"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

Categories: Celebrities | Health and Medicine

Oliver Sacks was one of the most famous psychologists of our time. We publish his last column, written six months before his death. Believe me, it's worth reading.

"A month ago, it seemed to me that my health was good, even strong. I'm 81, but I still swim a mile a day. But my luck ran out. A few weeks ago I found out that there are multiple metastases in my liver. Nine years ago, it was discovered that I had a rare eye tumor. Due to the radiotherapy and lasers used to remove the tumor, I eventually went blind in one eye. In my case, the probability that the eye tumor would metastasize was small—but I was unlucky."

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaningSource: Ideonomics

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

I am grateful for nine years of healthy and productive life after that initial diagnosis, but today I am face to face with death. Cancer has consumed a third of my liver, and although its spread can be slowed down, it can no longer be stopped.

I have to figure out how to live my remaining months. I have to live them in the richest, deepest, most productive way. I am inspired by the words of one of my favorite philosophers, David Hume, who, at the age of 65, having learned that he was terminally ill, wrote a short autobiography. It took him only one day in April 1776. He called it "My Life."

"I suffered very little from my illness, and, what is even more curious, despite the severe exhaustion of the body, my mental balance did not leave me for a minute," Hume wrote. "I have retained the same passion for science, the same liveliness in society as before."

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

I was lucky to have lived more than 80 years, 15 years longer than Hume, and those years were just as rich in terms of work and love. During this time, I have published five books and completed an autobiography (it is longer than a few pages of Hume), which will be published this spring. And I've almost finished a few more books.

"I," Hume continues, "was distinguished by a meek nature, self—control, an open, sociable and cheerful disposition, the ability to get attached, the inability to feed enmity and great moderation in all passions."

Here I differ from Hume. Although I have enjoyed a warm relationship and friendship, I have no real enemies, I cannot say that I am a meek person. On the contrary, I am a rather belligerent person, I am often overcome by bouts of violent enthusiasm and complete immoderation in all my hobbies.

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

And yet one line from Hume's essay seems to me strikingly true: "It's hard to be less attached to life than I am now."

Over the past few days, I have been able to see my life from a great height, like a landscape, and a sense of the connectedness of all its components has deepened in me. It doesn't mean that life is over for me. On the contrary, I feel extremely alive, and I want and hope to achieve even deeper friendship in the remaining time, to say goodbye to everyone I love, to write something else, to travel, if I have enough strength, to reach new levels of understanding and meaning.

This will require audacity, clarity and directness of speech. I will have to get clarity in my relationship with the world. But I will have time for fun (and even for some stupidity).

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

I suddenly feel focused and see a perspective. There is no time for anything insignificant. I have to focus on myself, on my work and on my friends. I won't be watching the news in the evenings anymore. I will no longer waste my attention on politics or arguments about global warming.

This is not indifference, but lack of affection: I am still deeply concerned about the situation in the Middle East, global warming, and growing inequality. But it's not my business anymore — these things belong to the future. I am delighted when I meet gifted young people — even those who have done a biopsy and diagnosed me. I feel that the future is in good hands.

In the last ten years, I have been paying more and more attention to the deaths of my contemporaries. My generation is on the way out, and every death seemed to me a break, cutting off a part of myself. There will be no more people like us. But there will never be people like you. When people die, they can't be replaced. They leave holes that cannot be filled, because the fate — both genetic and neural — of every human being is to become a unique individual, to find his own way, to live his own life, to die his own death.

"There will be no more people like us." Oliver Sacks on life, death and meaning

I can't pretend to be devoid of fear. But my main feeling is gratitude. I loved and was loved. I have been given a lot, and I have given something in return. I read, traveled, thought and wrote. I communicated with the world the way only writers and readers communicate.

And most importantly, I was a sentient being, a thinking animal, on this beautiful planet, and that in itself was a colossal privilege and a huge adventure.

Keywords: Life | Disease | Thoughts | Psychologist | Reflections | Cancer | Death | Emotions

Post News Article

Recent articles

What does a prison in the Canadian Arctic look like with a steam room and a place for fumigation?
What does a prison in the Canadian Arctic look like with a ...

The North Slave Correctional Center in the northern Canadian city of Yellowknife houses just 150 inmates and is designed for ...

7 Stunning Abandoned Castles We Dream of Visiting
7 Stunning Abandoned Castles We Dream of Visiting

There is a certain charm to ruined, once-majestic buildings. The facades are falling into disrepair, the great halls are home to ...

22 funny examples when someone overdid it with Photoshop
22 funny examples when someone overdid it with Photoshop

We have all used Photoshop at least once – to "hide" a pimple, smooth the skin, add contrast to the picture… Maybe even a ...

Related articles

Adam Rainer: the story of an unfortunate guy who managed to be a dwarf and a giant
Adam Rainer: the story of an unfortunate guy who managed to ...

The human body is an amazing creation of nature. He can present the most incredible surprises, which are not only difficult for ...

10 facts, knowledge of which may one day save your life
10 facts, knowledge of which may one day save your life

It is not 100% to say that tomorrow is with us nothing bad will happen, because often life throws up surprises when least expected. ...

History of leprosy: why humanity has conquered, but not defeated "lazy death"
History of leprosy: why humanity has conquered, but not ...

Leprosy for thousands of years has existed with the man, causing a chilling fear his unpredictability and ruthlessness. Only in the ...