A Real Concern
A REAL CONCERN But not so much that famous death as advertised: loss of breath, heart putters like a mower out of fuel, drool. Sure, I’m not looking forward to it, anymore than—per chronological nature—the next guy. What keeps me up is rather exactly what it means to— as the Rabbi paints it—die into a slow awakening, and more so, how we know. Sometimes I wake up in no hurry, take a long shower, scramble a few eggs for breakfast, shuffle back into the room to brush my teeth, only to discover myself still under the covers cause this was just the outer dream. It happens in what the doctors call deep REM, when I'm all the more asleep for thinking I'm awake. You see the problem here, I trust. Take it with a grain of salt, then, and preserve me your judgment when I suggest I’m coming to the gradual realization that the dead are those who know there’s always more dying to do.