Patti
Digh is recording the answers of readers to the question "What would
you do today if you had just 37 days to live?" Some of these answers are masterful pieces of writing. I read them over, several times, and then I asked myself what I would do.
I know what I would not
do: work, travel, or party. I've done enough of these things to realize
they are substitutes to fill an empty space in us that is better filled
with simpler, more generous, more thoughtful, instinctive, joyful and
sensuous activities. As you can see from the graphic
reproduced with yesterday's article, I'm pretty organized (perhaps even
anal) about what I do and intend to do with my time. As long as I
believe I have more than 37 days, I will continue to do these things I
now know I am meant to do, in a disciplined and well-paced manner:
to play, to love, to learn, to converse, to give (ideas, energy, knowledge, capacities), to be self-disciplined in maintaining my health and expanding my personal capacity, to write, to reflect, and to be attentive.
This, I've finally come to understand, is who I am.
Perhaps this is who we all
are. When I study the behaviour of wild creatures, when I read about
how the most knowledgeable and intelligent and admired people in the
world live, when I listen to and read the advice of indigenous people,
people connected to all-life-on-Earth, it seems to me that this is what
they all do. It has just taken me, poor disconnected and confused
civilized human, a lifetime to discover what they knew all along.
Recently
I've been focused on "love, conversation and community" as the means to
make the world a better place and to find meaning and purpose to one's
life -- to be of use, as my
friend Dave Smith puts it. I try to be of use, every day, and to work
towards creating what I call "working models" of a better way to live
and make a living. Hence my recent passion for identifying and
assisting in the creation of Natural Enterprises (self-managed places
where people work together responsibly, sustainably, joyfully, and meaningfully) and Intentional Communities (self-managed places where people live
together responsibly, sustainably, joyfully, and meaningfully). Natural
Enterprises in a Natural Generosity Economy built around Natural
Communities. And within these communities, I try to let-myself-change,
to adapt and be more authentically myself, and to help others do the
same.
But if I had only 37 days to live I think I would suspend these important activities, these model-building and model-being projects.
My father is not well, and he has been told that he may not have long to live. He has always been my
model, and I am like him in many ways. He has, for the last year or so,
been "setting his lands in order", as Eliot puts it in The Waste Land
just after he describes the thunder fable of the Upanishad: Datta, dayadhvam, damyata -- giving, sympathy, self-control. The fact that these three ancient thunders parallel so closely my modern love, conversation, community
mantra gives me pause. When I was younger and learning to write poetry
my father stepped me through The Waste Land to explain what it meant.
He taught me well.
But when it is time to set one's lands in
order, it is also time, I think, to suspend love, conversation and
community activities, in favour of quieter, more solitary pursuits. To
try to jam a lifetime of such activities into a 37 day orgy of frenzied
living, to the point of self-exhaustion, would I think be selfish,
futile, and unfair to those left behind to pick of the pieces.
Given
only 37 days, there is not enough time to love. Not fairly anyway, for
those who would then lose that love. When I started thinking about
Patti's question I thought at first I'd like to spend the time with all
those I've come to love. But then I concluded that was self-centred and
cruel. Love is a drug, after all, for better and for worse, and a
co-addictive one. And I'm not really sure I know what love is, anyway,
and to try to find out in 37 days strikes me as, at best, ungracious.
The words of the Joni Mitchell song Amelia came to mind:
Maybe I've never really loved I guess that is the truth I've spent my whole life in clouds At icy altitudes
This
mingled retelling of the Icarus legend and the more modern legend of
Amelia Earhart is, in a way, as much my soul song as Neil Young's Will to Love,
the song about a salmon swimming upstream through much hardship and
danger to find the one he knows he's meant to love. Idealists like me
are, most of the time, all talk and no action. Give us what we say we
really want and we wouldn't know what to do with it.
Too late anyway. With only 37 days there is no time for such addictions, or to find what I've "never really" been or done.
Likewise, I wouldn't travel to any of the faraway places on my list
of places I'd like to see. Too far away for just a short visit, and
besides, there are plenty of beautiful, undiscovered places right here.
My father thinks the wild animals have it right. When you know
your time has come, your instinct and your responsibility is to go off
by yourself, rest, contemplate, and be at peace with the world.
And
that's what I would do. With 37 days left, I would go off into the
forest near where I live, by myself, with a comfortable tent and a bed
to sleep on, good walking shoes, practical clothing (as little as
necessary), my guitar, vegan food, drinking water, pencils and paper.
No electronic or communication equipment except a camera, and no books.
I would compose and play and sing songs, and write poetry and a few
stories. If I had any wisdom I wanted to impart I would do so in
creative writing, through stories, not writings like this. I would
invent games that could be played in the wild, without leaving a
footprint. I would pay attention with all my senses and all my
instincts and all my heart, and fall under the spell of the sensuous,
Gaia's spell. I would run and dance and swim. I would meditate, and I
would fast. I would breathe deeply, and explore and learn and discover
the miniature truths of the forest. I would sleep soundly. I would be nobody-but-myself.
I would not count the days.
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