Life Can not end
What scares people more than monsters, burglars, murderers, and rapists? The answer is death. Why does death make us afraid? It could be because we are afraid for our life. The word life, as it is used here, does not mean that a person's heart is beating, and their organs are functioning properly. It is intended to represent the thoughts and experiences accumulated over time. We don't want to be lost once we are unable to continue collecting memories and interacting with other people. Will we become only a name in some distant past? The following lines by Manolis Anagnostakis, a Greek poet, show us this fear most clearly:
It is because of this that he left so much of himself behind. His studies of the human body pushed the envelope of what was socially permissible. " This quote illustrates that Da Vinci understood, that in order for our voices to continue after we are gone, we must silence the voices of others. It is clear that he, Da Vinci, was a brilliant man but still only a man and he did not look forward to leaving this world if it meant he would be forgotten. His name is remembered throughout centuries because he was not afraid to push himself and his opinions beyond the edge of accepted beliefs. Take for example Leonardo Da Vinci; he perhaps is one of the best known humans in history. The following lines demonstrate this fear:A far-off voice revolves in your memory and fades away(13-12-43, l 21). Everyone is familiar with the Mona Lisa, and Da Vinci's self Portrait, but what ensures that we teach about him in our classrooms is his ability to immortalize himself through a variety of art forms and scientific disciplines. Many people will go to great lengths, even leave projects incomplete, to touch as many areas of life as possible. In another poem by Manolis Anagnostakis he illustrates the fear that we all have that our voices will not continue in those we have had known in our lives. He is most certainly not just a spectator, but rather a major player in life. No one wishes to be remembered as a spectator. Da Vinci once said, "You do ill if you praise, but worse if you censure, what you do not understand. llow in the crowdNow he no longer applauds nor is applaudedA stranger wandering to the call of the streets. (Now he is a simple spectator, ll 16-19)Every day we exist we have opportunities to grow and touch the lives of others.
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