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The Geography of Loss

There is a particular
kind of silence that falls over a life when it arrives at a fork in the road. It
is not the quiet of peace, but the hush of a held breath. You stand at the junction
of two paths leading in opposite directions:
to tell or not to tell, to leap
or not to leap, to leave or not to leave.

In these moments,
time seems to stop, but the heart does not. The heart races. Because you know the
truth that all the platitudes about “new beginnings” try to hide: every real choice
is a double loss. Even the necessary losses, leaving a job that has died
inside you, ending a Love that has become a ruin, telling a truth that will shatter
a Family, these losses still hurt. The pain is not a sign you are wrong; it is a
sign you are alive. You will feel the absence of the road not taken acutely. And
the gains? The gains are constitutionally impossible to imagine. Your brain, wired
for survival, can picture the shadow of what you lose but cannot render the color
of what you might become.

You have likely
tried everything to escape this vertigo.

The Rational
Way (Franklin’s Ledger)

You pulled out a sheet of paper. You drew the line. Pro. Con. You
listed the reasons: salary, Security, loneliness, freedom. You tried to be Benjamin
Franklin, practicing what he called “Moral or Prudential Algebra.” You struck out
equal weights. You tried to reduce the chaos of your one precious life to a balance
sheet.

But you found
the flaw. The weight of a reason cannot be taken with the precision of algebraic
quantities. How do you weigh “the sound of her laughter” against “financial stability”?
How do you quantify “the shame of staying” against “the terror of the unknown”?
Franklin’s method works for buying a horse. It fails for choosing a soul.

The Emotional
Way (Abdication)

So you turned to the people you trust. You asked your mother, your best friend,
your therapist. “Tell me what to do.” For a moment, the relief is narcotic. The
responsibility lifts. But it always returns, heavier than before. Because abdication
is not a solution; it is a loan against your own integrity. When the decision sours
(as all decisions do, in small ways), you will have the double burden of regret
and resentment. You will blame them for the life you chose.

The Coin Flip
(The Illusion of Futility)

Finally, you might have reached for a coin. Heads I stay, tails I go. You
told yourself that free will is an illusion, that the neuroscientists like Sam Harris
are right, that “you are not the author of your thoughts.” Why agonize? Flip it.

But here is the
secret the coin reveals: the moment it spins in the air, you suddenly know what
you hope it lands on. Before it hits the ground, the decision is already made. The
coin is not a decider; it is a diviner of your hidden want.

None of these
methods solve the central poison of difficult decisions: renunciation. At
the heart of every binary choice is the commandment to kill a version of yourself.
If you go, you kill the person who stayed. If you stay, you murder the one who dared
to leave. No wonder you are paralyzed. You are being asked to commit a slow violence
against your own potential.

The Third
Way: Integration over Renunciation

There is another
way. It is not better or easier, but it is truer. It comes from a Danish philosopher
with a profound sense of irony: Søren Kierkegaard.

Kierkegaard looked
at the agony of either/or and laughed, not cruelly, but with the recognition of
an absurd truth. He wrote his famous litany of regret:

“If you marry,
you will regret it; if you do not marry, you will also regret it… If you hang yourself,
you will regret it; if you do not hang yourself, you will also regret it… This…
is the sum of all practical Wisdom.”

Most people read
this and despair. They think Kierkegaard is saying, “Nothing matters, all choices
lead to pain.” But he is saying something far more radical. He is saying that you
are looking for the wrong thing. You are searching for a decision that will bring
certainty, a decision that will have no sorrow. That path does not exist. The true
eternity, he insists, lies not behind either/or but ahead of it.

The third way
is to stop asking, “Which path is right?” and start asking, “Which path will
allow me to become more fully myself?” The goal is not to optimize outcomes
(you cannot, you have only one life to test them). The goal is to align with your
deepest value, knowing that sorrow is the price of admission to a meaningful life.

How to Lift
Off: A Practice for Integration

You cannot choose
between two losses. You can only choose which loss you will integrate into
the story of who you are. Here is how to move from trudging the ground of forking
paths to lifting into the sky of possibility.

Step 1: Stop
trying to predict the future. Predict your regret.

Do not ask, “What will make me happy?” Happiness is a weather system; it changes.
Ask instead, “Which decision, when I am eighty years old, will I regret not having
tried
?” Future-regret is a cleaner compass than present-fear.

Step 2: Name
the dead.

Write down the specific version of yourself that will die with each choice. “If
I leave this city, the version of me who was a loyal son dies.” “If I end this Marriage,
the version of me who was a protector dies.” Mourn them. Light a candle. Write a
eulogy. You cannot move forward until you have honored what you are renouncing.
Integration does not mean pretending loss isn’t loss. It means carrying the loss
with you.

Step 3: The
Kierkegaardian Leap of Faith.

Kierkegaard famously said, “Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be
lived forwards.” You will never have enough data. The pros and cons will never balance
perfectly. At some point, you must close the ledger and leap. Not a blind
leap, a leap of faith in your own capacity to metabolize whatever happens next.
The leap is not about the outcome; it is about the courage to be the author of your
own life, not the reader of someone else’s script.

Step 4: Choose
the sorrow that lets you sing.

This is the final, brutal metric. Both paths contain sorrow. One sorrow is a deadening
sorrow, a low hum of resignation, a life lived in the subjunctive (“what if”). The
other sorrow is a generative sorrow, a Grief that is also a door. The right decision
is the one whose sorrow you can transform into song. Not joy, necessarily. Song.
Meaning. Shape. The ability to look back and say, “That suffering was not for nothing.”

You are capable
of deep sorrow. You are also capable of heavenly song. The question is not how to
avoid the first, but how to arrange the second.

Originally Published on https://boomersnotsenior.blogspot.com/

I served as a teacher, a teacher on Call, a Department Head, a District Curriculum, Specialist, a Program Coordinator, and a Provincial Curriculum Coordinator over a forty year career. In addition, I was the Department Head for Curriculum and Instruction, as well as a professor both online and in person at the University of Phoenix (Canada) from 2000-2010.

I also worked with Special Needs students. I gave workshops on curriculum development and staff training before I fully retired

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