Saturday, June 19, 2010

The Abyss

If you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.
- Frederich Nietzsche

Gerard Vanderleun just celebrated his seventh (!) blogiversary at American Digest, so go leave him some commenty love. But while you're there, he writes about some people who buried their son. It will make you think:
The dark secret fear lurking inside you when you are a parent is that your children will die before you do. That fear came true for this family. All parents can imagine their grief, but all choose not to do so. But they did not choose, as so many do, to be utterly undone by grief. Instead they chose to balance grief with joy, "For Joy and sorrow are inseparable," and place upon this grave a bronze symbol of all that is best in this life and in this world.
All parents can imagine their grief, but all choose not to do so. They choose to not gaze into that Abyss.

Except some do. They do, because they have no choice.
Is it any consolation to remember her as she was? That bright, intrepid spirit, that keen, fine intellect, that lofty scorn for all that was mean, that social charm which made your house such a one as Washington never knew before and made hundreds of people love her as much as they admired her.
- John Hay, letter to Henry Adams on the suicide of Adams' wife Clover
Henry Adams was one of America's nineteenth century men of letters. Grandson and Great-Grandson of presidents, his house in Washington D.C. was high on the society list. Desperately in love with his wife, he built a new house for her, and shortly before its completion, she took cyanide. Adams gazed into the Abyss.

Two things stand out to me about his reaction: he burned all the letters she sent to him; he also had this sculpture created.


It's usually called "Grief", although Adams hated that name; you can see it in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington D.C. If you go, pick a day with cold rain, like Dad and I did so many years ago. Not only will the weather keep the crowds away, but it adds to the sense of melancholy, and perhaps gives a glimpse into Adams' Abyss.

All parents can imagine their grief, but all choose not to do so. Some parents don't have this choice; they live on a front line, dug in at the very precipice. They gaze into the Abyss every day. The view is terrifying, and it becomes even more disturbing when you realize that Nietzsche was right: the Abyss gazes back at you. But in that returned stare you will find a lesson.

Pandora did well to keep Hope captured in her box. Even in the Abyss, you see life holding on.
It is by going down into the abyss that we recover the treasures of life. Where you stumble, there lies your treasure.
- Joseph Campbell


UPDATE 19 June 2010 22:34: Must-read comment by ASM826 shows why he's a daily read for me.

6 comments:

  1. I implore readers to click on that link.

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  2. I would answer John Hay's letter like this:
    Of course we should remember her, her beauty, her charm, the spirit of her life. It will be required of each of us to die in our time. It is who we were, how we loved, and the relationships we fostered that makes up the life we had. It not the length of time we were given, or the way it ends that defines our life.

    Love, take the risk and love. To turn away is to choose the Abyss because you have not the courage to risk the possibility of loss. You will thrown life away without ever knowing the joy and sweetness that gives it meaning.

    Loving another person is an act of incredible daring in the face of an indifferent universe. To love, and to share that love with another in a way that brings another life into being shows us be creatures of such hope that the very idea of it is miraculous.

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  3. Father's Day is about far more than ties and barbecues.

    Fatherhood is not all riding lawnmowers, beer, and tossing a football.

    Facing that abyss must certainly be terrifying. I've had brief, fleeting experience - hearing "we suspect meningitis" as your son lies in a hospital bed comes about as close as I've ever come to pure terror.

    But that's a different kind of terror, a different abyss.

    An abyss I've had experience with in my own life, and one I wouldn't wish on anyone.

    Happy Father's Day, Borepatch.

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  4. Thank you for the link, but more for extending my thoughts so well.

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  5. "It not the length of time we were given, or the way it ends that defines our life."

    From someone who HAS outlived one of his children, that's totally true.

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  6. Rick C,

    I'm so sorry to hear this. I recall a PostSecret postcard that I once posted here, which read Sometimes I wish your child would die, too. Then you'd know how I feel.

    There are sometimes that it's impossible to have a discussion with someone on a topic, because there's no mutual frame of reference for understanding.

    Sometimes that seems to add to the sense of isolation.

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