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Does Thinking About Death Lead to a Good Life?
Does Thinking About Death Lead to a Good Life?

Sat, Apr 11

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Does Thinking About Death Lead to a Good Life?

Come See Me in the Good Light (documentary film) The Death of the Moth by Virginia Woolf ⏱️ Time Commitment: Approx. 2 hours

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Apr 11, 2026, 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM PDT

Zoom link shared after registration

Conversation Catalysts Preparation will take < 2 hours

  • Virginia Woolf, "The Death of the Moth" (short story, ~10 minutes)

  • Come See Me in the Good Light (documentary film) Unfortunately, the film is only available in theaters or streaming on Apple TV+, so some advance planning may be required.

Most of us are practiced at not thinking about death. We schedule around it, euphemize it, scroll past it. But what if that avoidance is costing us something? What if death, looked at directly, is one of the sharpest tools we have for figuring out how to live?

Virginia Woolf's brief, luminous essay watches a tiny creature exhaust itself against a windowpane and finds in it something enormous. The documentary Come See Me in the Good Light offers an intimate portrait of a life shaped, at its end, by a fierce and tender attention to what remains. Neither source is morbid. Both are, unexpectedly, full of life.

We'll ask: Does knowing we will die make life more meaningful, or just more anxious? Are there ways of thinking about death that help us live better and ways that harm us? What gets clarified when we reckon with finitude, and what gets distorted? And is there something we can only learn about life from people who are close to the end of theirs?



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