The Long Road Home... (ePub)
A Philosophical Journey.
(Sprache: Englisch)
By this point in our lives (my target readers) weve all heard the old adage You cant go home. But what does it mean?
As life winds down and the drone of existence begins to wane, I'm feeling an intangible desire or need to reach back into my past and...
As life winds down and the drone of existence begins to wane, I'm feeling an intangible desire or need to reach back into my past and...
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By this point in our lives (my target readers) weve all heard the old adage You cant go home. But what does it mean?
As life winds down and the drone of existence begins to wane, I'm feeling an intangible desire or need to reach back into my past and reconnect with a by-gone time and people...living and/or dead. It feels like an elusive melody that seems distantly familiar, yet strange and unidentifiable.
If all the above sounds like a premonition of the inevitable, I agree and accept that my time is ticking away. But its not about dyingits about going home! Im not afraid of dying, but I do struggle with the reality that I will no longer physically exist.
I have to wonder if the term going home isnt a misnomer and maybejust maybe, were trying to return to Neverland (Fridays With Landon). When we were very young we searched for that elusive, utopian communityand studies have shown that in our declining years, we slowly revert to our childhood.
Another line-of-thought is that its all just a mirage. We know and accept that a man can be dying of thirst, in the middle of the driest desert, and his mind will anesthetize him by creating the illusion of an oasis. If we can acknowledge that phenomenon (the minds coping mechanism) then it shouldnt be much of a stretch to reason that the elderly possess those same innate coping capabilitiesto ease their journey home. Of course their mirage would be about going homenot to a place, but to another time.
What is the driver for this (apparently) universal pilgrimage? I have to wonder, even compare it to an addicts motivation (The Path to Addiction)one more trip down that path of pleasant memories even as the host is being sacrificed.
As life winds down and the drone of existence begins to wane, I'm feeling an intangible desire or need to reach back into my past and reconnect with a by-gone time and people...living and/or dead. It feels like an elusive melody that seems distantly familiar, yet strange and unidentifiable.
If all the above sounds like a premonition of the inevitable, I agree and accept that my time is ticking away. But its not about dyingits about going home! Im not afraid of dying, but I do struggle with the reality that I will no longer physically exist.
I have to wonder if the term going home isnt a misnomer and maybejust maybe, were trying to return to Neverland (Fridays With Landon). When we were very young we searched for that elusive, utopian communityand studies have shown that in our declining years, we slowly revert to our childhood.
Another line-of-thought is that its all just a mirage. We know and accept that a man can be dying of thirst, in the middle of the driest desert, and his mind will anesthetize him by creating the illusion of an oasis. If we can acknowledge that phenomenon (the minds coping mechanism) then it shouldnt be much of a stretch to reason that the elderly possess those same innate coping capabilitiesto ease their journey home. Of course their mirage would be about going homenot to a place, but to another time.
What is the driver for this (apparently) universal pilgrimage? I have to wonder, even compare it to an addicts motivation (The Path to Addiction)one more trip down that path of pleasant memories even as the host is being sacrificed.
Autoren-Porträt von Richard McKenzie Neal
Richard was born in Hope, Arkansas (Bill Clintons boyhood home), in 1941 and his father was gone prior to Richard turning two years old. He never knew the man, but attended his funeral as a sixteen-year-old.Before boarding a Greyhound bus for California, at seventeen, Richard knew two stepfathers and a number of others who were just passing through. During those teen years, before succumbing to the beckoning allure of the outside world, Richard worked at an assortment of low-paying jobs. Summers were spent in the fieldspicking cotton and/or watermelons and baling hay.
After dropping out of school, eloping and landing in California, he soon realized how far out of his element he had ventured. And without the guidance of his Constant Companion, Richard would have spent a lifetime floundering in a sea of ignorance and ineptnessand his books would not exist.
Richards first book (Fridays With Landon) was driven by his sons life-altering heroin addiction. He had hoped not to author a sequel, but left the book open-ended due to historical concerns, which did in factresurface. For 25 years the family has endured the emotional highs and lows associated with the chaotic, frustrating and more often than notheartbreaking task of rescuing one of their own, from the always ebbing and flowing tide of addiction.
The unintended sequel (The Path to Addiction) was triggered by a mind-numbing relapse after 30 months of sobriety. The second book was then written to bring closureone-way or the other. The author advanced several possible scenarios for the ending of that book, but only one of those possibilities was favorable
His third book (The Long Road Home) is a philosophical journey that well all experience as our time here begins to dwindle.
All three books were written after retiring from the oil industry.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Richard McKenzie Neal
- 2009, 216 Seiten, Englisch
- Verlag: AUTHORHOUSE
- ISBN-10: 1449031862
- ISBN-13: 9781449031862
- Erscheinungsdatum: 18.11.2009
Abhängig von Bildschirmgröße und eingestellter Schriftgröße kann die Seitenzahl auf Ihrem Lesegerät variieren.
eBook Informationen
- Dateiformat: ePub
- Größe: 1.87 MB
- Mit Kopierschutz
Sprache:
Englisch
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