This is not the “strange and bookish” thing promised in
the prior post; the fog still abounds. But in a way, this is stranger. This is
my youngest daughter, Patch, age nine-point-seven-five, unprompted, at
government school, writing down some thoughts:
The
Meaning of Life
6-5-18
The
meaning of life can’t be put into a simple thought. The meaning of life is
bigger than a family, a job, the world, perhaps. The meaning of life is only
known by God, and man can only assume what the secret to it is. God gives us a
reason to live – in fact, a meaning. I suspect that life is a test. A test of
intelligence, courage, bravery, kindness, and fairness. You can’t necessarily
fail, but you can restart and reconstruct your life. If you “pass” then the
life of the grand is yours. You could have earned the grand life if it was the
seventh try. Nevertheless, at some point, many people think they know the
meaning of life, but alas, only God know that secret.
Couple of thoughts –
First, she’s nine
years old. When I was nine, I was drawing pictures with my stencil of
flying saucers zapping World War II soldiers. Though I did start reading slim
SF paperbacks around this time. Robert Silverberg’s Conquerors from the Darkness was read when I was her age. But I
didn’t know nuthin’ about meaning of life stuff.
Second, God.
Thank God our government schools haven’t squashed God out of her, though I’m
sure her fourth grade teacher is NOT ALLOWED to give her thoughts on the
Supreme Being.
Third, I think the writing gene has been passed on yet
again – first to Little One, now to Patch. May they have much more success than
their dad has had. Which should be a fairly easy task to accomplish, as they
have fifty-percent of their mom in those genes, too.
Wow! Incredible on every level!
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