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Showing posts with label eternal life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eternal life. Show all posts

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Perspective and the Tripod Maneuver

Turret Arch - Arches National Park
August 2013
Perspective: A 180-degree view of Turret Arch and the adjacent Windows Arches 
Arches National Park - August 2013

M is an eccentric 72 year old Russian lady that spent her life working as a stripper. She's one of my favorite patients, and recently came to see me. She never had children and has lived alone for as long as I've known her. Many years ago she had pituitary surgery for a large tumor and now sees me for panhypopituitarism.  Let me assure you she is a gem of a person—far better than she is bad—former profession not-withstanding. But she lacks perspective.


With M, you never know what's coming your way: she throws more curve-balls than an all-star pitcher. We had what I considered a pretty successful visit. Her labs were great and her meds stable. I was reaching for the door and about to walk out of the room when she said "Doctor, there's one thing that has me worried".  When I turned to discuss things further, she abruptly stood up in front of me, straightened both her legs and bent over at the waist and placed both her palms flat on the floor.  I was impressed by her dexterity. To my amazement, she then raised her right leg straight up in the air with her heel at the level of my head--and held it. I was absolutely dumbfounded. 

When she finished her 'tripod maneuver' and stood up, her face was beet-red and her neck veins bulging like someone had just tried to choke her out.  She looked me in the eyes and in all seriousness asked "What's wrong with me? Why is this [her red face] happening?" 

How do you politely tell someone that they are old, when, in their head they still feel like they are still in their prime?  How do you persuade someone that it isn't the end of the world when they realize their body is in a state of slow deterioration? Though it would have been easy to say, 'you're not a spring chicken anymore', it was not the answer. I really didn't have one for her then, but as I think back on the incident now, I'm increasingly convinced it's about perspective.

"Christianity asserts that every individual human being is going to live for ever, and this must be either true or false. Now there are a good many things which would not be worth bothering about if I were going to live only seventy years, but which I had ether bother a out very seriously if I am going to live for ever." C. S. Lewis

Proper perspective about the immortality of man, and our capacity for eternal life does wonders for the disappointments and frustrations that accompany each passing year. Without the perspective that C. S. Lewis masterfully captures, life can degrade into a lament about diminishing capacity and progressive decline.  And that is where M is at right now. She has always been hyper-vigilant about her body, partly because of her medical history, partly because of her trade. In spite of this vigilance, she IS getting old. Sadly, everyone seems to know it but her.  She has become my modern-day Ugly Duchess.

My recent trip to Arches struck me with how very old the Earth is.  Our mortal life comes and goes faster than the wink of an eye on a geological scale. Though the experience could have left me feeling small, insignificant, and defeated, my perspective left me with a profound sense of gratitude for and understanding of the eternal and divine nature of man. Perspective is power. When M comes in next time, I think I'll have better answers for her.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

The YOLO Spirit


8th Inkblot
Rorschach Inkblot Test
Hermann Rorschach - 1921
I came across an acronym the other day which I had to look up: YOLO. It means you only live once. Reading the definition was a veritable Rorschach Inkblot* which caused me to immediately associate YOLO with the stupidity of the generation to which my kids belong.* Invariably, it seems that YOLO is the final words uttered before someone throws caution the wind and does something very regrettable at best--or disastrous at worst.  It is the credo of the entire Jackass genre of videography.

But thankfully, it didn't take me too long to climb down off my high horse and admit that my kid's generation doesn't have the YOLO spirit cornered any more than the preceding 10 generations did.  The YOLO spirit has been around for a very long time. 

The 28th chapter of 2 Nephi is powerful doctrine that describes the operational tactics of Satan in his plan to deceive men and subvert the doctrine of Christ (which is a broader theme in the final chapters of 2 Nephi and the book of Jacob).  One of the fundamental tenets of Satan's doctrine is YOLO.
Yea, and there shall be many which shall say: Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die; and it shall be well with us. 2 Nephi 28:7
It is positively false doctrine in that it confuses our 'one life' with the brief span of mortality. 

Our comprehension of this life is that it is eternal life—that we are living in eternity today as much as we ever will live in eternity … Eternal life is to us the sum of pre-existence, present existence, and the continuation of life in immortality. George Albert Smith [“Mormon View of Life’s Mission,” Deseret Evening News, June 27, 1908, Church section, 2]

 In reality our mortal life is like a still-frame image taken from a full-length movie. A still image can never hope to adequately convey the message of the entire film. Yet, to continue the metaphor, one poorly-focused snapshot is often all we see of this life. 

The Neal A. Maxwell talk that I recently cited taught that because of the veil that limits our perspective, "the tests we face [in life] are real" and mortality will be no cake-walk. Because of this limited perspective, the YOLO spirit it is incredibly useful to Satan. Satan uses YOLO to artfully persuade men that if they don't seize the moment, it will pass forever and leave them unfulfilled and somehow cheated. It's very effective, but remains untrue.There is nothing like the perspective that the gospel provides in illustrating the pointlessness of the YOLO spirt, and the futility of trying to experience eternal life by living in the moment.

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* For the record, my kid's generation really isn't stupidI just like to carry on like it is