I was seated in the waiting room of the physical therapy center with the rest of the human wreckage. Two men were seated to my right, speaking Spanish. Both were in street clothes with no obvious signs of injury or disease. To my left was a black man about my age, dressed all in black. He had a prosthetic right leg beneath the knee and was drinking a cup of coffee. He uses a walker to navigate. We chatted, indifferent stuff at first, before I asked him how he lost the leg. “Fuckin’ diabetes,” he said. He still occasionally feels his foot, the so-called “phantom limb” phenomenon.
He goes to PT hoping to ease
other pains – knees, hips, back. Edema is an ongoing problem. He spoke clinically,
without complaint, and I appreciated his apparent absence of self-pity. When he
stood, he groaned softly. It sounded familiar. He had noticed my cane and I told
him about the arthritis. As he moved toward the PT room he said, “Life’s a bitch,
ain’t it?” and laughed.
To read while waiting I
brought along Santayana’s The Life of Reason, originally published in
five volumes in 1905-06. I haven’t read it in years and I’m luxuriating in the
prose. Can you think of another writer whose English prose is as fluent as
Santayana’s? Perhaps Ruskin. Or Evelyn Waugh. No academic nonsense or stiffness, little jargon,
philosophical or otherwise. In the first volume, Reason in Common Sense,
in the chapter titled “First Steps and First Fluctuations,” he devotes an
extended digression to the subject of pain:
“[T]o deny that pleasure
is a good and pain an evil is a grotesque affectation: it amounts to giving ‘good’
and ‘evil’ artificial definitions and thereby reducing ethics to arbitrary verbiage.
. . . A man who without necessity deprived any person of a pleasure or imposed
on him a pain, would be a contemptible knave, and the person so injured would
be the first to declare it, nor could the highest celestial tribunal, if it was
just, reverse that sentence.”