PERPUTUAL CARE IS NOT WHAT IT USED TO BE
As a child I was always puzzled by the “Perpetual Care”
marble markers in cemeteries we would visit for funerals or for Memorial
Day. How could we- the living- make
representations about this? This concern may have been related to one of the
recurring dreams of my youth where I was hurtling through space toward a
celestial object. The faster I travelled
through the dark ether, the further away the pursued object moved.
This may explain why I’ve always been interested in subjects
covering unimaginable time such as astronomy, cosmology, geology, human
evolution and (to a lesser extent) archaeology. Recently, I caught a program on
The Science Channel where astronomers and physicists discussed how the universe
would end. Basically, in a few trillion years, all of the hydrogen in all of
the stars etc. will be burnt off. At
that point, all of the energy in existence will be consumed and “the lights
will go out”. ( Not with a bang, but
with a whimper) At any rate, our descendants won’t be around (assuming we don’t
exterminate ourselves) as they will experience certain existential demise for a
range of reasons including: 1) being consumed by a nearby super nova; 2) suffocating
and starving when the sun evolves into a hotter star which will make the Earth
look like Venus; or when the Milky Way
and the Andromeda Galaxy collide creating mass destruction.
Alas, because of our accumulation of scientific knowledge,
perpetual care is not what it used to be.