Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Sunday, May 7, 2023

LIVING IN THE FACE OF DEATH*


So, here’s the deal.  

 

We are born helpless.  And then, guided and cared for by our parents and other adults, we spend the first few years of our lives figuring out our moving parts.  We learn to speak and walk.  We explore and attempt to conquer the wonders of this place where we have found ourselves. We form attachments.  And, given the right circumstances, we achieve some mastery and sense of belonging.  In general, we come to feel pretty comfortable with, and accustomed to, our surroundings.  We are at home in the world.

 

But, sooner or later, comes a shock.  One day, while we are minding our own business, not looking for trouble, feeling secure in our lives  -- it happens:  We discover death.  We learn that we and everyone we love will eventually have to leave this place.

 

Gaining this knowledge is like being thrown out of Eden. We hadn’t realized it, but permanence was the water we swam in.  With our rude awakening to the fact of death, our egos struggle to make sense of the reality that we are not, in fact, permanent fixtures in this world.

 

Over time, we find various ways of coping with our fears about death.  Some choose the path of denial, kicking thoughts of death down the road until it can’t be ignored.  Others ponder death, and decide it is the end of all consciousness.  Still others believe it will take them to a peopled heaven. I lean toward the Taoist view that we come from wholeness, enter the world of forms, and then, at our death, return to wholeness.  I do not, however, have any interest in arguments about what comes next.  I am content to abide with the mystery.   

 

So today I don’t want to talk about what death might look like.  I, instead, want to talk about our astonishing ability to create meaningful lives in the face of death.  And let me begin by saying that by “face of death,” I do not mean living in the face of a prognosis of say, a week, a month, or a year to live. I mean the basic fact that we’re all going to die. 

 

Period.

 

We live in an impossibly fragile world, filled with dangers and ultimate death.  And yet we build lives of beauty and purpose.  Yes, there seems to be some kind of will-to-live that keeps all animate beings moving forward, but we humans do so much more than simply keep ourselves alive.

 

We could spend all of our limited time seeking pleasure, selfishly hoarding what we have in order to insure our own well-being.  And some do this. But most of us, I think, spend at least as much time on activities that might seem almost quixotic in light of the fact that we will die.  


I find this deeply moving.  


Here is just some of what we do:

 

We spend years obtaining an education.

 

We train for and spend further years at a career.

 

We fall in love.  Indeed, we forge and nurture all manner of relationships, despite certain future loss.

 

We birth and raise children.

 

We read and seek knowledge that, as far as we know, will die with us.

 

We write plays and stories and songs and poems. 

 

We dance.  We sing. We paint.  We sculpt.

 

We play games. We run.  We ride bikes. We climb mountains.

 

We cook meals that require far more creativity than is necessary to keep our bodies alive.

 

We build things – homes, bridges, automobiles.

 

We discover things – gravity, electricity, the solar system, bacteria.

 

We invent things – the wheel, writing, the lightbulb, computers.

 

We travel.  We learn languages not native to us.

 

We build rocket ships that fly to the moon and beyond.

 

We plant gardens.  And, perhaps more surprisingly, we plant trees that won’t mature until after we have died.


 

Even in previous centuries when humans had a much shorter life expectancy, people got on with creating lives and leaving behind gifts that we enjoy to this day.  Take writers, for example. Shakespeare wrote all those plays and sonnets before he passed at age 52. And Keats, well Keats wrote his odes before expiring from TB at age 25.  And let’s not forget Austen, who managed to leave us an engaging and lasting record of the manners of her time and place before she died at age 41.  

 

Looking back further to a time when humans lived lives that sixteenth-century philosopher Thomas Hobbes characterized as “nasty, brutish, and short,” people also got married, had babies, worked, danced, sang, and, in general, seem to have done their best to make something of their lives.  As far as we know, this has ever been the human way.

 

I am in awe of the fact that those who came before us did what they did, and that we do what we do, in spite of the knowledge of our certain future deaths.  Or maybe it is that we build lives, not in spite of, but because of our pre-knowledge of death.  I don’t know about you, but I am quite the procrastinator when I don’t have a deadline or a structure.  Without death, there would be no final deadline.  Maybe we would just fritter away our time, knowing that everything could wait until tomorrow. Maybe we would be paralyzed by time without end. Maybe we would be bored.

 

Maybe death is our friend.  Maybe it is what gets us out of bed in the morning.

  

And maybe if we acknowledge death, we will come to feel comfortable with knowing ourselves to be a part of what the poet Mary Oliver called “the great wheel of growth, decay, and rebirth.”  So that even if we do not expect to survive death in any conscious way, we can take comfort in knowing we are participating, along with all other living beings, in the ongoing cycle of life and death.   

 

Here is a little poem from Wendell Berry that helps me to keep my eyes on this cycle and to celebrate my part in it.

 

       When I rise up

       let me rise up joyful

               like a bird.

 

       When I fall

       let me fall without regret

               like a leaf.

 

Can we get past our egos to see the beauty in our living and our dying  The poet Joe Brainard put it this way:  "Death has a very black reputation but, actually, to die is a perfectly normal thing to do.  And it’s so wholesome:  being a very important part of nature’s big picture. Trees die, don’t they?  And flowers?”

 

 

Here is some more of what we do:

 

We care for the sick and dying.

 

We volunteer our time and give of our resources to help others.

 

Sometimes we help others in ways that might lead to our own deaths.

 

We spend time seeking social justice – not just for ourselves, but for others.

 

Yes, I know there is evil in this world.  And ugliness.  And unfairness. I know that not all of what we do with our lives is noble.  Still, it seems to me that more people than not are working quietly to add something to the lives of those around them, to do some good while they are here. You are not likely to read about these people in the news. But you know them. They are your friends. Your family.  Your co-workers. And it is not only those with great resources who add to the beauty and progress of the world. Those with very little also do unto others.  In fact, I have read that poor Americans give a larger percentage of their income to charity than middle class Americans. 

 

And when we plant that tree or write that book or work for social justice, or even just go to work every day and come home to feed our families, we are building and contributing to a world that will benefit not only ourselves, but those around us and those who will come after us.

 

Mary Oliver closed one of her poems with the famous line, “Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?”   She seemed to provide an answer when she penned these words in a late-in-life essay:  “[H]aving chosen to claim my life, I have made for myself, out of work and love, a handsome life.”

 

May we all be able to say the same.  And when our time comes, may we fall like leaves.  


Without regret.   




*This post is a condensed version of a talk I gave three years ago at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Vancouver (WA)

 



Wednesday, January 4, 2023

LIVING WITH MYSTERY - WALKING IN WONDER

Lately, I have been thinking a lot about mystery.  In particular, I have been thinking about what the Irish mystic and poet John O’Donohue called “the mystery of being here.”

And, because I have three baby granddaughters, born within six months of each other, I have also been thinking about the fact that when we are very young, we simply accept the circumstances into which we are born – the shape and size and feel of our parents and others who care for us; the four walls of our home; the toys on our floor.  There are tasks to attend to – we must learn to sit up, to crawl, to walk, to talk.  These tasks are all-consuming.  The present is all there is.  


At this stage, as far as I know, we aren’t capable of thinking about the mystery of being here; we are, instead, experiencing the wonder of being here.  Each new thing or person we encounter is an amazement.  We are dazzled.


And then at some point the questions begin.  First come the answerable questions (even if one must resort to Google), such as:


Why is the sky blue?


What is snow?


Then come answerable questions that require a bit of finesse.   Here are a couple asked by a daughter of mine before age four:


How did I get out of the baby tummy?


How did I get into the baby tummy?


(I did answer these honestly.)


Then come the questions asked just before bedtime, when you really want to go to sleep.  Here is a further sample from a daughter, aged maybe 12:  What was the Vietnam war about, anyway?


And, eventually, along come the cosmic questions:


Where did we come from?


Why are we here?


Why do we suffer?


Why do we die


What happens when we die?


At first the cosmic questions take up a lot of space, at least, for me, they did.  But here’s the thing -- the older I get, the more comfortable I am with mystery, the more willing I am to accept the questions as being unanswerable.  


I am deeply perplexed by claims to certain answers to any of these questions.  I do not understand such certainty.  Where does it come from?  The poet Mary Oliver speaks for me on this subject:


Truly, we live with mysteries too marvelous

 to be understood.

How grass can be nourishing in the

 mouths of the lambs.

How rivers and stones are forever

In allegiance with gravity

 while we ourselves dream of rising.

How two hands touch and the bonds will 

 never be broken

How people come, from delight or the 

 scars of damage,

to the comfort of a poem.

 

Let me keep my distance, always, from those 

 who think they have the answers.

 

Let me keep company always with those who say 

 "Look!" and laugh in astonishment, 

 and bow their heads.

 

It’s true, I do have some intuitions about the cosmic questions; you might even say I have faith in my intuitions.  Still, I do not lay claim to any certainties.  And I have no interest in trying to convince anyone that my intuitions are correct.  (Let me add that I am as uncomfortable with atheistic certainty—what I call unholier than thou – as I am with religious certainty.)  

 

A number of years ago, I read the book Leaving Church:  A Memoir of Faith by the Episcopal priest Barbara Brown Taylor.  She recounted that several of her parishioners had come to her, struggling with questions of belief, and she began to realize that she was more interested in beholding than believing.

 

Beholding.  I like that word.  It allows for mystery.  It allows for wonder.  

 

Here's the thing about certainty; it cuts off curiosity at its knees.  Certainty is a hardening of our ideas, a shutting down of the possibility that there is another way of looking at things.  Acceptance of mystery allows for curiosity, for expansiveness, for taking in new ideas, for the possibility of harkening back to the wonder of our earliest years. 

 

I return to the wisdom of John O’ Donohue:

 

Awaken to the mystery of being here 

and enter the quiet immensity of your own presence. 

Have joy and peace in the temple of your senses.

Receive encouragement when new frontiers beckon. 

Respond to the call of your gift and the courage to follow its           path...

May your outer dignity mirror an inner dignity of soul. 

May you take time to celebrate the quiet miracles that seek no attention...

May you experience each day as a sacred gift woven around the heart of wonder.

  

As we begin this new year, may we each awaken to, and accept, the mystery of being here.  And may we, with O'Donohue and my granddaughters, behold all that is around us “as a sacred gift woven around the heart of wonder.”


                                   Photo by Guillermo Ferla on Unsplash