I felt like writing an overview of 50 years of different kinds of efforts to keep fit, well, in-shape, etc.---so here is a prose-poem I wrote today.
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THE WHIPS AND SCORNS OF TIME
Watching a television documentary on Jimmy Carter’s presidency(“Jimmy Carter: Part 2,”ABC TV, 5:00-6:00 p.m., 23/7/06) and reading Abigail Trafford’s article at an internet site from the Washington Post(“Presidents Set a Fast Pace,” February 9th 1999), I learned of Carter’s jogging and walking enthusiasms. This information caused me to reflect on the many presidents, prime ministers and leaders in various fields who enjoy varying regimens of exercise to keep fit and healthy, to overcome illness and different medical and physical problems. I could list here, by category: the walkers, the joggers, the weight-lifters, the games players, the swimmers, the exercise-treatment-fitness program enthusiasts, the afternoon-sleepers, the special dieters, the home exercise-equipment people and the yoga and meditation folk-and there are others, some of them listed at this site. I could also list my own exercise activities and health programs over the years and they would include all of the above at different times going right back to the start of what the Baha’is call the Kingdom of God on earth in 1953.-Ron Price, Pioneering Over Four Epochs, July 24th 2006.
I was never a glutton for physical
punishment, exercise and activity,
although I think the daily walk
may prove to possess longevity
along with the daily sleep in the
afternoon or the evening----and,
oh yes, prayer and meditation---.
The rest were not in the signature
of my life, but suffered the slings
and arrows of outrageous fortune,
here today and gone tomorrow---
like that erotic act, as fleeting as
the wind without that longevity but,
alas and alack, slipping into a quiet
niche with little role to play in my
health on any level—-those walks
& sleeps, though, that prayer &
meditation, they stood at the centre
of my days as a voice of moderation
countering the excesses, the illnesses,
the work, fatigue, anxiety, the chronic
problems and the thousand natural shocks
that flesh is heir to before the sleep of death
when I have shuffled off this mortal coil &
bear the whips & scorns of time no more.1
1 Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 1, lines 63-70.
Ron Price July 24th 2006.
__________________________
THE WHIPS AND SCORNS OF TIME
Watching a television documentary on Jimmy Carter’s presidency(“Jimmy Carter: Part 2,”ABC TV, 5:00-6:00 p.m., 23/7/06) and reading Abigail Trafford’s article at an internet site from the Washington Post(“Presidents Set a Fast Pace,” February 9th 1999), I learned of Carter’s jogging and walking enthusiasms. This information caused me to reflect on the many presidents, prime ministers and leaders in various fields who enjoy varying regimens of exercise to keep fit and healthy, to overcome illness and different medical and physical problems. I could list here, by category: the walkers, the joggers, the weight-lifters, the games players, the swimmers, the exercise-treatment-fitness program enthusiasts, the afternoon-sleepers, the special dieters, the home exercise-equipment people and the yoga and meditation folk-and there are others, some of them listed at this site. I could also list my own exercise activities and health programs over the years and they would include all of the above at different times going right back to the start of what the Baha’is call the Kingdom of God on earth in 1953.-Ron Price, Pioneering Over Four Epochs, July 24th 2006.
I was never a glutton for physical
punishment, exercise and activity,
although I think the daily walk
may prove to possess longevity
along with the daily sleep in the
afternoon or the evening----and,
oh yes, prayer and meditation---.
The rest were not in the signature
of my life, but suffered the slings
and arrows of outrageous fortune,
here today and gone tomorrow---
like that erotic act, as fleeting as
the wind without that longevity but,
alas and alack, slipping into a quiet
niche with little role to play in my
health on any level—-those walks
& sleeps, though, that prayer &
meditation, they stood at the centre
of my days as a voice of moderation
countering the excesses, the illnesses,
the work, fatigue, anxiety, the chronic
problems and the thousand natural shocks
that flesh is heir to before the sleep of death
when I have shuffled off this mortal coil &
bear the whips & scorns of time no more.1
1 Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 1, lines 63-70.
Ron Price July 24th 2006.