Thursday, February 2, 2017

Death; Is It the End of Life or the Transitional Point of life?

There are some topics that have been tabooed to talk about in public. Depending on cultures, it could be religion, political inclination, prostitution, some diseases like AIDS, and asking women’s age in public to name a few. Above all, the subject of “death” makes most people feel emotionally charged and frustrated. If anyone (who is in the right mind or does not have a totally aberrant idea about life or death) happened to learn about someone’s death, they would stop for a second and feel their heart welling up with sorrow. What makes people get serious or uncomfortable about death? How should we respond to the end of one’s life? Are we supposed to prepare for the finale in a somber mood? Otherwise, could it possibly be somewhat festive or convivial?

I have personally seen deaths of my close family and friends both in my home country and here in the States as well. As most of you may already know, when the family says their final farewells at the funeral home, the pallbearers will be asked to wait outside until the family has exited. When the family leaves, the pallbearers will be ushered in to lift the casket onto a wheeled device called a “church truck” and roll the casket out of the building to the hearse. This is the very moment when everyone present are surrounded by the unbearable feelings of deep sorrow and congested with complicated emotions. How would you describe the way you feel or respond facing the death of someone in your life? I was lost for words in that bleak moment. Empty. Blank. Consumed. Feared. Depleted. Lonely. ……..and totally separated from the ones I was saying goodbye to. However, as times went by, I found myself in the process of reminiscing the good old memories that I had shared with the ones I lost. It was more of celebrating and reconnecting with their past lives rather than of painfully grieving the loss of my precious people. The beautiful moments shared at some points in my and their lives would remain unperturbed even by many a vicissitudes after they left me for good.

It would probably take forever for us to let all the miscellaneous things in our lives fill the void caused by the absence of our beloved family members or friends. With hopes that someday we will reunite with them elsewhere, I would like to view their demise not as the tragic, frustrating end of life. It could be seen as the transitional point of one’s life, which is leading them to another world that we have yet to know. It is true that death physically do us part, but cannot easily get us emotionally separated with one another, because our time with them has not been over yet.

Expressions
be tabooed to do…: be prohibited to do…/ to urge us to avoid …. resulting from social custom or belief

aberrant: deviating from accepted standard

well up with…: to rise/ spring/ gush ….

somber: dark and depressing or dismal

convivial: related to feasting or lively

funeral home: a place where a dead person is prepared to be buried or creamated, and where relatives and friends can see the body

pallbearers: a person who helps to carry a coffin at a funeral or who walks at the side of the people carrying it

hearse: a vehicle used to carry a body in a coffin to a funeral

congested with: too blocked or crowded and causing difficulties

bleak: cold and empty/ unpleasant

unperturbed: not worried about something, especially when this is slightly surprising  
e.g., It is hard to stay unperturbed when you have to make a speech in front of hundreds of thousands of people.

vicissitudes: changes that happen at different times during the life or development of someone or something, especially those that result in conditions being worse

for good: forever

demise: the death of a person

do us part: make us separated

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