Seven questions from one life. You are already standing before one of them.
"When the mind shatters, what remains?"
Psychosis. Schizophrenia. The sudden silence where a person used to be. This gate was opened by a sister who disappeared behind her own eyes — and the question she left behind: is the soul the same as the mind?
"If the self dissolves, does the person remain?"
Dementia. The slow erasure. A mother who could no longer say her own name — yet whose hand still reached for yours in exactly the same way it always had. Is identity what we remember, or something deeper?
"Does God actually touch the human soul?"
Spirit. Grace. The gift of tongues. A Protestant seminary, a Catholic baptism, a choir — and the persistent, unanswered question: was any of it real? This gate is held open by those who almost believed.
"Is enlightenment possible within an institution?"
An uncle who became a Buddhist abbot. A cousin who became a pastor. And between them, the same question repeated in two languages: can a container hold the sacred without distorting it?
"Can sound reach God?"
Gregorian chant. Buddhist Beompae. The choir that made something move behind the sternum that had no name. This gate does not ask you to believe in God — it asks you to notice what happens when the right frequency enters the body.
"Where does consciousness end?"
A cave. Sensory deprivation. The substance no one names in polite company. This gate is not for everyone — it is for those who have already exhausted the sanctioned paths and need to go further.
"What does it mean to die well?"
Not hospice. Not a nursing home. A sanctuary for those who want their final passage to mean something. Who want to walk through the last door having looked at it squarely — and chosen, consciously, how to go.