A Rendezvous
with Death
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I woke in
the night reciting lines from WWI poet Alan Seeger’s, “I Have a Rendezvous with
Death”. Where did that come from? “At some disputed barricade, When spring
comes back with rustling shade, And apple blossoms fill the air. . .” I haven’t
heard that poem since high school. How could I have remembered?
Ironically,
I’ve never felt more intensively alive than today. Getting a new hip last
winter literally gave me a new life. I’ve always liked the rain but this
morning when I walked outdoors, it seemed like the world had been freshly
created. Like the First Morning. Tears wet my face.
How much of
my depth of feeling is due to being surrounded by death? When I sit at the
computer in the morning, first thing I ask is, “What is the death toll today?”
I have a
burgeoning acquaintance with Rumi, the Persian poet from 800 years ago which
makes us almost contemporaries. Today he told me that every story is us, from
the beginning to no-matter-how-it-comes-out. What I hear him say is that the
man who died in the hospital last night and the newborn baby in her crib; their
stories are also mine. We’ve lost the way to remember.
Rumi said,
in the same poem, those who sit at the table and eat are those who taste the
meal. When Alan Seeger wrote about Spring bringing meadow flowers and apple
blossoms, he was so intensely alive, sitting at that scarred oak table, bib
tucked into his shirt, knife and fork poised, savoring every morsel on his
plate. He knew he would not fail the rendezvous.
We are such
a funny people. We have a thousand euphemisms for death. Kicked the bucket.
Bought the farm. Gave up the ghost. We are so afraid of dying that we sidetrack
around the words “death, dying, dead”. In avoiding death, we forget to live.
We say, we
will begin living when . . . we save enough money, lose enough weight, get a
little stronger, more beautiful, more successful; if we wait until fall when
the crops are in, when the cattle are sold, when the bills are paid; once the
kids are through school, after the rains, when the snow melts, when we retire, then
we will do those things we’ve put off for years, those things in our hearts we
yearn to do.
A long-time
friend named Bob says, “Always choose life.” Then he walks off and leaves me to
interpret what that means.
Life is not
for waiting.
Like it or
not, in the midst of pandemic death, life is tough. Yet, perhaps more than
ever, we have opportunities to redefine, to realign our lives, to choose life.
I cannot say what this might look like for you.
Usually,
when I find myself at a crossroads, the choice, making a change is simple
though I’ve moved across stateliness when that is indicated.
Choosing
life might be as simple as walking across the street and offering to help with
childcare for that young mother who is struggling to work, to put food on her
table.
Or one might
set up a safe place for a few neighborhood children to gather for on-line
schooling.
Did you hear
about the neighbor who noticed a yard down the street gone out of control,
found the owner had a broken hip, and organized a garden party for Saturday?
Twenty people showed up, tools in hand, to work and soon had the entire yard renewed.
Another
person drove by, saw the work being done, returned with cases of bottled water
and boxes of cookies.
I know
people who do shopping for those who cannot get out. If you are one those stuck
at home, pick up the phone and call that old friend with whom you’ve lost
touch.
See, choose
life. It doesn’t have to be hard. Most changes that last are small. And quiet. Unremarked.
Our stories
merge, break apart, come back together. We sit across from one another at the
same scarred, scrubbed table.
Choose life.
After all, in the words of my favorite philosopher, poet and songwriter, Hank
Williams Sr., “No matter how I struggle and strive, I’ll never get out of this
world alive.”
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
August 20,
2020
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