Epiphany…
As usual, I was listening to NPR on my way into the office this morning. Their health news today was on smoking. In light of Peter Jennings being diagnosed with cancer after not smoking for 20 years—minus the brief lapse after 9/11—the focus of the report was on how your risk of getting lung cancer decreases, or not, after you quit smoking. In a nutshell, the damage caused to your cells over years of smoking—the more years the more damage—does not magically go away the day you quit. After five years of not smoking your risk factor is cut in half, but after that the slope is gradual. Of course this is just a rough summary based on what I was able to glean while driving, drinking coffee, not trying to hit the car in front of me and smoking a cigarette…
Ah, a nice refreshing, nerve calming, stress reducing, lung polluting, toxin rich cancer stick…Hmm, that’s not good…
Then it happened. It took a split second to play out in my mind (it’s going to take longer here):
I have always maintained that if I were ever diagnosed with a terminal illness, I would not seek extensive treatment. Rather, I would want to live out the remainder of my days in Bali. A little shanty-shack on the beach; an organic garden; an Indonesian family to maintain things; enough medication to keep me pain free as long as possible; and someone I trust and love to support me till the end. Well, in that moment, in my mind I was there lying on a beautiful beach. It was so real I could smell the ocean. Tasting the salt on my lips—residue from the swim I just finished—and feeling the warmth of the sun as I let it dry me, I began squidging my toes and fingers in the sand, writhing from pain. The granules felt course and hard against my delicate skin, but their cutting and biting offered me some relief from the other, more urgent pain. A gust of wind came up; blowing the sun’s warm tendrils off my shoulders. Next, clouds swept in taking away the suns light, and it was all at once gloomy, gray and chill. Shivering, I reached up to touch a thin veil of mist that was forming in front of me. It was cold to my touch, and yielded, parting like a curtain to reveal an unknown stage with unknown players of an unknown play. I thought of all that would be left behind—my cats and friends most of all—clinging to the material of life desperately. Why? For meaning? Maybe for reassurance that I mattered? Or did something worth remembering? I shrugged off all of the rhetorical, existential questions gnawing at me, and let the rush of pain wash over me. It isn’t physical pain I am talking about now. It is the raw, unadulterated, gut wrenching pain that makes your chest constrict and feel like it is being pulled in infinite directions. My breathing was deep, not gasping or jagged, but a little labored for the thick knot that was building at the base of my lungs. Building in size and pressure, twisting my diaphragm, and squeezing my heart out into my throat so that I could choke on it. I wanted to surrender to my mortality and be done with it once and for all, but I couldn’t. Not even the pain was enough to make me want to venture willingly into the unknown.
As I came to, my eyes were stinging and wet, and my chest was tight and barbed. I immediately began rationalizing, analyzing, and examining everything. I don’t have much “faith” because my mind is working too much all the time. I would have been at home in the 18th century, the age of the Enlightenment, discussing issues with Jefferson, and Looke over a cup of tea, or a pint of ale. I know I am scared of death. What is interesting, however, is it’s not because of heaven or hell or gods, but I cannot, in my limited grasp of being, comprehend not being.
This then led me to my next series of thoughts on having children, and its ramifications. (This is not meant to make anyone with children, or definitely planning on having them feel bad. It's just how I feel.) I do want to have children, I think, but I feel it would be selfish of me. I know life has more pain to offer than it does hope or joy (This is based on my opinion and my experience only. It is not an accretion of some universal truth or nihilistic philosophy.), and if I have children I will be giving them life only to suffer. Suffer the inhumanity of humanity; the injustice of society; an inhabitable environment; from all the pollution and destruction; my death and the deaths of others they know and love; and most of all, a struggle to understand why it’s like this, who they are, and their own mortality. Basically, one day they will have to face the fear and uncertainty of their own demise. I would bequeath unto them the legacy of my own unanswered questions and seemingly pointless existence. It is not a fate I am sure I want to be responsible for.
