Friday, March 9, 2012

Thankfully, the last Pearl Post for a While, and God Fucking Sucks

Just wanted to dot a few I's and cross a few T's on l'affaire Pearl. She seems for all the world like she is on the road to recovery.  It's not certain how long that road is, or what "recovery" looks like in her case, but it appears she only burned through a couple of lives; she got five or six left, methinks, and here's hoping they're far between in the losing.

So unless anything changes with the old broad, this will be my last Pearl update, unless anything changes for better (hey! she's regained sight in her right eye - AND she knows what 'make me a sandwich' means!) or worse. You've all of you been very kind with your good wishes and thoughts, and - well, the phrase "you have no idea how much that means to me" is overused and cliché, but I've been thinking a for a while now and I don't have words to say it any differently: you truly have no idea how much that means to me.  Thank you all.

So here's the thing: Cranky, in a comment on my previous post, used the term "crossing the rainbow bridge," which is an argyle-sweater euphemism for when a pet dies. Now Cranklin, you know how fond of you I am, except when you kick my ass in WWF by sixty pig-fucking points, but I confess that that phrase just goes up my ass sideways like few others do.  Not only is it just so Reader's Digest gentle, whitebread, obnoxious and superfluous (kitty heaven is already a euphemism; do we need a euphemism for a euphemism?), but it also ties in to the rat's nest that is the sum of my feelings on the afterlife (warning! religious/philospohical content to follow).

How very seductive is the thought that one's loved ones are just waiting for you in paradise; that all one has to do is obey the tenets of his religion, be a decent fellow to his fellow man, practice charity and forbearance, and an eternity with Dad and Grampa awaits him (Grampa Maurice, not Grampa John; John was kind of a prick).

It's a dangerous thought, exactly because it's so seductive.  It's a porous life preserver thrown to a drowning man; it's false comfort, and it's fucking cynical, because it's so obviously not true.

"But," says my evil twin, let's call him Harry, "what of the almost universal tales of a feeling of going through a tunnel and seeing a bright light?  How can so many people tell the same story and you still sit there and deny the existence of heaven?"

Well, look: let me suggest something to you.  It could be that the sense of going through a tunnel, then seeing a bright light, is nothing more than the dying brain's replay of its very first experience, that of travelling through the birth canal and seeing the bright light of the operating room.

Do I believe this? Not really.  But here's my point, and it's important:  There isn't a single shred of evidence to support either theory.  The two explanations are with exact precision equally plausible. I choose to believe neither theory; I think they're both preposterous.  But I will NOT - I absolutely refuse with every (admittedly flabby) sinew in my body - to credit (or blame) a benevolent god in the sky every time a question pops up that I don't have an answer to.

I believe that science, and the scientific method, is the only way of getting to the truth about anything, however painstaking and glacial the process is.  But the beauty of science, the aspect of science that makes it pure and keeps it pure, is that "I don't know" is a completely valid answer. You put forward a hypothesis about something, then you endeavor to prove it.  If you do, you write it up and expose it to the community, and they'll run their tests independently of yours and if they get the same result, why, you've got an answer, by gum.  You know: SCIENCE.

I know this is a bit of a rant; it's probably not wise to blog at 2:30 in the morning.  But since the old man died I've come to understand just how seductive the idea of an afterlife is, and to what extent the whole thing is a bottle of snake oil. Step right up to Doctor God's Decompositional Nostrum, ladies and gennamen!  One swig and you'll think you'll see Aunt Agatha again!

This is rapidly turning into a polemic against religion, which was not my intent.  But since I'm already all in, what is with you Christians and proselytizing?  For the love of Benji, you people are relentless! I mean, it's just absurd.  If you want to be a Jew, you have to go to where the Jews are.  You want to be Hindu, you go find the Hindus.  But you want to be a Christian, just answer your door at 8:45 in the morning. Stop it already! You think I LIKE slamming the door in your face?  Well I FUCKING DO.  Now get off of my land because in precisely three seconds you'll be trespassing.

Lastly, most really religious people are old, and they smell funny.  Like vitamins and pee, as Eric Cartman observed.

This ends today's rant.  Now back to regular programming, which is already in progress.

10 comments:

  1. Gary - I am so glad I used the "rainbow bridge" euphemism in my comment to you the other day. Who knew it would be the catalyst for such a rant? Truth be told, I wimped out on being blunt and saying "die" because I know how people are about their pets, and you seem to be particularly attached to yours. But I should have known calling a spade a spade is better for you than calling it a "device for shoveling."

    Ironically, I'm an atheist and no more believe in a rainbow bridge for animals than for humans. Skip believes in heaven and thinks the joke will be on me when we meet up in the afterlife. I think when you're dead you're dead and that's the end of it. But, as noted in your post, there's no empirical evidence to prove anything about existence, or the lack thereof, post-death.

    I shall now go to our two games of WWF in progress and see if I can keep up my lead on one of them (since you have me pretty crushed in the other).

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    1. Crankover, thanks then (pun upcoming) for being the (pun imminent) GENESIS of this post (pause for uproarious laughter). I rather think that "rainbow" bridge isn't like calling a spade a "device for shoveling," as you suggest, but rather calling it a "happy shiny dirt-moving princess."

      Thanks again for setting me off - in the good way. Not the REAL good way, just the good way.

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    2. I will never think of a spade simply as a device for shoveling again. Forever anon it shall be anointed the "happy shiny dirt-moving princess."

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  2. thats a far more offensive title than any of my blog posts.

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    1. I wasn't aware it was a competition, Tony. But if it is, I'm glad I won.

      And let me just say that there have been things on your blog I've disagreed with, even found offensive, but I have kept my negative comments to myself, perceiving that you seemingly had enough negativity from the peanut gallery to deal with. I've never attacked any of your content, not once, not ever. Why do you feel the need to do so?

      Having said that, I'm glad you read me, welcome to the site and feel free to comment at any time.

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  3. Wow, Gary, what a rant! It's obvious I don't ever want to play at the poker table with you, seeing as how I hate talk of politics and religion there!

    Whew!!!

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    1. Rob, rest easy - I don't talk religion or politics at the felt. Just stupid jokes, funny voices, fake anguish with folds, and upon request I'll show my appendix scar, which is actually just magic marker.

      And I've been blogging since 2007 - I think I'm entitled to one mamma jamma rant in five years, no?

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    2. Have as many rants as you want, the great thing about the internet that it is easy to hit the "X" in the upper right hand corner. If only I could have done that to the guy at the 1/2 game the other night.

      Seriously, I was just having fun with ya, not complaining at all. You are entitled to put anything you want on your blog because it is, after all YOUR blog. I promise not to tell you how to do your blog if you don't tell me how to do mine.

      Anyway, when we get together, I have a REAL appendectomy scar to compare to yours, but so far, only one person has ever asked me to remove my shirt at a poker table, but yes, it was a woman, interestingly enough. (The woman I've posted about extensively)

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    3. Ah yes - Prudence, and the vagina that launched a thousand ships. Quite entertaining, btw.

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    4. LOL, re: Prudence. Thanks.

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