Tag: existentialism

  • I Lost My Father on a Beautiful Spring Day

    I Lost My Father on a Beautiful Spring Day

    Years ago, I read a sentence in The Museum of Innocence:

    It was the happiest moment of my life, though I didn’t know it.

    At the time, I thought it was simply romantic in the melancholic way novels often are. I never imagined that one day I might understand it through my own life.

    My way into existentialism was through trying to understand death itself. Since childhood, I often wondered what life meant, what people meant to one another, and how anyone could survive the loss of someone they deeply loved.

    For years, one of my greatest fears was that I would one day have to adapt to life without someone I could not imagine losing.

    Over time, my understanding of death changed. I realized that many things die before people do. Habits die. Identities die. Relationships die. A version of yourself can disappear while the body remains. Even hope can gradually die.

    But somewhere inside me, I knew none of these would compare to the death of someone I loved.

    So, I lived with that private fear for years, trying to place it somewhere in my brain, somewhere in my heart.

    It was one of those beautiful spring days.

    I had never liked spring the way others did. It always carried a quiet nostalgia for me, a sadness I could never explain. Looking back now, I sometimes wonder whether it was only association or whether some parts of us sense grief before we truly encounter it.

    That day, everything was perfect. Almost flawless.

    In the morning, I received a letter of acceptance from a country I had long wanted to know more deeply. I remember feeling bright from the inside out. Everything felt possible. I felt myself shining with happiness.

    Then, in the middle of that brightness, the phone rang.

    I rushed to the airport and flew home. Somewhere in the blur of movement, disbelief, and noise, I heard the sentence:

    Sorry for your loss.

    I immediately thought:

    This has happened to me too.

    Not sorrow at first. Just emptiness. A strange hollow space where feeling should have been. I searched inside myself for something more dramatic, something more recognizable, but grief did not arrive in the form I expected, and nothing in my life seemed to be replaceable with this reality. 

    It came as absence. My biggest fear arrived as absence.

    That was when I understood what death truly means.

    It is not death itself that devastates us. It is the ultimate absence of someone who once shaped the atmosphere of your life.

    My father was not just my father. He was the starring actor of my memories, of my childhood, of many parts of my personality I had mistaken for being entirely my own.

    While getting ready for the funeral, I looked at myself in the mirror. Features I had criticized for years suddenly became precious to me because they were his. My face was no longer only mine. It was evidence.

    I had spent years fearing the death of one of my parents, and now I was living inside the very thing I feared.

    Yet real grief has no interest in your theories. It is bitter, physical, slow. It humbles every abstract thought.

    Shortly before my father died, I had been reading Marcus Aurelius. At the time, I believed he was right. Life should not be taken too seriously. Legacy was overrated. There was no need to burden oneself with thoughts of future generations.

    But grief has a way of exposing the beliefs we only hold in comfort.

    It may sound odd, but I stood at my father’s burial and thought the opposite.

    I realized that I did not want to disappear from this world.

    I wanted to contribute something. To leave something. To exist beyond the limits of a body. Whether through children, through work, through words—I did not know.

    Sometimes I wonder whether this blog itself is part of that desire: a refusal to vanish silently.

    My father did not vanish.

    He remains in the people who loved him, in the habits he formed in us, in our gestures, in our instincts, in our memories. He remains in my face. He remains even here, in these sentences, where someone who never knew him now knows that he existed.

    But everything truly begins after that period, when you are finally left on your own.

    As a teenager, I had a rule for myself: if I felt something too deeply, whether joy or pain, I would give it five days. I would sit with it until I became desensitized, then make decisions rationally. It was my private method of self-control.

    My father’s death taught me that some things do not obey systems.

    Some pain cannot be optimized. Some losses cannot be reasoned into neat conclusions. Some experiences need to be digested.

    I had to change my route, and I realized adulthood had begun at this very moment.

    What struck me most after losing my father was not only sadness, but the feeling that I had lost my sparkle.

    I had always been someone who could make meaning out of anything. Disappointment could become growth. Difficulty could become material. Whenever life gave me something inconvenient, my instinct was always:

    What can I do with this? What is my role in it? How can I cultivate myself through it?

    Then, for a while, I did not want to make meaning of anything.

    That frightened me more than grief itself.

    But grief changes shape.

    Later, I began to understand that my father’s absence was only biological. Presence can survive form. I found him in small things: a gentle breeze, a butterfly passing too close, the reflection in my coffee, a sudden scent in nature, a dream vivid enough to quiet the morning, my stance in certain situations.

    I thought I had lost my spark.

    Perhaps I had only shed the one I carried as a teenage girl.

    What came after was the slow work of building a different kind of light.

    Grief is not a wound that simply heals and disappears. It is more like losing a landscape you once navigated by instinct. The world remains, but your orientation changes.

    It does not truly pass.

    It is not something to be cured, nor should it be.

    You change. And then, you decide in which direction to continue.

    Sometimes you are guided only by what is missing inside you.

    It is not pain.

    It is ache.

    Artwork: Strolling along the Seashore, Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida

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  • Kierkegaard as a Big Brother

    Kierkegaard as a Big Brother

    I have always believed that privacy is the real key, even as a little girl. Whether out of necessity or a desire to share knowledge, I have always preferred keeping the real storm inside me. Staying private felt like being “preserved” and “respectful to myself,” a way of honoring my own sense of truth.

    Fortunately, some rare and precious minds chose to share their innermost thoughts with the world. Kierkegaard was one of them. His ideas reached me in ways that felt profoundly personal. I call him my “big brother,” not to diminish his stature, but because he silently guided me in the ways I needed, probably in ways he never anticipated. Of course, this is my personal experience; Kierkegaard himself had no expectation of being seen this way.

    As I mentioned, I have always chosen to preserve my thoughts, questions, and ideas. Perhaps I was fortunate enough to share and discuss everything with my parents, so I never felt obliged to seek validation from others. But as I reached the early stages of young adulthood, I realized that I needed new boundaries, even with my parents. When I confided this to my mother, she said, “Whenever you need advice, you may consult a psychologist you trust.” At first, this seemed logical.

    After experimenting with this path and reflecting deeply, I realized that it wasn’t quite right for me. I had no major crises; my struggles were with myself. Paying someone to navigate my existential musings didn’t feel organic – it was transactional, almost obligatory. What did I expect, in the end?

    So, I turned to what had always been my refuge: the library. Its quiet halls became sacred portals, taking me to parallel heights in my mind. And one day, I found it, the book that would change my perspective: Either/Or by Søren Kierkegaard. Of course, I was not unfamiliar with philosophy or Kierkegaard but reading him in that moment hit differently. It was as if someone was reading my soul, gently guiding me, giving me what I needed before I even asked.

    I was mesmerized. I lost track of how many times I read that book. Then I moved on to The Present Age. How could someone born in 1813, living in Denmark, meet the mental and emotional needs of a girl in a completely different “modern” time and place?

    Kierkegaard became my big brother, a silent mentor guiding my thoughts across centuries. At first, I hesitated to share my perspective about a philosopher in this way, as it might seem too shallow or disrespectful. But I decided to share this view of mine, because philosophy is not only about knowing theories and concepts. It is about what it makes you think. About what it makes you feel. About the questions it forces you to ask. Probably, Kierkegaard would be surprised if he knew someone saw him this way.

    Through him, I learned that solitude can be nourishing and that privacy can be empowering. Even as social animals, my approach towards carrying myself was not abnormal.

    But perhaps the most meaningful thing I’ve learned from him is this: when I feel the need to change something in my life, or when I sense that I crave difference, I no longer interpret it as a betrayal of who I am. Instead, I see it as a sign of growth, as a transition into another chapter of my life. Kierkegaard helped me understand that change is not disloyalty to the self; it is the very process through which the self becomes more authentic.

    I am so grateful for Kierkegaard having that enormous impact on my life.

    “When I see myself cursed, abominated, hated for my coldness and heartlessness: then I laugh, then my wrath is satiated. If these good people could really put me in the wrong, if they could actually make me do wrong – well, then I should have lost.”

    — Either/Or, Søren Kierkegaard, Vol.1, p.39, Translated by David F. Swenson and Lillian Marvin Swenson

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