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    Lee Wilson
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

On My Deathbed - 1. On My Deathbed

This one isn't anything like what you're used to from me. While the tenor is a fictional account of a lonely, dying, old man, you should realize much of it contains a lot of my own views on death, dying, and the 'afterlife.'
So, two words of warning. This one will be dark, and depressing.
Secondly, many of my views on the topic are, let's say, far from the norm, so this perhaps may upset some people. Hell, maybe even most people. I guess I'm writing this one more for me than you all. At least from that perspective. I've injected some humor so it's not totally depressing.
Fortunately, it will be short. Continue on if you like, just remember; you’ve been warned.

My name is Frank Garnet. My friends called me Red. I guess because of my last name. You may as well do that too, for the short time we'll be together. I'm ninety-eight years old and know my days are numbered. It's not like I have a disease or anything; just that shit shuts down in your body when you get to be my age. My only son is dead. Hell, I've even outlived a grandson. Fucking drugs. My only surviving grandson lives halfway around the world in New Zealand. Spouse, siblings? Long gone as well. My lawyer knows what to do with my body when I'm done with it. I always liked to travel. Since I'll have no use for it, I've instructed him to cremate me and dump my ashes into an airplane toilet. He'll be paid handsomely, so he'd better damn well do it. I'm hoping the chunk of refuse I end up in will land on some anti-gay bigot's house and demolish the building. Killing the bigot as well, of course.

I brought up the drugs because my grandson overdosed after being demoralized by a bunch of homophobes. He's also the reason I hope to demolish some bigot's home. But I'm not bitter. Believe that and I bet you'd want to sniff my asshole too. Oh yeah, I'm crotchety as well. And you know what? I don't give a fuck if you care. Life sucks and then you die. Only the dying part has taken me forever. But that's okay, because while I'm not necessarily afraid of dying, I'm afraid of being dead. There is a difference. At least I think so.

I hope the dying part will simply be me going to sleep and not waking up. That would be my ideal way to go. See, in that case, I won't know that I'm dead. I see death like being a light bulb that burns out. One second there's light, and the next, nothing. I'm afraid of making that transition. Like, what happens? Do I just completely cease to be a thinking, breathing being? One second aware, the next, nothing? Unfortunately, that's what I believe. There have been a few times in my life where I've felt, why bother going on? As bad as things have gotten at times, becoming that burned out light bulb scares the shit out of me enough to continue the struggle.

So, here is one example of one of those rotten times. I'd just completed basic training after joining the Navy. I didn't have many other options after barely graduating high school. Anyway, I was assigned to a destroyer during what was called World War Two. In my opinion, a stupid name. Nearly every war has an impact on the entire world, so World War Three Million may have been more accurate. I was on the USS Kimberly, if you care to know. We were stationed outside of Okinawa; part of a small gaggle of ships sent to provide support to the air force. One bright summer day, the world turned to shit. The air was filed with Japanese Kamikaze planes. I watched as one after the other crashed into one of our battleships. Explosions were everywhere along its length. I suppose either one of the zeros had different instructions or simply missed its target. I could do nothing but stand there and watch as one headed directly toward our A-Position Deck Gun. If that wasn't bad enough, my best friend on the ship was stationed there that day. He saw the zero too late. He was diving away when the Kamikaze hit. Never had a chance. You may remember the part in the movie 'The Rock' where Goodspeed tells FBI Director Womack that Mason was vaporized? Yeah, that's not something I ever wanted to see again. One second Aaron was there, the next, there was no trace of him.

Between that, and having nearly everyone I ever knew die before me, each death taking a small part of me with it, there were plenty of opportunities for depression to take hold. But I soldiered on, pun intended, even though I was in the Navy. Okinawa wasn't my only experience with death in the Navy. I spent twenty years on board ships and submarines. Even outside of wartime, bad shit happens. I witnessed somewhere around fifteen deaths first-hand during my time in the service. Not a single one easier to handle than the last. But we have to carry on, don't we?

I spoke about my son before. I suppose I should correct a minor inaccuracy. Barry was actually a stepson. He was nearly fully grown when I married his mother after I retired from the service. Doesn't make him any less my son. If you've never had a blended family, you may not understand that, but it's true. I started my family late in life. I met Penny on leave about a year and a half before I mustered out. We wed two months after I retired. Barry was my best man. Hell, after twenty years in the service, I didn't know many civilians yet.

Thankfully, Barry was nearly forty when his mother died of a heart attack. I'd known some of the families of my brothers in arms who died young. Dying young tears up the family something awful. I was almost forty myself when my Dad died. It hurt, but watching the young children of my friends upon their parent's deaths. Well, just one reason why I'm glad practically all of my family and friends are gone. I don't need to cause anyone more grief than life already hands them.

So, here I lie in a hospital bed, slowly feeling greater levels of pain. One kidney has already shut down and the other is half necrotized. That’s dead if you didn’t know. I didn’t smoke, but one lung is useless. Pneumonia, not cancer, but what’s the difference? It doesn’t work right. And I was wrong at the start. It’s not my days that are numbered. I realize now it’s my hours that are dribbling away to nothing. My hope of dying in my sleep is pretty much gone. I can’t sleep because of the pain. They could give me painkillers, but they also say too much of that will kill me. I want to hang onto every moment I can. That light bulb, you know.

I hope I’m wrong about there being nothing else. I’m a determined old bastard, so if I can let you all know there’s something else, I’ll damn well try. I’m not confide…..

Oh, fuck that hurt. I think my right kidney finally gave out. Either that or Claude Raines stabbed me with an invisible knife. Shit. It’s getting darker, but the sun is still shining, the lights in my room are lit. The darkness is closing in on me. I think this is it for me. I’ll be back if I ca…

The End

There are also a couple somewhat autobiographical points in this one. I had a nephew that OD’d, but he wasn’t gay. My father was in the navy, in Okinawa, and his ship, the USS Kimberly wad indeed hit by a kamikaze. And he died when I was nearly forty.
And as in the text, I do truly believe when we die, that’s it. Maybe it’s been all the posts about Comicality that got me thinking about death, but I’ve lately picked up an irrational fear of it. Not of dying. But of being dead and part of the nothing.
Copyright © 2024 Lee Wilson; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments

53 minutes ago, weinerdog said:

Very insightfuI. I bet a lot of readers have had similar thoughts even if they don't agree the though was there.

For reasons that would be inappropriate to state here I think we do go on in some way. The how and the what I have no idea 

I hope you're right, but for me, I have my doubts.

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42 minutes ago, Edgardo said:

I inadvertently hit the fingers crossed button, when I meant to hit the thumbs-up.

Gave me cause to think, as I had just looked at a group photograph of friends,

and noted that 4 of them have died.

You can change that, just click on it again.

Sorry to hear about your friends. Unfortunately, not necessarily photographs, but I know of quite a few from my youth that are already gone, most younger than me.

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1 hour ago, Flip-Flop said:

I can understand this statement from being with family at passing. The body is just the vessel that held the light of the one that we loved. 

True however one perceives an afterlife. The difference is some believe that light goes elsewhere.

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30 minutes ago, drsawzall said:

A powerful and thoughtful provoking essay with no right or wrong answers...

Thanks much.

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1 hour ago, Sherye Story Reader said:

Omg, that was how I envisioned the end for myself on lights out!

And here I thought I was alone with that imagery. Well, not really alone, but among a small minority.

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38 minutes ago, chris191070 said:

An insightful, though provoking, powerful piece of writing.

Thanks. This has actually been better received than I imagined.

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5 minutes ago, centexhairysub said:

I did not find this depressing.  Accurate and perhaps a little harsh, but not depressing.  

Well written and thought out, thanks for your contribution to my day being interesting.  

You're welcome. I suppose I saw it more depressing as I was writing it than it actually turned out.

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