Life
It was May, 2000, when at last
the human genome project was completed.
What that meant in a nutshell is that the blueprint of what makes us
human had been “read”. Of course, we are
not talking about sheets of paper drawings as in a house plan, or even a
topographic picture that maps it all out.
It is more complicated than that and what makes it even more astounding
is the microscopic size of this blue print.
A single cell is very, very small but imagine increasing its size to
that of a basketball. Inside it is the tennis
ball size nucleus where in it resides our twig-like chromosomes (carriers of
our individual characteristics). A
chromosome unravels as a very long continuous looped ladder-like structure with
rungs connecting two parallel strands. The
analogy is that of pulling a loose thread from a knitted sock where a long
strand of yarn unravels in a twisted pattern. The blue print is configured like
that – a ladder-like structure twisted about in a helix. Each rung is made up
of a pair of chemical bases labeled as the letters A, C, T and G, short for
each chemical base name. Interestingly,
which makes it simple in a way, ‘A’ only pairs up with ‘T’ and ‘C’ with ‘G’. Nothing
man has ever created comes close to the complexity of the DNA. We’re told that in each of our DNA is the
order and sequencing of these rungs that differentiates us from other living
things and from each other. The DNA is
the information molecule that has what it takes to be you or me.
Francis Collins who was the
Director of the Human Project Genome called the success equivalent to having read
the language of life. The language,
however, had to be incredibly boring.
Just imagine reading a million-page-book with repetitive sequences of
nothing but CG, GC, AT, TA over and over.
So scientists rely on computers to do the reading of over 3.1 billion
rungs in that ladder. All mammals have
about the same number, some amphibians may have more but I read that there is a
plant – a fern actually – that has a hundred times more as ours. Now, try writing the blue print for that
one. Apparently someone did to make the
determination that it is 100 times more than ours.
Every living thing has DNA,
including plants. We share 50 % of our DNA with a
banana! We and chimpanzees share
98 %. Incredible as that may seem –
about the banana, in particular – it is not at all, because we are told that
everything that lives has in its ancestry a history that goes all the way back
to a single cell life form just a little less than 4 billion years ago. Let’s set aside for the moment the arguments
from each opposing camps of creationism and evolution. In fact, it is actually not about which side
is right or wrong because, and this is very important, both can be right. Indeed,
if we stop the debate and just say that the chronology of creation and
evolution seems to match up except for the fact that we have “days” in creation
and a few billion years here and there in evolution. The fact of the matter is that the diversity of
life is so phenomenal that from one end we have microscopic planktons and 150-ton
blue whales at the other and everything in between. But we find DNA to be the most
absolute common denominator. In other
words, no living thing is without a DNA, and DNA has a way of relating one
living thing to another.
The Dalai Lama may be right after
all although one Australian TV host made fun of it by joking with the revered
spiritual leader that he (the latter) can order pizza by saying, “make me one
with everything”. Not only was that
perplexing to the Dalai Lama he failed to catch the punch line. The TV reporter
was teasing him about the spiritual concept that in the end we are all related
one to the other and that means with every living thing.
From the frozen tundra to the
black depths of a deep ocean to the vicinity of boiling sulfur lakes and volcanic
calderas life manages to manifest its many forms. It has extraordinary adaptable
attribute, it is flourishing, and defies imagination. Life finds a niche anywhere and everywhere. How did life become so easily possible
here? And why the inter dependence? Everywhere we look we are reminded of the
“balance of nature” but what does that really mean? Fortunately, the reason you
are reading this is because life had produced us - a thinking intelligent
creature with an ability to ask these questions. Foremost of those questions is one that had
been asked since the dawn of civilization that remains unanswered today; at
least not to the unanimous satisfaction of everyone. First, there is this – is
there really a meaning to life, and if there is, what is it? And there is something we often forget to
ask. In life’s diverse landscape – from
the simple amoeba to the jelly fish to the complex organization of harvester
ants and termite colonies to how families of capuchin monkeys operate, and so
on and on – how did one organism emerged to lay claim of dominion over others.
Yet, we second guess with this, “Is human life more meaningful than all others
and should not everything be considered along that line? It is often times unintended hubris on our
part to assume that we are responsible for many things that go wrong around us
when it comes to the welfare and survival of other species. That is why we have “protected species acts”
imposed by governments when we destroy the habitats of other living things, so we
need to limit our use of energy or reduce its ill effects and apportion the resources
lest we destroy the environment, prevent cruelty to animals. That is deemed a
civilized response; although the killing of people and the methods used have
grown in sophistication war after war and expectedly through to the next one. Even today the world has in its stockpile
weapons with enough power to destroy itself many times over. The
quest for life’s meaning will lose its relevance.
The rise in worldwide population
is self-ascribed to our nurturing nature and it didn’t take long to double it
from 3 to 6 billion people despite the fact that the road we took to get there
is littered with a history of tribal wars and escalating conflict that defy the
very premise by which civilized society is based and the promise of lasting
peace is a broken refrain repeated over and over.
Civilization, its rise for the
betterment of society, revolves around the value of life – human life. The New
International version of Genesis says, “Then God said, ‘Let us make mankind in
our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and
the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all
the creatures that move along the ground." That we had done. The other Biblical versions even used the
word “dominion” over other creatures. God
rested on the seventh day after six days of creation.
On the other hand, historical,
scientific and archeological evidence paint a different albeit parallel picture. The development of life had gone on for
billions of years and the fossil record is filled with life flourishing only to
be snuffed out abruptly, then re-emerging to develop once more and then die out
again. There were five major mass
extinctions but there were two dozen extinction events; the former were truly
about extinctions in a massive scale cutting across a wide swath of organisms, while
the latter was about certain species being wiped out due to competition or
catastrophic events affecting specific habitats. Incredibly life always managed to re-emerge,
with species coming out better adapted than the previous ones. Dinosaurs whose
fossils are the main draw in many natural science museums ruled for over 160
million years but incredibly were wiped out 67 million years ago by a
catastrophic event suspected to be an asteroid impact. It was that mass extinction that ushered in
the age of the mammals. It was not until about just two hundred thousand years
ago that our nearest ancestors appeared and it was likely not for another
hundred thousand years after that when the first humanoids walked away from the
safety of the forests to the plains of the savannah.
Life, however one looks at its
origin, is very persistent. Life is not
content with mere survival but it appears to have a goal towards
perfection.
Here is my last word on the
subject of creation versus evolution. If
science has established that every living thing has a blue print of its DNA it
is faced with the question as to whether it was written intentionally by a
Creator or the language just simply manifested itself as a random occurrence
over a period of time. That is what
faces every scientist and religious leader who wants to tackle the issue
because regardless of which side one decides to hold on to there is always the
lingering question, “So, what was it before this or that?” You see, even if we
accept that science has proven, for example, that the whole universe began as
an explosion from a single point at the beginning of time, there will always be
the question, “So before that so called explosion, what was there?” A shrug is
of course not a very good answer. Stephen
Hawking, the wheelchair bound physics laureate and bestselling author who is
heavily involved in the quest for the Theory of Everything, answers with, “the
universe has no boundary”, in time and space, whatever that means. The universe
just simply existed all along and for that reason he supposes that it has no
need for a Creator. On the other hand if
one camp agrees, for example, that evolution is a subset of creation whereby a
Creator used evolution as a tool to make creation possible then the
conversation could be less intractable.
But that is not likely to happen and that being the case it is therefore
best not to engage debating it at all.
Life as we know it today is a
complex phenomenon but only because we are here to contemplate it, examine it
from both the spiritual and scientific points of view, to be astounded and awed
by it, to be grateful for it and to cherish it. However, more importantly and limited only to
our humanity, we must live it.
Living
If life is God’s gift to every
person, then living that life however one chooses to do it is a measure of the
value we put into it. The manner by which we live that life also reflects how
we relate to those around us – our closest loved ones, friends, co-workers and
the community of people around us. If
life is the hardware then the manner of how we live is the operating program
that sits in our brain and governed by software that is in our mind.
“All the world's a stage, and all
the men and women merely players: they have their exits and their entrances;
and one man in his time plays many parts, his acts being seven ages.”
William Shakespeare
Indeed, but we must never forget
that the stage we get, the one we grew up in, the very place where everyone we
know also inhabits, may not always be the one we prefer or dream about. A suburban home in the western world is a lofty
place, almost heavenly like to someone living in the streets of Calcutta, the
remote region in Outer Mongolia, or the impoverished section of every congested
city from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil to Mogadishu in Somalia to Tondo in Manila,
Philippines. But life must be lived
whatever the stage we live in or by the state of one’s existence because life
is persistent, resourceful and enduring.
Yet, often we somehow manage to devalue it, destroy it, and most of all
despite all the prevailing chances and golden opportunities, we just simply
waste it.
If I must, and often I do, use
another metaphor, our birth, our entry into the world begins at the “Start”
button and from there living is our operating system. The program may do well for a while, for some
it does run splendidly because the stage is set in a stable two-parent, middle
class family in a developed society, for others (by a huge margin) it is rough
going that may begin with poor child care and diminished opportunities.
Nevertheless, in many instances not only that life prevails, someone who is
like a drop in the ocean of poverty and hardship floats up and sparkle as a gem
from a scattering flotsam. In both cases the “Start” button may not have been
equal but in many instances life was well lived because we had seen it
countless times from history and we expect that for many in generations to come.
Continuing with the metaphor,
just like with the computer program, life allows living to have a “Reboot”
option and again we saw countless examples of rough starts getting a fresh
re-booting for a life well lived. There
had been Booker T. Washington’s and Horatio Alger’s in history. Today we have
J.K. Rawling, Daymond John and Chris Gardner, to name just a few. They all had rough “Starts” but each one took
the opportunity to “Reboot”.
Life is not a gift were it not
accompanied by the chance to live it. If
life were a canvass, living is the variety of colors we have at our disposal to
paint whatever landscape we choose that shall become our life portrait. We live
and we work, we love and we enjoy, we toil and then we rest. Each of us can be defined in just a few
ways. The free spirits live free, others
live for free, some exceptional individuals live to work, while a majority of
us work for a living.
Lest we obsess over work we must
know that if each life can be contained in just one sentence, the individual is
the subject, his life the predicate and how he lives is the verb but work
should just be well within a parenthesis. We are born, we grow up and
parenthetically we work, hopefully have a family and blessedly have children
and grandchildren but then we, without exception, retire - hopefully for many
more years thereafter. The latter is
what it is all about and it must count because a complete sentence always ends
with a period. No one, however one
tries, can ever have a fragmented sentence, a prepositional phrase or
independent clause. At some point,
sooner or later, we all end with a period.
And enough with the metaphors. That last phrase, as you know, is what a
fragmented sentence looks like – undeserving of a period.
Death
Every life, from the simple to
the complex, begins with the raising of a curtain. Everyone who lives long
enough has a chance to play on stage, under bright lights for the very few but
for many under subdued lighting and anonymity for some, but like everything
all must face the final curtain.
And now the end is near
So I face the final curtain
My friend, I'll say it clear
I'll state my case of which I'm certain
I've lived a life that's full
I've traveled each and every highway
And more, much more than this
I did it my way
Paul Anka
We all would like to
have “lived a life that’s full” but even if we fall short of our dreams and
aspirations we hope to have left something to mark our passing. For the few there will be accolades and
applause; however, much to their wish, an encore is impossible. Everyone else will do his or her best. Along the way we do get sporadic applause
lines from loved ones and friends and colleagues but it is not the size of the
stage but the quality of how well we lived that matters. Such quality should not be measured by how
much wealth and material we leave behind to our heirs because often a person is
remembered for the immeasurable deeds of kindness, love and caring for others.
Mankind though had
always asked this. “What is it for me when I begin to cross that threshold of
mortality and find that beyond that curtain there is nothing but nothingness?” Well,
if that is the case then really there is not much we can do – we will not be
able to regret, to second guess, and certainly not able to have a do over. There is no mulligan. But then we are also allowed to speculate
with this, “The good deeds I did were all for naught then?”
To those who ask the
last question are reminded by the likes of Mother Theresa, the countless first
responders to a disaster, the doctors and nurses who volunteered to face the
scourge of Ebola head on, the soldier who was willing to sacrifice himself to
save a comrade, and many more examples.
These people do those things because it is already rewarding enough to
see a face relieved of pain and anguish at the moment of rescue, the smile of a
recovering child and the gratitude of a soldier who will get to go home to his
family. These people who do these deeds
do not wait to see what’s beyond that curtain because a well lived life today
is his or her reward – in the present tense.
I cannot seem to get
too far away from metaphors. In the end
do we shut down the computer of life or is it just an exit? I notice the new Windows 10 has a sleep
option. The Dalai Lama and partly in the
Hindu religion the possibility is more than suggested. What if life, living and death follow the
laws of the universe?
You will have to bear
with me here. The first Law of
Thermodynamics says that energy cannot be created or destroyed and can only be
transformed from one form to another.
Einstein added to that by saying that matter and energy are
interchangeable, as evidenced by nuclear power – matter converted to energy. The combined energy and matter in the
universe remains constant throughout from the start of the Big Bang – the
moment of creation. From that beginning
nothing can be added or subtracted.
Now, as we all know the
universe is the ultimate recycler.
Nothing is ever wasted. What God
created apparently cannot be violated in any way. Even at the sub particle
level where protons collide at near light speed at the Large Hadron Collider
they merely splinter to their basic components even for mere nanoseconds only
to re-emerge in other forms – but never destroyed.
Is it then too farfetched to
think that what religion teaches as transformation of the body to the soul to
re-emerge in a heavenly state or its lower opposite, or in the form of
reincarnation proposed in the Hindu religion or what is behind the Dalai Lama’s
re-emergence for the 14th time or the end of days in the Book of Revelation and
other interpretations have some validity?
I am only asking the question to accommodate all the various faith that
man had been subscribing to for millennia.
It is true that we can set this all aside, lest we begin a contentious
debate, but it must be worth to ask, “Surely there is more to just have a life
begin, live it, and then death, isn’t it?”
If God gave us the intellect to ask these questions then these must be
well within our operating system. It has
been programmed. It must be in our
DNA. Thus we go back to the beginning of
this musing – at the beginning where life began.
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