Born Alone, Die Alone: What Does This Mean?

Wilson Gray hwgray at GMAIL.COM
Mon Oct 24 18:57:31 UTC 2011


On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 2:20 PM, Ben Zimmer
<bgzimmer at babel.ling.upenn.edu> wrote:
> Other variations on the theme include "You're born naked, you die
> naked" and "You're born broke, you die broke" (i.e., you can't take it
> with you, or as John Lennon put it, you don't take nothing with you
> but your soul).
>

Isn't it the case that Jobs was never acknowledged by his biological
father and given up for adoption by his mother? And cf. the old blues,
"God Bless The Child"?

I don't that Jobs had in mind being physically alone, in the literal
sense. If mere physical loneliness is the only kind of loneliness that
a person has experienced, then he's a "fortunate son," luckier than
99.44% of the rest of mankind.

How can Jobs's observation possibly be hard to understand?! Geez!

--
-Wilson
-----
All say, "How hard it is that we have to die!"---a strange complaint
to come from the mouths of people who have had to live.
-Mark Twain

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