For quite some time, i've loved this quote by Aristotle. I cannot even begin to talk about how much i agree with his thoughts, so instead I thought I'd share some more from my favourite book, Looking for Alaska by the one and only John Green.
This short passage is about how the main character, Pudge, tries to cope with the death of his friend Alaska (SPOILERS!). Green interweaves Aristotle's quote and seems to explain it perfectly.
I thought at first that she was just dead. Just darkness. Just a
body being eaten by bugs. I thought about her a lot like that, as something's
meal. What was her—green eyes, half a smirk, the soft curves of her legs—would
soon be nothing, just the bones I never saw. I thought about the slow process
of becoming bone and then fossil and then coal that will, in millions of years,
be mined by humans of the future, and how they would heat their homes with her,
and then she would be smoke billowing out of a smokestack, coating the
atmosphere. I still think that, sometimes, think that maybe "the
afterlife" is just something we made up to ease the pain of loss, to make
our time in the labyrinth bearable. Maybe she was just matter, and matter gets
recycled.
But ultimately I do not believe that she was only matter. The rest
of her must be recycled, too. I believe now that we are greater than the sum of
our parts. If you take Alaska's genetic code and you add her life experiences
and the relationships she had with people, and then you take the size and shape
of her body, you do not get her. There is something else entirely. There is a
part of her greater than the sum of her knowable parts. And that part has to go
somewhere, because it cannot be destroyed.
Although no one will ever accuse me of being much of a science student,
one thing I learned from science classes is that energy is never created and
never destroyed. And if Alaska took her own life, that is the hope I wish I
could have given her. Forgetting her mother, failing her mother and her friends
and herself—those are awful things, but she did not need to fold into herself
and self-destruct. Those awful things are survivable, because we are as
indestructible as we believe ourselves to be. When adults say, "Teenagers
think they are invincible" with that sly, stupid smile on their faces,
they don't know how right they are. We need never be hopeless, because we can
never be irreparably broken. We think that we are invincible because we are.
We cannot be born, and we cannot die. Like all energy, we can only change
shapes and sizes and manifestations. They forget that when they get old. They
get scared of losing and failing. But that part of us greater than the sum of
our parts cannot begin and cannot end, and so it cannot fail.
Now there's some wisdom for you.
-Kate
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