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To Die Without Ever Having Lived
by
Lisa Guidarini
In a world where everyone struggles to survive whatever the cost, how could one judge those people who decide to die?
Veronika Decides to Die
Many of us battle demons, manipulative, calculating demons. Set on protecting us from experiencing any further hurt, they would prefer we never experienced anything again, either good or bad, rather than risk further damage to psyches already battered by life. Such loyalty is meant well, but the price paid can be the ultimate one.
Such is the nature of deep depression, in my case that which comes
along with bipolar disorder, a chemical imbalance of the brain
distinguished from mental illness by its measurable medical component.
Though partially controllable by a combination of medications and
regular therapy, there is no cure. It’s something I face anew each day,
never knowing what the next day will bring, never predicting if I’ll be
up or down. Many others face similar uphill battles, for this and so
many other reasons.
Being depressive by nature, when my therapist recommended I read Paula Coehlo’s Veronika Decides to Die
I was initially startled. I’d tried reading it before, I told her, and
found it too depressing to continue. “Finish it,” she said. “You’ll be
surprised. It isn’t what you think.”
Weeks passed, then months. I intentionally didn’t make time to get to
the book. Then, about a week ago, my doctor announced she was going on
vacation. “This,” she said, “is your chance to finally finish this
book.” I had two weeks. Surely anyone who reads as much and as quickly
as I do could finish such a short book in that time.
More to appease her than anything I capitulated. Seldom does she order
me to do anything. There was obviously a higher reason she felt I
needed to persevere and learn the lesson Coehlo had to teach. It was
time I faced this demon head on.
Veronika, the title character, makes up her mind before the book begins
that life is too mundane and depressingly predictable to be worth the
effort. At twenty-six she’s doing nothing more than going through the
motions of life. She’s incapable of feeling. Nothing touches her,
nothing interests her, makes her happy or angry. Inside she already
feels dead, so what’s the point of living? She attempts suicide, having
saved up weeks’ worth of sleeping pills gathered from friends
sympathetic to what she insists is merely a sleeping problem. On the
day she decides it’s right she takes the pills, swallowing them one by
one in case she changes her mind mid-way. But she doesn’t. She takes
every pill, then lies down to die.
But death doesn’t come immediately. As the minutes pass Veronika
becomes at first agitated, then bored. She reads an article in a
magazine, feeling a stab of irritation that the article’s author has no
idea where Slovenia is located. Such is her anger that she decides to
write a letter to the editor, one final act of rebellion while she has
the strength.vUltimately the pills start taking effect. She’s nauseous
before sinking into oblivion.
Hours later Veronika wakes strapped to a bed, a bright light shining in
her face, the bustle of people all around her. And it hits her, this
isn’t heaven. She has survived. Depression descends at the thought of
her failure.
When she’s well enough a doctor at the asylum tells her though she
didn’t die she’s done irreparable harm to her heart. He gives her just
a few days to live; there is no hope. Initially she rejoices for she
would die, just not as quickly as she’d originally hoped.
This was the point where I’d stopped reading the first time I attempted
the book. The complete futility of it all and the inevitability weighed
on me. The scenario was so depressing I never had the strength to
continue.
Persevering this time, I read how the days wore on for Veronika. She
met other people, befriending one or two, learning their life stories.
Finding the ward had a piano she indulged a passion she’d kept hidden
away since childhood—becoming a pianist. She played for the other
patients, one man in particular becoming transfixed by the beautiful
music. Though mute and supposedly beyond the capability for
appreciation, he was drawn to her music. Day after day she played, and
day after day he was there. Interest bloomed, then love, a love they
both realized was doomed.
With each passing day Veronika knew she was that much closer to death,
yet at the same time she fell more in love with life, more engaged,
more passionate. Music reawakened her soul, and the man touched her
heart in a way no one else had before. Just as her life slipped away
she began living fully.
It’s what happens after this that is the reason my doctor wanted me to
finish the book. I can’t reveal the twist out of respect for others who
may wish to read it, but the part containing the real lesson is already
largely covered by what I’ve been able to relate.
Yes, life can be boring, and at times mundane. It can seem to lack any
obvious reason why we should bother living to see another day. At the
same time, the potential for finding passion never goes away; it is
never too late. No matter what adversity you face, no matter what
obstacles, there’s always that one thing (or, if lucky, more than one)
to keep you challenged and interested, to make life worth living. This
is the thing that creates beauty in life, making it so full to bursting
that every trial is worth it because of the existence of it.
Veronika Decides to Die warns us not to let life get near to
slipping away before indulging our passion. Before you make the
ultimate decision to end your life remember what’s been important to
you. Even a dream never fully realized, or a passion discouraged, can
be resumed. Look for that within yourself, push aside the dirt covering
the flower and let the sun in. What blooms is what’s been inside you
all along, waiting dormant. Cultivate this, and before you know it what
blooms is a garden, a beautiful, variegated garden lying in each one of
us, waiting for the spring to come alive. As difficult as it can be to
remember, we all have the potential for contributing great beauty to
the world, each in our own way.
I understand now why my doctor felt this was such an important read for
me. I know what she’s saying, and why she’s saying it. When the
darkness returns, like it always does, it’s this lesson that I—that all
of us—should remember. The battle of good vs. evil will rage eternally,
but all things must and will pass. While we linger we owe it to
ourselves and to the world to cultivate our inner garden, cultivating
our unique colors, inspiring others to do the same. Together all our
voices, our words, and our colors create the symphony that is life,
making it all worthwhile. This we must do, so long as we have breath to
live. Then, when the end does come, we can say with confidence that we
have lived. We have been here, left a mark, and all our collective
beauty will resonate so long as there’s life left on earth to see and
appreciate it.
Lisa Guidarini subsists, almost entirely, on her twin passions of
reading and writing (running just ahead of her love for Goose Island
beer and Asiago cheese). Her day job, unsurprisingly, is at a public
library where she works as Adult Program Coordinator for the Algonquin
Area Public Library District. (To this day, she still wonders that
people really pay her for the privilege of working in a library.) By
evening, she is a graduate student in a distance learning program
through the University of Wisconsin—Madison’s School of Library and
Information Studies. In her spare time she tends to her family,
including one husband, three children, and two rambunctious Jack
Russell terriers. She also enjoys digital photography, visiting old
cemeteries, and the occasional old-fashioned road trip. A member of the
National Book Critics Circle, she also blogs about anything literary or otherwise interesting. You can reach Lisa at
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