Day 133

I don't imagine that the moment after my death will be any different for me than will the moment after death for any other human, creature, or even plant.

And there it is, my answer to the so-called problem of evil.

When we about when bad things happen in completely arbitrary ways, when the most innocent of all children die by painful starvation or natural disaster while the heavens look on with arms crossed, if we ask why, we're asking the wrong question. There is no metaphysical truth to the matter: tragedies are often unpreventable, and as far as we're existentially concerned, random.

The right question is how do we cope? I see nonsense when I'm confronted with the 'problem' of reconciling a benevolent God with the world's evil. But there is meaning in asking how we reconcile our freedom with the fact that the rug may be pulled out under us at any moment. The more one is willing to push, the more one is able to understand just how constrained we are; the world is fragile, time is severely limited, lives walk very, very thin tightropes.

But then here we are. I feel very deeply that every key stroke is chosen.

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