I've had just enough time to... mourn the passing of a friend
Death in the Cycle of Life in the lotus pond in Taiping Lake
Last night (this
was written before my trip and posted after) I attended the funeral of one of
my friend’s mother. We who were a closely knitted group during high school, now
meet as a group only on weddings and funerals. I was the youngest and had left the
group though some members still meet regularly for badminton and suppers twice
a week. Thus, I have not much to add to the free-flowing conversations but
listened with interests. They are good friends but I was always sort of an outsider
within, then and now. The trouble was and is with me - a loner of thoughts, a
dreamer, impractical and more than a little odd. They on the other hand were
regular guys out for a good time, uncomplicated.
Our
conversation was not a happy one that night. Not because of the passing of our
friend’s mother. Most of us in the group treated death quite casually. The aged
have lived their life. They died. It is meant to be. There is nothing particularly
sad about it. Death is accepted with resignation, more than sorrow. We may
recalled some episodes that involved the dead, felt a few tucks at the heart but
generally accepted that death is inevitable and that dragging on just create
suffering all round. In this, we are surprisingly similar in thoughts and
feelings. Thus, there is very little sadness felt in the funerals we attended
of the aged.
We were sad
that night because our conversation is not about the dead but the dying and it
concerned one of our gang. We learned that one of us did not make it that night
because he is terminally ill in hospital with pancreatic cancer, last stage. Four chemos in a month, the unbearable pain,
the despair. In the end, it did not make a difference. He is dying. Why are we
talking like he is a piece of bad news? Why are we not feeling it like a blow
that floored us? Why are we not on the floor?
Many leaves and flowers have fallen leaving the branches bare...
So many
memories. More of his idiosyncrasies than his virtues. More of his embarrassing
behaviors than the quiet conversations we had. It made me sad that I did not
express any of this to my friends. Why didn’t I? Is it because grief is a very
private matter and cuts too close to share it honestly without devaluing the
purity of the emotion? Maybe my friends are feeling the same but they are not
showing it either. I asked his brother-in-law how was his emotional state. The
answer pained me and I wonder (not for the first time) how I would feel if it
is me.
One friend
remarked that if I wanted to see him, I should visit soon. Again, the thought
what I would want if I were him circled like vultures over my head. I know I
would hope for a dignified death but if I cannot have that, I would not want
others (including my friends) seeing me in a pitiful wasted condition suffering
from pain from which they are helpless to release me from. I would not want
that. I think it will make me feel worse if my friends visit me. But then, that
is me. How would he think? What would he think of me as a friend for not even
coming to say the last farewell? What would my other friends think, all of whom
will do what most will do? Because they are my friends, what they think of me do
matters but should I do what is expected of me or do what feels right? There is
no right or wrong, that much I know. But do I follow my heart and my thoughts of
doing what is best for my friend or what is best for me? I know if I did not
see him before my trip to China, I will probably not see him again after my
return.
On my first
day in China, I received a text message informing me of his passing...