Immortality 1. I could choose to become immortal. I joined the simulation. I pretended to time travel to September 1, 5689. I worked out with 250 breasonings that buying the sim card to my time represented buying the simulation chip. I turned it on. 2. Meditation and philosophy were my pastime in the simulation. I felt 100% safe in the simulation. Nothing could daunt me. If there was a mistake, medical problem or unwanted thought, it was taken care of and I felt secure. The computer preferred for me to receive, rather than make up my own thoughts. 3. I researched people who looked like adult forms of the children time travelling to me. I felt 100% warm in the simulation. I asked my mother about the electrician and the new heater. Heat contributed to my feeling of well-being. I thought, even if I can't have immortality, the argument would help console me. 4. Immortality was possible by being a bot in a state of perpetual well-being. I felt 100% immortal. In the simulation, I was able to enjoy life as a human kind of bot without medical problems, or stress. I found myself thinking of superior critical thinking skills in a positive way. The behaviour that led to no disease was text-to-breasonings about meditation. 5. It just means, that it exists in the moment, and it lasts forever. I remained 100% healthy. My body was replaced, the building (which looked like my home) was an image, but maintained (replaced) and the weather, surroundings and people were all to my liking. I wondered, is that (the simulation) like the heaven on earth the philosophers mentioned? Nietzsche answered, "Yes, it is." 6. It is important to meet people. I noticed the small things in the simulation. There was a SuperCard button (that was automatic), to complete As for my job and comfort. I didn't have to do work. But it was nice to keep occupied. 7. Meditators and mathematics professors like simulations. I was 100% impeccable at understanding, rather than disagreement. I became interested in the time of the simulation's use. I could walk around, even study the simulation myself. I could make my own simulation. 8. It was a conclusion that I was kept alive. I queried the computer voice and the coming-back, and living forever in the chip. I asked the computer voice about what commands were available, including how meditation reacted to me in the simulation (the answer to which was that it just improved things). When people in the simulation came back to the real world while still being in the simulation, it reminded me that real protections were needed (such as skipping accidents and maintaining high quality of life). I wondered how the chip helped me live forever, the answer to which was it had time philosophies that made it interesting to work on things. 9. I realised I was like a balloon, and had a body if I examined it (so I wanted to examine it). I found relaxation was a good idea in the simulation, and really got to the point with people. My uncle Allan found the idea that I was in the simulation while at home funny, because he could talk to me and I looked normal. I gave myself an A each day for immortality. 10. I noticed that my effort through history was initiated with my own effort in my earlier lifetime. I ended thoughts with "arem" and "that's good". I supposed that since there was no me outside the simulation, I didn't need to meditate for them, but it was nice to meditate still. I saw the upside of life, remaining optimistic as my way. I could do anything, for example if I wanted, I could open businesses after my training, in meditation education, also at different times in history. 11. 50 As in new people came from individual effort, and in existing people came from examination. I noticed that business success was based on being able to help businesses with being successful. I focused on quality and effectiveness. I took the better of my writing or a paraphrased computer-written essay. Effectiveness was 50 As. 12. I was particularly sure of what I wanted, the point, and everything went well. With the simulation, I noticed cracks and body aches and pains going away. Everything was a joy. I practised yoga and gave myself As for the exercises each day. Everything was positive, and my spiritual side was part of the experience. 13. I aimed to spend most of my time on helping people with what I knew. I found positive (including Eastern) philosophies to examine, as well as computer compilers, computers to build, and designing writing software myself. I tried to avoid space travel, and unnecessary risks. I mind read with Guru Dev whether it was safe to time travel. I read uplifting works in literature about spirituality and took an interest in film. 14. I understood that the immortals lived on, and inside the chip. I noticed that there were no criminals in the simulation and that it was ideal, like the future (everything was in terms of the blissful future). There were no negative thoughts. I moved from strength to strength, finding interesting things to talk about and discuss. I was happy to learn all the people at a certain point in the human civilisation were immortal, and wondered how it worked. 15. I compared programming with my existence, and thought that there were other-side-of things that were positive while frustrated while debugging. I stated that I felt good thinking about my simulated brain, with enough thoughts to go on to the next thought. I felt good about room service, which was actually me choosing to buy and eat food down the street. I felt good that the simulation technology knew enough about science to simulate space travel, but wondered if it worked far from home (to which the reply seemed to be that it did anywhere in the universe), and wondered if I could at least watch TV about aliens. At least, I felt good about being in the middle of safe, comfortable thoughts. 16. I wondered whether those I knew would be interested in joining me in the simulation. I felt good about my memory, doing memory exercises, testing whether my body was optimally functional and noticed that I seemed to be in the centre, not at the side of life. This showed that I was a true computational creation, and was glad my consciousness had somehow been transferred to it (was it by some kind of operation?) I wanted to thank the researchers for centuries of research into the successful project and wondered why anyone wouldn't want to do it? As an aside, I wondered if mind reading (for music and essay writing purposes) was better supported in the simulation.