13 July 2009

Feelings of mortality

I've just learned that one of my friends from university died on Saturday night, having been fighting against a brain tumour diagnosed about a year ago. He was 38 - six months younger than me - and a devoted husband and father of two.

Truth be told, the news has hit me much harder than expected.

As a parent, I can empathise but only imagine how his family feels right now. To lose a father and a husband at such a young age through little more than random chance just feels wrong on every level. He will never get to see his son and daughter grow up; they will never fully know how smart and caring a father he was.

From a personal perspective, it had been maybe four years since I last saw him, and after learning of his tumour last September, I hadn't done much more than exchange a few supportive emails. So I haven't really been much of a friend either. That just makes me feel worse.

I don't know why I hadn't been in touch before it was too late. Laziness, perhaps. (After all, there's always a million and one urgent little things to do, aren't there?) Maybe also a bit of denial. This is the first time something like this has happened to any of my friends or direct peers, and acknowledging this raises all sorts of uncomfortable questions about my own mortality.

When you're growing up, you feel like you will live forever. As a child, death is an abstract concept; you've barely lived, so the idea of dying doesn't carry the same weight of loss, and besides it's the sort of thing that only happens to really old people, isn't it? And even as a young adult, you're just discovering yourself as an individual and starting to embrace independent life, and death is, well, the sort of thing that only happens to really old people.

But it's only when someone of a similar age in your own social circle actually dies that it suddenly hits home. My friend was younger than me, healthier than me, and certainly no less deserving than me. He was just unlucky.

It could have been me. You never know, one day soon it could be.

That's a scary thought.

There is always a plethora of excuses for not getting on with the big things in life. A few of them are valid. The assumption that there's plenty of time because you'll be around until a ripe old age is not one of them.

It's too late for my friend. It's not too late for me. If nothing else comes of it, I guess I should remember that.

SBS, RIP.

2 comments:

  1. Tim, this is all so true for me too. He was my brother and although I feel I knew him pretty well there are corners of him that I am only just learning about.
    This whole year (less than) has thrown a whole new perspective on life. Although I shall never see Sam again I feel I now have a duty to put a legacy into practise: To make the most of every minute! Do all those things now! Make that little bit more effort to manage my time better! To enjoy life and those in it!
    I could of course go on for longer, and perhaps will at another time, but for now I just want to get this posted.... also to say - I was glad you came to the memorial service yesterday (13th Aug) and I would have loved to talk to you longer but sometimes those occasions lend themselves better to a short and therefore shallower exchange, besides I found the high ceiling and the babble of others made it very hard to hear all that you said.
    Stay in touch!

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  2. Lucy, I understand completely. It's like doing the rounds at a family wedding, only harder - a wedding is all about unbridled joy, whereas a memorial service is more a mix of happy remembrances tinged with sadness.

    I can remember having lunch at Sam and Elena's a few years back, and Sam was showing us how he had been teaching Adam - who I think was still not yet 4 at the time - the capital cities of the world. He would say 'Azerbaijan', and Adam would faithfully respond 'Baku'. I expect that, even now, Adam knows more capitals than I do!

    That one memory says everything to me about the attentive father Sam was, and the inspiring teacher he would have been. The world needs more men and women like Sam; sadly it now has one fewer.

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