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Last updated Tue Sep 16, 2008 Member since February 2008

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If you love something, set it free. If it comes back to you, it's yours. If it does not, it never meant to be.

"My love, I cannot live without you"
"My love, I cannot live without you" magnify

-While doing researching into Puskin’s poems, I bumped into this one.-

From The Sunday Times

October 14, 2007

My love, I cannot live without you

French philosopher Andre Gorz wrote his terminally ill wife a moving letter before their joint suicide last month. Here we publish it in Britain for the first time.

Gorz, 84, a friend of Jean-Paul Sartre, and Dorine, 83, committed suicide by lethal injection at their home in the village of Vosnon, east of Paris, on September 22. Two days later a friend found them lying side-by-side in their bedroom.

Gorz’s 75-page Lettre à D. Histoire d’un Amour (Letter to D. Story of a Love), published a year earlier, was a tribute to his wife. One French critic described the work, which won him a wider audience than his essays on ecology and anti-capitalism, as his “intellectual and emotional testament”.

‘I took a photo of you, from behind: you are walking with your feet in the water on the beach of La Jolla. You are 52. You are amazing. It’s one of the images of you that I like best.

I looked at that photo for a long while after we got back home, when you told me you wondered if you didn’t have some sort of cancer. You’d already wondered that before we left for the United States but hadn’t wanted to say anything to me. Why not? ‘If I have to die, I wanted to see California beforehand,’ you told me calmly.

Your endometrial cancer hadn’t been picked up in your annual checkup. Once the diagnosis was made and the date of the operation set, we went to spend a week in the house you’d designed. I carved your name in the stone with a chisel. That house was magic. All the spaces had a trapezoidal shape. The bedroom windows looked out over the treetops.

The first night, we didn’t sleep. We were both listening to each other breathing. Then a nightingale started singing and a second one, further away, started answering. We said very little to each other. I spent the day digging and looked up from time to time at the bedroom window. You were standing there, motionless, staring into the distance. I am sure you were practising taming death in order to fight it without fear. You were so beautiful and so determined in your silence that I couldn’t imagine you giving up living.

I took time off from Le Nouvel Observateur and shared your room at the clinic. The first night, through the open window, I heard all of Schubert’s Ninth Symphony. It is etched in me, every note. I remember every moment spent at the clinic. Pierre, our doctor friend from the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), who came to hear your latest news every morning, said to me: ‘You are going through moments of exceptional intensity. You’ll remember this always.’ I wanted to know what chances the oncol-ogist gave you of surviving five years. Pierre brought me the answer: ‘50-50.’

When you came out of the clinic we went back to our house. Your spirit thrilled me and reassured me. You’d escaped death and life took on a new meaning and a new value. A friend immediately understood this when you saw him at a party. He stared into your eyes for a long time and he said to you: ‘You’ve seen the other side.’ I don’t know how you responded or what else you said. But these are the words he said to me, straight afterwards: ‘Those eyes! Now I understand what she means to you.’

You had seen ‘the other side’; you’d come back from the land no one comes back from. This changed your perspective. We made the same resolution without consulting each other. An English Romantic once summed it up in a sentence: ‘There is no wealth but life.’

During the months you were convalescing, I decided to take my retirement at 60. I started counting the weeks till I could pack up. I took pleasure in cooking, in tracking down organic produce that would help you get your strength back, in ordering the specially tailored medications that a homeopath had recommended you take.

Ecology became a way of life and a daily practice without ceasing to imply the requirement of a completely different civilisation. I’d reached the age where you ask yourself what you’ve done with your life, what you would like to have done with it. I had the impression of not having lived my life, of having always observed it at a distance, of having developed only one side of myself and being poor as a person. You were, and always had been, richer than I was. You’d blossomed and grown in every dimension. You were at home in your life; whereas I’d always been in a hurry to move on to the next task, as though our life would only really begin later.

I asked myself what was the inessential that I needed to give up in order to concentrate on the essential. I told myself that, to grasp the reach of the upheavals that were looming in every domain, there had to be more space and time for reflection than the full-time exercise of my profession as a journalist allowed.

I was amazed that my leaving the journal, after 20 years of collaboration, was neither painful to myself nor to others. I remember having written that, at the end of the day, only one thing was essential to me: to be with you. I can’t imagine continuing to write, if you no longer are. You are the essential without which all the rest, no matter how important it seems to me when you are there, loses its meaning and its importance. I told you that in the dedication of my last work.

Twenty-three years have gone by since we went off to live in the country, first in ‘your’ house, which radiated a sense of meditative harmony. A harmony we enjoyed for only three years. They started building a nuclear power station nearby and that drove us away. We found another house, very old, cool in summer, warm in winter, with huge grounds. It was a place where you could be happy.

Where there was only a meadow you created a garden of hedges and shrubs. I planted 200 trees there. For a few years we still did a bit of travelling; but all the vibrating and jolting around involved in any means of transport, no matter what, triggers headaches and pain through your whole body. Arach-noiditis has forced you, little by little, to abandon most of your favourite activities. You hide your suffering. Our friends think you’re ‘in great shape’. You’ve never stopped encouraging me to write. Over the 23 years we’ve spent in our house, I’ve published six books and hundreds of articles and interviews.

We’ve had dozens of visitors from every corner of the globe and I’ve given dozens of interviews. I surely have not lived up to the resolution made 30 years ago: to live completely at home in the present, mindful above all of the richness that is our shared life. I’m now reliving the instants when I made that resolution with a sense of urgency. I don’t have any major work in the pipeline. I don’t want ‘to put off living till later’ - in Georges Bataille’s phrase – any longer.

I am as mindful of your presence now as in the early days and would like to make you feel that. You’ve given me all of your life and all of you; I’d like to be able to give you all of me in the time we have left.

You’ve just turned 82. You are still beautiful, graceful and desirable. We’ve lived together now for 58 years and I love you more than ever. Lately I’ve fallen in love with you all over again and I once more carry inside me a gnawing emptiness that can only be filled by your body snuggled up against mine.

At night I sometimes see the figure of a man, on an empty road in a deserted landscape, walking behind a hearse. I am that man. It’s you the hearse is carrying away. I don’t want to be there for your cremation; I don’t want to be given an urn with your ashes in it. I hear the voice of Kathleen Ferrier singing, ‘Die Welt ist leer, Ich will nicht leben mehr’ and I wake up. I check your breathing, my hand brushes over you.

Each of us would like not to survive the other’s death. We’ve often said to ourselves that if, by some miracle, we were to have a second life, we’d like to spend it together. ’

Extracted from Lettre à D. Histoire d’un Amour by André Gorz. Translated by Julie Rose.

HAPPY 8/3

Tags: valse
Friday March 7, 2008 - 07:15pm (IRST) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
Hanoi is Vietnam's capital.
Hanoi is Vietnam's capital. magnify

[The symbol of Hanoi]

Hanoi is a whirlwind city that dazzles visitors with architecture, trade and tecture bustle. But Hanoi’s true beauty lies in something simpler – the familiarity and humanity of its people…

Hanoi is intimate because of its people. Although most have been urban dwellers for several generations, Hanoians still keep the basic mannerisms of farmers, scholars, teachers and merchants. These mannerisms are the quintessence of Hanoi people.

I would like to note the inherent friendliness of Hanoians and, in that, discuss generations of two or three decades ago. The tracks of generations past remain in the houses where they used to live, in their children and in their grandchildren. I write to follow these tracks, to invoke the histories of some of Hanoi’s residents past.

I was told a blissful story belonged to a nameless Hanoian couple who argued all the day long and then got divorced. Their room was divided by a partition. Shortly after the wife married a new husband, she realized that the previous husband was somehow more interesting. Her first husband also found her not so bad and, by the special language of men and women in that context, they illegally and confidentially went to each other.

The spiral wooden staircase was so creaky, every time the first husband visited he had to tiptoe to avoid complaints from the neighbors. Eventually a habit formed and he began to tiptoe even when going up a granite staircase. “I was used to be shy for so many years”, he disclosed before he passed away.

And I also heard a story of another Hanoian. He was born into a rich family. After graduating from the Buoi School, he worked as an officer for a French office. Like many other young men in Hanoi at that time, he wore a suit with a high stiff collar, two-colored shoes, played the mandolin, and read poems of Xuan Dieu.

Romantic enough, he got married to a young lady. Times sharply changed and he applied to work as a government officer. Half of his life passed by, he retired and got a pension. He lived for several years more, keeping his old habits: he sported his wrinkle-free pajamas, ate 1 or 2 bowls of rice with boiled fillet and Son Tay morning glory dipped with soy-sauce, and he sipped with lemon juice. Towards the end of his life, he spent most days sitting in a rattan chair, with his eyes towards the Western orchid he planted when he got married. Perhaps he was remembering his job of paperwork dozens of years ago. The day he died, he passed with serenity.

These people were neither preeminent characters nor well-known in Hanoi. They were just simple people whose stories evoke sweet memories of the city they made their home.

Tags: [hanoi-capital]
Saturday March 1, 2008 - 06:56am (IRST) Permanent Link | 1 Comment
You can argue with a Tennis Ball.
You can argue with a Tennis Ball. magnify

You can argue with a tennis ball

or argue with your hat.

You can argue with bananas

or a broken baseball bat.

You can argue with your locker.

You can argue with your shoe.

You can argue all day long

until your face is turning blue.

You can argue with a pickle.

You can argue with a bee.

It's a fact that you can argue

with most anything you see.

You can argue with the football field

or argue with the bleachers.

But I've found it isn't very smart

to argue with the teachers.

FEB 29 EVERY 4 YEARS.

(internet)

Tags: [valse]
Friday February 29, 2008 - 02:23pm (IRST) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
the color of love.
the color of love. magnify

For some folks the color of love is RED ...fiery and hot,

For others the color is BLUE ...placid and calm,

For some it's YELLOW ...caring but cautious,

For others it's ORANGE ...rich and fruitful,

For some the color is LAVENDER ...gentle and kind,

For others it's PURPLE ...sacrificing and giving,

For some it's GREEN ...with its go, go, go,

For others the color is WHITE ...pure and undefiled.

But for me the color is RAINBOW ...

RED and BLUE, YELLOW and ORANGE,

LAVENDER and PURPLE, GREEN and WHITE.

The RAINBOW painted by GOD is a symbol of forever-love.

And as long as there are sunshine and rain there will always be

RAINBOWS.

And as long as there are

RAINBOWS

there will always be forever-love for you.

Let’s keep love in our heart. A life without it is like a sunless garden when the flowers are dead.:)

Tags: [valse]
Thursday February 28, 2008 - 04:58am (IRST) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
Cute Love Poem : A Woman's Poem
Cute Love Poem : A Woman's Poem magnify

This funny love poem tells us the difficulties of being a girlfriend of a wife! If you are a woman with a seemingly impossible boyfriend, you have got to read this! It's so funny!

He didn't like the casserole,

And he didn't like my cake.

He said my biscuits were too hard...

Not like his mother used to make.

I didn't perk the coffee right

He didn't like the stew,

I didn't mend his socks

The way his mother used to do.

I pondered for an answer

I was looking for a clue.

Then I turned around and smacked the shit out of him...

Like his mother used to do...

(internet)

Tags: [valse]
Thursday February 21, 2008 - 03:15pm (IRST) Permanent Link | 3 Comments
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