I had a birthday the other day. I'm old enough that I found it a little irritating. Then I had a couple of thoughts.
everybody dies.
You are dying. I am dying. We are dying. The only sentence in which the personal pronoun form does not modify the terminal meaning. All of Us are dying. Everyone is dying. You yourself and everything you know... are in the process of dying.
After you get to age 50 or 60 who really cares if you die of pneumonia or the next cancer you are in line for? Hell, your knees hurt, your sight is going and driving gets a little scarier every year. Time to check out of the hotel that is life and hit the revolving door.
After you get to age 50 or 60 who really cares if you die of pneumonia or the next cancer you are in line for? Hell, your knees hurt, your sight is going and driving gets a little scarier every year. Time to check out of the hotel that is life and hit the revolving door.
The USA wastes incredible time, money and human energy trying to cheat death. This creates untold human misery due to our dual obsessions of early detection and prolonging life.
Prolonging life for what? They aren't going to give you another five years of being 20 years old.
Prolonging life for what? They aren't going to give you another five years of being 20 years old.
This healthcare crisis is partly due to our fanatical obsession here in the U.S.A. with medicine - not the good kind of medicine that cures kids and relieves suffering, but the expensive stupid late-in-life kind that tries to pretend people get to live happy California lives forever.
Hogwash.
As soon as I hit 50 I made a firm decision to die of the first damn thing I catch that is strong enough to kill me. Seems like a good way to go.
Good for you... I am feeling the same way. I am not anybody special, so why jump all the pharaohesque hoops? Not even kings are immortal.
ReplyDeleteGreat point Luke Lopez
Delete50 is too early, do it at 60 at least...you wanna see your enemies die before you.
ReplyDeleteI've seen many of my friends and enemies fall, often of their own error or of simple bad luck.
ReplyDelete