raison d’etre

by kye on September 6, 2009

I turned fifty a couple of months ago.

I feel younger than I have since I was a teenager, if by ‘feeling younger’ one means the feeling of one’s own vitality running high. But I don’t feel young. I’ve done too much; learned too much; lost too much. My father’s dead, my mother’s dying and her recognition of me unsure. There’s now a landfill next to the farm where I grew up. The water of the creek where I played is brackish and stinks of refuse. There’s no going back.

Maybe you know that famous story about a man who slips while walking along a cliff. Plunging towards his death he is able to grab a vine and starts to haul himself back up, when a tiger appears on the cliff above. Looking down, he sees another tiger below.

But the worst is yet to come: a rat begins to gnaw away at the vine. This rat has a nearly mythological interest in cutting through that vine. We might name him Mortality, and the tiger below, Death.

The tiger above? Perhaps it should have an angelic name, as it represents the force which prevents the man’s return to Eden.

If you put yourself in his position, you’ll find that it’s a tremendous moment–both terrible and marvellous in its enormity. Now, stay with the experience for a minute more as he spots a luscious strawberry growing right in front of him. He lets go of the vine with one hand… reaches out… plucks the strawberry… eats it…

What a strawberry!

That is vey nearly the experience of fifty. But not quite. Because in the story the man is alone, and there’s nothing to do but eat the strawberry by himself.

But we’re not alone. And it’s much much sweeter to pluck that strawberry and share it. So, I’ve started a blog.

And you’re reading it. I’m very grateful.

  • jsdixon

    interesting, the man was forced to live completely in the moment.

  • http://www.sixtyplusplace.com/ Madeleine

    “I feel younger than I have since I was a teenager, if by ‘feeling younger’ one means the feeling of one’s own vitality running high. But I don't feel young.”

    A wonderful introduction to a wonderful post. I know this feeling and the sense that there's no going back. I loved the way you touch on the complexity of feelings at mid-life: the losses of the past and some fear of the future. And yet, as you say, we are not alone and that's very comforting. Well done, Kye.

  • kye

    Yes, the feelings of midlife are very complex and rich, aren't they? It's a pleasure to share the experience with you, knowing that you also know just how it is.

  • kye

    though the moment also included an awareness of the past and the future…

  • Ellen Daly

    I love what you say about the vitality of the age you are. I turned 60 a couple of months ago. I have always felt young in my mind, and now I feel young and wise at the same time. It is surreal to have been a child of the 60’s and 70’s, and now be considered an aging baby boomer.

    The best thing that has changed in me since becoming 60 is that I had the realization that no amount of pressure or stress is worth ruining a day for. Every day I try to remember that today is all I have, and it helps to stop a moment to feel into what my next step is: to the tiger, forward off the cliff, or plucking the strawberry.

    Thanks for a very thought provoking post!

  • http://sharingsuccess.tv/ jai kai – SharingSuccess.tv

    Thanks Kye, for letting me have a taste of the strawberry. It will be several years before I reach 50 but i feel as though I have experienced a lot already. I just read conversations with god – the last book “At Home with God” – quite amazing, talks about life and death and Neil – the co-creator of the book lived homeless on the streets for a couple of years at the age of 48.

  • kye

    There was a time right after I was divorced when the tiger at the bottom was the fear of being homeless on the street. Funny how being homeless can seem more fearful than death itself.

    I'm curious how being homeless was for Neal. A while back a homeless man told me that he slept in the middle of a baseball field, looking up at the stars. The image of sleeping under the stars like that, out in the open and trusting that things will be okay, has resonances with Neal's book title.

  • acordaamor

    I feel an interesting kinship with you as I read this, although I'm 32. I've been striving for a long time to “make an impact” in the world, and I think I'm finally seeing that I need to enjoy the process of creating the impact, because otherwise when it finally comes it's going to be underwhelming. I need to eat the strawberry in other words, and do it slowly.

  • http://www.personaldevelopmentpro.net/ Karlil

    Wonderful post Kye. I've never heard of the story of a man stuck in between the two tigers. I can only imagine how it feels like facing the inevitable.

  • http://ourcryforhelp.wordpress.com/ John Duffield

    Good morning Kye from an isolated farmhouse in the midst of Canadian farm country. A vague fog rises here today with ponies across the way, and I hear slivers of daylight calling. Just so you know, I turned 60 last year and have grown younger since. My plan is to grow as young as possible before I “go”. Anyhow, I loved your little story for sure, because it parallels a similar one of my own. If I may, I'd like to share it. Here we go. Imagine falling off a cliff and hurtling to certain death on rocks below. Lucky for you though, you've gotten to a Spiritual place in your life by now I call “freedom from fear”. A place were peace of mind reigns supreme and Joy abounds. Having reached this “zenith of Being Human”, you enjoy the view from your vantage on high and the spectacular Journy down. Unafraid of what lies ahead, the moment you are in lasts forever. End of little story. Chances are most people would consider it a ridiculous fairy tale. But like the man in your story who enjoyed the strawberry, I believe it is attainable. Ciao Kye. John Duffield

  • kye

    John, I enjoyed your parallel play. Enjoying the view while hurtling to certain death–that ups the ante!

  • kye

    What an amazing thing to experience–the flavor of the process of making an impact. A slow savoring indeed…

  • kye

    John, I enjoyed your parallel play. Enjoying the view while hurtling to certain death–that ups the ante!

  • kye

    What an amazing thing to experience–the flavor of the process of making an impact. A slow savoring indeed…

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