perlmonger (
perlmonger) wrote2007-06-28 06:43 pm
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light bulb in my mouth
Watching Andrew Marr’s programme about Hume and Edinburgh last night, and Hume’s acceptance of his mortality, left me thinking about death.
I’m with Hume on this; my only concerns about dying are of what difficulties and upset will be left for those who survive me and, inevitably, for things I’ll leave undone. I don’t want to stop being, because (these days; it was not always so) I mostly like be-ing, but ceasing to be has no fears in and of itself.
What I have noticed though, in the last year or so, is occasionally thinking that I won’t buy a book or a DVD because it feels a waste; because I’ll likely die before I get round to reading/watching the thing more than once. Something in my psyche is regarding the likely twenty-odd, possible thirty or forty years I have left as being a perceptibly approaching end. This, at least, I’m not sure I like: intellectually, I’d rather just carry on living in something close to the now and, well, just stop one day.
There. I’ll probably get eaten by the cats tomorrow :)
I’m with Hume on this; my only concerns about dying are of what difficulties and upset will be left for those who survive me and, inevitably, for things I’ll leave undone. I don’t want to stop being, because (these days; it was not always so) I mostly like be-ing, but ceasing to be has no fears in and of itself.
What I have noticed though, in the last year or so, is occasionally thinking that I won’t buy a book or a DVD because it feels a waste; because I’ll likely die before I get round to reading/watching the thing more than once. Something in my psyche is regarding the likely twenty-odd, possible thirty or forty years I have left as being a perceptibly approaching end. This, at least, I’m not sure I like: intellectually, I’d rather just carry on living in something close to the now and, well, just stop one day.
There. I’ll probably get eaten by the cats tomorrow :)
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errrr,
i'll just be somewhere else.
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Back when I was gainfully employed, we had a client who was Something In Developmental Psychology™ before deciding to go an make a metric shitload of money. I discussed this with him, and apparently there's a well-understood process where – somewhere in middle age – our existential view shifts from to . What the lay person jokingly refers to as a has good grounding.
I've never experienced your (which strikes me as the inevitable consequence of an unreconstructed hippy reaching middle age), but I have fairly bitter experience of the related . After my brother died I lost pretty much all capacity for medium or long-term planning; I spent all of my contingency funds, for example, on things I'd always wanted but could never justify before.
In the end, I think, the only solution is to live in the moment but with a weather-eye open towards the inevitable. Anything else will lead to one kind of madness or another. I dread the 1st of June 2010 – for example – because it's the day I become older than my older brother. Having said that, I recognise that there's precisely no guarantee that I will make it to that date as a living, breathing human.
What terrifies me, though, is the process. What John Lanchester describes:
I've looked into someone's eyes as that recognition dawned, in a moment that arrived like a bolt from the blue. Now I'm privileged to watch it approach another loved-one at a creeping pace (though one would prefer it to be many times slower), and I'm still struggling for form a coherent humanist philosophy of acceptance. Oh it's easy enough with sky-fairies and an after-life, we all know that, but if one cannot invoke those then learning to accept the inevitable is probably the most challenging developmental task we face.