Re: Death
Thank you, Jools, for this important point, and for sharing your experience. As someone who applying to medical school and considering oncology for a specialty, and who has lost several close relatives to cancer (my aunt quite suddenly, with only three months from diagnosis to death from a rare, very aggressive form of cancer), I consider this subject and its impact to be of the utmost importance. However, that said, I have neither experienced nor witnessed firsthand the shock and pain you describe, either from a diagnosis or, frankly, from any other source. It's an important point, to me, to drive home the fact that all the thought experiments in the world can't really prepare one for the experience itself.
That said, even while we experience (or don't experience, even in the moment) what our lives bring us, yet simultaneously it all is a thought experiment. Speaking not from the wisdom gained from an experience as hard-hitting as the one you described, but from other experiences, even while we are in the throes of pain, fear, sadness, or (in my case) anger, yet it is all also a thought experiment. Scant comfort, perhaps, in the midst of the emotion, but even the most intense emotions pass and reveal themselves for what they are: a part of a moment perfect as it is that then vanishes, replaced by another moment perfect as it is.
Again, hard to hold to in the moment, but no less true in the midst of intense emotion than in our moment of greatest calm and clarity.
Gassho,
Kevin
PS. I celebrate with you your still being here three years after your bowel cancer diagnosis. Deep gassho to you and your family, and thank you for your teaching.
Originally posted by Shindo
That said, even while we experience (or don't experience, even in the moment) what our lives bring us, yet simultaneously it all is a thought experiment. Speaking not from the wisdom gained from an experience as hard-hitting as the one you described, but from other experiences, even while we are in the throes of pain, fear, sadness, or (in my case) anger, yet it is all also a thought experiment. Scant comfort, perhaps, in the midst of the emotion, but even the most intense emotions pass and reveal themselves for what they are: a part of a moment perfect as it is that then vanishes, replaced by another moment perfect as it is.
Again, hard to hold to in the moment, but no less true in the midst of intense emotion than in our moment of greatest calm and clarity.
Gassho,
Kevin
PS. I celebrate with you your still being here three years after your bowel cancer diagnosis. Deep gassho to you and your family, and thank you for your teaching.
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