30% Discount On ALL Items! Applied At Checkout.
by Scott Goolsby May 26, 2024 2 Comments
Gods: we project them first in the boldest of sketches, which sullen Fate keeps crumpling and tossing away. But for all that, the gods are immortal. Surely we may hear out the one who, in the end, will hear us.-Rainer Maria Rilke
I live in a picturesque little town of about 300 people on the Snake River canyon. It has a wonderful name: Bliss. If you want to get an idea of what it looks like, the photo in this article is a view from the deck of my house in Bliss. I have lived in many places in the world: San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boise, and Germany. But I have always found myself returning to this little town. I have a certain love for it that I will have for no other place on our vast planet. Bliss embodies the dictionary definition of "quaint". It is the kind of place where everyone knows your business before you do. We can't and don't have secrets. My fellow inhabitants think I am pretty strange as I am the only gay, Buddhist, vegetarian who practices yoga and meditation in at least 100 miles. Regardless, this place is home and I am proud to have grown up here. There is a ubiquitous sense of community and we all realize that, in somewhere so tiny, we are all interconnected and continuously depend on one another. Bliss is populated with some of the kindest souls and warmest hearts who live simple lives doing simple things like ranching and farming. Surely you've eaten one of the potatoes grown here during your previous visit to McDonald's.
Now, you may wonder, what do my verbose painting of my hometown and the silent conspiracy of death have in common? Oddly, we seem to have been, for some reason or another, a recent tourist attraction for Death's cold hands. I remember the gentle, handsome 23 year old man, Hunter, who was struck and killed by a car on the freeway after he had exited his own car, which had broken down. His mother, Natalie, is a friend of mine and has been a cashier at my family’s convenience store for 8 years.
Then there was Bailee, the extremely respectful 17 year old, possessed of a strikingly beautiful smile who loved to ride his dirt bike. His mother and I went to high school together and she graduated in the class one year above me. She comes to our convenience store daily for Mountain Dew.
Our latest casualty was Rachel. She was a 43 year old mother and rancher who had a heart attack in her sleep and aspirated because of difficulties related to bronchitis. She ate at my restaurant almost daily. She loved chicken wraps and sirloin steaks. Two of her daughters have worked as waitresses for us.
Death has been to our town and brought with it the realization of life's finitude. It reminds us that, in essence, it is one of the many things that makes us human and it provides our lives a meaning unparalleled by anything else. Because of death's certainty, we are forced to live with the knowing that we are here to bask in all the beauty that life can offer. This has called us to face the real possibility that death can, and indeed does, come at any time. It does not knock. It does not ask for permission. It does not tell us when it is coming, but it always does. It will come to each of us. This is a certitude of life. Let this certitude not depress you but empower you. Let this certitude fill you and the life you have yet to live with vibrance. Know that, in life, you possess the most powerful gift that the universe can offer.
Dance. Dance gloriously. Create. Create with abandon. Dream. And live those dreams. Let those dreams take you to the furthest reaches of your imaginings. The gift that death gives us is not sadness, but realization of our light, our resplendence, our beauty, and the ecstasy of being human.
Rather than allowing death to be something dreaded, let death be a reminder. Allow it to let you know that we, the living, are here to imbue our lives with love, beauty, curiosity, and adventure. I invite you to let it remind you to spend the time you have in joy with those who bring smiles to you heart. I invite you to remember that, in the end, it is the simple things that are meaningful and important: Our time. Our light. Our ecstasy. Our creativity. Our adventure. Our families. Our friends. Remember.
This, not despair, is the invitation of death's beauty and certainty.August 19, 2024
Wonderful blog..and reminders of our mortality are always… or at least should always be welcomed. With the appreciation and constant reminder of our impermanence we can take the present more ‘seriously’… and enjoy its treasures through remaining in awareness…
And thank you for sharing so freely about Dzi…
In joyful frequency,
Michael
Comments will be approved before showing up.
Paula
August 19, 2024
I too have started feeling death walking by side, recently. I see people getting old (no, not me, others) and die, and take this awareness as an invitation to reflect on life. The futility of superficial things that we accummulate. I look at my boxes full of stuff which I have collected throughout my life, and realise that most of the items I own I have used only a few times. Get and store, get and store, get and store. I have boxes of coats, jackets, shoes, books, and wondeful suits which I have worn once. I have jade buddhas, tangkhas, buddist artefacts. Life is going fast, what is going to happen to all of these things? Many items stay intact, but others deteriorate. I open the boxes to find them full of things falling apart. Reflecting on impermancence. Do not hang on. Let go. Thanks for sharing