I've been reeling the last 20 hours or so since finding out that one of my sons best friends is in the hospital and might not make it. I've known this boy since he was in high school and even went to his wedding and reception last fall. At age 60 to here about someone only thirty who might die just after getting married is a truly awful thing. If you are young and saw this happen it would be bad enough but for someone like myself at age 60 it is unthinkable to watch someone that age pass on. It is such a loss for everyone.
I've led a very full life. I have three biological children and two grown step-kids and two God daughters that my wife and I have helped through college. If I passed on tomorrow it would be okay with me just not my wife and kids and friends. So I stay alive for them now mostly. Mortality touches us all. I've read that a meditation on the impermanence of life is one of the keys to enlightenment. Unfortunately, someone meditating on death is not someone most people would want to talk to afterwards. Such are the paradoxes of life.
To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Top 10 Posts This Month
- Dow futures jump 600 points after Trump says he doesn’t plan to get rid of Fed chief: Live updates
- How does one learn to be in the right place at the right time all or most of the time?
- How does the Human Race not go extinct this century?
- We’re suddenly talking about the Great Depression when discussing Trump’s stock market
- March 12th 2025 in and on Mt. Shasta
- What are the 4 types of Anthropology? begin quote from Google AI:
- When I studied Cultural Anthropology at UCSC I was most interested in understanding cultures especially Tibetan Culture.
- ‘He broke barriers’: One of the last survivors of elite group of paratroopers died. He was 108
- Mt. Shasta tourism was the highest ever for winter skiing and such BEFORE Trump was inaugurated
- The Fed Chief Powell HAS to be non-political or the whole economic System will collapse in the U.S. and possibly the world too
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
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