I look at my shelves, full of the books I will gradually have to dispose of, and I am reminded that even objects, like relationships, have their season. I carry both gratitude and regret. At 78, one does not escape such reckoning.
If I knew the precise length of my string, I suspect I would live differently. I might rush to repair what remains frayed. Or I might grow cautious, conserving energy. Uncertainty leaves me in between. Aware of the limit, but not of its measure.
It is that uncertainty, perhaps, that keeps life from becoming either frantic or complacent.
If there is a ledger somewhere, I hope it records effort. That it shows I kept revising myself. That I tried to mend what I could. That I did not stop growing simply because the horizon drew closer.
I am not eager to open the box. And I am not certain I want a tropical eternity with no horizon. I only know that the ticking is audible now. Doctor visits. Quiet evenings. Books to disperse. Old relationships to ponder.
Age 78. Still adding to the ledger.