An Abstract Outlook on Invisibility
I had never felt afraid of death before. I have never encountered a life-threatening experience, and I have never been close to someone who has died. Death is far from me with a stretch of years in between. It is a ferocious beast, but there is a safe distance separating death and me.
One night I was lying in bed about to fall asleep. A sleepy haziness descended and rested upon my leaden eyes. It muddled everything together—all my thoughts blurred into one, and the past day became one thought. All my days and memories came together at that moment, collapsed, and expanded into a horizon of sleep and dreams. I could remember the past and feel the future. I was three, sixteen, and a ninety years old all at once.
I closed my eyes and for the first time something ancient and forgotten welled up inside of me. It was rising, rising from a deep instinct to a churning gut feeling. It rose still, past my heart with a shock, and in my mind became a thought; the thought became a word, and for the first time I knew what it meant to die.
The ninety-year-old in me felt it near—felt it hovering over me like this was my deathbed. The three-year-old shuddered, and the sixteen-year-old snapped my eyes open, alarmed by the fear that was suddenly flooding my mind and saturating the sheets with cold sweat.
Something that had been dim was briefly illuminated. I had often peered down that long hallway of my future, but its end was hidden, trailing off into mysterious shadows. In the glimpse of light I saw the hall end abruptly at a door. I had always subconsciously known that it couldn’t stretch on forever, but that was the first time I had ever seen or felt such a finite end. It was not the door itself, for it had always been there, but the thought of that door clicking shut that made me tremble. What if one day I went through and closed that door behind me? Would that trodden hallway still exist, lost in darkness like an undiscovered Egyptian tomb? To history I would be invisible—every second of my life left unfound.
I suddenly felt transparent, like my life meant nothing and I would simply fade through to the other side. A chill gripped me. I might vanish one day and the world left behind wouldn’t even realize I am gone. I am ultimately invisible. So with grim resolve I decided my future—the future that cannot be seen beyond the door. Let this life be what it may. One day I will close that door from the other side and I won’t look back.
