What brain surgery taught me about the fragile gift of consciousness
13 days ago
- #brain surgery
- #survival
- #consciousness
- Eric Markowitz experienced profound consciousness on the eve of brain surgery, feeling fully awake to existence's miracle and absurdity.
- During recovery, he reflected on longevity as an active choice, practice, and philosophy, not just passive survival.
- Consciousness, he concluded, is not just about neurons but also about care, love, and the willingness to choose life.
- The night before surgery, he felt deeply connected to his wife, time, and the world, experiencing a luminous moment of presence.
- He thought about his daughter growing up without him, feeling a deep, conscious love and sorrow.
- Surgery preparation felt like entering sacred theater, with moments of irony, awe, and aliveness despite the risks.
- Post-surgery, he faced a brutal recovery but clung to the 'survivor’s euphoria'—a reawakening to life’s fragility and beauty.
- He realized survival depends on interconnected systems—medical, emotional, logistical—and active engagement with life.
- Consciousness, for him, means paying attention, feeling deeply, and choosing to marvel at existence, even in pain.
- His ordeal revealed that true consciousness lives in presence, awe, and the willingness to be changed by what we see.