getall.com getall.com
  Home Page >> About Us >> Place Your Link >> Privacy of Info >> Terms & Conditions >> Add Your Article
Search:   
Multiple links exchange
 
   

Outdoor & Sports

   

Education & Learning

   

Investment & Finance

   

Eating & Drinking

   

Medicine & Treatment

   

News & Events

   

Hotels & Travel

   

Home Family & Garden

   

Shopping & Auction

   

Recreation

   

Business & Commerce

   

Culture & Art

   

Property & Estate

   

Children & Teens

   

People & Society

   

Internet & Computers

   

Technology & Science

   

Government & Politics

   

Indoor Games

   

Fashion & Relationships

   

Automotive

   

Employment & Careers

   

Self Management

   

Hygiene & Health

 

Home Page » Self Management » Spirituality & Self
 

Riddles About Somebody's Death

 

I got this email today, about somebody who got hit by a bus crossing Ayala Avenue in Makati.

And the first thing in my head was, What shiny shoes.

How neatly the shoelaces were tied. And the lunch bag. These little things, how strongly they remind you that this headless corpse used to be a person; that people cared about him enough to shine his shoes or wash his socks or prepare his lunch.

It makes you remember all those times youre going out for a new day at work and tying those shoelaces and thinking of that old Stephen King line, SSDD (same shit, different day), and hating everything.

Im probably just being silly and hopelessly melodramatic; maybe this is what I get out of unintentionally watching Gulong ng Palad on most nights. These days, when things like Rotten or Philippine politics have killed an enough number of brain and heart cells to leave us so jaded, there are still some things that make you stop and wonder, in a Milan Kundera sense.

Of course, all of us die a little, every single day, if you believe people like Sylvia Plath or Courtney Love.

If youd ask biologists, theyd say things like you replace your entire skin every some months or so, or each of your cells is gone and replaced every seven years. Its one way of saying that the person you were seven years ago, thats dead now, and the only thing that creates the illusion, the semblance, of continuance is memory. And stem cells. But lets not even go there.

Maybe, yes, we all die a little every day, but at least, those little deaths are nothing dramatic; just a bad hair day, a broken tooth, a night of heavy drinking that decimated thousands of your neurons.

But if you end up lying on the pavement and staring at your own squashed brain, right there, on the same metropolitan road so many of us beat everyday, it just makes you stop.

Or maybe Im not as hardened as I think I am, after all; at least, not as dead-hardened as any regular faceless, nameless Iraqi. Not as neuron-fried or fed-up as those vendors in Quiapo.

Somehow, the first image that flashed in my head was that scene in Fallen, where the serial murderer is being gassed to death and hes singing that Rolling Stones song,

Time is on my side, yes it is
Time is on my side, yes it is

Says a character in that Nicholas Kazan film, death is probably what you get when you finally figure out the answer to the Big Why.

That when finally, in that small moment you figure out why there are six billion of us here on this blob of mud and nothing seems to make sense, death strikes you to shut you up. So that the secret remains a secret forever.

So that the answer to the Big Question remains heartbreakingly inaccessible.

Sometimes, I imagine Death as something formless that leaps from person to person, unseen, flying above your head as you walk the roads of your days; it brushes past you, breathes down your neck even during your happiest of moments. And then one sunny day, it finds you and smiles at you. It finds you to shut you up.

When the Roman town of Pompeii was unearthed in the mid-1700s after almost two thousand years of being entombed under volcanic debris, one of the graffiti on the walls the excavators found said something like, Lets eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow, well die

You cant stop it; nobody can. And because we know its a losing game, we sing our songs and drink our beer and fornicate whenever we can.

Like that murderer being gassed to death, the Pompeiians would have also probably sung that Rolling Stones song in the last moments before Vesuvius came raining down on themjust to mock and spit in the face of the inevitable. That is, had they known the Rolling Stones.

That dead guy on Ayala, why is it so easy for me to see him in those last critical seconds as he crossed that road, humming that same song because finally, on his way to the office that morning, the Big Answer to the Big Why struck him. Like Archimedess eureka. Like Tony Kushners blue streak of recognition.

And as swift as the Big Answer came, death arrived to shut him up. Just like that.

So that the secret remains a secret, the Big Answer remains, forever, so heartbreakingly out of reach.

Author: JB Lazarte
 
Author Bio:
JB Lazarte is an expert in this field. JB has written several articles in the past on this topic.
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Success Leaves Clues
 
Coming Home
 
Quick Steps To Handle Setbacks
 
Reincarnation is a Promise of Unconditional Love
 
The Top 10 Reasons to Consider the Universal Laws for Making Life Work
 
Success Formula
 
Take Care Of Yourself: Use These Three Life-Tuning Strategies
 
Lasting The Distance
 
Past Life Regression in Hypnosis: How to Contact Past Life Creative Abilities
 
Turn your Dreaming into Doing
 
 
 
Home Page >> Privacy of Info >> Terms & Conditions  
Copyright © www.getallcontent.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.