"The heart," Blaise Pascal said, "has its reasons
which reason knows nothing of." Something in us longs, hopes, maybe
even at times believes that this is not the way things were supposed
to be. Our desire fights the assault of death upon life. And so
people with terminal illnesses get married. Prisoners in a
concentration camp plant flowers. Lovers long divorced still reach
out in the night to embrace one who is no longer there. It’s like
the phantom pain experienced by those who have lost a limb. Feelings
still emanate from that region where once was a crucial part of
them. Our hearts know a similar reality. At some deep level, we
refuse to accept the fact that this is the way things are, or must
be, or always will be.
Simone Weil was right; there are only two things
that pierce the human heart: beauty and affliction. Moments we wish
would last forever and moments we wish had never begun. The
playwright Christopher Fry wrote,
The inescapable dramatic situation for us all is
that we have no idea what our situation is. We may be mortal. What
then? We may be immortal. What then? We are plunged into an
existence fantastic to the point of nightmare, and however hard we
rationalize, or however firm our religious faith, however closely we
dog the heels of science or wheel among the starts of mysticism, we
can not really make head or tail of it. ("A Playwright Speaks: How
Lost, How Amazed, How Miraculous We Are")
And what does Fry say we do with our dilemma? The
worst of all possible reactions:
We get used to it. We get broken into it so
gradually we scarcely notice it.
(Desire , 8-9)