When a terminal illness killed one of my cousins recently I found myself pondering the old question, "Why would cancer take such a dear person from this earth?" It doesn't make sense.
Subconsciously I retain the ridiculous notion that deadly afflictions will only touch "bad" people. Shouldn't kind people be immune from life's punishments?
The fact that justice sometimes prevails tricks us into thinking that it always will – that we can make the world make sense – that everyone will eventually reap their just reward.
Nope.
So much of life is an abstract painting filled with "tricks." Time is a trick. Reality itself is a trick. Fairness is often an illusion. Does my photo portray a torch or a drift of hair?
Hospital hallways are filled with the language of "life-saving" surgeries and treatments. But, no caregiver can save you from death. They can only delay its arrival.
Artists help you understand time, reality and "life-saving" as tricks. Movies are populated with ghosts. The surrealist painters startle you with images of trains coming out of fireplaces or a sky raining men in bowler hats. Mannequins can deceive us for a moment.
In some ways, life is nothing more than a joke and we are fools for not recognizing this. Take your relationships and your work seriously but never yourself.
One wag wrote that what doesn't seem fair is that Elvis is dead and all his impersonators are alive.
But, of course, to function in the world you have to try and make sense of it. The key is to recognize that, ultimately, you can never make things make sense.
Grieve loss, celebrate life, and simultaneously understand that nothing is eternal except the present – and the love that can inform our lives if we will let it.
-Erie Chapman
photos coprtight erie chapma 2013

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