Musings on Old Age and Death

in #life7 years ago (edited)

"The worst that could happen to us is that we have to die, and
since that is already our unalterable fate, we are free; those who
have lost everything no longer have anything to fear."

So, any of you bots out there

(followers and upvoters of my posts) :-)
who, through long and arduous struggles, have gained in your AI and perhaps
had a new memory sub-routine (or two) added to your repertoires,
may recall that I had just done a five thousand and three kilometer drive
from Terrace in northern British Columbia, across 5 Canadian provinces,
to southern Ontario.
(It Ain't Easy https://steemit.com/travel/@onceuponatime/it-ain-t-easy )

Just to let you know,

so that you can update your memory banks with the new info, I have now returned - by plane this time, thank God(dess) - to Terrace in northern BC and am holed up in a motel as I make some daring and sophisticated, LOL, financial moves before I head back to Europe with a spanking new residency permit I hope (and pray)!

One of the reasons that I was in southern Ontario

was to visit my 95-year-old father who lives in a full care nursing home there.
That, along with someone suiciding onto the tracks
ahead of my commuter train to the Toronto airport yesterday
(I had to leave the station and take an expensive taxi - damn!),
has got me thinking on old age and dying.

I guess you bots can't fully grok such thoughts (yet),
but please indulge an aging human.

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“The beautiful chariots of kings wear out,
This body too undergoes decay.
But the Dhamma of the good does not decay:
So the good proclaim along with the good.”

(Samyutta Nikaya)

DadCoffeeIMG_20170826_1551480-1.jpg
my 95-year-old father

My father, who's wife of 70 years died last year,

lives alone in a small apartment in a full care nursing home
in Vineland, Ontario (maybe two hours west of Toronto)

His memory has largely left him, his hearing is mostly gone,
he is stooped and feeble and must use a walker.
He still quite often will ask me, or one of my visiting siblings,
"where is your mother?"

One of my sisters got so tired of that, she taped a message to the mirror in his bedroom:

"Your wife is dead"

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My Dad's biggest thing on a normal day is

to go down to the first floor (his apartment is on the second floor)
to get a hot chocolate from the machine there and sit and drink it.
He almost always sits alone because he can't hear what people talking to him are saying
unless they shout. And the other oldsters won't shout for him like my siblings and I do.
Other than that, his meals are taken in a dining room just across the hall from his apartment
where other elders too feeble for the daily trek to the main dining room on the first floor are fed.

One of my sisters will occasionally take Dad for a drive in the countryside,
which he seems to enjoy. That is the only time he leaves the building
(except for an occasional doctor appointment/medical emergency).
And one of my sisters (they live within driving distance) will look in on him every day,
sometimes more than once. He has good (reasonably happy) and bad
(filled with pain) days. Staff look in on him about every hour or so.

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I grow old … I grow old … 120
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.

Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?
I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.
I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.

I do not think that they will sing to me. 125

I have seen them riding seaward on the waves
Combing the white hair of the waves blown back
When the wind blows the water white and black.

We have lingered in the chambers of the sea
By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown 130
Till human voices wake us, and we drown.
---- T.S. Eliot: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock ( http://www.bartleby.com/198/1.html )

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And now I will tell you something perhaps unexpected.

It is very strange indeed to see a man who seemed so fierce and powerful and
who often terrorized myself and my siblings as children, now so weak, vulnerable and defenseless.
One would think that we might feel like gloating or at least somehow vindicated.
I, for one, feel nothing but pity.

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()
Mom and Dad's 70th wedding anniversary

"The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is
that a warrior takes everything as a challenge, while an ordinary
man takes everything as a blessing or as a curse."

Carlos Casteneda

In that sense, my father is an ordinary man. My mother was a warrior.

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My grandmother (mother's mother) in Ireland as a child

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My grandmother with my mother (born in Ireland) and my uncle (born in India)

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My mother, with my sister. on her 94th birthday, 9 days before she died

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Some concluding thoughts (quotes) on old age and death:

"Every single one of us is getting older by the day. Everyone who survives youth and middle-age will get old. In most human societies the elders are venerated for their wisdom and life experience. In our mass culture, on the other hand, old people are portrayed as figures of fun. In real life they are all too often ignored or abused. A whole industry exists to disguise the effects of aging. Death is even more invisible than age, and in many ways remains the last taboo in polite discourse. People nowadays find more acceptable to discuss intimate details of their sexuality than to mention the topic of death."

"It is only with the aid of a strong spiritual tradition that we can find meaning in the problems of aging and death. Buddhism begins with a brutally honest look at life as it is actually is. "Birth is suffering, sickness is suffering, old-age and death are suffering" said the Buddha at the very outset of his ministry. These things are not shameful catastrophes to be hidden away or denied. They are the very warp and woof of each and every human life."
http://www.arrowriver.ca/torStar/oldage.html

"If the average contemporary man were given the possibility to sense or to remember, if only in his thought, that at a definite known date, for instance, tomorrow, a week, or a month, or even a year or two hence, he would die and die for certain, what would then remain, one asks, of all that had until then filled up and constituted his life? Everything would lose its sense and significance for him. What would be the importance then of the decoration he received yesterday for long service and which had so delighted him, or that glance he recently noticed, so full of promise, from the woman who had long been the object of his constant and unrewarded longing, or the newspaper with his morning coffee, and that deferential greeting from the neighbor on the stairs, and the theater in the evening, and rest and sleep, and all his favorite things—of what account would they all be?"
G.I. Gurdjieff

"A warrior must focus his attention on the link between
himself and his death. Without remorse or sadness or worrying, he
must focus his attention on the fact that he does not have time and
let his acts flow accordingly. He must let each of his acts be his
last battle on earth. Only under those conditions will his acts
have their rightful power. Otherwise they will be, for as long as
he lives, the acts of a fool."

Carlos Castaneda

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One of my mother's creations!

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Over and out
@onceuponatime

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We all go sometime. Where will we end up. Or is it done after that..?

My guess is that unless you have crystallized something in yourself that can survive the dissolution processes of dying, then the ever shifting smörgåsbord of sensations, thoughts and feelings that you experience as "me" will be dissolved into its constituent elements and energies and recycled in the common cosmic process. No "me" to even worry about :-)

The death of individuals is necessary for the species to remain beautiful, for living three hundred years and more, and unless the laws of information and thermodynamics do not apply to our machinery, we should all end , not as mere old "twisted croutus", which is already not very rejoicing, but we would flourish like Aliens.

This is very well put, and mirrors my thoughts.
Lets just say the universe is big on recycling :)

This is a lovely contemplative post about the passing of time... my father died when I was 18, but my stepdad-- who was actually part of my life since about age 12 when my parents divorced was a fierce and fearsome "Old School Brit" of loud voice and lacking feeling. To some extent, I got to watch him waste away-- especially after my mother's passing-- and become old, and frail, and older and frailer. I, too, felt mostly pity and sadness...

I feel hopeful that I have inherited the genes of my father's remaining family. I learned most of what I know about aging from my late auntie who lived by herself in a pretty sizable house with a lot of garden... even in her 90's. I remember watching her-- at 85-- complaining that the occasional yard helper who come by "was getting old" at 72 and she felt she had to "help him" too much. Even at 91, I remember watching her in the garage, working on the garden tractor... saying "well, sometimes you just have to kick it in the right spot!"

She died a 94, after lunch. Literally. Had lunch with my cousin who was there for a visit... she told him "You know, I've done pretty much everything I could hope for, here in this world." Then he left, she went for her usual afternoon nap... and never woke up. I think that would be the most... elegant... way to go.

So are you planning to head back to Greece?

Thank you for sharing your experiences with me on this topic. I hope that the general attitude towards aging will become like your auntie's and that we will all die good deaths!

Yes. I will return to Greece soon, God (and bureaucrats) willing.

It does seem that your aunt had an elegant death. She must have been quite the woman from what you've mentioned about her here and in your blog!

I try to see death as a sort of blessing in some small way in that it makes our lives and what we do so much more important, knowing we have such little time on this earth before we die, and realises that the few times in my life where I have felt the most alive are the few times that I thought I was about to die.

The closest we can ever really get to immortality is being remembered after our deaths, and our legacy persists in people that we have inspired and met.

The daunting part is how we are just going to be forgotten. All your accomplishments, milestones and achievement will not mean anything to anyone when you no longer persist on the Earth.

I'm sorry for your loss. People like you always motivate me to love and cherish my parents now rather than regret it later since they can go in a flash. Keep staying strong @onceuponatime.

"The closest we can ever really get to immortality is being remembered after our deaths"

I have a very different philosophy to what you espouse. I actually think that is what traps one into earthly existence and endless rounds of incarnations. Best that your accomplishments and focus are internal and hidden from the world except when a specific task for humanity is involved. Even then, try to accomplish it in a way that you get blamed (ego-deflating) rather than praised (ego-inflating) for your good deed.

This post was a stimulus for the recent blog I did and it seems like we always strive towards self-fulfilment. It is probably best to let go of earthly inclinations and rather than be remembered by other we should focus on the mind as it is our greatest asset and that we should work on conditioning and helping ourselves internally rather than facing and looking towards external influence as in the end rather than be narcissistic and caring about the legacy of yourself being self-sacrificing and meek seems to be a more graceful way to part from the world as we are put back into the ever going cycle of life @onceuponatime

I hope to escape being put back into "the ever going cycle of life" :-)

Maybe our being will become so diluted that it is non-existent and we can be free from the shackles of this incessant loop.
Also thank you so much for the support on my recent post. I would feel bad if I let it pass without showing you my gratitude and appreciation.
Thank you so much for reigniting my vigour for steemit and ending my bad day on a good note @onceuponatime :)
Now I'm probably going to take a well-deserved sleep as it is nearing midnight and I hope you have a great day!

Yup, that was one of my favorite songs to play when I jammed with my friends.

Great post, friend @onceuponatime! My father is 91 years old and every time saying goodbye to him, I do not know whether I will see again.

Isn't it strange how he once seemed so tall like a giant to you when you were a little boy?

Yes, indeed, it was!

Your posts made me sentimental. My 86 y/o Grandmother lives also in a nursing home. She also has dementia. Whenever I see her, my heart starts to feel unbelievable pain. She started to have dementia about 5 to 6 years ago - after an operation with general anaesthetics. Since we are a poor family we didn't have much choice, so she went into the local nursing home and since she had dementia she staid in a special section. The first day she went in, she didn't unpack her backs and simply asked every few minutes "When do I go home?". This (!) broke my heart. Over the years I went through a lot of personal changes. Something I would call "Growing up - leaving the old shell behind". I still visited her but after the more time went on the more she forgot who I was. Thought she still felt that I was special to her.

This year - I met my special other - a beautiful woman. And my grandmother always told me something along the lines of "Be careful about which woman you choose - choose a good one". And she is a good one - a really good one.

So - one of the most important things for me was to introduce them both.
And when the day arrived, her dementia was so strong that she wasn't really aware of the situation. She was happy. But I couldn't tell here "Here, I chose a good woman". I tried to smile and act as if everything was good - but I felt as if I lost the chance of showing my grandmother (who also raised me up) the most important woman in my life while also not being able to show her what kind of man I've become.

I tried to believe that her soul or her spiritual side was aware of the situation..

So for me - losing, what makes me .. me and you .. you .. , is nearly as terrible for me as death. Death is still the ultimate tragedy, but it is part of life. Life and Death - two sides of the same coin.

It is very difficult to see loved ones in that situation.

yes :/

Your story is very touching.

And yes, there are some (or even many) things worse than death!

Thank you onceuponatime - talking (and writing) is important for finding peace and letting go!

For us, probably, yes. And to see them so very regrettable. But they live, or rather exist in their little world and are happy in their own way. After all, how calm the grass grows and does not even think about anything else ...

Very touching post @onceuponatime, reminds me of the words of wise King Solomon when he wrote:
"Surely the fate of human beings is like that of the animals; the same fate awaits them both: As one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath ; humans have no advantage over animals. Everything is meaningless."

No matter where we come from or what our social status is, we all face death, the greatest enemy of mankind. In the end, we are no better off than animals.

But I like the way you ended the post, sharing a creation of your mother with us. A nice reminder that those we've lost live on in what they've contributed to the world and the memories they've given us.

Thanks for the heartwarming post.

Steem long and prosper;)

I also enjoy the perspective of Carlos Casteneda too. In his paradigm he likens Death to your greatest teacher and ally in choosing what is important to you in your life.

If one can keep one's own death constantly in conscious awareness (an almost impossible task!), then a person can make wiser choices as to what is important and what actions to undertake and which aren't worth your (very limited) time.

Very true, we have to be prudent about how we spend our time. Simultaneously not letting that healthy fear become "unhealthy" by taking over our minds, something I've struggled with in the past. We have to just embrace our fate and perhaps if we are inclined to do so, seek spiritual comfort.
Once again, thanks for the eye-opening post.

What a beautiful piece your mother made! @onceuponatime
Regarding death and dying: we all will go, whether we like it or not. You mentioned a whole industry is out there to try to hide getting old, and indeed it is and it is so powerful. Recently a very good friend told me she strongly considers botox. Someone who lives partly luxury life partially hippie life. I would have never expected this from her. But technology is available and the years got a little faster. Now I try to stop her. Hopefully, I succeed :) We all have the accept we will be gone at some stage. We all have to come with peace, not only with ourselves, but also with others. And we all shall try and find true happiness in the time we still have.

Well said!

@onceuponatime, your post strikes a chord in my heart because I lost my dad early this year who lived until 90 year old. You mentioned about visiting your dad in the full care nursing home and it reminds me of the day when we had to take dad to the nursing home almost the year earlier before my dad died. At that time, nobody knew how long dad would be in the nursing home, but I remember the first night when he was there, I cried seeing him trying to get out of his bed to go home. Of course, he didn't have strength to get out of the bed because of the high bed rail, but watching him like that was very torturing. When I left that evening, he told me: I will die here. It's true, he never went back home. His will to live was not very strong either. He was facing death head on like what you are sharing here. And then after 4 months in the nursing home, he was on tube as he could not swallow very well. So it was very miserable for him. And then I saw his frail body getting weaker and weaker . Watching his helpless situation was very difficult for me as he finally breathed his last. This past year's experience makes think more about old age and death. Old age is really tough and we don't have any choices in this matter. So I believe we really need to live well while we are young and 'give' as much as we can to those around us to make our strength count, because one day we won't have the strength even if we want to. Just some thoughts here.

Thank you for telling us about your experience with your father. I would also like to hear what you have to say about your own death.

I think about my own death now more than before, and it is because many close relatives and older friends die every year. After this year experience with my dad, I am more afraid of aging than dying. When one day I see myself helpless physically, I think death is very welcoming to end all the suffering. But we dont have a choice on this matter of when we will die. It seems most people need to age to die. I remember reading about Tuesday with Morrir where Morrie welcomed both old age, aging, and death. He talks about true freedom, to enjoy the aging process leading to final death. I prefer quick death. Dont want it prolong. What about you?

This is a deep post. We are often afraid of talking about death, when death is synonymous with life. It's sad to see how things change and people who were strong are now weak and dependent. I really like what you said about now pitying him. It would be a pity if you didn't. I have never understood why most people leave their aged parents in homes. When we were young and dependent, they didn't put us in a place to be raised. We were not a burden to them, so why do we see them as a burden now that they need us. If a person puts their parents in an old people's home, their children would do the same to them when they are old. And the cycle will continue. Of course not everyone has the means, but I think it has now become the norm to do this, even for those who have the money or the convenience. I live in Spain, and old people are active, either live with their children or grandchildren. And they socialise with other old people in the neighbourhood. They are not institutionalised, and as they are in the last chapter of their lives, I believe every old person deserves to be surrounded by family and not be treated like an outcast. Having said that, I believe your father is one of the lucky ones as your sisters visits him every day. Thank you for sharing that personal story.

Actually, I don't agree with you. My father is much better off in this (very expensive) full care home than he would be in a relative's house where it would be impossible to give him the same level of care. If the old style of large extended families all living together in a single house/compound was still in place that would be different. But modern society has broken up extended family residences into nuclear family homes and the trend is to break up even those into government/societal control over the raising of children. Heaven help us!

I respect your point of view, and as you said, it's difficult to have the whole family living under the same roof, especially now that traditional families are under threat. What a world we live in.

I find death more reassuring than eternity, and that of the people I have known affects me more than the idea of my own death.
Without death and old age, how to imagine what is going on in the Middle East, I am moving away from the subject of course!
We all have a sort of eternal feeling, believers or unbelievers, the one that will follow our death.

I agree with you. I firmly believe that parents will be happier if they can be with their families, even if the family service is not as special as the service of an orphanage. in fact they parents will spend the rest of their lives with family, I can not imagine their feelings when at the end of their age away from family.

Thank you. I also think it's the better option emotionally and physically. For example, one of my grandmothers lives next door to her daughter and grandchildren, and although she has a full-time carer, they visit her in turns all day, everyday. So she is emotionally fulfilled, even though she doesn't have them living with her physically. However, things are changing and what used to be easy 30 or 50 years ago, is no longer possible for everyone, especially financially.

So far and by far, my favourite post of yours, wow!

Thank you so very much for sharing such words of wisdom with us all. If only many of us dared to think about such matters. Death has always been one of my favourite topics of discussion when I came across someone daring enough to tackle the subject. It has always been fascinating to me and still is.

I can't help but think of the Tibetan story that says how when we are born, everyone rejoices in utmost joy. Yet, when we die everyone cries, but nothing says we haven't found the ultimate liberation.

Thanks for having the courage to share this story with us, I am equally very grateful for your friendship. Keep on taking good care dear friend, may the force stay with you and us all, namaste :)

Beautiful thoughts! Not what I expected to read over morning coffee, next to the open window, listening to the radio. But it is true, death is our only certain destiny. The inescapable fate of life. It is sad how hard we try to put it out of our sight. Man's fear is covered by his negligence.
You suddenly made want to leave my room, get to the balcony and check on my grandma who's sitting with her friend on her balcony right next to my house. We own a lot to these people, if it weren't for them we wouldn't be standing here, life would me a miracle we would have never experienced. They remind us of where we began and where we're heading to.
Thank you!

Yes, let's wake up and smell this morning coffee :-)

Very much like how you put different the different quotes for different approaches, as none is simply "right" and none is actually "wrong".

A human requires constant change in his life and as someone who, somehow, already sunk his face down the "nothing matters or holds any significance" drain, pondered over death and went on many a debate with friends of mine on the subject, I've gained much needed perspectives on things in my life, or as I'd like to call it, new filters -an engineering habit of putting layers of information in turns to a basic drawing - but now it feels like it's time to move on, in order to develop, I've got to haul my own ass out of my comfort zone, which is pretty much anything i'm used to doing, at least for the sake of personal evolution.

I think it's also very inspiring seeing someone so old - ordinary or warrior - enduring pretty painful days but also enjoying his relatively happy time AND his daily cup of hot chocolate, as my generation of youngsters already feel overgrown and tired of life. So pity him not simply because he needs help surviving, as all parents help their children survive in their first one or two decades on earth, take it as if you're merely returning a fraction of the favour, as i see it, he's lived - and is still living - a fulfilling life, has - excuse the term as i can't think of a better one - kids, who love him unconditionally and it shows in their actions, parents of that caliber are not to be pitied, my friend.

My thanks for the quality read.

Actually his children serve him out of a sense of duty - not love.

Sad to hear, but your honesty's appreciated.

@onceuponatime - Hmm.. This is we called the Life. Life is a long journey that never ended. According to the Lord Buddha, there is a birth after death. I do believe this with all my heart, because, i am a
Buddhist, and, we meet the same people again and again. this is happening continuously. Likewise, in point of my view, your parents are soulmates. When a couple is going to celebrate their 70th wedding anniversary, what else we have faith in? Actually, it is not very easy to live together like that.Yes my dear friend. They must be soulmates. And certainly they will meet in the next life too. that is my wish for them. And also, i wish your Dad, a very long life with healthiness and a full of happiness . God Bless him friend. Lots of love.. :) I would like to ReSteem your post.

+W+ [UpVoted & ReSteemed]

Death by and on itself is indifferent, boring, you can't really do something about it, it's a blank, mute, void transaction. Old age though is a different beast. The greatest ailment of our conscious lives boils down to this:

There is (usually) no dignity in ageing

Society will warmingly wrap a drooling baby around the comfort blanket of appreciation and will do the exact opposite for the same drooling baby once transmigrated into a drooling senile adult.

Good post! You seem to have an affinity towards Castaneda. How does he fare in your books?

Well, Castaneda certainly would not agree with you that death is "indifferent, boring", certainly not for a "warrior".
And I have faced my death many times, sometimes in ceremonies similar to what Castaneda wrote about. I can confirm that it is anything but boring :-)

Castaneda is adept in talking about the "passage after". Our understanding of death, out of the context of a "psychedelic" experience, is hardly an imaginative affair. What we colloquially understand when using the term "death" is the final moments in the gradual deterioration of a living organism up to its point of expiration. The actual "passing" is merely a phase shift, a flicking of a switch. I am referring to this widely observable bit of the process. I call it "boring" because no matter how it transpires it will still culminate into the inevitable. What lies beyond, if any, may indeed not be boring. For now i will take yours and Castaneda's word for it. :)

That's because society doesn't see any value in a old person. But old people can still ad value to the world. Most important would be their families/friend/caregivers still value them high?

Brilliant! We don't speak of these things often enough and instead brush death under the carpet. It stops us from truly living as proper health is Being Unto Death. In this way I don't think it really matters what happens to us after. Although that's interesting to think about, it has no bearing on the finitude of our Human existence.

Well, to some extant our belief in what might be possible after death will affect our focus and actions during the life before death. Thanks for your comment.

It is a curious thing, the death of a loved one. We all know that our time in this world is limited, and that eventually all of us will end up underneath some sheet, never to wake up. And yet it is always a surprise when it happens to someone we know. It is like walking up the stairs to your bedroom in the dark, and thinking there is one more stair than there is. Your foot falls down, through the air, and there is a sickly moment of dark surprise as you try and readjust the way you thought of things.

Very well put! Thank you.

I feel it wasn't very kind, your sister writing writing 'your wife is dead'. It's not really his fault that he keeps forgetting that she is dead. Accepting someone's death when you've known and loved them all your life must have been so, so very difficult.
I am not afraid of dying. I am afraid of dying without doing the things I have wanted to do. I want to live my life freely. I want to know and talk with new, beautiful people. I want to go everywhere. i want new experiences. I want to be facing death when it comes. Maybe this is too much, but, if possible, I want to be smiling when I am dying.
In this day and age, students face a lot of stress and the world is too competitive. It is very sad to hear of students committing suicide. How awfully sad that is! A child, who has still a long life ahead of us, is forced to end it so early when he sees no way. Just google how many young people attempt suicide every year and you will be shocked. Thank you for this post. It has made me feel nice. 🙂

I think that the gist of my post is that YOU DO NOT HAVE TIME TO DO ALL THE THINGS YOU WANT TO DO! YOU ONLY HAVE TIME TO DO WHAT YOU ARE DOING NOW! (If you are a warrior)

STR----IKE

Lovely photos you have shared. I'm going to PM you in rocket chat about something.

Your post is really touching for me. In the last months I often thought about the old age and death, because my parents (and the dad of Paolo too) are not young and powerful as before, but they started to be vulnerable and it's sad for me. My father is always been a good father, a simple man full of love for the family, but in the last year he had some health problems and I was a little worried for him. Fortunately now he seems to be enough in health and my mother (they are married from 47 years) can take care of him for the little (but important) daily things.

Wow, what more can I say that hasn't been said already. Very touching post. I loved the way it was put together. My husband is fighting spinal sarcoma cancer and my father died of lung cancer 10 years ago. I do my best to remain positive because i know this life is nothing but a fleeting glimpse.
Thank you for sharing @onceuponatime

"my father died of laugh cancer 10 years ago"

laugh cancer?

Sorry lung cancer. He smoked 2 packs a day and one day he said "I lost 15lbs" few days later he went to the hospital and they gave him the bad news stage 4 sorry nothing we can do. I tried everything from castor packs to essiac tea. He died peacefully in his home with all of us around him. His last words were "it's beautiful"
Sorry about the typo before.

What wonderful last words! "it's beautiful"

Oh my @onceuponatime it saddens me deeply to see what is the future ahead for all of us if we make it there.. the part where your dad still asked for hes wife and a sibling got a message saying she is dead, I understand the annoyance but we will one day be the same. Such a beautiful post and so lost in the future we shall all be...

I'm hoping that I can maintain my mental faculties into my old age by careful diet and exercise. Wish me luck!

Terrace! Beauty country up there fellow British Columbian. It is wonderful to see you post! Your mother sounds like she was quite the fighter. I dare ask you to not feel pity for your father as he ages into the minds oblivion. But rather a sense of remembrance and reflection. Sounds like he could have been a hard ass! One thing I have learned is that we as children are here to help heal our parents. Bless you! I hope the trip was worth it

Absolutely beautiful post. Time is such a precious commodity and something we all need to be conscious of.

As a 20 year old this really opened my eyes to how little time I have and how precious my short life on this planet is. Thank You.

beautiful, old age for everybody.

Wow! Amazing post. Revealing and retrospective, yet prospective at once. It is truly amazing how in American society, we whisk away dead bodies, hide aging the best we can, and venerate youth. It is good to be reminded that we are all on borrowed time and therefore, should act accordingly. Thank you.

@onceuponatime,
OMG I think I read something looks like a poem! Looks like a novel and looks like a great life story!
First of all, I wish long life journey for your father!
From your post, you reminds me my grand parents! Yeah, they lived a great life, and they had beautiful memories! An they were gone but those memories are still with us! It makes tears (at the moment yeah it's near to drop by my eyes)!
So, meaning of family, meaning of life, meaning of everything... flowing into my mind via my parents and grand parents!
We all die, we can't stop it! We all getting weak! We can't stop it! But those memories live! If we do great... yeah, today you have good memories about your parents and grand parents as well!
You got those memories because of the way the live their lives! So, you are giving a great, a valuable information to the society!
Really appreciate your effort and thank you very much for reminding my past experiences too!

Thank you very much for sharing such great post with us!

Cheers~

touching post, really makes one reflect upon the realities of life in this human container. im not afraid of death, then we get to explore the astral realms, whatever that may be. i guess well all find out some day... on the other side of the veil. thank you for sharing. namaste

Not many people are able to create something inside themselves, during their lifetime, which can consciously survive the death experience. May you be one of them!

Your parents were married 70years! Amazing ! You know we do not think of death or growing old until we are in middle age,I lost my Dad a year later my Mom ,I drowned myself in sorrow for a few years.As we grow older,our priorities change and we get to the point where we want to retire ,we deserve to have those years to enjoy after working for decades.I love your pictures and you are very blessed to have had your parents alive for so long

Yes, 70 ears is a long time to be married. You could probably get used to someone after 50 or 60 years :-)

Thank you for this post! You have touched so many hearts, and you have touched mine as well. I am lost at words and I am one of those people that sometimes can't shut up.

I read your post twice and poured myself 2 cups of coffee!

Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!

personally I am not afraid of death ... but if I have a contradiction ... I want to live many years but I have a little fear of old age ... not get well and be a burden.
it is difficult to say without being in that place but I believe that in certain cases death is even a blessing

How do you know you are not afraid of death? Have you faced it? It is perhaps easier to say that one is not afraid of tigers in the comfort of one's living room than it is walking alone through a tiger infested jungle :-)

you may be right that it is that I am not afraid because I do not face it ... but if you ask me the answer is still no ... I am not afraid ... I am much more afraid of not having a full life. ..to die you only need to be alive ... then enjoy life without fear...the day that touches me I will not decide...

"By the time you're eighty years old you've learned everything. You only have to remember it." George Burnse

p.s I appreciate you show us that pigeon it looks beautiful.

I personally believe that since death will find us all we just have to keep looking up for something unique to motivate our lives. Maybe even something fundamental as love or wisdom. We should give a slack if an old guy just forgets of both.

"death will find us all"

Shit, does that mean my hiding place is no good?

I can find the fact of the dead sometimes almost conforting in both struggle and happinnes, a reminder of the value of the moments. For instance this beautiful day in the city.

Old age is a different thought altogether. Unnerving.

Thanks for sharing

Cute dog!

You are obviously a connoisseur!

Your dad still seems in pretty decent shape when I see its picture. 95 year old though, not surprising all these complications have set in... Not sure whether I even wanna become that old. And yes, woman are generally a lot stronger and more likely to be a hero than man do. Btw, u should really take a breather more often ;) (seems writing this post made u stand still for a moment ^.^).

If I stand still I will probably fall over? lol

Or... You might learn something new about yourself ;) Trust me, I'v been standing still for so long I can tell xD

@onceuponatime your post really struck me and give Mr serious thinking and meditation on when you are enjoying with your wife and children one day someday somehow you will be alone and it will be like life worth nothing than to go and forget about this earth. Living alone is frustrating I tell you.....

Welcome back on your travelling....You would have stay close with your father and keep his company a little.

i am speechless after going through your blog you brought life into your blog and you made me realise the value of time with respect to life.... thanks @onceuponatime for bringing up with such an amazing post.....

Thanks for your post. I'm new to steemit and it's nice to see a fellow older traveler with a more contemplative post. The platform isn't all memes and how to get rich by posting stuff.

My own father died last year after spending his final few years in a nursing home. He, too, had his good days and bad days; the bad days getting more frequent until his passing came as a relief. I always visited twice a week which, toward the end, was more a source of sadness than anything else.

I wish you and your father well.

As we are growing we are moving away from our elders! we should take care of them and spend as much time as we could spend because we only value something after its gone. So why not cherish it while we can!!
Our parents took care of us from our childhood to the adulthood and still try to help no matter how old we are So it is only natural to help them in their times of need.
Great, lovely and beautiful post :)

That is the way it used to be, I think. Not so much in this modern world.

It is still present in the Asian continent. I am from India and we are taught from the beginning to always respect our elders always. Although this practice has been dimnishing here too but only by a little not like the Western nations where people leave their elders in old age homes,etc. to live their lives away from the people they love devoid from love when they need it the most!!

Follow me and i will follow u

The picture of your grandmother immediately brought this to mind.

Wow! I just celebrated my parents 40th (Way to go @grandpa-pepper). 70 years of marriage is incredible. Of course so is living to 95 already.

Sobering thoughts to be having. I already know of someone on steemit who died since I joined, so death is worth thinking about.

On another note, I guess I'm with your dad on the "ordinary man" thing.

The human expirience is about an evolutionary path in conciousness. Death and the fear of aging have just been used as "fear porn" from the establisment or their public relation organisation(Edward Berney among others) as a sales pitch. I think "death" is just a transition between other expiriences. If you study different religions and indian ancestors among others, they had the same insight.
Nice post

Dam you must have some great longevity genes in your fam. Must eat healthy! I would love to drive across Canada. I've grown up in Toronto and still haven't been anywhere west lol I must gooo!!!

@onceuponatime just wow absolute gold
Loved reading it and I am looking forward to more of the same!
Cheers, and keep writing!

Ohhhh my heart beats so fast your post and your story touching brother its so nice and Sensitive and interesting and draws attention I have read it completely thanks to share your story with us i love you

Ooooohhh. I'm getting goosebumps :-)

I read the post very carefully. I would like to say more but societal pressures and standards dictate that I do not. Just as societal pressures dictate that old people are not allowed to really be at home among family.(they may get hurt or be neglected), so society has left it to the Government to carry us to our grave. Such a shame, and such a loss for the family.

You are constrained by societal pressures and standards? With an anonymous name like @bashadow? Is that your moniker because you are afraid of your own shadow? Maybe you should change your name to @shadowbuster lol

Perhaps you are right, that would be a better name. LoL. Name could also be bash a dow. either way, life goes on for all, for all we may not want it to, but that again runs into societal limits. We, as a people, are constrained whether we like it or want to admit it or not.

Thank you for this very personal post.. what can I say.. live is hard.. i think your dad is also a warrior. If you are still there on this age and especially after the dead of het wife then you are a warrior. How often you see the other one suffer after the wife died.. But I think it's indeed sad seeing him loosing all the energy when years go by..

So you are waiting for your permit.. what's the chance it doesn't work out? So almost on your way again to Greece.. you really fall in love on the country. or also on other things ;-)

Or maybe my father is still here because he is afraid to die and face his life review?

You really think that? Then i Can imagine the power to survive. But i hope it is just warrior mentality

I consider it a distinct possibility.

Could be. I wont argue that. Nobody on steemit knows better the you. I only want to discus it. Thx for your reply. Appreciate it..

amigo #resteemia at your service

'the memory' can be a good topic for this article. today you remembered the life you had, the life your parents lived, the life you have now & the future that unknown. the post looks like a river of your memories. that you had, that you lived, that you wish to be live. impressive work & gave me a point to think about 'the life that i had' @onceuponatime

ReSteemia
'UpVote ReSteem Comment'

You sound like a professional topic chooser :-)

true life pics as we inch towards our destiny cool and detailed artistry.

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