I'm going to share three words of advice I just read, advice from the marvelously witty songwriter and performer Warren Zevon. Warren died in 2003, leaving behind a colorful life full of ups and downs, periods of success in performing and writing, and periods marked by drug and alcohol abuse. He was only 56 when he died.
It's noteworthy that he was famous for recording other peoples' songs, and having other record his. See him here on the Letterman show singing Prince's "Raspberry Beret"...and Linda Ronstadt had the hit version of his song "Poor Poor Pitiful Me."
But 56 years on earth is plenty of time to reflect and share what one has learned. Once he learned that his death from mesothelioma was inevitable, he let his mordant, thanatotic side out to play...recording a final album called "My Ride's Here," in which he posed for the album cover looking out the passenger window of a funeral limousine.
Enjoy every sandwich.
When I saw that written somewhere last night, I wondered about how foolish we are to race through life without stopping to think about the farmers who grew the wheat and threshed it for us for someone to make bread...the arborist who raised raspberries for use in making jelly...and the farmer down in Georgia whose peanut crop turned into a jar of Skippy.
Don't get me wrong! I'm not writing because I got some bad news. I didn't! Why, just last week my personal physician assured me there is no reason I won't live to be a hundred and some. (I've got great insurance!) That's a lot of years left, and believe me, I am going to feel and express appreciation for the people, places, emotions, and sandwiches that come my way.













