Covid-19
kills over 3000 people…and more..
Tornado
in Nashville kills over 17 people…Several Injured
Delhi
Violence over 38 people died… a few hundreds injured.
The
average death in road accidents every year crosses 1.5 lakhs….
Beyond the natural processes that govern life
and death, the news pertaining to people losing their lives in tragic modes is
indeed very painful. No body wants to embrace death and more so, through any
unnatural ways. Yet, death, as a potential negotiator with human life never
seems to look for bargains. It has its own ways of hitting people, sometimes so
hard, that it takes centuries to forget such events.
The long queues reported in Australia mall for
purchase of toilet papers and sanitary supports consequent to the fear of
Covid-19, the extraordinary precautions taken by Governments to ensure that
the disease doesn’t impact their own country are but the narratives of human thirst
for life and living better.
Imagine of an expensive car in United States
being run over by a train and smashed completely, yet the driver comes out
safe. Imagine of a young man in Japan applying for a driving licence and gets it; and in the next ten minutes communicating his joy of having got the licence
to someone else over a mobile phone, he drives the car and falls into a nearby
river .. one doesn’t know how death will negotiate with life, where and when.
Along with it, comes its paraphernalia… sorrow,
pain, pessimism, disappointments, loss of self-esteem.. not to the victims, but
to an entire eco-system which is impacted by its arrival. The very idea of
death, even under natural circumstances, brings a sense of fear – fear of the
unknown, fear of loss of possessions, relationships and a host of other things.
No wonder Yudhistra, the eldest brother of Pandavas, remarks “ It is indeed most surprising that humans
fully realizing that nothing is permanent in life and everything goes along
with death, chase possessions thinking they have a full authority and control
over them.”
One
could never predict how it arrives or embraces…
The fear of death is oftentimes, more killing than death itself. “Death is a fearful thing” claims Shakespeare,
yet on the other side he says “All that live must die, passing through Nature
to Eternity.”
Epicurus takes a very pragmatic view on this
“Death does not concern us. Because as long as we exist, Death is not here. And
once it does come, we no longer exist.”
Many have had the courage to face it with
wisdom, with a sense of humor, or with a conviction. It is said, Lewis Carol,
the author of ‘Alice in Wonderland’ called the people around him and said “Take
away those pillows – I shall need them no more.” The famous economist John
Keynes, on his deathbed, was asked whether he regretted anything. His last
words, it is said “I should have drunk more Champagne.” Aristotle, known for his unparalleled wisdom
said “Everybody knows death is unavoidable, but nobody thinks about it, if it
is not close yet.”
Sir Winston Churchill, known for his punch and
humour, appears to have said on his 75th birthday “ I am ready to
meet my maker. Whether my maker is ready for the ordeal of meeting me is
another matter.”
With all the wit, humor and wisdom associated
with death and its philosophical and spiritual interpretations, it is indeed
painful to witness. No wonder, the Sanskrit prayers often start with the saying,
“ Lead us from Death to Immortality.”
The
Indian scriptures take the travelogue of life beyond death claiming what dies
is only the body and not the soul. These ideations tend to relieve human of
some latent fears and imminent threats the mind articulates during their life
time. Says Gita, detailing the nature of the soul, “Weapons cut it not, fire
burns it not, water wets it not and wind dries it not.” So, why fear death?
The fact that neither death could be
anticipated nor could be largely predicted, puts the entire thrust on the
process of living. Why care about death so long you are living? And thus, the
need to live healthy, happy, productive and performing. Say Norman cousins
“Death is not the greatest loss in life. The greatest loss is what dies inside
us while we live.”
A dialogue with life, hence, appears more
important than a dialogue with death. Any dialogue with death, oftentimes,
comes with negative sentiments, with a sense of helplessness, a sense of
surrender to unseen and unimaginable. A dialogue with life could be more purposeful,
more authentic and more positive that ushers in energy
“The Meaning of Life is to find your gift. The
purpose of Life is to give it away” says William Shakespeare. How do we find
that gift in our life? If someone examines closely, every morning we wake up,
is the gift that we have received from the Almighty. We are bestowed everyday
with the power of life. The power to be with the elements of Nature, the power
to celebrate Nature both internal and external, the power to communicate with
limitless organisms that surround us, the power to co-exist with harmony and
what not. In short, we are born everyday with innumerable resources around us
for experiences that would be exclusively personal, the experiences that make
us rich every second. The wealth that is all around, the wealth that comes
through such experiences cannot be equated with other formats of perceived
riches which have a transient value.
Can we try to find what is the gift of life
that we have in store?
Soul is immortal, those who live a life of compassion, love will not feel for death,that is the gift of life.
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