The Inevitable
Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2015 4:42 pm
This morning I received the news that one of the janitors of my school passed away last night, he had a heart attack. I was not very close to him, although I remember having some good conversations with him. I am quite dazed by his sudden death (he was roughly 55). Apart from the philosophical questions that a death brings up, it made me worried that something similar might happen to someone closer to me, my father in particular. The janitor was about my father's age, and I do not doubt he died because of an unhealthy lifestyle; he was very overweight. If he had exercised more, and eaten healthier, I really don't think this would have happened.
However, when I talk to people they compare his death to getting hit by a car, dying in a plane crash, etc. It seems like people think a heart attack is as inevitable and unpredictable as a traffic accident; you can't do much to prevent it, and you never know when your life will end. It has something tragic; a society of people who have access to all the information they could possibly need to eliminate their largest peril, however fail to realize they can do anything at all. Every day countless lives are ended by largely preventable diseases.
I wish I could do something to make people realize that many of the terrible diseases that cripple our society are not in fact inevitable. I just wanted to share that thought, thank you for reading.
However, when I talk to people they compare his death to getting hit by a car, dying in a plane crash, etc. It seems like people think a heart attack is as inevitable and unpredictable as a traffic accident; you can't do much to prevent it, and you never know when your life will end. It has something tragic; a society of people who have access to all the information they could possibly need to eliminate their largest peril, however fail to realize they can do anything at all. Every day countless lives are ended by largely preventable diseases.
I wish I could do something to make people realize that many of the terrible diseases that cripple our society are not in fact inevitable. I just wanted to share that thought, thank you for reading.