What to do With the Rest of My Life…

Let us suppose, for the purpose of conversation,
That I will live no longer than did my father,
A few days past his eighty-seventh birthday.

I am now less than half-way past seventy-eight.

No, no, I feel perfectly well. I am quite fit and healthy.
It’s just that I am a serious fellow, always have been,
And it seems time to set a general course for my remaining years.

There is a growing dissatisfaction with the way things are going.
I am too much aware of all the ills and distresses of the world.
These have always been with us, but now we have countless sources,
Filling unlimited, unavoidable spaces and pages
With all the terrors and injustices in the world,
And perorations on how things should otherwise be,
And what you and I should do about them.

Among his many admirable and a few frightening ways,
My father was someone who drank in all the injustices of the world,
Spewing vitriol around his home about the evil perpetrators.
But he tried to do something to ease his Weltschmerz,
A word his family often heard.

He did some creditable, palpable things in pursuit of Justice,
Something the gods of the Ancient Greeks reckoned was of paramount importance.
And Dad was, in essence, an Ancient Greek.
It was his mother’s desire and plan for him.

Conrad Pavellas Cleaning up the front yard Nepo Drive, San Jose Around 1995

Conrad Pavellas
Cleaning up the front yard
Nepo Drive, San Jose
Around 1995

But, in his final years, perhaps the final seven when he was my current age, he turned to his garden, and to music, which was always with him for as long as his failing hearing would allow.

Ludvig van Beethoven was his lifelong hero.

I, too, now find the garden a place where a great Nothing happens. But, I am more in tune with Johannes Brahms.

I am, in many ways, my father’s heir,
As Brahms was Beethoven’s heir.
But Johannes didn’t try to change the world;
He described it, poignantly.

Brahms was serious, and he was melancholy.
This is how I perceive my favorites in his music.
It is not a hopeless melancholy, for there is much joy
And power throughout his works.

Beethoven fought the Fates;
Brahms accepted them.

I spent much of my working life trying to make things right,
Sometimes succeeding.
But as time progressed, these efforts became exercises
In personal survival.

I have survived into the years designated for Senior Citizens.
Some years before this attainment
I began writing about the world that I saw,
In poems and essays, and writings such as this.

I began reading all the books my father wished I had read, and more.
I began collecting and listening to all the music my father and I listened to,
And more.

I joined a book circle.
I started web logs in which I discussed fiction and non-fiction books.
I was accepted into a writing group.
I started to write memoirs, and stories, and novels, as well as poems and essays,
Many of which I published in my web logs.
I self-published small volumes of short writings, mostly poems.

Now I am here.

One paragraph in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
Has stayed with me since 1975, an edited version of which is:

If we are going to make the world a better place to live in, the way to do it is not with talk about relationships of a political nature, full of subjects and objects and their relationship to one another; or with programs full of things for other people to do.  Programs of a political nature can be effective only if the underlying structure of social values is right.  The social values are right only if individual values are right.  The place to improve the world is first within one’s own heart and head and hands, and then work outward from there.  Other people can talk about how to expand the destiny of mankind.  I just want to talk about how to fix a motorcycle.  This has more lasting value.

Here is what I will do:

  • I will avoid “The News.”
  • I will slowly read and take notes from the books I have accumulated, but have read too quickly.
  • I will schedule at least two consecutive days per week to be with no one but myself during daytime hours.
  • I will let poetry and other short creative writings happen.
  • I will attend musical concerts with friends, and sometimes write about them for my music web log.
  • I now release myself from expectations regarding my two novels which are “in the drawer.”
  • I will work in the garden with Eva, a place where everything that happens, or doesn’t happen, is good.
  • I will continue to be with family and friends, for without them, well…
  • Finally, I will continue to fulfill, as I have since reaching real adulthood, the universal imperative:
    “Clean up your own mess!”
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About Ron Pavellas

reader, writer, a sometimes poet
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