09 Nov Are You Afraid To Live? The Courage to Touch the Pulse of Life
LAST WISHES
A woman in Brooklyn decided to prepare her will and make her final plans. She told her rabbi she had two final requests.
First, she wanted to be cremated, and second, she wanted her ashes scattered all over the shopping mall.
“Why the shopping mall?” asked the rabbi.
“That way I’ll be sure my daughters will visit me twice a week,” the mother responded.
TWO WAYS TO LIVE
Attack life, it’s going to kill you anyway.—Steven Coallier
There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle.—Albert Einstein
A CURIOUS EXPRESSION
An interesting verse in this week’s Torah portion, Chayei Sarah, reads:[1] “Abraham was old, he came in days, and G-d had blessed Abraham with everything.”
What is the meaning of this expression that Abraham “came in days?” Most biblical commentators[2] explain it simply that Abraham had advanced in years; that he had grown much older.
Yet, if this is accurate, the verse is redundant. Once the Torah stated “Abraham was old,” there is no need to say that he was advanced in years.[3] This would be inconsistent with the meticulousness of every verse, word and even letter of the Bible.
HOW MANY TIMES DO YOU GET OLD?
Another difficulty arises when carefully studying the Bible. Several chapters earlier, the Torah states[4] that “Abraham and Sarah were old, they came in days; the manner of women had ceased to be with Sarah.”
Now, let us recall that this verse describes Abraham and Sarah at the ages of 99 and 89, respectively, one year before their son Isaac was born. Their description as “old” people seems fair.
Our verse however—“Abraham was old, he came in days”—describes an Abraham living 41 years later, after the death of his wife Sarah at the age of 127 and right before the marriage of his son Isaac, who married at the age of 40. Why would the Torah suddenly now state that “Abraham was old” again, 41 years later?[5]
And in the earlier verse as well, the Torah uses this apparently redundant expression: “Abraham and Sarah were old, they came in days.” Once you have stated that Abraham and Sarah were old, you have already stated that they had advanced in their years.
ALLOWING LIFE TO TOUCH YOU
The Hebrew expression used for “they came in days” is “baeim bayamim.” A literal translation would read, “They came into the days.”
Perhaps, then, we ought to interpret the words “they came into the days” as simply as possible: that Abraham and Sarah entered inside their days, allowing the days and its experiences to encompass them completely and touch the texture of their very being.
Many of us are too frightened to enter into our lives and live it fully, with complete presence of mind, heart and body, with unbridled passion and zest. We do not trust life enough to let it possess us. Life holds too much pain, too many disappointments, so much shame, anger and guilt; we would rather let our days pass by as we “mark time” and retain a certain distance, so that we remain safe. We observe our days moving along, but we are too timid to become one with them, to be fully encompassed by them.
Yet Abraham and Sarah, the Bible says, personified a different model: “They came into the days;” they fully enetered into their days. They allowed themselves to be wrapped by life. All their days were explored, utilized and lived to the fullest.
Abraham and Sarah had been through quite a life together! They enjoyed tremendous blessings and victories, as well as profound pain and disappointment, including the fact that Sarah was (at that time) childless. Yet throughout all of it — the positive as well as the challenging, the joyous as well as the painful — they allowed themselves to experienced the pulse of life in its totality. They were present throughout, and did not retreat into the cocoon of safe detachment. They “entered” inside each day and stared at its existence with an unwavering gaze. [6]
Sure, it is safer to enter into your life half-way, to create a border between yourself and your experiences. No sorrow, no pain, no tears. But that may come at the cost of LIVING, of a life filled with exuberance, laughter, passion, and wholesomeness. Abraham and Sarah, in a sense, remained children. Did you ever observe children? They dislike fragmentation. They enter into something completely — with their entire sense of curiosity, trust, presence of mind, and emotional vulnerability.
It has been said that there are three types of people: Those who make things happen; those who watch things happen, and those whom you have to tell that something happened…
WHEN LIFE BECAME ROUGH
Now we will understand why, 41 years later, the Torah finds it necessary to repeat the exact same description about the first Jew: “Abraham was old, he came into the days.”
No doubt during this period of time, Abraham experienced the most profound and most turbulent moments of his entire life. After waiting for decades, he was finally blessed with a child, Isaac, who would carry on the monotheistic revolution he had begun. During this time, Abraham watched himself about to slaughter his son.
Finally, during these years, the person who was there with him through thick and thin, his life’s partner, passed on. Sarah has walked alone with Abraham for close to a century, their lives merged into perfect oneness. Her death must have been an unimaginable loss to Abraham. [7] One would think that at this point Abraham would have developed some detachment skills to protect himself against any further pain and hurting.
Indeed, we often observe how many people after years of experiencing life with all its pressures and struggles, develop a certain indifference to the losses and blessings of their existence. They have simply been through too much to subject themselves to the vulnerable tide of life.
Thus, the Bible tells us that Abraham’s courage lasted him till the very end. “Abraham was old, he came into the days.” Even as a widower, Abraham did not detach from life. He breathed it in, with all of its majesty, drama and pain. On the lines of his face and the streaks of his soul, he carried a reminder of every encounter, of every relationship, of every experience. That is what we call truly living: acquiring the courage to become one with life, to feel it, love it, and possess it.
Abraham believed that that cynicism and detachment is the easy retreat of a small mind. Hence, till his last breath, the founder of the Jewish faith awoke each morning and said, “I will live my life today to the fullest; my heart and soul will fully go along with the ride we call living.”
When you live in such a fashion, you need not scatter your ashes across a mall in order to be remembered. As Abraham Lincoln put it: “In the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years.” [8]