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WAKING UP TO LIFE (EXTENDED VERSION)
Some time ago, a woman with a gun in her hand demanded of me and my
companions that we provide good reasons why life is worth living.
Otherwise she was going to terminate us.
I thought to myself: "This is the very question that I've struggled
with for so long and now I am being forced to provide a definitive
answer. Do I make up some fancy reason and thus escape with my life?
But if I lie, then my life is not really worth pursuing.
"How many times have I dreamed and read about this kind of a
life-and-death situation and convinced myself that I thoroughly
understood it, assumed that I knew exactly what it felt like. And now
finally it has happened for real and this time I cannot wake up nor
close the book.
"I realise that we all have to go some day, but what a pity it would be
to go on a brilliantly sunny day like this, when the whole world is
pulsating with life and every cell of my body is screaming out with the
desire to live. How much more fitting it would be to leave on a cloudy,
sunless day with the sky shedding cold tears.
"No, this doesn't feel like the right time to die! But when is the
right time to die? How can one tell that one has accomplished all that
one can accomplish on this Earth?
"To make the most of my existence, I really should try to cram it all
in, all of my life, into these last few remaining minutes, the way that
I used to try to squeeze in all of the information just before the
start of the exams. Now is the time to live my life to the fullest
degree, like I never bothered to before.
"Yet this fear of death that I am feeling right now is out of all
proportion to the joy and satisfaction that life has brought me so far.
Why does my life seem so dear and precious to me now? Is it because
only now, on the threshold of death, does the vision of ideal life
appear to me, life free of all the illusions that have previously
brought me down, illusions that only the proximity of 'The End' can
destroy?
"Is it because that only now can I see life as it really is, free of
all the grime that besmirches its true visage, free of all the trivial
annoyances that make life so hard to bear in day-to-day existence?
It is as if during the day of my existence, life concealed her features
with dowdy garb and only now, as the midnight approaches, does she shed
her frumpy dress and stands before me in all of her natural, radiant,
shining glory."
In the distance, I saw my friends getting finished off -- obviously
their answers weren't good enough. Almost certainly they all used the
"My life is unique" defence and it didn't work.
"Should I make my reasons stand out from theirs? But I am a person just
like them. Wouldn't making my reasons more striking imply that my life
is more valuable? Surely we all live for pretty much the same reasons
and so my answer should be identical to theirs.
"But what does the tormentor want from us? Honest, straightforward
replies or singular, elaborate explanations? How can one justify one's
existence? Where does one begin?
"I have no need nor reason to justify my past for it is already gone
and she can t take it away from me. Nor can I justify my future for it
hasn't yet occurred and is therefore of completely intangible and
unknown nature. It follows then that I am only in a position to justify
the now, the immediate moment during which I am alive."
It was now my turn. I came in and faced the interrogator. In a voice devoid of any tone she commanded me to present my case.
"Life is hard, really hard sometimes", I replied to her, "and a lot of
times I don't want to go on struggling against the unyielding,
overpowering forces. Yet I want to continue living. That is all I can
say. I want to live."
The interrogator gazed at me with an empty look, a look lacking any human expression, deciding on her answer.
Just as she was about to make her pronouncement, I woke up to life.
| | Copyright © 2006 Boris Glikman | |
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