But that’s the good thing about Christianity. And what if they never liked you? Part of growing up in the South, you learn that you burn in hell for the rest of your life if you don’t do this or that. It just doesn’t make sense if you think about it. It’s like billions and billions of people, and what are the odds of even finding them. I thought, with all the people in heaven, all the people who have lived on Earth, how do you even find your family. My sister Amy went to a psychic who said my mom, who is dead, was with my sister who committed suicide and they are all together now spending time with grandma and grandpa. I think when you die, it’s like unplugging the TV. What do you think happens after you die?Ī: I don’t think I believe in an afterlife. Q: “Happy-Go-Lucky” documents your father’s death. He’ll read from “Happy-Go-Lucky” Sunday at the Balboa Theatre downtown. Sedaris has penned a dozen previous books, contributes regularly to “The New Yorker” and his “Santaland Diaries,” which first aired on National Public Radio’s “Morning Edition” in 1992, remains an annual tradition. “The best you can say with any degree of certainty,” he writes, “is that my father’s in another place, meaning not the only restaurant in town that could accommodate a party of eighteen with five hours’ notice, which, hint, it could do only because nobody wants to eat here, especially me - it’s just that I need to keep my strength up.
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