Learning To Love You More
HELLO ASSIGNMENTS DISPLAYS LOVE GRANTS REPORTS SELECTIONS OLIVERS BOOK

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Assignment #51
Describe what to do with your body when you die.

Rozzell Medina
Portland, Oregon USA

REPORTS:

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If I die, I would like for my dearest friends to fashion a wicker boat. I think that wicker boats can happen, and I feel confident that I have friends who would be able to make one, particularly Ryan. If possible, I would like for Ryan and Sam to help each other make it. Hopefully they will be friends again by then. If not, this will be a meaningful project to reunite them. While my friends work on building the wicker boat, my body should be kept cold, or at least not hot, so it won't get too stinky and gross. The idea of my body getting stinky and gross after the spirit has left it is too sad to bear! Speaking of bears, if I am devoured by bears (or any wild animal), and that is how I die, then none of this will matter, because being devoured by animals is an acceptable way to die if, indeed, I have to die, which is what everyone tells me will eventually happen. Getting rid of my body will not become necessary in that case, which is fine by me, and better than drowning. Still, if getting rid of my body they must, when my friends are done preparing the wicker boat, they should put me in it and then put that boat in some water. I'm not sure which water just yet, and there are probably laws about such things, but Trillium Lake would be a good place. I found an underwater tree stump there once several years ago, and I stood on it for what seems like hours in my memory, which allowed me to relax, standing up in the middle of the lake as if by magic, free from the fear of drowning.
So yes, whoever wants to can gather there on the banks of Trillium Lake as my closest friends put me in the wicker boat and push it out into the water. It would be nice to have Mariachis there, playing some sad songs and some not so sad songs. They could use their mariachi sensibilities to figure out what feels appropriate. A mariachi band with at least one trumpet player would, of course, be ideal. While the boat is being pushed out into the lake, it would be someone's task to light the tips of some fire arrows. If I die, hopefully it will be a long time from now, and by then Ryan, Shiloe, Adam, and perhaps a few others, will be proficient enough as archers to feel confident that when they shoot these fiery arrows at the wicker boat, they will be able to hit it at least once. They should wait until the boat has been allowed to float out at least a good 40 yards or so. Indeed, anyone in attendance should be allowed to attempt at least one shot, because how often is one given the opportunity to shoot a fiery arrow at a wicker boat containing their friend's/brother's/son's/nephew's/cousin's dead body as it bobs up and down on the waters of a beautiful lake at the base of a snowcapped mountain? Therefore, plenty of fiery arrows and bows (not fiery) should be made available. As the boat burns, I would like for the mariachis to continue playing, and I would like for wine and beer to be made available to everyone to drink while they watch the flames lick the air and smell the smoke as it billows.
At dusk there should be dancing.