When my father died in 1997 I started to have regrets for the many things I’ d never spoke with him. I know so little of his life when he was a young poor poor boy in Sicily and what happened to him and my mom (she died in 1965, I was 8) before my birth.
I never had living great-grandparents growing up… just my maternal grandparents (paternal grandmother died before my parents met one another and paternal grandfather died before my older brother was born). Now I just have my stepmother’s mother; stepmother’s father died a few years after Dad remarried and after maternal grandparents died.
The image I have is of a woman giving birth over an open grave. Not a pleasant image. But at my age, I guess I can claim to have fallen slowly or far… so far.
Pig is speaking of what we hope is the natural progression. It is not always that way for everyone. But so far, I haven’t lost any children or grandchildren. I hope it stays that way until I’m gone.
Stephan’s ancestors must have traditionaly had kids at a young age. My great grandparents died years before I was born. My maternal grandfather died five years before I was born. Both of my dad’s parents died when I was a kid. Only my maternal grandmother lived until my adulthood.
A married couple are having a fight.Finally the wife screams at the husband to get out of the house.
She throws his suitcases at him and he packs his things. On his way out, the woman says, “I hope you die the slowest, most miserable, most agonizing death imaginable.”
So he turns and says, " What, so now you want me to stay?"
I seems Pig has no piglets or siblings with descendants. It is even more sad when you loose one of the following generation before you had to go yourself.
I’m in the “You’re next” tier. My mom and a couple of her cousins are the remnants of that generation in my family. My dad and all of my aunts and uncles are gone. Heck, some of my cousins are well into their 70s and a couple of them have died. This mortality thing kinda sucks.
Paternal grandmother died when she was only 27, and my paternal grandfather’s family was always shrouded in mystery – it’s like he had no family at all. My mother’s side of the family was tight-knit, extremely extended, and we have pictures of great-great grandparents and family records going back to the 1700s.
What’s a real kick in the head is for your children to die. But, it did give me a faith I had been unsure of before that. My son died of covid. He was an RN and got it before shots were available. But, from the first day, I knew he was OK. I don’t know where, I don’t know how, and I don’t think there is anyone or any religion on earth that has that information. But, I know it, and that makes accepting his death a lot better. I don’t know if I will see him again when I die, but I know he is OK. And, I know that death is something we are all going to have to do eventually. I just wish he hadn’t done it so soon. I wasn’t finished with him.
I figure I’ve had a pretty good life and I’m not going to accomplish much more so I’m not going to complain when it’s my time. I just hope it’s quick. I’m just glad I’m able to die with memories rather than dreams.
This comment group is one of the best things on the Internet. First, the comic strips are a great way to start your day and, second, there is little cursing, ranting and vituperous vituperation yet we can talk dark topics like this and realize we’re not alone.
Don’t worry about that which you can’t control. Live your life the best way possible and when death comes to meet you, shake hands with Death and tell him, “Let’s get started on my next great adventure…..”
As that great philosopher, Bob Dylan, once said: “The cemeteries are full of people the world thought they couldn’t live without”. At least it was on the back cover of one of his records. Whether it was his quote or someone else, I don’t know.
And then there comes that fateful Thanksgiving when you realize you are the oldest one there, you’re the patriarch/matriarch and your “umbrella” is gone.
I knew two great-grandparents – Dad’s maternal grandmother and Mom’s paternal grandfather. I had three sets of grandparents (one through marriage) who all lived to be fairly old. A couple years ago Dad (94) became the longest living person in his family. I think he’s trying for at least 100, if not beyond. Earlier this month we had to move Mom (92) into an assisted living facility with hospice care. In April she had been diagnosed with late-stage Alzheimer’s, and after a couple falls her condition worsened, to the point Dad could no longer care for her at home. While it’s not easy seeing the people you love fading away, it’s reassuring to know they have all lived good, rich lives.
Damn, this is what freaking happens when you let philosophers take the funnies, now what am I supposed to do with the rest of the weekend. #Sarcastically #OhWell
“Iv’e had a life that’s full, everyone’s been good to me.So fire up that fiddle, boy, and bring me one last drink.When the sun comes up, I will leave without a fightthe world is mine…tonight”…__traditional Irish death song
“Enjoy yourself, it’s later than you think, enjoy yourself while your still in the pink, the years go by as quickly as a wink, enjoy yourself, enjoy yourselves it’s later that you think! " Live long and prosper!!
Hey, Stephan—your ancestors are your “forbears,” not “forbearers.” That would be people who refrain from doing something even if they could do it. Hate to go all usage-nazi on Mr. Pastis, whom I greatly respect; I know he and Rat detest people like me, but duty is duty, and like nature, when duty calls, you gotta go.
Jesus died that we can have eternal life with him. The alternative of life without him is real and horrible. He is who he claimed to be and did what he said that he would do. The proof of his validity is in his resurrection. You can make peace with him and know where you will be in eternity.
BE THIS GUY about 3 years ago
Hope you got a plot picked, or do you prefer ending up in an urn?
BasilBruce about 3 years ago
On the plus side, everyone around you is happier because you’re no longer talking about people who’ve died.
Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus Premium Member about 3 years ago
When my father died in 1997 I started to have regrets for the many things I’ d never spoke with him. I know so little of his life when he was a young poor poor boy in Sicily and what happened to him and my mom (she died in 1965, I was 8) before my birth.
Bilan about 3 years ago
When Pig dies, they’ll take something from him: bacon, ribs …
DennisinSeattle about 3 years ago
If you have kids, you have to worry about them too.
Templo S.U.D. about 3 years ago
I never had living great-grandparents growing up… just my maternal grandparents (paternal grandmother died before my parents met one another and paternal grandfather died before my older brother was born). Now I just have my stepmother’s mother; stepmother’s father died a few years after Dad remarried and after maternal grandparents died.
Concretionist about 3 years ago
The image I have is of a woman giving birth over an open grave. Not a pleasant image. But at my age, I guess I can claim to have fallen slowly or far… so far.
sirbadger about 3 years ago
When people the same age as you start dying, that’s a little unnerving.
B UTTONS about 3 years ago
Rat forgot: After your parents and other forbearers, we begin to lose our friends and acquaintances.
… So Rat, you’re next to go.
Alexander the Good Enough about 3 years ago
A few years ago, an old friend complained that friends of his were dying who’d never died before. Then three years ago he followed after them…
pearlsbs about 3 years ago
Pig is speaking of what we hope is the natural progression. It is not always that way for everyone. But so far, I haven’t lost any children or grandchildren. I hope it stays that way until I’m gone.
mnexplorer+ about 3 years ago
Or it can take your kids. My third oldest died about six weeks short of his 38th birthday.
Robin Harwood about 3 years ago
These days I assume that , if I’ve heard of someone, they’re dead.
hariseldon59 about 3 years ago
Stephan’s ancestors must have traditionaly had kids at a young age. My great grandparents died years before I was born. My maternal grandfather died five years before I was born. Both of my dad’s parents died when I was a kid. Only my maternal grandmother lived until my adulthood.
John Smith about 3 years ago
A married couple are having a fight.Finally the wife screams at the husband to get out of the house.
She throws his suitcases at him and he packs his things. On his way out, the woman says, “I hope you die the slowest, most miserable, most agonizing death imaginable.”
So he turns and says, " What, so now you want me to stay?"
John Smith about 3 years ago
What’s sexually transmitted and has a 100% death rate?
Life
Orcatime about 3 years ago
Unless it’s someone younger.
Pgalden1 Premium Member about 3 years ago
Yep
Doug K about 3 years ago
Pig, the Philosopher, is hit with the reality of mortality.
Sanspareil about 3 years ago
Lost my mother and father and both of my brothers!!
Can’t complain that I’m still alive!
My wife has all of her sisters and one brother still alive
I envy her !
Life is what it is !!
unfair.de about 3 years ago
I seems Pig has no piglets or siblings with descendants. It is even more sad when you loose one of the following generation before you had to go yourself.
Gent about 3 years ago
Especially when you is a pig. You see all your relatives getting turned into pork, ham, or bacon etc. until it is finally your turn.
Ellis97 about 3 years ago
Easy for you to say, Rat. You’ve only got four or five years to live.
Ellis97 about 3 years ago
Easy for Rat to say, he’s only got four or five years. Pig has maybe fifteen years.
mwest about 3 years ago
I’m in the “You’re next” tier. My mom and a couple of her cousins are the remnants of that generation in my family. My dad and all of my aunts and uncles are gone. Heck, some of my cousins are well into their 70s and a couple of them have died. This mortality thing kinda sucks.
juicebruce about 3 years ago
Creepy …
jimchronister2016 about 3 years ago
Steph you are what you made for yourself so if your not happy only you can rearrange your life to be satisfied and happy again.
SheMc about 3 years ago
& I was having such a nice Saturday scroll through GoComics :(
basspro about 3 years ago
Death and taxes.
Ignatz Premium Member about 3 years ago
Paternal grandmother died when she was only 27, and my paternal grandfather’s family was always shrouded in mystery – it’s like he had no family at all. My mother’s side of the family was tight-knit, extremely extended, and we have pictures of great-great grandparents and family records going back to the 1700s.
wrd2255 about 3 years ago
Always wondered why mascot pigs in ads look so happy. It usually doesn’t end well for them. https://www.pigglywiggly.com/
Purple People Eater about 3 years ago
I wasn’t sad at all when my great grandmother died. Of course, that may have had something to do with the fact that I was less than two months old.
Snolep about 3 years ago
Pig was a fan of Roseanne Rosannadanna.
rickseg about 3 years ago
My dad died at 101. His sister (my aunt) died at 105. They both immigrated here from Transylvania back in 1922. Hmmmm.
Huckleberry Hiroshima about 3 years ago
Feeling depressed already, Stephan? It’s not even Christmas.
pheets about 3 years ago
The normal progression should be to bury the grands, then the parents, then friends. I am at the bury friends level :(
Kaputnik about 3 years ago
My great grandparents and two of my grandparents died before I was born, and I only really knew one of my remaining grandparents.
I still think frequently of my father, who died in 2002, and my mother who died in 2016.
Perhaps the most unnerving death of a family member was of a cousin, ten months younger than I, who died at age 21 back in the 1970s.
Now I want to go before the people I care about most, whether they’re older than I am or younger. But I guess that’s selfish.
Diane Lee Premium Member about 3 years ago
What’s a real kick in the head is for your children to die. But, it did give me a faith I had been unsure of before that. My son died of covid. He was an RN and got it before shots were available. But, from the first day, I knew he was OK. I don’t know where, I don’t know how, and I don’t think there is anyone or any religion on earth that has that information. But, I know it, and that makes accepting his death a lot better. I don’t know if I will see him again when I die, but I know he is OK. And, I know that death is something we are all going to have to do eventually. I just wish he hadn’t done it so soon. I wasn’t finished with him.
ChristineMurphy about 3 years ago
Sounds like the line of life.
YippiKiAyMofo about 3 years ago
When you’re favorite hit songs from your teenage years are used to sell laxatives, adult diapers, retirement homes…
tripwire45 about 3 years ago
I’ve still got a few forebearers left but a number of my peers have already died. Yikes.
walstib Premium Member about 3 years ago
Tempus Fugit, Momento Mori
klapre about 3 years ago
I figure I’ve had a pretty good life and I’m not going to accomplish much more so I’m not going to complain when it’s my time. I just hope it’s quick. I’m just glad I’m able to die with memories rather than dreams.
Steverino Premium Member about 3 years ago
Death is nature’s way of telling you to slow down.
Zebrastripes about 3 years ago
I am the oldest in my family….it’s working my last nerve….
Sir Isaac about 3 years ago
This comment group is one of the best things on the Internet. First, the comic strips are a great way to start your day and, second, there is little cursing, ranting and vituperous vituperation yet we can talk dark topics like this and realize we’re not alone.
Yakety Sax about 3 years ago
“When your friends begin to flatter you on how young you look, it’s a sure sign you’re getting old.”
“The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
“Age is an issue of mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
“Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint.”
“Wrinkles should merely indicate where smiles have been.”
“The only way to keep your health is to eat what you don’t want, drink what you don’t like, and do what you’d rather not.”
“Life would be infinitely happier if we could only be born at the age of eighty and gradually approach eighteen.”
—Mark Twain
craverjim about 3 years ago
“Forebearers” should be “forebears”.
raybarb44 about 3 years ago
Don’t worry about that which you can’t control. Live your life the best way possible and when death comes to meet you, shake hands with Death and tell him, “Let’s get started on my next great adventure…..”
Goat from PBS about 3 years ago
The pain never leaves, but thankfully, neither do the memories.
Sue G about 3 years ago
As that great philosopher, Bob Dylan, once said: “The cemeteries are full of people the world thought they couldn’t live without”. At least it was on the back cover of one of his records. Whether it was his quote or someone else, I don’t know.
stamps about 3 years ago
About 20% of my high school graduation class (’65) have died.
BC in NC Premium Member about 3 years ago
At some point, on this planet of billions, you will be the next one to leave it.
WCraft Premium Member about 3 years ago
And then there comes that fateful Thanksgiving when you realize you are the oldest one there, you’re the patriarch/matriarch and your “umbrella” is gone.
l3i7l about 3 years ago
I knew two great-grandparents – Dad’s maternal grandmother and Mom’s paternal grandfather. I had three sets of grandparents (one through marriage) who all lived to be fairly old. A couple years ago Dad (94) became the longest living person in his family. I think he’s trying for at least 100, if not beyond. Earlier this month we had to move Mom (92) into an assisted living facility with hospice care. In April she had been diagnosed with late-stage Alzheimer’s, and after a couple falls her condition worsened, to the point Dad could no longer care for her at home. While it’s not easy seeing the people you love fading away, it’s reassuring to know they have all lived good, rich lives.
cmxx about 3 years ago
Forebears, Stephan. Forebears.
Ivan Araque about 3 years ago
Damn, this is what freaking happens when you let philosophers take the funnies, now what am I supposed to do with the rest of the weekend. #Sarcastically #OhWell
Drummer54 about 3 years ago
My college roommate died a couple of years ago. We weren’t close, but still a little jarring.
zeexenon about 3 years ago
When your time is up, your time is up. When your pilot’s time is up, your time is up.
ekke about 3 years ago
Forebears, not forebearers.
ekke about 3 years ago
Actually, when you come to the point where there is no one else it can take from you, you’re probably ready to go yourself.
The Fly Hunter about 3 years ago
I just want to enjoy living rather than worry about dying.
Eric S about 3 years ago
and suddenly I want bacon.
kaycstamper about 3 years ago
My husband died over 16 years ago, he had just turned 51.
stringer831 about 3 years ago
“Iv’e had a life that’s full, everyone’s been good to me.So fire up that fiddle, boy, and bring me one last drink.When the sun comes up, I will leave without a fightthe world is mine…tonight”…__traditional Irish death song
Aramanthus about 3 years ago
This hits home. I lost my last parent last year!
Call me Ishmael about 3 years ago
Mozart died in his early thirties. Moscow Mitch is pushing eighty. Yet many people think there’s a god.
aerotica69 about 3 years ago
Add to panel 1 : And mixed in among all that, you lose your Bowies and Pettys and Wattses and you have more sad.
jrbaskind Premium Member about 3 years ago
Oh snap!
Sisyphos about 3 years ago
Yes, Pig. Father Time is relentless, and the Grim Reaper is his close companion. We will all meet him, some sooner than others….
TheDadSnorlax Premium Member about 3 years ago
Hey Mr. Pastis, check out Working Daze!! would love to see reciprocation
iggyman about 3 years ago
“Enjoy yourself, it’s later than you think, enjoy yourself while your still in the pink, the years go by as quickly as a wink, enjoy yourself, enjoy yourselves it’s later that you think! " Live long and prosper!!
rogthedodge1 about 3 years ago
My attitude toward death is like my attitude toward jury service: I’d be willing to do it some time, just not today.
Mayor Snorkum about 3 years ago
Hey, Stephan—your ancestors are your “forbears,” not “forbearers.” That would be people who refrain from doing something even if they could do it. Hate to go all usage-nazi on Mr. Pastis, whom I greatly respect; I know he and Rat detest people like me, but duty is duty, and like nature, when duty calls, you gotta go.
PBS1! about 3 years ago
Who is cutting onions next to me?
_lounger_ about 3 years ago
dang, can’t relax, even for a moment….
johnschutt about 3 years ago
Jesus died that we can have eternal life with him. The alternative of life without him is real and horrible. He is who he claimed to be and did what he said that he would do. The proof of his validity is in his resurrection. You can make peace with him and know where you will be in eternity.