Change is also the art of dying. Life is a long process of dying ending with departure. How about that?
the art of change is the art of dying along with the art of embracing the unknown. dying involves looking back. embracing the unknown involves looking forward. which way are you looking at it erik?
In such context 'being-OK-and-living-fully' sounds a bit hollow, don't you agree?
that could take us some time to explore erik. i don't know why things sound the way they do to you. why is it that you find mayflow trying to be ok with himself a "hollow" task?
my guess is that you find living fully "hollow" because you have made assumptions about the author...am i right? if we erase those assumptions as if they were never there and proceed...to suggest that fully living is a hollow task indicates that you havent devoted yourself to the effort yet. iow it doesnt seem that you know what it entails.
accepting change (ergo death) iow accepting the loss of something you once had is part of having it. iow dealing with the death is not actually walking through to the next part. embracing life (ergo living fully) is walking into the next part. dealing with your loss is important. but so too is moving on. neither task is "hollow."
tell me erik, since you have taken this position, what is it about living fully that seems so "hollow" to you? do you not love life? have you never seen something so beautiful that you wept in joy? have you ever tasted food so marvelous that you had to stop and fully enjoy the moment it was in your mouth? do you think that you have enough moments to spare that you can waste opportunities to express the love within you? is life not profound? because erik, life to me is so full that your comment about living it in its fullness being "hollow" just doesnt track.
if you dont have a clue what it is you are giving up, how can you call it "the art of dying"? are not both necessary?