Whilst living in London, arguably the best time of my life
to date, I went to watch the London marathon, and cheer on the disheveled
runners as they screeched across the finish line. And so, of course, it was with so much
sadness that I heard, like everyone else, about the events at the Boston
marathon, and I, like so many others, waited and watched the London marathon
runners today, hoping that all would be well, which it was.
Of course sheer acts of fear-inducing behaviour appalls us
all, so I won’t dwell on that, but it brought a thought to mind that I then sat
and thought about over a glass of chilled sauvignon blanc. It is this – that life can literally change
in a heartbeat. You can be cruising
along in life, and the next thing, you are not.
Life is as unpredictable as it is rich, as static as it is
fluid, as devastating as it is rewarding.
The thing we all need to come to terms with, is that none of
us knows the future, none of us know our own future, or that of our children,
friends or family members. This can be a
good thing and a bad thing. I have to
say that if someone had told me two years ago what my last two years would be
like, I think I would have crawled into a wine vat then and there and sipped
away until I woke up two years later.
Rather like Sleeping Beauty, just not quite as pretty, and of course, no
kiss of life at the end of the story by the handsome prince in the beautiful castle. That is the good part of not knowing what the
future has in store for us.
The bad part of course, is the part we probably spend more
time thinking about – senseless loss of life, and with that, the loss of future
opportunity, whatever that opportunity would have been for that now lifeless
existence.
A very dear and great friend of mine died a few years ago in
the most tragic of ways. I make a point
of visiting her grave as often as I can, and today made my way there to sit
next to her grave and contemplate the myriad of personal challenges that face
me at the moment, and have some quiet time.
Well, there is nothing like sitting in a graveyard to bring you back to
an acute appreciation of life, challenges and all.
I read, as I have read so many times before, the wording on
her grave stone – “time not spent with you is lost”. How true and how very accurate. In a world where we live, and we love, all we
want to do is spend time, quality or other, with the individual(s) we love the
most. Yet often, through circumstances
we are not placed to change, this is not possible. I think it is this feeling of lost
opportunity and lost time that leaves the sensitive types, like me, reeling,
and wishing for a different outcome.
A very good European friend of mine ends all his e-mails to
me with “Carpe diem!!!” – exactly like that.
He is wildly successful, and it is not surprising really with an
attitude of “Seize the day!!!” He
seizes each and every day, and lives the success he so richly deserves.
As always, so many questions, so few answers, but one
conclusion I feel I am able to live with is this: Life may be long, it may be short, but
whichever it is, it is unknown to us, and there is little we can do to change
that. So, note to self, stop wishing for
things to be different, for changes to have already taken place, but rather,
take whatever it is that is presented to you right now, in this moment, and
focus only on the very bright silver lining that encapsulates each and every
cloud, dark grey or not.
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