Quote Post: Emily Wilson

You will die. Everyone you love will also die. You will lose them forever. You will be sad and angry. You will weep. You will bargain. You will make demands. You will beg. You will pray. It will make no difference. Nothing you can do will bring them back. You know this. Your knowing changes nothing.
 
— Emily Wilson (from the
introduction to her translation of The Iliad by Homer)

Great Watching: Being 97

This touching short documentary looks at themes of death & meaning through the eyes of a 97-year-old man. A great watch.

“As I sit out now on my deck of the house, I look at the trees blowing a little in the breeze.

And I’ve seen them innumerable times but somehow, seeing the trees this time is a transcendent experience.

I see how marvellous it is, and I think to myself: I’ve had these here all along but have I really appreciated them?

And the fact is I have not, until now.”

Watch the short documentary on vimeo.com >>

Quote Post: Wilhem Stekel

Every fear is fear of death.
 
— Wilhem Stekel

Quote Post: @lazenby

'[T]he thicket of mind and flesh, the one on fire with the awareness of death, of your grave-bound life. [A]nd above all, the awareness of the crumbling, meaningless insubstantiality of life lived only by your own lights. [T]hat burden is what … relationship[s] [can help relieve]'

― @lazenby on Tumblr

Source: https://www.tumblr.com/lazenby/693408280158093312/how-do-i-stop-being-so-horny-for-him-when-weve

Great Reads: How to Die Well, According to a Palliative Care Doctor

By Mark Starmach. ‘Preparing for death by making peace with it’:

First, you withdraw.

Life shrinks down to the size of your home, then to your bedroom, then to your bed—sometimes over months, but more often over weeks.

Old joys stop having the same pull.

You eat less, drink less. Have less interest in speaking.

As your body’s systems start shutting down, you have less and less energy.

You sleep more and more throughout the day.

You start to slip in and out of consciousness and unconsciousness for longer periods of time.

Staying alive starts to feel like staying awake when you are very immensely tired.

At some point, you can’t hold on any longer.

And then you die.

A calm fall into a cosmic sleep.

But that’s not even the half of it.

“There are four ways people tend to die,” the older woman opposite me says as she reaches for a napkin and a ballpoint pen.

Read the full article on medium.com >>

Quote Post: Vladimir Nabokov

'The cradle rocks above an abyss, and common sense tells us that our existence is but a brief crack of light between two eternities of darkness.'

― Vladimir Nabokov

Quote Post: Dame Deborah James

Dame Deborah James talking about when she moved into end-of-life hospice care at home:
 
"I am not brave - I am not dignified going towards my death - I am simply a scared girl who is doing something she has no choice in but I know I am grateful for the life that I have had."
 
— Dame Deborah James 1982-2022


Source: https://news.sky.com/story/deborah-james-dies-podcaster-and-cancer-campaigner-passes-away-aged-40-12610225

Quote Post: Philip Roth

In every calm and reasonable person there is hidden a second person scared witless about death.

― The Dying Animal by Philip Roth

Quote Post: Arthur Schopenhauer

After your death you will be what you were before your birth.

― Arthur Schopenhauer