We’re insatiable. Gnashing our increasingly worn teeth with
each devastating loss. Oh my god…Betty White. (Yea, but she was just minutes
away from her 100th birthday. We should all be so lucky.) Dobie Gillis…ancient.
Sidney Poitier…ditto.
I can barely see the iPhone screen through my tears after hearing
the devastating news about Bob Saget… as I frantically search Google, trying to
remember who the hell he was.
We, as a society, are phenomenally bored, in constant need of
ever more shocking and higher-profile deaths to mourn. Anything to break the monotony.
Wonder what Jack Nicholson is up to?
Hey, calm down, don’t give yourself an aneurism worrying
about it. We all eat, sleep, poop, scurry around quite a bit, and die.
Everything, everywhere, dies. It’s just part of the package.
But dying isn’t the problem, that’s just life. It’s the
walking dead that we need to worry about. All of us that are still breathing.
It's an interesting and fun premise, and wacky hilarity
ensues…but that’s not the point.
Now fully awake for the first time after spending 30 years
in a coma, Robert DeNiro takes a long look around. With his new-found
appreciation for life itself, DeNiro realized that most people sleep-walk through
their lives and are rarely appreciative of just how wonderful it is to be
present, breathing life in and out. We spend too much time in a different form
of coma, worrying about things that may or may not happen in the future, and
almost no time being in the now, being present.
Robert DeNiro had to awaken from a thirty-year coma to
really see it. Many of us never do.
That’s our responsibility, our challenge from Bob Saget and…oh
my God!…now Louis Anderson too! (Google, Google) (And from anyone else near or
far who has already transitioned.) I believe they would tell us the same thing
if they could…enjoy the ride right here and now. This is heaven, this is hell. Stop
worrying about the next thing, be present, be ecstatic that you are simply alive.
Be like Minnie “Just so proud to be here!” That’s our obligation to Dwayne
Hickman, Meat Loaf, all of those who are no longer on life’s stage.
I take it all to heart, being conscious to maintain an “attitude of gratitude”. That said, I often have to agree with Clarence Darrow when he said, "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure."
So there’s that too.
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