Death
Death may catch up with you at any time. Who
knows, perhaps this is the moment. Or, it may be
much closer than you have ever expected.
These lines may be the last opportunity, the
last reminder, the last warning before death comes
upon you. As you proceed with these lines, you can
never know that you will still be alive in the
next hour. Even if it proves to be so, nothing can
guarantee you another hour. Let alone an hour, not
even after a single moment, is it certain that you
will be still living. There is no guarantee that
you will ever finish reading this book. Death
will, most likely, come upon you at a time when,
only a moment before, you never thought about
dying.
You will most certainly die, as will all your
loved ones. Before you or after you, they will
certainly die. A hundred years from now, there
will not be a single soul you are familiar with in
this world.
Endless aims pertaining to life occupy man's
minds; to finish high school, to enter university,
to graduate, to have a respectable occupation, to
marry, to bring up children, to lead a peaceful
life…these are among the broadest and most
ordinary plans of man. These aside, there are
thousands of others devised to address one's
personal circumstances.
Death is one of the few things in life certain
to occur. This is a one hundred per cent
certainty.
After years of hard work, a student succeeds in
entering the university, yet dies on the way to
class. Someone who has recently been hired for a
job loses his life on his first morning commute to
his work. A traffic accident ends the lives of a
newly married couple on their wedding day. A
successful businessman prefers to fly to save
time, not knowing that that very flight will put a
horrible end to his life.
At such a stage, plans no longer avail. Leaving
behind plans doomed to remain unfinished for all
eternity, they head for a point of no return-and
yet it is a destination they never planned for.
Ironically, for years, they spent too much time
detailing plans which would never be put into
operation, yet never gave a thought to the one
certain thing that would happen.
How then should a man of wisdom and conscience
establish his priorities? Does he have to make his
plans for the one thing certain to happen or for
something unlikely to happen? The majority, it is
evident, give priority to goals which they can
never be certain of accomplishing. No matter which
phase of life they are passing through, they
resolutely plan for a better and more fulfilling
future.
This tendency would be quite rational, if man
was immortalYet the fact remains that all plans
are doomed to that absolute end, called death.
Thus it is irrational to disregard death, which is
certain to occur, and devote all one's attention
to all those things which may or may not
materialize.
Yet, owing to an incomprehensible spell
enslaving their minds, human beings fail to notice
this obvious fact.
This being the case, they can never become
acquainted with their real life which is due to
start with death. They simply do not prepare
themselves for it. Once they are resurrected, they
head nowhere but hell, a place specially designed
for them.
The intention in writing this book is to make
man ponder over an issue which he avoids thinking
about and warn him against an imminent and
ineluctable event…
Avoiding thinking about it cannot, by any
means, provide a solution.
|