—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
When I was younger, I would often
dismiss such concerns. Old people, after all, were the ones who had to worry
about other old people around them dying. I was sure I still had some time left,
before that reality hit me straight in the face.
I learned that I had been wrong for
at least three perfectly good reasons. First, it assumed that what would come
later was meaningless now. Second, it revealed a vanity in my own sense of
security. Third, it all came to me quite a bit quicker than I expected.
I would often be told that youth was
wasted on the young, and I resented such claims. People might not always be
compassionate when they are saying it, but they do say it for a good reason. It
wasn’t just that we were failing to plan for the future. In fact, I knew many
young people who had their entire lives planned out. No, it was that we were
planning for all of the wrong things. We wanted to be rich, gratified, and
respected, and we wanted to keep that going for as long as we could. Our sense
of morality, whether for now or for the future, was secondary to our sense of
utility, whether for now or for the future.
At the same time, I saw loss in
other people’s lives, but I took it for granted that none of that would happen
to me. Youth made me invulnerable, I thought, even when I would dramatically
claim that I had no intention of living past thirty. It all seemed more like a
game than an actual reality. There would be much playing now, and no thought of
any paying later. It should have come as no surprise that so many of the young
and bright professionals I’d gone to school with went from strength to strength
in their careers, while they were completely incapable of forming lasting and
loving relationships with other human beings.
Then, far more suddenly than I could
ever have expected, the changes set in. I had struggled with the passing of my
elders before, but now I struggled with the passing of my peers. It seemed to
pick up the pace before I could ever take proper notice. One died, completely
unexpectedly, and then another. And then another. And I had failed most every
time to make things right before they were gone. Others died in a different, more symbolic, way, because they moved away, lost interest, and because they no longer cared,
and we no longer had anything in common.
I lost a fine friend from high
school when I was in college. I lost a true buddy from college when I was in
graduate school. I lost a fellow, who knew me better than I knew myself, just
after I got married. Through all of that, people I loved and cared for slipped
out of my life, having chosen different paths, never to be found again.
This will bring great sadness to
anyone who still has a mind informed by a conscience, and a heart informed by
love. It is also a perfectly good reminder for all of us that, whenever things
come and go, we should be called to be the best of friends while we are all still
here. It will all be gone before we know it.
Written in 7/2007
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