This post, albeit mostly about me, has direct relevance to my practice of veterinary medicine. Please bear with me.
Last September, on the day following my birthday, I was driving to Vancouver to work along the Sea to Sky highway. After a few weeks of draught (sic! in the Pacific Northwest) it was raining for the first time. I lost control of my car, slid across the oncoming lane, and plowed through the ditch with a towering rockface to my left and inches away. I still don’t understand how I didn’t crash into the rock. By Hollywood movie standards I felt embarrassingly, disappointingly little. My life did not flash before my eyes, because that’s complete and total bullshit. Do you realize how much time it would take for your life to "flash" before your eyes? I'm guessing no less than ten minutes, by a very generous estimate of an average life. Here is what did happen. The picture of the world ahead of me, what small piece of it I needed to see, became blurred as from a very quick and very close zoom-in, with no time to sharpen the focus. Through a slight haze I saw the rockface coming at me, and I expected to hit it. There was no fear; I guess there was no time for that, and no room. My thoughts were blurred just like my vision; there was so little I needed to think about, but that too was magnified, almost as if the letters of those wordless words were bigger than usual. And this is what they read: Everything Has Changed. I was equally ready to live or to die or to get crushed and mutilated but remain alive; I deserved either of these in equal measure, and nothing depended on me any more. And when I found myself not only alive but utterly unharmed inside a dead and mutilated car that had rolled out of the ditch back onto the highway and had come to a stop at a perfect 90 degree angle to traffic, I was not surprised, because nothing was surprising, and anything was fair game. I remember the smell and spatter of coffee on everything, and I remember feeling embarrassed that people would find me in this pitiful and slovenly state. Before anyone arrived, I already felt squeamish on their behalf. I will never again sneer at a person who asks for a nail trim for their dying dog or cat. These priorities get fucked up for a good reason. We cannot fathom death any more than we can fathom the infinity of the universe. In the presence of death, the only recourse available to us is the ritual and decorum of living, nail trims and all.
Days later, when I crept in my new used car past that cursed turn and studied it, I was surprised to see a signpost only two or three metres across the ditch from the rockface; I don’t remember seeing it as I hurtled through that ditch and have no idea how I avoided crashing into it as I was trying avoid the rock. I say “trying” because I’m guessing that my body was taking measures: my hands must have been steering the wheel, my right foot must have been braking, or staying the hell away from the brake - I’ll never know which one. My body knew what to do. Maybe my eyes did see the signpost and told my hands and feet to avoid it. My left hand was holding a cup of Timmie’s coffee as I went into that turn and lost control, and the hand must have thrown the cup away from me to grab the wheel because that cup ended up on a soaked jumble of papers and a sweater at the foot of the passenger seat. I don’t remember doing any of this, and never will. It’s none of the mind’s business what the body does in such moments. Presence of mind, my ass. If my jittery and meddlesome little mind were allowed to be present, I am quite sure I would be dead.
The wisdom of the animals whose lives I strive to prolong and often carry the burden and honour of ending, is in living by their senses. They are not tormented by the knowledge that they have this disease or that, and as long as they are free from pain and able to enjoy their food and repose, they are happy. We the oh-so fortunate sons and daughters of Western Civilization have been taught by Socrates to despise this unexamined life. But might it not be time to revise that cumbersome and complicated lesson, to learn from our animal companions how to be grateful for the mere absence of pain? Because it takes so little, so wonderfully little to take pleasure in life. After my accident on the highway I have felt the duty to derive some sort of learning from it, but I have yet to figure out what it is I'm supposed to learn. I am fairly certain that an animal would not "think" twice about such an experience, because for them dodging death is business as usual. But I cannot claim the simplicity and innocence of an animal. For a short while it pleased me to think that providence (or God) had spared me so I could go on to achieve something or other. But my temperament is not well suited to religion. In these past weeks I have often felt as if I'm watching a movie about someone who lived and loved and worked and was happy, but is now dead. That someone is, of course, myself. Lately, after years of peaceful sleep, I have found it hard to sleep through the night. It feels exactly like jet lag because that is exactly what it is. I have been catapulted through time to the final moments of my life, and I have felt them without seeing them. I have been released on parole, but the sentence stands. At any moment I can be summoned to finish serving that sentence of mortality. Up until that accident I had lived the naive and blissful illusion that my life would never end. The shattering of that illusion has marked the beginning of the second half of my life. In chronological terms I do not know how long that second "half" will be, but every morning I still enjoy my coffee and I am happy to resume my place among the living. It is not my intention to wallow in maudlin sentimentality but to move past it to a new appreciation of life that no longer rests on the illusion of immortality. A few minutes before the end of 2014 my partner asked me to marry him. I was blissfully happy, and I remain so every day. Every day it is still a wonder to me that another life out there has noticed me and found me to be singificant. This is nothing to sneeze at, because evolution has not prepared us for this. In terms of evolution, one person and all their aspirations mean nothing. But if only one other person in this crazy world of ours thinks we amount to a hill of beans, that is quite something, that is reason enough to celebrate. While I cannot claim the simplicity and innocence of animals, I have experienced the miracle of lighting up the life of other humans. I am amazed that people thank me for nothing more than relating lab results for their ailing cats and suggesting a plan of action. I am amazed and slightly embarrassed by how little it really takes to make a difference in someone's life. All it takes is listening and a kind word, I kid you not. I owe it to my fiancé, to myself, and to the world around me to take my life seriously, and with time I shall find a way to do so.
thank god you are alive and god bless you - :)
ReplyDeleteSubject: Hill of Beans
ReplyDeleteYou do not appear to belong to "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" school with it's highly fictionalized account of near death experience. Neither do I. At least once in my life I too was in mortal danger and nothing flashed before my dazzled eyes except an ugly coach front bearing down on me inexorably. I also share your view that we matter to ouselves as long as we matter to others. Helping people - and animals and trees and flowers and so on and on - that's reason enough for living and being happy - with one important addition - :)
Subject: Hill of Beans
ReplyDeleteI must say I read your account of near death experience with keen interest (and spontaneous sympathy) as one dabbing in applied psychology of human behaviour in extreme circumstances. Obviously you do not appear to belong to "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" school with it's fictionalilized emotions of imminent death. Niether do I, actually. At least once in my life I had a more or less similar accident and nothing flashed before my dazzled eyes except an ugly coach front bearing down on me inexorably. I also share your view that we matter to ourselves as long as we matter to others. Helping people - and animals, and trees and so on and on - is reason more than enough for living. That makes for nine tenths of happiness. As to the remaining one tenth - well, you seem to know about it too. Good luck, Dr V.
It's interesting that you mention that story. Ambrose Bierce is one of my favourite writers, although I can only take him in small doses :-)
ReplyDeleteHow can I email you through your author page. please?
ReplyDeleteApparently you can't. You can do it through this blog: click on "Dr V" under "About me," it takes you to a page that has "Contact me" options, and you click "Email." My, I'm not good with computers :-)
ReplyDeleteNo luck, your e-mail wouldn't open. Ah well.
ReplyDeleteMy best wishes to you on Women's Day.
Thank you! And drat that it wouldn't open. Here it is: gassendus@hotmail.com
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly.
ReplyDeleteMay I offer you my congratulations on the publication of your third book of fiction.
ReplyDeleteYour literary work deserves much more attention than it gets.
Hopefully in good time it will change.
Instead of one of a million your book will be one in a million.
And Good Luck!
ReplyDeleteAh, I haven't visited my blog in two and a half months while we were away in Europe. Thank you for the kind and encouraging words. I have yet to discover the formula of publishing success, that's for sure. It will be a bit like giving/getting advice on how to win the lottery :-)
ReplyDelete