Death: the wrong channel
I had just settled down with my laptop when I heard the firm, friendly “shave-and-a-haircut:-two-bits” knock. The people on this section of the street are very close, organizing everything from block parties to snow removal. So, thinking it was a neighbour, I answered the door.
It was a local political candidate. His hope, he said, is to tighten legislation against possession of guns. He rhymed off the length of his party’s proposed sentences, and named a woman who has recently lost a second son to street violence. Then he asked if I would like a lawn sign. Not bothering to explain that I was merely the catsitter and this wasn’t my home, I said I wasn’t sure; but we shook hands, and off he went.
I can barely imagine a woman losing two sons; just one death was enough to make my family disintegrate. I was 10 when my oldest brother was struck by a car while trying to fulfill a dream, a long-distance bicycle trip. My mother drooped and faded; my father disappeared into his work. My remaining brothers spent as little time at home as possible. Not allowed to hitch-hike to the village, I withdrew into myself. A quiet, paradoxical hopelessness took root. Mustn’t get too good at anything; mustn’t aspire; mustn’t shine; that way lies death.
I once chuckled at a birthday card depicting a hilltop guru explaining his secret to longevity: “Refrain from dying.” The other day, while washing the dishes, I recalled that card and wondered if I’ve spent my life adhering to the corollary, to whit: To avoid death, refrain from living.
The knob was hard to turn, but it made a satisfying chunk-chunk sound when you did. Two, Four, and Seven were Buffalo; Six was CBC; Eleven was CHCH Hamilton; and Thirteen was Kitchener-Waterloo. But the other channels rendered fuzzy grey snowstorms that said “Shhhhh!” In my preschool years, I much preferred the non-fuzzy channels. How can I develop the remainder of my life into one of those, a peopled channel, a live channel? After all, I’m not, in fact, dead yet; how can I make the best use of that happy little fact, the fact of my being alive?



March 3, 2008 at 12:34 pm
To define life as an absense of death is essentially self-defeating. The trouble is that we are trained from an early age for survival, not “thrival”… so what we remember are things like the hazards of hot burners and busy roads, and we become accustomed to living our lives within fences (at first imposed, and then chosen). I think the question you’re asking is how much we can risk the possibility of hurt or death in order to live more fully. It’s a tough question, but a good one!