T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1085.1 | | TJB::WRIGHT | Anarchy - a system that works for everyone.... | Tue Oct 09 1990 11:47 | 13 |
|
Eric -
Where did you get the 40-50 years left to enjoy sunsets??
Is that your own life expectancy?? Or are you doomin' and gloomin' ??
Grins,
Clark.
BTW - 50 years gives you 18,250 sunsets to enjoy....
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1085.2 | I'll miss me when I'm gone... | ORMAZD::REINBOLD | | Tue Oct 09 1990 12:00 | 23 |
| Eric,
I've been going through some very similar things over the past several months,
especially when I'm enjoying being me. I sometimes feel split in two - like an
eternal self that's part of the universe looking down at *ME* the person,
thinking, "I'm really fond of you - I'll miss you when you're gone."
I don't know how old you are - in your 30's, aren't you? Since passing 35 I've
noticed myself aging, frustrated that I can't stop it, and sad and frightened
that someday I won't be around anymore. Makes me wish that I could at least
contribute something significant to the world before I go. The older I get the
more I learn, the wiser I feel,and the more I think I'm improving - I wish
it didn't have to stop.
There are a lot of beautiful days here in Colorado - blue skies, warm
sunshine, snow-capped mountains, green forests, golden aspens in the fall.
Sometimes I wonder how it all evolved the way it did, and wonder at the joy
it fills us with inside when we look upon it.
We really don't know very much about the world we live in, or even about
ourselves.
Paula
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1085.3 | | SFCPMO::GUNDERSON | | Tue Oct 09 1990 12:40 | 7 |
| Eric,
Instead of getting bummed out on the future try to enjoy what you have
and take one day at a time.
-Lynn
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1085.4 | dreamer | SWAM2::SIMKINS_GI | | Tue Oct 09 1990 13:18 | 17 |
| I think the 18,000 sunsets was a great way to look at it. I live in
Santa Barbara, CA, and in the Fall on my drive home from work I also
marvel at the most gorgeous sunsets. It looks like a painting with
fluorescest colors like from the stroke of a brush. I just have to be
careful not to get in a wreck.
In regards to time passing I try to make the most of it, but I am
getting to 35 and realizing that a time will come eventually when I
will have no choice in leaving this world. I would like to leave
something important, even better, to enjoy what I will contribute in my
lifetime. If this life has so many beautiful attributes of nature can
you imagine what is in store for us in our next life which is supposed
to be better? I'll just miss my family.
As for now I'll enjoy the sunsets and wish I didn't have to spend all
the valuable hours each day closed off from it all under artificial
lighting in artificial air while all the wonders of nature pass me by.
|
1085.5 | a taste of heaven!!! | BTOVT::MUNROE_R | I'll give it a whirl! | Tue Oct 09 1990 13:21 | 8 |
| Eric,
For me, whenever I see something that is truly, totally breathtaking, I
take it as a gift. I also take it as a glimpse of what heaven must be
like. So I that changes my outlook, I guess. I know this sounds
REALLY silly, but, hey, it's part of my belief system ;^)
---Becca
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1085.7 | Sounds Normal to Me | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Tue Oct 09 1990 13:42 | 10 |
| There are certain stages in life where we begin to question different
aspects of our existence. It sounds as if you have reached one
of those points, Eric. If you can face your present fears, you
may discover that you have a new awareness you never knew was there.
These concerns are normal and everyone experiences them sooner or
later--most of us at many different stages in our lives. Try to
look at this as a time of growth for you and learn what you can
from the experience.
Barb
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1085.8 | Preparing now for the next adventure | NUTMEG::GODIN | Naturally I'm unbiased! | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:06 | 19 |
| My inspiration for facing my inevitable death comes from watching my
four grandparents age and eventually take that step into the unknown.
Each of them, to a greater or lesser degree, lived life fully EACH DAY.
While none of them ever expressed the goal of "living each day as if it
were your last," they made sure they took care of the important things
on a daily basis (saying "I love you" to their loved ones; enjoying the
sunsets and the natural beauty around them; taking/making the time to
pursue personal growth and fulfillment). Each of them went to their
death without regrets or might-have-beens.
Because they all lived to a ripe old age (87 being the youngest death
age), they also were able to demonstrate to me that life and living
don't have to end at 30, at 40, at 50, or at retirement. They made
just as productive use of their old age as they did of their youth.
Thanks to their example, I have no fear of death. I welcome it as a
big step into the next adventure.
Karen
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1085.9 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:15 | 6 |
| I've thought more than once the terrible feeling it MUST BE of being
locked up in a box and burried under 6 feet of earth... I know we all
have to die someday but... boy, it is hard to accept it! I'm pretty
much alive and appreciate being "still around" for as long as can
possibly be... life is good and being alive is great! I wish I could
live forever........
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1085.10 | Sunsets Would Come to Bore You | BSS::S_MURTAGH | | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:24 | 16 |
| But isn't dying what really gives life such great value? Suppose that
you were (barring accidents, etc) going to live forever. How long
before you got so bored with it all that you were ready to give it up
anyway? What incentive is there to pay attention and "smell the
flowers" if you have infinite tomorrows to do it in?
Have you read any of Anne Rice's vampire stories? Here are creatures
that can exist forever without aging at all. And yet virtually none
of them survived more than a few hundred years. They got bored, or
lonely, or simply couldn't cope with the way the world changes over
that much time. I think we would all face pretty much the same fate.
Immortality would lead us all to suicide.
But mortality! That's different. Suddenly each day is a treasure beyond
accounting. To me, death seems a fair price to pay.
|
1085.11 | Cherish the good | ABSISG::HENNESSY | IMAGES....diddled here.... | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:39 | 30 |
|
I believe, as appears others do also, that there is another life
waiting for me after this one. IMO we should enjoy, cherish, nurture
ourselves and others as we live each day.
Sometimes I too have the "wow where has the time gone?" feeling. I am
44 this year. I have finally run into aging, my vision is in need of some
assistance(I will use training first then give into glasses later).
I ache from activities that never bothered me before.
When I get to thinking about all this, I remember the incredible events
I have been part of: my incredible good fortune at finding and marrying
my wife, to be present for the births of my children, come face/face
with death in Vietnam and walk away, A triple rainbow in the Wilkinson
Pass west of Colorado Springs, a raging typhoon, the gentle time of
holding a cousin while we said our goodbyes to his father, the
fierce competition of my high school football days. Wow!
Whatever the rest of my life my bring, I have these and other wonderful
things to cherish.
Take life as it comes, change what you can for the better, accept
gracefully that which you cannot change for the better, ask for the
wisdom to know the difference.
Richard
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1085.12 | | PSYCHE::ELLIOTT | | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:44 | 34 |
|
Eric,
Thanks for a provocative note.
Sunday night the sunset was gorgeous where I live. I live in
Sterling Mass on 3 acres of land, 2 rolling acres of grass surrounded
on by woods. The trees looked gorgeous in their autumn colors,
a fog was settling over the grass and the sky was pink and blue. I
thought about how pretty it all looked.
Instead of thinking where I was going, I thought of where I've been.
There were many times in my life when I wouldn't care about a sunset or
wouldn't have a nice home with such scenery right outside the door.
There were times in my life I had no where to go or was in such dire
straits in my personal life that I would have missed it. There are
people in this world who did not know peace on Sunday night, the way I
did. There were times in my life I did not know it either. The sunset
was a gift and as you said, I won't be around forever to see them. But
if I worry about forever, I'll miss Sunday and what it means to me.
Knowing I don't have forever makes each day and the actions I take that
day more important and more meaningful as someone else already said in
a previous reply. If I had forever, it would get boring indeed and
things would just not have the impact on me that they do.
I took the opportunity, on Sunday night, to be grateful for the sunset,
for my home and for my life as it stands today. And when my life ends
someone can ask "Did you stop and smell the roses (see the sunsets)?"
and I can say "Yes I did." Sunday night was one of those times and I
gave thanks for that day and for the brilliance of nature and for my
opportunity to enjoy it.
Living just for today,
Susan
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1085.13 | | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Tue Oct 09 1990 18:32 | 14 |
| Re: the note that mentioned being 6 feet under...
There was a movie out with Burt Lancaster (I think) called "Rocket
Gibralter" that was a very touching look at dying. You can probably
still find it at local video stores. It's worth a watch.
If you think about it, friends, when a child is "born" into this
world, it is actually "dying" to the life it's always known. Who
says that each of us is not actually being "born" into a newer better
life when we "die" to the life we've become familiar with? For those
who may have gone through a "near death experience," being "dead" is
far more pleasant than being "alive."
Barb
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1085.14 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Oct 09 1990 20:25 | 55 |
|
Ozymandias
I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed;
And on the pedestal these words appear:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Death, Be Not Proud
Death, be not proud, though some have called thee
Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so;
For those whom thu think'st thou dost overthrow
Die not, poor Death; nor yet canst thou kill me.
From rest and sleep, which but thy pictures be,
Much pleasure; then from thee much more must flow;
And soonest our best men with thee do go-
Rest of their bones and souls' delivery!
Thou'rt slave to fate, chance, kings, and desperate men,
And dost with poison, war, and sickness dwell;
And poppy or charms can make us sleep as well
And better than thy stroke. Why swell'st thou then?
One short sleep past, we wake eternally,
And Death shall be no more: Death, thou shalt die.
John Donne
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
"....So Live, Laugh, and Love you wretched fools for the world shall
end tomorrow!"
A Prophet/Preacher in Downtown San Diego
(Summer of 1978)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I can't prove them, and I can't argue with them... so I thought
I'd share them instead.
Skip
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1085.15 | | DUGGAN::RON | | Tue Oct 09 1990 21:16 | 21 |
|
Eric,
It all revolves around your priorities. If quality of life is more
meaningful that it's longevity, then brooding over one's mortality
is kind of counter productive, don't you think?
You remind me of my older daughter. She loved our family outings,
where we'd pack a big, big cooler with all sorts of good stuff and
drive off into the mountains for a day of swimming in the lake,
BBQing on those awful public open grills and taking it eeeeasy.
Early in the morning, as we were getting in the car, just before
taking off, she would ask in a whimpering little voice, "Daddy, we
don't have to came back early, do we?"
You see, she never fully enjoyed those outings she loved so much,
because she always worried they would end too soon.
-- Ron
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1085.16 | A different address | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | Take a Hike...join the AMC | Wed Oct 10 1990 07:26 | 15 |
| Along the lines of Barb's reply I attended the dedication of my niece's
children to the church this summer. The dedication was part of the
regular Sunday service, and I was very impressed with the country
preacher's sermon. Sue youngest Andrew was four weeks old at the time
and the minister talked about Andrew's life in the womb as compared
with his life now. He was quite comfortable in the womb, all his needs
were attended to but something compelled him to go through that tight
corrider and come out into the world...a different address for sure.
Given the opportunity he would not return to his previous address. The
minister went on to say that in death we will go through another
corrider and come out to another address...one which will fit and we
will not remember or wish for what was before.
So the whole thing is just like moving...and I am well prepared. I
have moved 42 times in 52 years!
|
1085.17 | | BROKE::BNELSON | Just the Fax, m'am | Wed Oct 10 1990 09:16 | 16 |
|
I've had the same reaction, when I allow myself to think about what
it will be like to die; to cease to live. To not be able to think,
feel, see, hear or do anything. Pretty scary.
I think times like those are important to help you keep things in
perspective, but I don't let them rule my life. Rather than think
about what it will be like when I'm *not* here, I try to make the most
of things while I *am* here. Enjoy the moment. "Live every moment,
and love every day". And try to laugh at least once every day, too --
there's just nothing like a really good laugh to perk you up!
Brian
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1085.18 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Wed Oct 10 1990 09:23 | 9 |
| I save my sunsets - so far I have only been able to capture them with
words and with a camera (a painter I am not)....but that way I can
relive them as often as I want!
And actually I have a harder time thinking about those around me dying
that I love than thinking about myself dying...
-Jody
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1085.19 | | MLCSSE::LANDRY | just passen' by...and goin' nowhere | Wed Oct 10 1990 09:27 | 26 |
|
I was with my mother when she died. She suffered over a year with
cancer. Living for her at the time was horrible. At the moment she
died, however, I was alone with her in her room. I was frightened.
However, I gave her a kiss, she took her last breath and she was gone.
When I say she was gone, I don't mean she was dead - as in cease to
exist. It was more like she had walked out of the room. Sure, her
body was still lying there, but "she" was somewhere else.
As a child I was taught about heaven. If that's where my Mom is,
than that's wonderful, but since sharing her death I *know* there is
something to look forward to after life.
I can't say growing older gets me too excited. I don't want to be
a burden to anyone, nor do I want to suffer the way my mother did. I
do want to enjoy this life to its fullest.
Sure, I make mistakes along the way, that's part of being human.
And I've been through some pain in my life. Sometimes, I figure
whatever comes next can't be as bad...other times this seems just fine.
gotta run....
jean
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1085.20 | Children can be our eyes | WR2FOR::COSTELLO_KE | Jim Morrison...a Tragic Hero | Wed Oct 10 1990 12:12 | 14 |
| I think about this situation from time to time, then look at my
1 1/2 year old son and realize that I did contribute something
wonderful to the world. After I'm gone, a part of me will still
be here to enjoy the wonders that I had to leave behind. And even
if I personally didn't do anything "great", perhaps he will or one
of his descendents will.
And when I must leave, I want my ashes to be burried next to a Giant
Sequoia in Yosemite. Hopefully I'll give a little back to the one
place on earth that has brought me my fondest memories of the raw
beauty of nature.
Kel
|
1085.21 | Random thoughts on this rainy day. | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:01 | 9 |
| The moments of happiness are indeed few. The crimson sky of the setting sun.
The echo of your footsteps in the hollow mountain. The barren ocean that
forever pounds the deserted beach. You climb the hill to view the ocean
beyond; you chase after the fading sun over the mountain, forever gone;
yet, you still wander on the beach waiting for that last glimpse of the
sun--death, destruction and desolation. Why should we complain the
happy moment not last long? For most of us, life is indeed very long.
Eugene
|
1085.24 | yes, I'd worry about the hill, also !! | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early T&N EIC /US-EIS | Fri Nov 02 1990 12:49 | 26 |
| >-< a damper on the sunset >-
>I live on a high hill in Waltham Ma. Saturday night I was taken with the
>gorgeous sunset I could see from up there.
If I lived in Waltham, I'd worry about the hill still being there
next year !! let alone 40-50 years from now !!
>I'm interested in hearing about similar experiences from others of you.
When I was a young boy, we used to play in the woods not far from
my home. As we grew on toward manhood, we'd consider how great it
might be if our kids culd learn to enjoy those same woods.
Today, those woods have a different name. Parts of them are called
I-93 ...
It is sad to see even geographic landmarks being taken for
development ... but then, such is the nature of governmen ...
-BobE
|
1085.25 | We're a social animal | USCTR1::LRYDBERG | | Thu Nov 29 1990 14:59 | 2 |
| I love nature and beautiful sunsets too. What makes me sad is when I
can't share them with someone else.
|