I’ve
read Matt Appling’s Life
after Art, and been going back over it, looking closely at the questions
and exercises at the end of each chapter.
One
question caught me up short. Actually, several questions clustered together
caught me up short.
What would I like my life to mean when
it is over? What do I want my life to say about me? What legacy am I building?
What will I leave behind that will tell people about my life?
I’m
not sure how I’ll ultimately answer those questions, but I know that I’ve
already started the process of answering them.
I’m
becoming more aware of time.
Specifically,
I’m becoming more aware of my time.
It’s
getting shorter.
When
you’re 20 or 30, the time in your life stretches into infinity. You rarely
think about time at all, in terms of the time allotted for your life. It
beckons with possibility.
I
will say this: my time still beckons with possibility. What time is left is
shorter than when I was 20 and 30, but it’s still filled with possibility.
I
started riding a bike when I was not quite 53. I published a novel when I was
60, and a second novel at 61. Would it be too much to say that there are at
least 10 novels left inside my imagination? And a collection of four long
stories. Two novellas. And this non-fiction book that’s well underway, and
looks like it just might make its manuscript deadline of July 1?
But
that’s only a partial answer to those questions. Perhaps the smallest part.
What
will I leave behind that will tell people about my life?
I
know most of the answer to that question.
My
two sons. Travis and Andrew.
They’re
eight years apart. Travis gave us such a run for the money that we thought he
might be an only child. But eventually Andrew came along.
They’re
both adults now, and I can see elements of myself in both of them. I hear their
words and expressions, and I’m struck with amazement at how much I hear my own
father. How did that happen? I hear them tell a story, and I hear myself
telling a story.
But
that business about screaming at the television set during sports games? That’s
their mother. I am not making this up. They’re louder than she is. But they get
that form their mother. In fact, they inherited all of their sports genes from
their mother.
I
look at my two grandsons, and I see another part of the answer. I am part of
their lives, both carefully and wildly.
Wildly,
in that with them, I am ready at any time to try anything and do anything.
Grandchildren suggest a kind of freedom for grandparents, oddly enough, freedom
to be a child again and no one thinks you’re an idiot.
And
carefully, because I will not crowd out their father. They need him in ways
they won’t fully understand until I’m long gone and he’s waving his cane at his
own grandchildren.
So
those are a good part of the answers to those questions. There’s more to tell,
but for now, they’re sufficient.
Related:
Ah, yes. To all of it. I'm right there with you and it's sobering.
ReplyDelete"...we spend our years as a tale that is told...So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom." (Ps. 90). To be play with grandkids like a kid and no one thinks you're an idiot - I love that! Kids & old folks are the closest folks to eternity we can find on this earth--we'd do well to spend much time with them 'cuz they have a lot to teach us.
ReplyDeleteThoughtful post, Glynn.
ReplyDeleteI feel the same about my only; we've gone through a lot together. I'm proud of who he is. And luckily, he got my DNA for writing, though in his case, it's writing rap lyrics and composing music.
It is the way of youth to realize not what is left behind, but what is before them.
ReplyDeleteSeeing some of these same things with my newly born grandson ... something I never would have thought I'd see. It's both exciting and sobering.
ReplyDeleteSuch a touching post, Glynn. I was at a workshop yesterday and by way of introducing ourselves to each other we had to answer the question, "What is giving meaning to your life right now?"
ReplyDeleteSo many things. But my boys were at the top.