All change, please. |
A palliative nurse gets to
witness a lot of earthly departures. Someone
sent me a link which made me pause for a moment’s reflection. Its author was a nurse writing about people’s final, often sadly regretful wish-lists as they faced the greatest adventure of all,
death, the biggest change of all.
I am currently facing the
possibility of change, a paradigm shift, a genuinely small wrinkle or shrug of
eternity, insignificant to all but me and those whom I know and love. Life is
full of small comings and goings. How we deal with them is determined by how we
deal with ourselves when change, inevitable as it is, knocks on our door. Am I
going to cower behind the sofa, expecting Freddy Krueger to be on the other
side? Or, do I invite the stranger in.
I’ve been wondering why I still
need so badly to feel validated, measured by the quality and, above all, the
quantity of effort I expend. One ‘deathbed wish’ the nurse heard so tragically
often was
“I wish I hadn’t felt the need
to work so hard”.
I
sometimes look back and recall that for so many who have gone before, life was ‘nasty,
brutish and short’. Which particular roll of the dice caused me, this one soul
among so many, to have arrived in the world at this time, where comfort, food
and shelter are so freely available? And,
why do I feel so driven to validate myself by working so abominably hard? For
years, the whispering demon of ambition squeaked and gibbered as it sat on my
shoulder, enslaving me. As I grew older, I came to see that a prerequisite of naked
ambition is an ego so inflated that one can barely see over the top of it.
Slowly, inexorably and hitherto incompletely, the whispers have faded and lessened and
the promised glitter fades like shabby tinsel. The world will not cease to turn
because people don’t understand Kepler’s Laws. The Universe will not cease to
expand because I failed to explain the concept of space-time accurately. As I
know myself better, the mists roll away and I know as I am known, which is ultimately
a simple matter of perspective.
Also heard often was “I wish
that I had let myself be happier”
Happiness is, ultimately, a
choice. I think. Sticking fast to old habits and patterns, the ‘comfort of familiarity’
– can overflow into the emotional life thus I convince myself that I’m happy
because I’m afraid of change when in reality I’m only barely contented. H’m.
Just follow your heart, we only live once...so far...
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