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Thoughts On Mortality

A Seven Days In Excavation From April 2017

By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred Published 8 months ago 3 min read
A Nightcafe Creation By The Author

Introduction

I keep thinking I have exhausted all my Seven Days In posts to share with you on Vocal, and then another comes along.

There are over two and a half thousand, but some of them are barely two lines long.

Thoughts On Mortality

A departed friend of mine once said we now die because something wears out; once we get that sorted, we become immortal. That was decades ago. I've just started reading "The Age of Bowie" by Tony Morley after finishing "Tom Waits on Tom Waits". When I first opened the Tom Waits book, the writing was so tiny that I had difficulty reading it. I actually found a solution which was ....

.....to remove my glasses and hold the book a bit closer, then everything became crystal clear. When I opened the Bowie book, the print was bigger, so it is easily readable using glasses or contact lenses. The books have similar numbers of pages but the Bowie book is larger format.

That got me thinking that without contact lenses and glasses my life would be far more difficult. I wouldn't be able to drive, watch TV properly or spot things from a distance. We now take these things for granted but visual aids have only really proliferated properly since the late nineteenth century.

When I was a child, people died because they died, there was the odd time there was a reason but , mostly they jsut died, the equivalent of "natural causes". Now there is always a reason. The thing is, we are still all mortal, but now have a lot more support in prolonging and enjoying life, although unfortunately the younger generations have a shorter life expectancy that older generations mainly due to junk food and sedentary lifestyles.

Today's media promotes that you child is under threat from any number of predators, when in fact that has always been the case. I taught my children to look out for themselves because I would not always be there to protect them , and also they needed their own independence. In all the time we once lost Juliet for three hours (pre mobile phone days) . it turned out she was with friends in a house across the road. We just emphasised to let us know if she was going to do that again. Another time Kirsty phone me at midnight:

"Dad can you come and get me"

"Where are you?"

"I don't know"

It turned out she had fallen asleep on the last Metro and missed her stop. Luckily, she was at Manors station, not the best place to be, but it was within walking distance for me (no car) and two nice guys had stayed with her til I came for her.

The thing is, if you look after yourself and keep in touch with friends and family, life can be very positive. You should always do things that you want to do, and don't procrastinate. Anyway, I could go on and on, but I kept putting off writing this because I thought it would be too depressing, and I prefer positive things.

Despite all the bad things the media piles on us, we are living in great times. We have so many opportunities to enjoy life, experience things, and do things, alone and together, and if you do all those things, you will live long and prosper (to nick a line for Star Trek's Mr Spock, I think, but am willing to be corrected).

I think in this post, to have seen a little of how my mind wanders. I was going to include many more examples but I think I've have generally got some points across, and am now returning to the book that sparked this off "The Age Of Bowie" and Tony Morley keeps mentioning "Supermen" by Bowie from "The Man Who Sold The World", although I first heard it when I bought the Glastonbury soundtrack from Palace Records and Coffee Shop next to the old Public Hall in Preston (where I saw my first live gig Uriah Heep on the "Demons and Wizards" tour) and spent many an afternoon there when I should have been in lessons. Wildflower on Westgate Road has a very similar atmosphere, but these students just go to corporate brands. I wanted to "educate" one I heard walking through Newcastle yesterday who proclaimed loudly:

"Newcastle has so much choice.... Jamie's Italian, TFI Fridays, Frankie and Bennies, Costa, Starbucks ...."

What an idiot. I desisted, though.

Anyway, my mind wandered again, and I will leave you with "Supermen" by Bowie, because that is want we can all be (I am using it as a generic term).

Enjoy Good Friday Easter Bunnies.

Conclusion

Thank you for reading, I really appreciate your support.

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Comments (6)

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  • Marie381Uk 6 months ago

    I too struggle with small print and my glasses it’s horrid ♦️♦️♦️😢

  • Calvin London8 months ago

    Nicely done. Mike. I have noticed a decline in my eyesight as I am getting older, especially with reading. My mother, who is 93, is nearly blind, and it breaks my heart to hear her say she can't read anymore and can barely even watch TV. She always brushes it off with "I am 93 and I have had my life, so I can't complain."

  • I wonder as I wander if there is anything better than simply wandering as i wonder.

  • Fred Davis8 months ago

    I relate to struggling with small print. Visual aids really make a difference in our daily lives.

  • Annie Kapur8 months ago

    YOU GUYS STILL HAVE A FRANKIE AND BENNY’S ? That is my favourite restaurant and the one I loved in my hometown shut down after Covid. I had been going there since I was a teen. It was a heartbreaking feeling.

  • David Smith8 months ago

    I can relate to struggling with small print. Removing glasses to read is a neat trick. It's eye-opening how much visual aids have changed things. And teaching kids self-reliance is key.

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