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Not Fade Away: A Short Life Well Lived

Not Fade Away: A Short Life Well Lived 

By Laurence Shames and Peter Barton 

Live as though you’ll live forever.

And be prepared to die tomorrow.

-The Talmud 

I can’t remember a book that has cut to my core like this one. Maybe it’s the fact of being in the prime of my life with two beautiful kids and a wife I adore and having to think how fragile this all is. Reading this book has changed me, made me more understanding, and present with those I love. These notes won’t scratch the surface of it’s content and I hope you read the full book. 

 

Key Themes

Optimism, zest for life, intensity, authenticity, love for family 

 

Why I chose to write this book: 

 

Hungry for experience, avid for life, Peter showed us what was possible

Some people are born to lead and destined to teach. Peter Barton, I think, was one of these. He would have preferred, God knows, a longer life; but when he knew that he was dying–dying in the vanguard of his generation–he seemed to feel a responsibility to make his death of use. He set himself a final goal: to die well, with gratitude rather than complaint, with dignity and grace, with a highly personal faith that could coexist with reason.

Whatever I did, I gritted out. I valued nonchalance, and I tried not to let the effort show, but the fact is that I worked my butt off.

 

Growing Up

Perhaps the luckiest part of all was that we were the generation that wasn’t rushed and bullied into becoming grown-ups too soon. We could knock around without guilt or undue anxiety. We could take the time- in the parlance of the day–to find ourselves. That phrase, I realize, has become one of ridicule, away of deriding the navel-gazing of the sixties and seventies. But maybe it’s time to reexamine that. 

What’s unworthy about working to understand who you truly are and what you really want from life? What better use can a person make of his youth?

Anyway, we had the luxury of believing that, eventually, there would be a career, a track–but in the meantime there were a lot of excellent detours. I took my share of them, from the slightly crazy to the somewhat reckless, and sucked the marrow out of every one.

But while I was busily goofing off, something mysterious and amazing was happening-something I didn’t even realize at the time. Gradually, on my own schedule and no one else’s, I was becoming ready. Ready to be a responsible adult. Ready to be a husband. Ready to be a father. Ready to work–and to do so not in the drab spirit of trading time for money, but with the joyful ambition of creating something, participating in an enterprise I could be proud of.

“I began to think of him as not just an interesting person but an extraordinary one. Another thought occurred to me as well: I wondered if perhaps everyone, facing death, became extraordinary; if maybe each of us had untapped reserves of nerve and strength that might prove surprising, even glorious, at the end.” 

Kids are always soaring

For them, there’s no boundary between the down-to-earth and the heavenly. Mud is a miracle. Snow is pure chilled joy. A pile of leaves is a sacred altar. 

Why do we lose that feeling, that sense of wonder, for so much of our lives

 

The approach of death has made me realize that there are no unimportant details in life…. 

 

And this, unfortunately, brings me to one of the most excruciating incidents of my childhood–one of those awful moments, totally trivial in itself, that you literally spend your whole life getting over. I tell this story as a plea to parents, coaches, teachers: For God’s sake, be careful what you say when a child messes up!

That’s how tender kids are

Cancer & Kids 

One of the insidious things about cancer is that, even as it’s leeching onto your body, its subsumming your identity as well. In the eyes of others, you become the disease. People look at you and see cancer.

But there’s no hurry. Love your life. Take your time.

I’m thinking to myself: You think that’s a problem? You’re letting someone like that make you unhappy? Buddy, you don’t know what a problem is. (His thoughts at a cocktail party filled with people complaining about “problems” like long lines at the grocery store. 

Arrogance of Health 

 

CARPE DIEM. SEIZE THE DAY, BOYS!

MAKE YOUR LIVES EXTRAORDINARY.

– Tom Schulman, Dead Poets Society

Every breath smelled of promise as yet unfulfilled

I had a clean one-year exam.

After it, I took my wife in my arms and cried for joy. I don’t think I realized quite how frightened I’d been all year. Now it all poured out of me. 

One day, when my body was wrecked and my head ached and my spirits were at their lowest, I said to my wife: “I just don’t see the point.”

Now, my wife Laura is as supportive and kind as a person could possibly be. I’m in awe of her gentleness. But in that moment she was something other than tender; she was absolutely fierce.

Fierce on my behalf and, I think, on her own. She still had the determination that I was having such a hard time mustering. She still saw value in the struggle. She wasn’t about to let me wallow. She already had enough burdens; she didn’t want to cater to someone who had given up.

“So find one!” she declared.

Finding the point became the point. That was the realm in which I still had everything to gain

 

A problem that can be fixed by money… is not a problem. It’s an inconvenience, maybe. 

Holding On

There’s a next level where the soul can go, and the body can’t. 

Bodily pain would be the body’s problem. I’d concentrate on learning how to keep my mind unclouded, my soul free to soar

 

Risk

Thus, by increments so exquisitely gradual that they might have passed unnoticed, I could have ended up being totally untrue to myself and living a life I hated. Twenty years later, I might have had a closet full of suits, a passport full of visas, and an irreparable feeling that I’d really blown it.

 

No future

I promised myself that I wouldn’t have a bad day for the rest of my life. If someone was wasting my time, I’d excuse myself and walk away. If a situation bothered me or refused to get resolved, I’d shrug and move on. I’d squander no energy on petty annoyances, poison no minutes with useless regret. 

I’d play music at any hour of the day or night. I’d make a point of noticing the smell of the air, the shifting light on the mountains.

 

The readiness is all. – Shakespeare, Hamlet 

PETER IS DETERMINED to live until he dies.

In our conversations through the spring, Peter spoke of many things–ideals and disillusionment, the value of risk, the anguish and thrill of transitions–but the overriding theme was always the idea of becoming ready. Ready to live; ready to die. Ready to change directions when change was necessary.

Timeliness was everything. Opportunities were useful only to those who were prepared to seize them. Gifts were appreciated only by those whose minds were equipped to see their value. And nothing, not even death, is daunting to the person who is ready for it.

 

It’s not the leap that’s dangerous, it’s the landing.

 

Mortality doesn’t limit us only in time. It limits us, as well, in what we can ever hope to understand. 

Readiness isn’t something that appears all at once. It’s something you earn by increments, at the cost of much anxiety, and rage and sadness

Appreciation 

If I crashed and burned, so be it. But there had to be some big dream worth pursuing, and there had to be joy and excitement in the challenge of pursuing it.

My classmates could analyze, but I, thank God, could rhapsodize. In business as in life, that’s a far more precious thing.

​​Well, one of the things I’ve learned from having cancer is that it’s always worth it to continue. Death will come when it’s ready to; the bad stuff will end. You can count on that–and I don’t think it’s morbid to consider it a comfort.

But in the meantime there continues to be good stuff, too.

Small pleasures loom large. As with anything in short supply, their value rises with their rarity. A favorite two-minute song can offer all the satisfaction of a symphony.

There’s rapture in watching a dog chase a tennis ball. Sometimes a breeze from the west carries a pine smell down from the mountains. 

 

Redemption

 

Andre is a romantic, an aesthete, a perfectionist. He tells his friend Wally that, for him, a great day has to be sublime in every detail. There has to be a perfect meal at a perfect table over. Looking at a perfect sunset. One flaw anywhere and the whole experience is spoiled.

Wally is just the opposite. He asks very little of life. He’s thrilled with whatever scraps of pleasure the world throws his way. A good day for him is when he wakes up in the morning, finds a cup of coffee left over from the day before, and discovers that no cockroach has crawled into it and died.

Well, when I was young and healthy, pumped up with the brightness of my prospects, I wanted to be Andre. Demand the best. Insist on perfection. But later in life, humbled by sickness and the prospect of mortality, I’ve come to understand that Wally, all along, was really the wiser person, and certainly the happier one. 

He had the great gift of being pleasantly surprised, of seeing small delights as large victories.

A person of Andre’s temperament would have a really tough time getting ready to die. He’d grumble at every bodily insult, mourn every vanished possibility, see every lost pleasure as a personal affront. A person like Wally, on the other hand, is al ready so much closer to acceptance and to peace.

Thank God I’m becoming more and more like Wally,

 

IF ONE ADVANCES CONFIDENTLY IN THE DIRECTION OF HIS DREAMS, AND ENDEAVORS TO LIVE THE LIFE WHICH HE HAS IMAGINED, HE WILL MEET WITH A SUCCESS UNEXPECTED IN COMMON HOURS.- Thoreau, Walden 

Through that summer, a season that Peter never thought he’d live to see, he taught me that just as there is a prime of life, there is a prime, too, in the process of approaching death.

If life’s prime corresponds to the period of greatest physical power, then the prime of dying is defined by strength of spirit

In this other prime, Peter mustered an unflinching awareness and maintained it in the face of awful pain, and battled to keep it whole even as concentration became an ever-greater challenge. He made an array of choices as bold as any he’d ever made before: He chose gratitude over disappointment, curiosity over complaint, hope over despair.

Somehow, he transformed fear into a bracing suspense; he reshaped death itself, so that it was no longer a gaping terror, but just one more of life’s intriguing twists.

 

Facing Death 

 

Marriage 

 

Parenting 

 

Let me tell you about the best hour of the best day I’ve had since getting sick.

We explored a bunch of little coves around the resort. The water was a hundred shades of blue and green; sunlight glinted off it so brightly that it almost hurt. Rays scudded by; tiny fish went skittering across the surface. Everything amazed us; we just pointed at things and giggled. And we talked about how great life is. How lucky we were to be living it. As a family and as ourselves.

I choke up when I recall this story. But not because I’m sad. Because there’s more joy in the recollection than I can hold. There was a lifetime’s worth of pleasure in that single day-an intensity and a completeness that strike me as a great deal more important than the mere question of how many years a life contains.

That excursion on the water taught me that each moment is a life, that life is renewed every time we’re walloped by beauty, every time we’re shaken up by gratitude and love. I have nothing to complain about. I feel like I toured much of Heaven in that single afternoon.

 

I love entrepreneurs

I make no apologies for these inconsistencies. I’d rather be honest than consistent. 

 

The End 

 

It dawned on me that a totally weird series of events was beginning. From now on, I’d start doing the last this and the last that.

My hunch is that it comes to saints and sinners equally. It’s not about justice, and it doesn’t mean that life is fair. Just inevitable.

 

It’s a calm that comes from knowing that I’ve held nothing back.

It’s simply this: I really tried. I did my best

 

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