Precarious Life
Old folks, disabled folks, infirm folks, all have something in common.More than the average person, they are aware how precarious life is and how uncertain the future is.When one is young, the end is too far away and the future is tomorrow. In mid-life, a productive person is too busy to bother too deeply with the consequences of life. So, how does Objectivism deal with these very basic manifestations? I think I know, but I'm always open to learning.
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the reality of how life goes for us is not necessarily recognized when we are young, but that is just the way it is, human nature maybe.
but we can not escape reality so as the saying goes "we get old so fast and smart so late"!
Actually, I prefer the '69. But how about the cars of that era? I still mourn for my '69 Charger 440.
The problems you must deal with are not as such something to celebrate, but accept facts as they are and you can see why the Kira attitude, true to her life until the end, is the right approach.
Ayn Rand also said "those who fight for the future live in it today". That is true for any moment as long as you are living.
Above my door to the garage I have a bumper sticker that says:" The best way to predict the future is to create it." Funny, though if you look at it two ways- one is we never see the future only
The here and now or -all we experience is the future unfolding before us like a 72 fleetwood brougham cruising across the states to unseen places.
This saying as well as "stop and smell the roses"
"You only live once"
To be conscious and hear these words of wisdom
One has to be aware of the message.
Lives change I mean really change in the blink of an eye, always with out advanced notice.
Best to you and yours!
Maybe I'll also store rotten eggs for all those illegally parked cars.
I'm not afraid of death for reasons I'm not allowed to discuss here.
I'm thinking of visitors to my dirt nap. So I have a pretty local cemetery picked out that's more into flowers instead of a dreary if not Gothic clutter of markers and monuments.
Someone once said that we start to die the moment we're born. Kinda puts an ending on it at the beginning, doesn't it?
I can only deal with my own experience. So far, I have learned to live and deal with physical pain. I took myself off opioids, went through a mild withdrawal and found I could cope with pain using OTC meds. The real pain is between the ears. The knowledge that because of age and disabilities, I can not only no longer do many things, but that I cannot even dream of doing the impossible things. If you are unable to take the first step, you'll never get to the tenth. It's depressing espially to a vivid imagination.
Example, CT. is a state where we can administer cannabis or hemp oil, but in doses only for pain but not for healing and make no mistake, these canabinoids do heal...your body is loaded with canabinoids that would benefit profoundly...it's not about the THC.
Also, there is intravenous vitamin C and lately D as well. High doses of vitamin C is an excepted protocol in New Zealand. It's know to pull one out of the wool, so to speak.
But as you might observe, government and their crony connections do not really want to cure diseases...they just want to profit from the symptoms...after all, that's what allopathic medicine is all about...symptoms but not the causes.
j_IR1776wg placed the salient quote from Ayn Rand. It is something to think about.
When you look into the abyss the abyss looks back at you. - Nitche
When you are young you are setting and achieving goals in an effort to achieve for yourself and your family. Once enough time passes and you've met your goals (or failed to), the kids are pretty much on their way, and the relationship your in has become mundane you have time( perhaps desire) to think on larger matters (not focus solely on the present) and look into the abyss.
That's my take and, I think, I'm wading through a mid-life critical evaluation.
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