Dealing with death requires a deeper understanding of Life – through
an awakening from within.
Our most
normal reaction as children to death is total puzzlement. When we asked someone
in the family why someone is ‘not waking up’ or ‘not coming these days’, we
were told ‘the person has become a star in the sky’ or ‘gone to God’. Therein
begins our misunderstanding of death. Slowly, as we grow older, while we begin
to appreciate, albeit subconsciously, the certainty of death, and its tendency
to arrive unannounced, we loathe it, we fear it. Anything that we fear will
torment us. And death is no exception.
A friend
passed away yesterday – consumed by cancer of the stomach. He was in his late
forties. Seeing his picture in the obituary of The Hindu this morning, an eerie feeling crept into me. Is this it,
I wondered. One day, you are there; and the next day you are gone? If this is
an unchangeable reality, an eventuality, about Life, why and how is it that
some are able to handle death, when it comes calling in their families, calmly
while some others suffer endlessly in sorrow?
The answer
lies, like with Life itself, in accepting Death for what it is. Osho, the
Master, as always, is helpful in promoting our understanding: “Death is always close by. It is almost like your shadow. You
may be aware, you may not be aware, but it follows you from the first moment of
your life to the very last moment. Death is a process just as Life is a
process, and they are almost together, like two wheels of a bullock cart. Life
cannot exist without death; neither can death exist without Life. Our minds have an insane desire: we want
only Life and not death.”
All desires will bring agony when
they are not met. You ask for a cappuccino in a restaurant and you get an
espresso instead. You are angry. You want a raise. And your boss says no. You
are angry. In the case of desires such as the cappuccino and the raise, your
anger__and resultant agony__may result in your desires being fulfilled. But let
us say you live in Chicago and you desire that there be no winters? Or you live
in Chennai and desire that there be no summers? Is there any point in having desires
that are NEVER going to be fulfilled? To have a desire that death must not
visit you, your family and your social circle is meaningless, absurd and sure
to cause you a lot of suffering. Instead of fearing it, accept, embrace and
welcome death. This is the only certainty that Life can offer you. The only
guarantee. That you will die. So, what this knowledge calls for is celebration.
Not grief. Each time you encounter death around you__to someone you knew, or
knew of, or just heard
about it in
the news__remember that it is Life’s way of nudging you awake, to
remind you how precious, how fragile and how impermanent your
own Life is. It is a wake up call to live fully and intelligently. We will do
well to know that, as departures keep happening in our lifetime, we are all in
the same queue, and until our time comes, we must live, share, love and serve.
Awakening indeed to
ReplyDeletethe process of reality.
subbuthatha.
www.subbuthatha.blogspot.com