I've Been Feeling Mortal
Sep 10, 2019
In the past two years, I have spent more than my fair share of time at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. The clinic is a fine hospital with hundreds of fine, young doctors and thankfully I’m all right, it’s just that hospitals in general make me feel sadly mortal.
It’s not like I think I’m about to die. In fact, dying is hard for me to imagine. But, there is a creeping sense of fragility. It usually only comes over me when I’m about to do something stupid, like looking into a strange horse's eye and trying to read its soul before I jump on. Life has suddenly gotten less physical. I don’t lift heavy objects anymore. Walking is still a great pleasure to me but now, before I set off, I notice and consider the distance and change of elevation like never before. That contraction of the physical is probably all normal and good, and I can bear it. What bothers me most, is a new focus and feeling of helplessness with regard to purpose. It is a kind of exhaustion that makes me reconsider the future as if I have lost some power to mold it. I have always been a dreamer, but now I feel myself planning more, weighing the options, noticing the flaws in the dream.
My new-found mortality is not simply the sudden realization of fear and risk. The risks of my life have always scared the hell out of me, but I usually went ahead because I felt strong and the dream was so much more powerful than the fear. But of course, dreams are personal things and the weight of them falls on the dreamer’s shoulders. It isn’t fair to expect others to step into the harness of another’s dream. I’m lucky to have a daughter and a son-in-law in the wings to take over this buffalo ranch and the meat business. They too have a belief in good food and the restoration of the Great Plains, but one can never be sure. Maybe the sense of my mortality is not so much the realization that I will one day die, but that, when the inevitable happens, there may not be anyone to step in and tend the dream.
Anyone who cares to think, can stand on the deck of this ranch house and look over the Cheyenne River and know that the temporal relationship between the Great Plains and a man/woman is severely out to scale. Time simply acts on one differently in those two concepts. For a man to affect any sort of restoration (or new realization) about our relationship to the environment is way bigger than any single human life – if it is possible at all. A guy hates to think of his life’s work sliding backward after he’s gone. It is really only ideas that have a chance of bridging gaps between generations. If an idea can be established then the next generation gets to start at a different place than the last generation. It might be two steps forward and one step back, but it seems to be the way it works. So, the real question is not so much one of the mortality of a single man/woman as it is one of the immortality of ideas.
There are modern ways to counter-act this negative effect of time. There are organizations that carry on the dreams of men/women. There are legal creatures like, conservation easements and corporations that can extend the influence of us all. But, knowledge of these things is not something that I have picked up over the years. Of course, old dogs can learn new tricks... but there is that exhaustion to consider.
This month, I have been unplugging the telephone and reading old books. I re-read Don Quixote and it struck me hard that the hero dies only when he realizes that his dreams are not possible. It makes me think that this old dog had better be studying up on some of those new tricks.
32 comments
Although I’ve found no joy in getting “older”, I try to keep my focus on the beauty of life and not be wasteful of time. No one can escape the mortality of the circle of life unfortunately as the clock ticks for all living things. I think the most difficult thing we will all do is to say goodbye to all and everything we love so dearly. That’s where our faith steps in to help us carry on. It’s so simple, yet so difficult.
In the mean time, don’t stop moving!! I still go to rock concerts, lift weights to keep my muscle, I’ve been eating organic for 26 years, still learning to play guitar, harmonica, and the ukulele!
I do have ailments such as a chronic neck injury a chiropractor inflicted on me 7 1/2 years ago. An old knee injury that is better at predicting the weather than any meteorologist.
I’ve been here 60 years and I plan on skidding into my grave….I won’t be one of the people sitting and watching people and life pass by…..I’ll be the one they are watching.💃
Squeeze every last drop of pleasure you can get out of life!! This is no trial run…this is it! Step outside the box sometimes…as long as you’re not hurting anyone or starting any fires!! 😋
Throughout my life I’ve always asked, “Who made these rules?”
I am a retired stonemason and I understand completely what you are saying. I can no longer think of lifting stones that I used to throw around haphazardly. I also worry about what will happen to my 100 acre farm that I have lovingly cared for over the last 50 years.
The man or woman who plants trees not knowing if he will ever sit in their shade starts to understand the meaning of life. Thanks for all you have done and will do. Keep learning the new tricks!