In a new three-part documentary series called “Arnold,” which started streaming on Netflix, the former governor of California is also expected to be open about his struggles.
Arnold Schwarzenegger depicts heaven and death in his own unique way.
When asked, “What’s in the future for us,” by 78-year-old Danny DeVito during a drawn-out interview, the 75-year-old actor brought up the subject.
As a result, I remember the query Howard Stern posed to me. The governor asked what happens to us after we die, but I didn’t respond. There it is, six feet beneath you. Anyone who claims otherwise is lying to you, he said.
Even though I am not an expert in spiritual matters, I said, “We don’t know what happens with the soul and all this spiritual stuff, but I know that the body as we see each other now, we will never see each other again like that”.
Even though the former bodybuilder finds talking about death unsettling, he also asserted that he views heaven as a “fantasy”.
“It sounds wonderful when people say, ‘I’ll see them again in heaven,’ but the truth is that after we pass away, we won’t run into each other again. That is the unfortunate part. I recognize that some people find solace in passing away, but I don’t,” he declared.
In the bodybuilding community, according to Schwarzenegger, he has lost “15 friends in the last 20 or so years,” and his conception of heaven has evolved.
“Someone I love, who is kind, generous, and who made a difference in both my life and other people’s lives, is where I’ll put them in heaven,” he said. ”. I store them in a location in my mind, just like that front row of all your friends, he said. “And thinking about them always makes you happy”.
The former governor of California is expected to be open and honest about his challenges in the new Arnold documentary, a three-part series that premieres on Netflix on Wednesday.
The documentary series, which includes interviews with Schwarzenegger and “friends, foes, costars, and observers,” “chronicles Arnold Schwarzenegger’s journey from the countryside of Austria to the highest echelons of the American dream,” according to a statement from the production company”.