Saturday, 14 February 2015

TO SLEEP, PERCHANCE TO DIE...



When you're young, you have absolutely no concept of never having existed.  On an intellectual level (if you ever felt disposed to consider the matter), you know there was a time when you weren't around, but you can't truly conceive what it was like because non-existence is a difficult if not impossible state to imagine.

Think of any period in mankind's history from before you were born;  the Old West, the Victorian Era, the 1920s or '30s - whatever.  Even though you never experienced them, you almost feel as if you have, thanks to history books, old photographs, artists' impressions, TV shows, movies, etc.  And because you can't remember your beginning, it seems as if you never actually had one and that you've been around forever.  At least, that's what it seems like to me.

Consequently, when I was a teenager of 14, I subconsciously laboured under the impression that I had always been.  (Though the same perception also applies to any point in my childhood from when I first became aware of my surroundings.)  It's unlikely that I was alone in that regard, and it's surely the same for 14 year-olds today.  It's only because fourteen years to someone of my age passes so quickly that I finally realized just how inconsequential such a period of time actually is.  I've got things lying around the house which have never been out of the wrappers since I bought them that are older than that.

As you inexorably inch closer to that time when the condition of non-existence threatens to once again engulf you, it's a prospect you tend to contemplate more than you did (if at all) in your younger days.  Finally, you begin to be able to nearly catch a glimmer of what extinction might be like, and the prospect isn't a pleasant one.  I recall waking up in hospital one day after a procedure which required my unconsciousness, and was alarmed to find I had no recollection of even a half-sleep-like state between being knocked out and coming to.

As I said, no half-remembered thoughts, vague dreams, or hovering on the edge of awareness to connect me to my pre-anaesthetised self - only an absolute absence of even the slightest sense of continuity between the two conditions.  It was then that I realised what oblivion must be like.  It was as if I'd been dead for however many hours I'd been out, and, although my body was still functioning, as far as my mind was concerned, there was no discernible difference between death and unconsciousness.

So, death is not merely a case of not waking up, it's also not even being aware of going to sleep or being asleep at any stage in the process.  Shakespeare was wrong; there are no dreams in the sleep of death, only a blackness and silence from which we never awaken - an eternal nothingness, an everlasting night.

That's no doubt why I often find myself wishing I was only 14 again.  The illusion of no beginning (and, by extension, no ending), while temporary, is a comforting and necessary notion, otherwise we'd probably abandon our journey before we were very far into it.  After all, what's the point of taking a road to nowhere?

Come to think of it, I wouldn't even mind being half that age.  Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to get back to work on that elixir of life I'm developing.  I just can't afford to relax if I want to be here in 2115.

******

We are but older children, dear,
Who fret to find our bedtime near.

Lewis Carroll.

6 comments:

  1. You experience that nothingness if you faint, no sight, no sound, nothing. I once fainted during a very loud gig ( No, I hadn't been given the bloody bill! ) and when I came round, the effect of LOUD reality suddenly switching back on again shocked the heck out of me!
    When I was a kid, I often used to think, out of all the billions of people, why am I ALWAYS ME!?!? Every single day, it's always me. Never anyone else.
    Still me, now!
    Figure THAT one out!

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    1. But who else would you (could you) be, JP?

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  2. Something that used to preoccupy me as a child was the idea that my whole life might be a dream, and that the real me was in fact a caveman who would someday wake up and realised he'd imagined a whole world.

    Funny the things that can niggle at a young 'un's mind...

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    1. There's an interesting story in there somewhere, DD. Perhaps you should write it? Of course, there's always the chance that we might be someone else's dream - now wouldn't that be something?

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  3. I think the same as John - why am I me and not somebody else ? Another interesting thing to ponder is when exactly does your consciousness begin ? Does it just pop into existence at some point in the womb like a light bulb being switched on ? And is an embryo aware of its' existence anyway ? Returning to oblivion doesn't bother me - I'm sure the reason for the continued existence of religion is largely because people can''t face the thought of their own oblivion and cling to the pathetic belief that they carry on in another way beyond their corporeal form.

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    1. Although, if there's such a thing as punishment for 'sin' (which the concept of justice would surely demand), the idea of an afterlife can be quite a terrifying idea and no comfort at all. Better to pass into oblivion and escape the consequences of all the bad actions in our lives. There's also the argument that, being finite, limited beings, the concept of an infinite, unlimited being could never occur to us unless such a being revealed it to us. As for 'Why me, and not someone else', I touched on this in my post 'The Road Not Taken - A Reflection' on my other blog.

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