1318
The idea of rippling, of passing along to others what has mattered to one life, implies connection with other self-aware essences; without that, rippling is impossible. 
 
Note - Location 1319
I don't agree. Survival is, by definition, universal.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1447
Schopenhauer and Bergson, for example, think of human beings as individual manifestations of an all-encompassing life force (the "Will," the "elan vital") into which a person is reabsorbed absorbed after death. Believers in reincarnation would claim that some essence of a human being-the spirit, soul, or divine spark-will persist and be reborn into another being. Materialists might say that after death, our DNA, our organic molecules, or even our carbon atoms are dispersed into the cosmos until called on to become part of some other life form. For me these models of persistence do little to relieve the ache of transiency: the destiny of my molecules, sans my personal consciousness, provides me only cold comfort. To me, transience is like background music: always ways playing, rarely noticed until some striking event brings it into full awareness. 
 
Note - Location 1451
Look more closely 
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1495
As an adult I attended a Catholic friend's funeral and listened to the priest proclaim that we would all meet again in heaven for a joyous reunion. Once again, I looked around at all the faces and saw nothing but fervent belief. I felt surrounded by delusion.
 
Note - Location 1496
Refusal to believe is as much a delusion as believing.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1501
my work is rooted in a secular, existential worldview view that rejects supernatural beliefs.
 
Note - Location 1501
And yet, you only believe what you are capable of understanding.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1505
Hence, orthodox religious views based on irrational ideas, such as miracles, have always perplexed me. I am personally incapable of believing in something that defies the laws of nature.
 
Note - Location 1506
And yet, our understanding of the laws of nature continue to change.
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1615
The answer is within each of us and readily available. able. Set aside some time and meditate on your own existence. Screen out diversions, bracket all preexisting theories and beliefs, and reflect on your "situation" in the world. In time you will inevitably arrive at the deep structures of existence or, to use the theologian Paul Tillich's felicitous term, ultimate concerns. In my view, four ultimate concerns are particularly germane to the practice of therapy: death, isolation, meaning in life, and freedom. These four ultimate concerns constitute the spine of my 1980 textbook, Existential Psychotherapy, in which I discuss, in detail, the phenomenology and the therapeutic implications of each of these concerns.
 
Note - Location 1618
The four givens
 
-----
Highlight (yellow) - Location 1620
Carl Jung and Viktor Frankl, for example, emphasize the high incidence of patients who seek therapy because they have lost any sense of meaning in life. The existential worldview on which I base my clinical work embraces rationality, eschews supernatural beliefs, and posits that life in general, and our human man life in particular, has arisen from random events; that, though we crave to persist in our being, we are finite creatures; that we are thrown alone into existence without a predestined life structure and destiny; that each of us must decide how to live as fully, happily, ethically, and meaningfully as possible. 
 
Note - Location 1621
Jung and Frankl 
 
Note - Location 1624
Existential world view


__________

(1) A list of the books I've read since September (more for my memory than for anything else):

  • Biscuits: a Savor the South cookbook (Savor the South Cookbooks) by Belinda Ellis
  • 72 Reasons to Be Vegan: Why Plant-Based. Why Now by Gene Stone and Kathy Freston (browsed, originally thought it was a cookbook!)
  • Wonder by R. J. Palacio (saw the movie, White Bird, bought a copy of the original graphic novel, read and bought this book)
  • Staring at the Sun: Overcoming the Terror of Death by Irvin D. Yalom
  • The Secret of Secrets by Dan Brown
  • The Teacher of Cheops by Albert Salvadó (read 30%)
  • Solaris by Stanislaw Lem (still reading, finished 30%)
  • The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho (re-read first read in 1994?)
  • Rental House by Weike Wang (read 30%)
  • Civic Self-respect by Ralph Nader (read 20%, browsed rest)