I was woken from my revery by the shrieks of laughter coming from my husband, and
parents-in-law. They were joking about how my father-in-law has to be
careful about meat and fat now and saying he seemed to have gotten it
wrong and thought he should eliminate fruits and salad instead. I don't
know why it made them laugh so hard but they were all turning red and
were close to tears. Then all of a sudden my father-in-law was on the
ground and his wife and Remi were trying to get him to respond. He'd
fainted for some reason, maybe from the intense laughter, and was out
for a few seconds. We got him to wake up and he seemed fine. He had no
recollection of fainting.
We were all a bit disturbed by the incident, and it made me think how
quickly one can go in this life. One moment you're joking around and
the next you're not breathing. Just like that. And once again that
question: what's it all for? You work hard all your life (especially in
my father-in-law's case) just to be taken down by heart disease or
cancer or Alzheimer's. If you're lucky enough it doesn't happen till
you're 90. If you're in the wrong place at the wrong time you could get
hit by a rock some idiot teenager throws off a bridge.
Last week I saw people loading old furniture and household items into
what looked like a dump truck. It made me think it was an older
person's house that they were clearing out because he or she had passed
away or was now in a nursing home. And here were all the tangible
pieces of this person's life, fifty or sixty years of purchases and
collections, probably headed for the recycling center. Again it seemed
so anticlimactic. The sum of a person's life just basically thrown
out. (Not that we have to keep every item a relative who has passed on owned...)
And so, I wonder about myself today. I'm working, but barely. I'm earning money, but not much. I
wonder if I made some wrong turns or wrong decisions in my life. Not
that it really matters so much anyway. What will they remember about me
or any of us, way on down the line? We're just one little blip in
history anyway. Sometimes it just gets you thinking.
So I'll leave you with one of my mom's favorite quotations (not a "quote", wink wink to
Holly!), which is one that also gives me inspiration in times like
these...
“In the best of times, our days are numbered anyway. So it would be a crime against nature for any generation to take the world crisis so solemnly, that it put off enjoying those things for which we were designed in the first place: the opportunity to do good work, to enjoy friends, to fall in love, to hit a ball, and to bounce a baby.”
Alistair Cooke
1 comment:
Reflective. I can't say I have the answers, but it's the kind of post I like. It's funny how even knowing how we are just a blip, life can still feel pretty stressful at times.
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