Thursday, February 17, 2011

Tears in Heaven

When you tell them that you have a potentially fatal illness, most religious people will say something like, "I'll pray for your health," or "God bless you," or things in that line. A few will say, "I'll pray for everything to work out as it should," which infuriates me.

Because it doesn't mean that they hope I'll get better, it means I hope you convert to [narrow-minded, premillenialist Protestant sect] before you die, and that you die soon, before you commit [victimless sin I've probably already committed]. It's not an ill wish, but it is a reflection of their repellent, destructive theology, where life in Heaven is so much better than life on Earth that actually living is an unhappy obstacle to be removed, hopefully as soon as possible.

They'll say, "I'll pray for everything to work out," and I'll chirrup, "Thank you so much for thinking of me!" while thinking Fuck you and your consolation prize Heaven. I want to grab them by the shirt front and shout at them, like Mersault to the priest in his prison cell: Don't you know how beautiful life is? Don't you understand that, at it's best, Heaven is just a chance to live again? Or that even a moment of life in wracking pain from my deformity and sickened by chemotherapy is preferable to a thousand years of that imaginary honeyed perfection? Like the masses who couldn't understand Nietzsche's Zarathustra, their other-worldly obsession prevents them from seeing that the this-worldly is infinitely more deserving of their attention.

Heaven is a reward only in the minds of the healthy, like a person persuading herself to get out of bed by remembering that the comfort will still be there this evening. When night falls, she pushes herself to stay awake just a little longer, to finish her program or novel or conversation. The dying person uses any means available to them to push Heaven away for an hour, a day. Heaven is the cheese in the mousetrap: Put your foot on the pressure plate, little mousey.

2 comments:

  1. Hey! I hope you're doing okay! :)

    To be fair, Zarathustra is pretty tedious, and Nietzsche wrote his works to attract only those who would give him a thorough reading!

    I'm sure some dying people, especially older ones, are happy to let go of life though. In your analogy, the prospect of an early morning is like the threat of hell.

    Funnily enough, any anxieties I've had about death are exactly like that awful Sunday feeling, where you dread the end of the weekend and have to face the inevitable working week (I suspect, just like a Monday morning, death isn't that bad!).

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  2. I've seen you get up for an early morning, don't tell me you don't think it compares to the threat of hell!

    I didn't mean that in the metaphor; for me, hell has always been to ludicrous a concept to be taken seriously.

    I actually meant the literal masses in the book Zarathustra, who listened to him preach about how horrible and empty their lives were and then shouted "Show us the way to that happy life!"

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