Double (Blue) Crossing the River Styx
Dr. Christsakes took a yawning breath and pushed the oars deeper into the Stygian river. Sticks and stones can break my bones, he thought, but death panels won't hurt my business. His rivercraft to the other side was full of previously middleclass baby-boomers and his palliative crew was busy setting the final rigging in the cool autumn air. The pre-fabricated vessel made flat line waves as they began their once-in-a-lifetime death trip across the river. Ironically, some religiously yearned to survive it. Since the recent election, it had been determined that rising health insurance premiums were a pre-existing perdition and that those without healthcare would be forced to wander the banks of America for one hundred years.
Recently re-animated by working for an enormous salary in insurance subsidized services, the good doctor's fairy had generated odious religious convictions and copious capital in the form of co-pays. Ontologically, the irreversible loss of personhood was on everyone's mind. But terrestrial evidence suggested that from the source, all rivers flow downhill, typically terminating in that notion.
Beginning as an evangelical death panel hypothesis, this "probability of living eternally without government healthcare" meme had morphed toward infamy; penetrating Alaskan swamp-gas radio shows, passing for treason under the gold-covered bridge to nowhere and landing somewhere beyond the conceptual horizon. Quite rapidly the questions of what constituted a human condition and how we could determine its needs had emerged as a political issue both philosophically rich and patently unheard.
Like an itchy uncertainty prince, Dr. Christsakes gathered up the opiate expedition tickets from his one-way commuters. Under duress, everyone had purchased them before boarding the common antiboat. The boomers were a little short of funds as many had complications of under-remuneration regarding their impending retirements. Somewhat exhausted by medical bankruptcies, most had conscientiously set their personal affairs in order, ready to give it up - notwithstanding the stormy crowd who gathered on the other side of the blather.
Double Blue-Crossing the River Styx, some prepaid winky whacktivists carrying semi-autocratic weapons and turbo snakes were bused in by repelican propaganda corporations. Zoned out hotsy sympathizers carrying flipnfuck mattresses from Null-Mart struggled to block some boomers from joining the hospice hospitality lines. But standing there in the majority, democritters who had lost their voices while in exile for nine years were now drinking unbottled municipal water and making reality-based appeals to reframe their optional hopes.
"Have you ever read that poem by Dylan Thomas?" Dr.
Christsakes finally asked his passengers with a sardonic smile. "After the
first death, there is no other." All rose on their last legs, placing their
binoculars of foresight into a care package for the living. They threw paper
airplanes back toward the children crowded on the shore. Printed on the planes surface
was House Resolution 676, Medicare for
All. The other side outlined the titillating Cash for Punkers program, already funded by insurance conglomerates
and moving like an engine in full revolution.
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http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d111:HR00676:@@@D&summ2=m&
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/death-definition/
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/20/health/20doctors.html?pagewanted=6&ref=health















Every single sentence in this post is so very well written that I can't pick out a favorite.
Highly rec'd.
August 22, 2009 2:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks LisB. Your comment is highly appreciated!
August 22, 2009 2:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
Does this mean I will still be eligible for Medicare? I mean even if I die first. I mean I am dying to see what legislation is actually percolating over there, on the Hill.
And does this have anything to do with the nucular option?
And speaking of nucular, does this mean that under some circumstances like so ulcerous mass, does the surgeon have to stop in mid incision and made a decision as to whether complete excision is necessary?
And if I were a smoker, I mean will they simply say:
Hey, where is this guy's living will, I mean he does not have that many years anyway.
Oh, wait a sec. That is what we have insurance agents for.
August 22, 2009 2:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
Hey doncha know that it’s really your fault anyway? Don’t you know how to “thrive?” What’s wrong with you? Do you smoke, are you hungry, drink occasionally, eat industrial foods, or do you just try to cope with re-uptaking reality in the US of internal combustion?
Are you living willfully? You must be a human, like me, not quite old enough for Medicare.
August 22, 2009 3:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
You have blown me away. Thank you.
I read all the lines, then went back and read in between the lines.
Then, I had to go back and read in between the spaces in the words...
All of it brilliant, all of it. So very moving and full of imagry.
Also.
August 22, 2009 3:23 PM | Reply | Permalink
She is gooooooooood is she not?
I am getting the biggest kick out of her posts.
August 22, 2009 3:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
I can see all them common folk standing on the shore, Dickon, working hard, doing their best not to harm others, doing their best for their kids. I think I hear them saying, very quietly, "if we get in the boat, will the sharks stop gnawing at us? Please, just stop gnawing at us...."
Kind of like the rustle of dead grass in a hot breeze.
August 22, 2009 3:31 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you so much Bwak. I know you know
how it feels :~( x :~)
but you always give me hope for all of us critters.
August 22, 2009 4:02 PM | Reply | Permalink
Strato's composed a new thought symphony from Cascadia.
Bravo Strato.
August 22, 2009 4:14 PM | Reply | Permalink
Your excellent post brought out these thoughts. “The Collective Breath” you suggested we take. Thank you Gary - I can breathe now.
http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/tpmgary/2009/08/00011100000000100011-said-one.php
August 22, 2009 4:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
I can't say enough positive about this piece of deeply intellectual and evocative art. It made me go back and refresh my memory on the River Styx, and I found something I never learned from Encyclopedia Mythica. From that link I learned there are actually FIVE rivers that separate the world of the living from the world of the dead and that the Styx circles Hades 9 times. Further, that Styx is the River of Hate and that Cerebus (who guards both rivers Styx and Acehron) would only accept those with a coin in their mouths.
HMM, strato. A pertinent choice for the tenor of these days it seems. It is a bit distressing that the Greeks made you pay to die too.
August 22, 2009 7:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you Rowan. That River Styx isn’t really a myth. We’re seeing the hatred full bore these days, and paying big premiums to cross over. I appreciate that link. The Greeks had a real flair for describing demise.
August 22, 2009 7:31 PM | Reply | Permalink
Brilliant. Word by word.
August 22, 2009 7:20 PM | Reply | Permalink
Hello Belle, how is my sweetheart tonite?
Hope things are well.
Never miss Strato. ha!!!
August 22, 2009 7:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you, dear Staebler. Really good to see you again!
I hope things are looking up, up north in the
copacetic Canadian cool.
August 22, 2009 7:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Hey -- I feel as if I've crossed a river (OK, a bay) to a land of the living where a true appreciation of "socialist" programs indicates national sanity. Two job interviews, one of which has promise. Therefore, all good "up north in the copacetic Canadian cool" except ... uh oh .... Hurricane Bill, making an appearance today. I ask you --what are the odds of a two hurricane veteran being here for that, eh? What's that you say? That if you want to avoid hurricanes mebbe stay away from the coast during the season? Never mind. I was actually useful yesterday in identifying potential flying objects. Missing all of you. (Sorry, Strato, for the frivolous digression from a serious subject.)
August 23, 2009 6:47 AM | Reply | Permalink
Welcome back.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHcvoksKJKA
August 23, 2009 9:31 AM | Reply | Permalink
Third time's a charm! Hardly frivolous when objects fly
in a hurricane. Take cover please.
We sure do miss you around here and send
all good wishes for your well being in that
socialized sanity.
August 23, 2009 12:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
Strato and her technicolor brain waves strikes again.
Simply fantastic.
August 22, 2009 8:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you flowerchild :~)
Did you ever notice how rainbows smile upside down for
us, but just right for the sky?
Thanks for reading this.
August 22, 2009 11:55 PM | Reply | Permalink
Some things are too good to compliment. Whoever it was who created words had you in mind.
August 22, 2009 10:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
LarryH, thank you. I'm honored you came to read.
What you said made me cry.
August 23, 2009 12:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
This. Blows. Me. Away.
What else can I say, except that I will probably steal at least "flipnfuck mattresses from Null-Mart" for sometime when I need to paint a picture.
Thanks for this. I will read it again and again, just to peel it all back and savor every word.
August 22, 2009 11:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Stealin, stealin,..."
Hahahaaha... Thanks Sleepin!
I'd love to see your painting!
August 23, 2009 1:22 AM | Reply | Permalink
This one's for pondering. Thanks stratofrog. Beautifully written!
August 23, 2009 9:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you ohnocindymaxparsingthru.
I appreciate your kind words
and I love your name!
August 23, 2009 1:05 PM | Reply | Permalink