However, I did take one gem away from this book which made the hours spent reading it well worthwhile. It is the expression amor fati, which loosely translates as “love of fate” or “love your fate”. Wikipedia tells me this motto was coined by Nietsche who I suspect may have meant something like “just accept that life is cruel and ugly and that you can’t do a thing to change it”. But I have decided to understand it more as “embrace your circumstances rather than fighting them”.
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On the other hand, while the disease has unquestionably slammed shut a number of doors, it has also opened others that we had never even considered. For Jon, for instance, taking early retirement has made him a far more sociable person who stays in touch with old friends and colleagues on Facebook, visits his grandchildren with keen regularity and generally enjoys talking to people about things other than his work – a major change and improvement, I can tell you!
For myself, the disease has led me to start writing about PD – this blog, regular articles, and working on a few book manuscripts – which I greatly enjoy. And it seems there is a decent chance it will lead me away from my current job in an ailing industry (academic publishing) to new and more meaningful work on the carer project that I talked about a few posts back. At least, reactions have been positive all round from carers, health professionals and patient associations I have discussed my ideas with. Will I also be able to secure the funds to make the project possible? I don’t know, but I’m feeling really hopeful. Amor fati in action!
1 comment:
it's a job to accept the circumstances much less to embrace them.
no open doors here yet and we are going on over 20 years with this shit.
or should I have said, lovely shit?
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