a companion to the video
You know you're going to die. And the moment that actually lands — really lands, not just as a fact you nod at — your brain immediately looks away. That's not a bug. It's the most ancient reflex you have. The Mortality Frame is the first time you look back.
It launches alongside the video. Leave your email and you'll be the first to know — no spam, one message when it's live.
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Price at launch: $19 one-time · instant PDF · 30-day refund. Not therapy. Just honest thinking.
You just watched ten minutes about death, the afterlife, mind uploading, and whether the thing that wakes up after you're gone is even still you. And now you're here, and you feel something. A little unsettled. A little more awake than usual.
That feeling has a name. Psychologists call it terror management. The idea is almost too blunt to be science: you walk around carrying a quiet, foundational dread — and the whole machinery of your mind is built to keep it covered. Stay busy. Make something that lasts. Believe in something bigger. Anything but stare at the clock.
The uncomfortable part is that most of what you've built your life around — your ambitions, your legacy, your values — may be downstream of that one thing you're not looking at. And here's what nobody tells you: for a lot of people, looking at it directly doesn't make it worse — it makes it feel smaller. Not for everyone, and not at every time.
Most people never get to really examine this, because there's no obvious place to do it. It's not a therapy topic if you're not in crisis. It's not a dinner-party topic if you want to keep your friends. And it's too abstract for self-help books that want five steps before the weekend. This is that place.
A 40-page self-guided PDF workbook built around the same ideas the video unpacked — but now you slow down, go further, and make it personal.
It is not therapy. It does not diagnose anything. It does not promise peace or transformation. It's a structured thinking tool for someone who is curious, honest, and willing to sit with uncomfortable questions for a few hours.
Where your death anxiety actually lives — the places you avoid, the ambitions you can't explain — found through reflection, without needing to name it.
Your brain's three strategies for managing the unmanageable: symbolic immortality, worldview defense, and plain distraction. You'll see your own — probably for the first time.
The "copy problem" from the video, grounded in your real life: if you slowly change every belief and value you have, are you still you?
When you imagine the best version of yourself — unlimited, free, powerful — what are you actually asking for? The answer is usually not what you expect.
Not a silver lining. A practical framework for deciding while you're alive, with the clock out in front of you instead of covered up.
Each section has 3–5 written reflection prompts. No wrong answers. ~2–3 hours, one sitting or spread across a week. You will not be graded.
$19. One time. No subscription. A PDF you can read, annotate, and return to. No account, no app, no follow-up emails unless you ask.
It draws on real frameworks (Terror Management Theory, personal-identity philosophy) and the ideas in the video that brought you here. What we don't promise: that you'll feel better or have your questions resolved — you may finish with more open questions than you started with. That's the point.
If it's not what you needed, the 30-day refund is real and frictionless. No email explaining yourself required. Just ask.
No. It's not therapy, counseling, or any clinical mental-health support, and it doesn't treat or diagnose anything. If you're struggling with grief, depression, or anxiety, please work with a qualified professional. This is a reflective reading-and-writing tool for curious adults in a stable state of mind.
Technically no, but it was built as a companion to it. The video gives the emotional context; the workbook gives you somewhere to take it. It's free and it's 10 minutes.
No. It's a PDF — deliberately. Go at your own pace, re-read, write in the margins, put it down and come back. No deadlines, no community to join.
An A4 PDF, designed for reading on screen or printing. Comfortable on desktop or tablet, and fine on a phone if that's all you have.
Email the address on the final page within 30 days for a full refund. We'd genuinely rather you have your $19 back than have paid for something that wasn't right for you.
The Mortality Frame is an independent reflective workbook on death psychology and personal identity. It is not therapy, counseling, medical advice, or any clinical mental-health service, and does not treat or diagnose any condition. The ideas draw on academic psychology (particularly Terror Management Theory) and philosophical thought experiments — for intellectual and personal reflection only, not clinical application. If you are experiencing grief, suicidal ideation, severe anxiety, or any mental-health difficulty, please reach out to a qualified professional or a crisis service in your country. Intended for adults aged 18 and over.