Comparative truth is
a casual rationalizing account
for our worth in almost all matters.
But it takes insightful living
to appreciate dying and death.
Our mechanisms of experience
for this process seem to fail us
at the inevitable approach of death.
These very mechanisms
compel us towards conclusions
as presumption,
towards judgments that exile,
towards observations that are
less empathetic and empathic,
towards intimacies that leave us
sickened by the circumstance
and concessionary by nature,
towards shared lessons
that are less likely embraced,
towards distances rendered
by uninspired responses.
Expectation is a hostile environment
for conscious dying to occur.
False attachment is at the fabric
of an apparently meaningful death.
Death then appears to be superficial
without the hard evidence of living.
We hold others
by account in distinction as separate
and yet paradoxically connected.
We impress each other and remiss
by remembrances of past actions.
These mechanisms of experience,
applied to dying,
have never come under
any conscious scrutiny.
There is little observance for clarity
or deliverance of current presence
or procession of being,
no spirit at the very core
inevitability revealed or on task,
and yet, always justified
by the inference to their personality.
Where is it in another
that we so subtly search for,
so effortlessly and so diligently,
that it can be found
in this situation, either way?
Where is it that the connections
that run so deep
and seems so unjustified
by these current circumstances,
are and yet remain forthcoming?
The fear of dying
must be the punch line
to a very dumb joke
about human beings themselves.
What we inherited from objectification
fails us in the end,
as the false end.
We are subjectively engaged
with tools of experience
that do not permit us
the conveyance of being
or the collective of heart
that we somehow deny.
The fear of dying
is an un-skilled incantation.
It is an avoidance ritual,
forcing us to be more impromptu
as death approaches.
There is inadequate preparation
that produces slights
against the sacredness of living
but yet left-handed compliments
to the existence of essence
are there,
all along the way.
And in the end,
fear is not a giving way.
With fear set aside,
there is no more,
“I’m only the messenger’,
no more the antidote for being present,
no more the charade
of the excuse or the alibi,
no more the anecdotals
to fill the silence,
no more the reliance
on landmarks of control,
no more the overly concern
about the trivials of the day
no more reasons for
or positions against topics
of a lesser concern,
no more . . . other thens,
but then . . .
there is the letting go.
And for us,
the fear of dying
sees itself alive
by us who are left behind
to be satisfied
by that last breath
and then . . . gone.
As if only our every breath
was that rich and complete.
All along . . .
but unnoticed,
without the fears,
that may truly be so . . .
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