Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Last Words
I must confess that, since stories by survivors of near-death experiences surfaced in the media years ago, I have been fascinated by them. Those lights, that tunnel, that...joy--what do they mean? Are they the final flashes of dying neurons, or are they glimpses into what Shakespeare called "the undiscovered country from whose bourn no traveler returns"?
The dying are necessarily brief in their accounts of what is happening to them. My father was comparatively descriptive when he whispered ecstatically his last words to my mother: "I feel God so close to me." My maternal grandmother, who had certainly never heard of near-death experiences, at the very end smiled, exclaimed, "Oh, such light!" and died.
In the New York Times' recently published eulogy for her brother, Steve Jobs, (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/opinion/mona-simpsons-eulogy-for-steve-jobs.html?_r=1&pagewanted=1 ) Mona Simpson says that his final words were "Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow."
I find solace in these stories. I am consoled when I read that people who have come very close to dying often say that they have lost their fear of death, and live out their lives in serenity and peace. Is it foolish to find comfort in something that seems to answer our deepest hope, but hasn't been proven by replicable double-blind experiments?
I don't own an Apple, an iPod, an iPhone, or an iPad, and I've never watched Toy Story. But I'm grateful to Steve Jobs for leaving life's final gate ajar for just a second, before closing it forever.
Labels:
death and dying
,
last words
,
Mona Simpson
,
Steve Jobs
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