I am
sure that many of you reading this are familiar to some degree or another with
the extraordinary books and career of Oliver Sacks, and have also heard the
very sad news that he went public only a few weeks ago, that he is
dying of metastatic liver cancer, and has less than a year to live.
The
other day, I had the extraordinary experience of reading a piece written by him
in the NY Review of Books entitled “A General Feeling of Disorder”:
I
could not more strongly urge that every sentient intelligent person ought to
read Sacks’s account of one important aspect of the process of dying he is
experiencing and writing about in real time. It is not that long, and if you
have ever enjoyed reading any of his books, you can readily imagine that it
delivers the extraordinary combination of intellect, humanism, and
demystification that is his trademark. But it now adds other elements, being
the courage and generosity of spirit to devote so much of his precious, short
remaining time on earth to helping other human beings understand their own
bodies and souls, by offering his own experience as a model for how to die not
merely with dignity, but with grace and love.
Among
other things, Sacks made utterly clear to me the distinction between the
central nervous system and the autonomic nervous system in the human body, a
distinction I had barely recognized previously, and had therefore never
realized the giant hole in my understanding. He not only filled that hole of
knowledge, he made it clear why it is something every person ought to
understand, and he did it in his characteristic mesmerizingly lucid and almost
poetic prose.
More
than that introduction would be utterly superfluous, as Sacks needs no
translator of his ideas. No one has ever written better about such important and
interesting matters, in ways that penetrate so easily to a reader’s heart and
mind.
So,
if you read his piece and find it as compelling as I did, please pass the link
on through your own social media network, so that he can reach as wide an
audience as possible, in real time. We will all, one day, sooner or later, be
facing the same sort of trial he is now undergoing, and I now feel more than a
little better prepared for that eventuality, having been gently taught life and
death lessons by the greatest master of the art. No holy writ could have touched
my spirit more deeply.
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
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