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Yesterday my brother called me to tell me that my cousin's daughter died. She was an attractive young lady (27?) who had chosen to be a ski instructor at Mammoth and other resorts. No details on the cause of death yet, but it sounds like it might be cerebral hemorrhage after a fall. She complained of headache and nausea over the weekend. (Thinking of her, I'm reminded of Maes in Lucifer; yeah, that good looking).

I'm glad she spent what life she had doing what she enjoyed, but I can't imagine the shock to her family at never seeing her again.

I recently lost my cousin's wife's brother. He had a brain tumor and got an operation. He even posted in Facebook after the operation letting everyone know he was OK. A day later...

A coworker would chat in my doorway, telling me about properties he was buying and selling. I noticed one day that he was fairly pale, and later, passing by his office, he was white as a sheet. He planned to go see his doctor the next week. He didn't make it.

These sudden deaths are hard to take, but, as the years go by, the frequency ticks up gradually. We can ask what's to become of us, but we know all too well...

racocn8 9 Apr 19
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6 comments

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1

I am getting to the part of life where the adults I remember from my childhood have passed away. Death always seems so strange in its finality. What I was younger I used to dream about my uncle, my first experience with death at 17. Up until my 40s I used to dream that he would come back and his death had been a hoax to escape the law. Now I miss those dreams, despite waking to remember he had really passed and sometimes crying. I'm not sure of the psychology behind such dreams, but since I don't have them anymore I miss them. For a brief moment the death had never happened. It always seems impossible that I will never see them again, my grandmother, grandfather, aunts and uncles, etc. Death seems like the worst bad joke - you are waiting for a punchline that will never come.

2

Life is terribly short, so make the best of it.

1

Sorry for your loss. Sudden death is a hard one to take. I recall a boyhood religious friend of mine dying suddenly over a year ago. We talked on the phone almost daily and then he just was not there one day. He had a stroke and died.

Wow. That's got to be hard. Hopefully time will soften the pain...

2

Yeah, these sudden deaths coming out of nowhere are reminders to live each day as we wish, tell people who matter that we love them, and put our affairs in order. That last one is something I hope to work on soon, as I have a week off coming up.

I'm almost exactly my mom's age when she died suddenly. So this coming week is when I want to make my will, list out my end of life directives and start getting my house cleared of unwanted items, so it won't be too much of a burden on my kids, even though I think I'm going to last a good 30+ years yet.

4

Very sorry for your loss. Yes, death awaits us all. It is our fate. But twenty-seven is too young! 😞

1

I am sorry for your grief. It must be considerable at this point. I've become a Houseboy for my friend/Landlord who is dying. She's in renal failure and ten years older than me so very frail. It's a sad thing to watch happen and will shut off my freedom to travel until she goes. Sometimes Zen sucks and this is when meditation is even more helpful.

My best friend's sister and I have been friends for some time. She has eczema, anxiety, and smoked like a chimney for decades. She is 63, but looks 90-plus and in terrible health. Still, she hangs on. It's very hard to see someone so pathetic. I'm not sure I'm doing her a favor by coming around. I started sending my housekeeper to her trailer because she was living in filth. They have struck up a friendship, and I'm glad she's willing to help out. I'm sorta glad I did some of the crazy things I did because she remembers them better than I do! (i.e. taping Estes D engines to make giant stick rockets)

@racocn8 At this point she's probably not looking for favors. Just a good laugh or two and some company. Peace, dude.

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