September 20, 2013

Five years on...


My sister passed away five years ago today.  I wrote this maybe a month or two later after I could muster up the energy to do so.  It's crazy how life has changed so much in five years.  I originally posted this to Myspace.  Not a life-shattering example, but you get the drift. 

I'm really happy that I wrote this because it's a real time capsule for myself to look back at those dark days to see where my mind was at.  I remember knowing pretty early on that I had to stop asking questions or it would drive me mad.  Life happens in not the best ways sometimes, and we can only learn by growing with those moments.  You cannot suffer the unknown.  

I miss my sister's physical presence.  I miss her voice.  But it is more important to know that she is always here because we are blood and we had 30 years of life together and she is permanently recorded in my mind.  There is nothing more infinite than that.

I love you Suzanne.  





Every morning I wake up to the constant realization that will plague the rest of my life:  I’ve lost my sister Suzanne and I’m not getting her back.  The emptiness that accompanies this sentiment is hard to grasp, because simply put, there is nothing there.  You know you will never be able to hold her hand, and you’ll never be able to hug her and kiss her on the cheek.  It’s a rotten felling to have because you know that you shouldn’t even be writing this because you should have been an old man and your sister should have been an old lady and it would have been a natural passing.  It’d still be sad, but you’d be okay because you’d be gone in a couple years too, and it’d be a wholly natural thing.  You’ve lived your life, you’ve done your thing, and now you’ve passed away.  But that isn’t how it is.  I’m going to live the rest of my days missing my sister who fought hard and probably lived longer than she should have with stage four lung cancer.  She leaves a husband.  She leaves a daughter.  She leaves parents, a brother, and a sister.  She leaves loving family and friends, two dogs, and a cat.  She’s left a world of suffering that she did not deserve and a bad hand shuffled back into the deck.  It was before her time, but time due for what she was going through.

What does it mean to lose a sister?  It’s a question that is answerable and unanswerable all at once.  A feeling that is felt, but also not transmittable to those outside of yourself.  It’s more than a sense of loss and more like something was stolen from inside of me, something not physical, but something that has been there since the day I was born and should have been there on the day I die.  This thing wasn’t fully formed, still growing with every moment.  When I was a kid, it was prevalent in my every day.  I just didn’t know it.  In my teenage years and early twenties, this thing revolved around that same world I did, just in opposite directions, being around just as much as I was, which wasn’t a whole lot.  But after moving 3,000 miles away from Connecticut, with every passing year, with every day I grew older, this thing inside could truly be acknowledged, and maybe even understood a bit more.  This thing inside of all of us is the greater importance of family, the connections and relationship you have with those who have always been there.  When a part of this is taken away, squashed from our psyche, there is a matchless loneliness that sits in its place and pervades almost every moment of our every day.  Even in a room crowded with family or friends, there sits an empty space and the density of the air feels less.  Staying at her home for two weeks during this whole ordeal, every time I entered a new room I looked for her.  Strangely enough, being back in my apartment in Reno, a place she’s never been, I do the same.  Where is Suzanne?  Where is my sister?  All I find every place I go are the places she should be.

She should be…

But she is not, and I don’t know when my brain is going to fully accept that.  Right now I’m at battle with reality.  And guilt.  And the “whys” and “what ifs.”   And the last week of her life in the hospital.  What I said.  What I didn’t.  It’s all there, swirling round and round on the daily-go-round, even in my most distracted moments.  When I wake.  And when I sleep.  I have no doubt in the validity of the phrase “time heals,” and I don’t mind waiting because all of these feelings, no matter how mixed up, confused, and upsetting; they are my sister, and I have no doubt that with time they will turn into her greatest attribute: strength.   

In the past year, there were conversations we never had.  Conversations I wish we had.  They didn’t not happen out of dishonesty, but because my sister was protective, not just in a proud way, but because she did not want people worrying about her.  Trust me, we worried plenty, and we were scared shitless, but talking to my sister was talking to my sister and I don’t think she wanted it any other way.  The cancer was on our tongues, but so were other things.  We talked about what was going on, and jokes, and memories, and parents, and life.  I wish we could have had many other conversations.  I wish we could have many more.  No matter how much I could let out at her bedside at the hospital, there’s always more to say.  I have an infinite amount of words for my sister, and where once they were heard, I no longer know what they really are.  My belief system doesn’t know what to make of where she is and this is the first time I’ve really been confronted with this.  Confronting the known unknown.  In the back of my mind I’d been waiting for the phone call that would have me on the next flight to Connecticut.  The longer she lived, the further off I could  push that phone call away, and the further off I could push the notion of death.  Then you find yourself in the hospital sitting next to your sister, holding her hand, wanting so badly for her to be able to come home, if only for a short period of time.  I don’t know how I could sit there and think about time in such an ultimate form, with an end in sight, but I did, and all I wanted was for my sister to have a few more days with her whole family, eyes open, breathing, talking, and maybe a laugh or two if she could muster it (and believe me, I bet she could).  Then as the days moved forward and she did not, I only wanted some time with her off sedation, but I knew in my heart that it wouldn’t happen and I became fearful that my sister would pass into the night, alone.  

It’s hard for me to look back on these moments and put myself back into it.  How could I not sit there and wish my sister to only live more than forever.  In the midst of her suffering you have to be as rational as possible and only want what is best.  Upon arriving to the hospital on Saturday the 20th of September, it was time to let nature take its course.  Suzanne was tired.  She let us know it when her husband whispered into her ear and a tear came rolling down her face.  She knew what hour had arrived, and let us know it by fighting through yet another trial with her strength.  Her body was giving out, but she gave us a true and knowing response.  Throughout the week I wasn’t sure how much she could really understand us under sedation.  As much as we all could, we’d sit by her side and tell her stories, describe pictures from photo albums, read emails people sent to the hospital, tell her how we love her and we’d keep her safe, and she even got one last friendly Kratky family argument (politics of course), but I was never clear that she heard us.  She would open her wonderful green eyes once in a while, but it wasn’t until that tear that I really knew that she could take her surroundings in.  She truly blessed us with it, and I believe she fought hard for us all to be there.  When my sister passed away, she was surrounded by family, all of us holding on to her, all of us telling her we love her.

It’s this moment that I wanted most for her in the end that haunts me more than anything.  It’s all you could do sometimes.  Be there.  It’s all you can do sometimes.  Be powerless.

Standing in the cemetery the day before I left to go back to Reno, I felt uncertainty inside myself.  I stood before where she laid, but still, I looked out across the grass and through the trees searching for Suzanne.  I will always search for her; in the windows of every home, in the slow passing nights, across Nevada’s desert terrain, and every time I look to the sky.  I know that after time I’ll eventually find her, and I’ll have to look no further than myself.  No further than my sister Rachel, and my parents, John and Maryann.  I’ll have to search as far as my cousin and Suzanne’s best friend Melissa, her husband Chris, and of course, her daughter Cyndy with whom we all have a new role.  Not as surrogates in a capacity we could never fill, but to embody the true essence of family and support.  Then I’ll look up to the stars at night and know that my sister fills the empty space in between, holding them together with all her strength.  In time, that empty spot inside all who loved her will fill with realization and learning from her life and her death.  The world has already become a different place for me.  Never again will it hold the poetry of fresh eyes, because I am old now, and unwilling to venture backwards.

Suzanne, all I can do now is make you a promise:

When the loneliness settles in, and the empty chambers of my heart ache, I will think on our childhood.  I will remember your smile and hear your laugh.

When the sky grows dark, and the “whys” and “what ifs” settle in, I will remember our phone calls and the times spent staying in your home over the last few years.

When the tears swell in my eyes and my stomach grows uneasy, I will fondly think back, and thank you for all you have given me.  Things that have shaped me, that may forever go undiscovered, but they are there and they are me, and I thank you.

Sis, you will never be forgotten, only known more and more. If I could I’d write you into existence again, but I know you’re in a place greater than words.  I love you so very much.  We all love you so very much.  

September 5, 2013

No Philosophy, Part 5


As I write this, Americans are in the middle of a debate on whether or not the central government should drop bombs on a civilization that is thousands of miles away so that fractions of the terrorist group that it claims to have been fighting for the last twelve years can gain control of the aforementioned civilization’s government.  Got that?

When this is the debate in a supposed advanced culture, something has gone awry.  When this scenario played out just ten years ago in Iraq, and the outcome was the destruction of a people and we have learned nothing from that, something has gone amiss.  When murdering people is proposed as a path to peace, you know that the world you live in has been depleted of good philosophy.

This cry for war is not about protecting people, it is fully about strategy for attacking Iran and closing in on Russia and China.  It is about paychecks being passed from the weapons industry to the elitists in government.  It is about creating new mythology.  It is about upholding control and writing news laws in which to control with.  It is about getting minds off of the awful economy, and into a state of fear and nationalism.  It is about World War III, whether you want to think that or not.

The world is on an awful path and we have got to change before it is too late.  Each of us individually has got to stop this lack of imagination that feeds this monster into gaining control over everything.  This is your future and it is tied down by the weight of an unforgiving organization filled with sociopathic liars, murderers, and thieves.  This is your life, and you’ve got to take of the fucking chains.




NO PHILOSOPHY, PART 5

How I Learned to Hate Slavery

Slavery is a big, ugly word with the weight of history attached to it, and I promise you, I do not use it lightly.  When I say that we are stuck in a state of slavery, I’m talking mentally.  I don’t compare this to the physical and mental enslavement that was happening in America for too long and which continued long after the Civil war within the prison system.  I don’t compare it to the brutal and demoralizing modern slavery within the sex trade that exists right now the world over.  The enslavement of the human race is one of submission of the self to an unjustified authority.  The slavery we live is a hopeless seduction of myths and legends that are schooled into us from a young age.  You will believe that a powerful federal government must exist to protect us.  You will believe that rights come from that organization through documentation that was signed by a few men.  You will believe that society as we know it would fall apart without the social contract, a non-existent document that nobody has signed or seen yet somehow is said to mold our economy and social structure.  You will believe that it is a feasible set-up for a few hundred men and women to control millions, and in some cases billions.  You will believe that the ruling class and the elites are something that exists outside of government, and is not actually government itself.

The one area where our mental captivity is darker than the physical slavery is that most of us don’t know it is happening.  Slaves held in physical captivity against their will knew that they were slaves.  They knew that somebody owned them and that they were held through force and violence.  Our captivity is just part of life.  It is what it is.  We live in a world where prosperity is judged by the level of taxation a government levies.  Some think a little more is good for everyone, some think a little less is good for everyone, but not enough realize that zero taxation of income is ideal.  Wealth is judged by how much material stuff is in your living room, not by your ability to earn, save, and create a safety net for yourself and your family.  Safety is having strangers listen to your phone calls, read your emails, frisk your body, and police your streets.  Freedom is spread throughout the world by the bullet.  In an unfree society, leaders have been replaced by rulers, not people to emulate, but messiahs to worship.  We not only have the task of taking our lives back, but we also have to take our language back.

I don’t think I will ever talk a single person into understanding the philosophy of liberty.  I will never argue anybody into taking the path of the individual and leaving collectivism behind.  Maybe I can introduce an idea or two here and there, but liberty is just too personal a path.  You have to not only accept and understand ugly truths about the world, but you have to accept them about yourself and your past.  That’s the real hurdle.  Letting go of and changing ideas that have been secure in your own mind for so long is a sometimes drudging experience and will last a lifetime.  It’s a battle that has you at odds constantly with what you have been told since you were young.  There are of course small fights that are easy to win, which for myself was understanding the abusive public school structure, and then there are tougher fights.  The biggest battle for me was wrapping my head around how a free world will work without the coercive, monopolistic system of government shaping it.  Most times though, this is only due to a basic lack of imagination.  There are so many solutions to every problem, not just the one we are lad to believe in.  Imagine the world being able to open up to those options once the central government is dissolved.  Progress is not as difficult as we think, you just have to get the one thing that forces us into the past out of the way.

All I can promise is that once you mentally tear yourself out of the world of total government, you will not only see life in a new way, but you will feel much more optimistic.  Your life will no longer be filled with the slog of politics and scandals.  Most answers to the issues of the day will be easily understandable once force is taken out of the equation.  You can move on to philosophy, the market, and freedom within your own existence.  Once the monopoly no longer has a hold over you, maybe then you can take those first steps into a future that wasn’t supposed to be.  That’s the first sign that the individual is winning.  Taking over your own life.


The individual can only free him or herself.  Your mind is yours.  You own it.  It belongs to you.  You must start using it.
Are all of these ideas utopian?  Sure, but even just the ideas that come with liberty, freedom, and peace are better than the reality of being a slave.