A little rain must fall...
We plan. We live. We try to understand.
Somewhere in this universe there is a record-keeping device
that ascribes to Steinbeck’s famous quote, “the best laid plans of mice and men
oft go awry.” Being George Milton is no solace when you lose a friend Lennie
Small to your own hands. It is an act of love albeit a murderous one. Somewhere
in that flow of thought, the curse of knowledge comes to mind. You know, like,
George understood what would not be; the happiness of a life on the ranch.
George could not bear to see Lennie sad or lynched by Curly's mob, so he
killed him.
Lennie’s soul must cry out somewhere in this universe of
being wronged. Ah compassion of the wrong kind heralded by the slow of mind, by
the fast of claimed virtue, by the unwitting and by the rest of the herd seem to fall into
their personal trap of emotional comfort. For they seem to think that the act
justifies and thus soothes the emotional vein of feeling. Does it? Snuffing a
life that can be helped live out some future is a good thing? Justification in
the name of empathy is an emotional recoil for reason. “How can you not,” some
will say, to ward off future suffering. They forget that the future changes moment
to moment. Time lapse photographs of a blooming rose, a fracturing fallen
pitcher of milk or the penetration of a bullet through time all change the
future. The suffering never goes on. It ends sometime. It ends with time!
How can we in good conscience allow denial of care to a
human in need? When did we get bestowed with the rationalization of a George
Milton mind? How do we know of what is yet to come? The three days, three
months, three years or three decades of a future might through the act of one
life change the course of human existence, much like a certain human named Hawking has done. Was Lennie Small in need of
protection from his own strength that became his weakness? Was Lennie Small’s
simplemindedness nature’s cruel joke or nature’s argument for understanding?
Whatever it was, he deserved a better fate! To sit in judgment of a future that
is yet to be is to sit and revel in the ultimate hubris a human mind can
conjure.
Time to think and comprehend what is real and what could be in
the as yet fictional future.
A little rain must fall in everyone’s life. Humanity calls
for giving shelter, not the gun to blow off Lennie Small’s head!
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