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I sit in front of the fire and think, of olden days, of yore. Of those moments which, by virtue of their power, still shine golden, or shimmer darkly, like ebony in a pool in the dying light, out of the mists of age and forget- fullness, this both a blessing and a curse, to one who has lived so long as I. For I have seen many triumphs and celebrations, and many more defeats and fruitless victories, these like the long dark shadow stretching out from the pillar of my accomplishments. This pillar is the anchor of my life; without it, I would be lost in the sea of my own wretched failures. And yet, still, from my vantage point atop that shining monument that enshrines all that was, is, and will be good in my life, still the shadow grows, along with the pillar itself, for though I have passed that point of sweet and soaring ****** at the epitome of my life, and have long since begun the descending spiral towards the grave, I am not yet dead. And yet, even as my pillar grows, so does my shadow, and its length grows longer as my years increase, and the memory of past failures compound one upon the other, until they are stretched far out to the distant horizon, and have filled it with darkness and shadows, for the sun is low, as my age ascends, and so the shadows lengthen. And yet. Through all of this, of the pain of my failures, of the tragedies of my defeats, of the defeats of others who were close to my heart, peace is with me, and I have no fear, and I am happy, and I give of myself to others, and expecting nothing, receive all, for the gratitude and happiness of others in response to ones generosity and love, is the greatest reward that one may hope to attain. For I do not dwell only in the past, but in the present, and do not impose worry and fear upon my soul through vain speculations of what the future may bring, and instead live in the present, and think on the past, and act according to what I believe to be right, before the eyes of man, and the eyes of God. And all is right with me, and I am happy, and as I sit here before the hearth, the fire leaping merrily, and crackling like a thousand distant fireworks, I smile, and sink softly into sleep.
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Dec 26, 2015
Dec 26, 2015 at 11:26 PM UTC
An Old Man's Thoughts Before the Hearth
I sit in front of the fire and think, of olden days, of yore. Of those moments which, by virtue of their power, still shine golden, or shimmer darkly, like ebony in a pool in the dying light, out of the mists of age and forget- fullness, this both a blessing and a curse, to one who has lived so long as I. For I have seen many triumphs and celebrations, and many more defeats and fruitless victories, these like the long dark shadow stretching out from the pillar of my accomplishments. This pillar is the anchor of my life; without it, I would be lost in the sea of my own wretched failures. And yet, still, from my vantage point atop that shining monument that enshrines all that was, is, and will be good in my life, still the shadow grows, along with the pillar itself, for though I have passed that point of sweet and soaring ****** at the epitome of my life, and have long since begun the descending spiral towards the grave, I am not yet dead. And yet, even as my pillar grows, so does my shadow, and its length grows longer as my years increase, and the memory of past failures compound one upon the other, until they are stretched far out to the distant horizon, and have filled it with darkness and shadows, for the sun is low, as my age ascends, and so the shadows lengthen. And yet. Through all of this, of the pain of my failures, of the tragedies of my defeats, of the defeats of others who were close to my heart, peace is with me, and I have no fear, and I am happy, and I give of myself to others, and expecting nothing, receive all, for the gratitude and happiness of others in response to ones generosity and love, is the greatest reward that one may hope to attain. For I do not dwell only in the past, but in the present, and do not impose worry and fear upon my soul through vain speculations of what the future may bring, and instead live in the present, and think on the past, and act according to what I believe to be right, before the eyes of man, and the eyes of God. And all is right with me, and I am happy, and as I sit here before the hearth, the fire leaping merrily, and crackling like a thousand distant fireworks, I smile, and sink softly into sleep.
If one lives well, then one will die happy. It's as simple as that.
christian-l-bixler
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Dec 26, 2015
Dec 26, 2015 at 11:26 PM UTC
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