mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
91 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
|
Author: Krishna Padmasola
|
||
|
e-mail: krishna@scri.fsu.edu
|
||
|
Credit: The idea for writing this story came after reading the 1992 Scientific
|
||
|
American special issue on Mind and Brain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Case No. 234FA
|
||
|
|
||
|
``It was a diminutive winged creature, a little bird with
|
||
|
crimson headdress, its brown feathered body quivering with the
|
||
|
restless energy derived from the accelerated metabolic rate so
|
||
|
characteristic of its species. Displaying excellent navigational
|
||
|
skills, it would suddenly dive into the thicket to feast on some
|
||
|
insect which betrayed its own presence and relieve it of its burden of
|
||
|
existence, and emerge again from the world of inconstant shadows into
|
||
|
the brilliant sunlit garden. However, the feast is soon forgotten, and
|
||
|
the search for new source of food begins all over again; this time
|
||
|
perhaps it is a flower in bloom, its scent hinting at the presence of
|
||
|
nectar, advertising its need for pollination. It was fascinating to
|
||
|
watch the exquisite little bundle of life, and I could see every
|
||
|
detail of its feathered body, I could feel its heartbeat, I followed
|
||
|
the rythmic motion of its wings flapping in synchrony, its tail
|
||
|
serving to steer and balance at the same time. There was no message in
|
||
|
its existence, and as I realized the senselessness of the demand for
|
||
|
the meaning of life by ossified minds, I felt a strange kinship
|
||
|
towards my avian friend...''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Three days ago, a patient was admitted to the ward. Evidently
|
||
|
he was suffering from severe depression. He used to be a dancer in a
|
||
|
Broadway show, before he was fired six months ago for being rude and
|
||
|
giving unsolicited advice to the director. As is usually the case, the
|
||
|
onset of mania was quite sudden and apparently without any obvious
|
||
|
reason. At home he mistreated his wife, and made life difficult for
|
||
|
her with his tense and irritable demeanor. Then he left to live with
|
||
|
his father, who also suffered from similar symptoms, though not quite
|
||
|
that degree. There, however, his condition steadily deteriorated , and
|
||
|
finally he accepted hospitalization. Although he received a dose of
|
||
|
tranquilizer, he spent the night disrupting the ward, and in the
|
||
|
morning, signed out against medical advice. That was two days ago....
|
||
|
Yesterday we learnt that he had committed suicide. Interestingly, the
|
||
|
cause of death was unknown. One would have thought that he had passed
|
||
|
away in his sleep had it not been for the note found in his clenched
|
||
|
hands, in which he stated that he was committing suicide of his own
|
||
|
free will.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The description of the bird in the garden was one of the many
|
||
|
remarkable entries we found in his diary, each of them revealing an
|
||
|
intensity of perception and heightened awareness which a prejudiced
|
||
|
mind would have thought him incapable of possessing. It has been
|
||
|
observed that manic-depressives are talented or even endowed with
|
||
|
genius. Perhaps, as some suggest, the extreme swings of mood and the
|
||
|
accompanying changes of outlook may give rise to creativity. The same
|
||
|
emotional fluctuations often lead manic-depressives to exhibit
|
||
|
suicidal tendencies, and their spark of creativity is prematurely
|
||
|
extinguished , perhaps an indication of the inherent instability of
|
||
|
creativity itself. If I were allowed to speculate, I might say that
|
||
|
creativity is a local revolution against mental entropy; but that is
|
||
|
the philosopher's job, and henceforth I shall withhold myself from
|
||
|
trespassing into the realm of his investigations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How did he come by his death? That is an interesting question,
|
||
|
but his diary is mute upon that point, understandably so. Perhaps if
|
||
|
the fleeting images of his thoughts in the moments prior to his death
|
||
|
were captured by an invisible scribe , they might read like this...
|
||
|
`` I am on the shore of a mighty ocean, a silent observer, dwarfed by
|
||
|
its magnificence to an insignificant speck . The waves are rushing to
|
||
|
pounce upon the beach, then receding to muster all their strength and
|
||
|
prepare for a fresh assault with renewed determination. But deep below
|
||
|
the raging surface, there is an undercurrent, signifying confidence
|
||
|
and purpose. This, I recognize to be my mind, my conciousness
|
||
|
witnessing the various activities going on in it. I am now lying down,
|
||
|
with the suicide note in my hand, and have willed myself to death. The
|
||
|
waves are subsiding gradually , and now the surface is disturbed only
|
||
|
by tiny ripples. I feel my breath to be a tenuous thread connecting me
|
||
|
with life. Deep down, on the ocean floor, a dormant volcano is about
|
||
|
to wake up, and if it did, its tremors would create a tidal wave of
|
||
|
uncontrollable fury. This is my innermost survival instinct rebelling
|
||
|
against the sentence I have placed upon myself, but it vanished as
|
||
|
soon as I recognised its identity. Now the ocean is completely
|
||
|
stagnant, its surface mirroring the blue sky above. Suddenly, there
|
||
|
are clouds floating across the sky, their reflections skimming the
|
||
|
ocean surface. These are the images of various people, cherished,
|
||
|
forgotten or vanished memories , the faces, sights, sounds and smells
|
||
|
that I had hoarded in my unconcious. They are of no value to me
|
||
|
anymore. Of what use are dead memories to a dead man? My breath has
|
||
|
stopped and the heart has followed suit. Now there is just the calm
|
||
|
ocean, and a clear blue sky , both merging together in the horizon.
|
||
|
There is no more division between the mind and the conciousness; they
|
||
|
are one. Only I exist. ''
|
||
|
|