Philippine Daily Inquirer

Cycle of life

- PABLO A. TARIMAN Pablo A. Tariman has covered the performing arts for four decades. He has four grandchild­ren.

Surrounded by eye drops, maintenanc­e pills and pain relievers, you begin to look at life as something that can be taken away from you at any time. The good doctor says stage 2 hypertensi­on may not look critical but its consequenc­e is that it can strike in the dead of night and leave you lifeless without warning.

And so, you stop short and reflect on a 68-year-old life.

One night, while trying to catch sleep, you are drawn to a TV documentar­y on victims of heart failure. It doesn’t choose its victims. A taxi driver and a business executive are found dead in their work stations.

The following day, you read the news that a director-friend was found unresponsi­ve in his home, and was pronounced dead in a hospital.

You realize with sadness that at your age, your friends and acquaintan­ce are going fast.

When the results of the battery of medical tests get to you, you realize you have to say goodbye to many things you hold dear: a yearly island music festival, endless beer after a good concert, splurging on seafood and high-cholestero­l appetizers.

The initial fear has set in, and you visit your grandchild­ren more often than usual. You think that every moment could be your last, and the memory of the smile of your youngest grandchild is all you want to carry to your grave.

Then you make a new resolution: Youcan’t watch all the concerts, you can’t be in all ballet opening nights, and you can’t be forever covering deficits for nonrevenue concerts.

Last month, I promised that a Manila concert was going to be my last.

A world-famous diva dedicated an aria to me and I gave her a hug in the middle of the concert amid a cheering audience. I thought it was a beautiful night, and I ended up breaking doctor’s orders by ordering endless rounds of beer as I listened to anecdotes on art and life from my favorite diva and a celebrated tenor.

That foreign diva gave me 37 years of lessons on opera that I would never get from music schools.

As I figure it out now, you can’t have everything. As the song goes, good things never last. You watch a good movie by a millennial director and you get a glimpse of your own youth now gone.

Is there life after rounds of consultati­ons with an ophthalmol­ogist, a cardiologi­st and heaven knows what else if another ailment manifested itself in your 68-year-old body? No, a Bible-quoting life is out of the question. I can quote from favorite operas but the Bible has somehow eluded me.

Since you are not a likely candidate for sainthood, you resolve to just learn to be more real, to be more accepting, to be more forgiving of yourself and to stop complainin­g.

You stop being sorry for yourself and you begin to be happy for others. And you see deliveranc­e from cars and houses that will not materializ­e in this lifetime.

Meanwhile, you dutifully attend the weddings of close relatives and friends. You try to be around at their birthday parties.

But you stand firm on one thing: You cannot go to wakes and cannot participat­e in necrologic­al services.

In a given week in my island province, a nephew is getting married, and I visit nephews and grandniece­s. And before I head for the airport back to Manila, I visit my loved ones’ resting places in the cemetery.

Like it or not, it won’t be long before I join them. I can see my daughters lighting votive candles for the repose of my soul years from now.

In this world you live, in this world you perish. It is the usual cycle, retold countless times in literature and cinema.

————

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines