One could compare human life to that of, at first, simple looking memes. Life, as well as memes, begins at first with a sense of joy and discovery, finding yourself inside a pool of undiscovered greatness waiting to be experienced. With time, this sense of discovery starts fading away, being replaced by a mere sense of rutine, you see, once you’ve seen a meme many times you stop feeling that sense of humor you once felt, they all seem the same exact thing which, in comparison to life, may signal to the routine today’s society put us in, an endless loop with seemingly no end. After the meme is long dead people may start having a sense of nostalgia towards the humor shared in those puny pieces of our everyday internet life but somehow, they meant something to us, everyone has that meme they loved but is now not popular, going back to the theme of life, we could compare this to a later stage in our lives when, after all the years of working and studying gone, we realize how important they were and how we let them go away, to never be seen again. Does this philosophy have anything to tell us about the afterlife though? Some memes come back years later with a completely new meaning, such as the popular internet dog, Doge, who started as a dumb comic sans meme but evolved into other templates. This could represent how after we die, we live inside the hearts of people who will fondly remember us, how it’s important to make a story today for it to be told the day of tomorrow. Life is just a meme, and we should learn to appreciate that.