As it is carnival season in Germany and the daughter of my girl-friend is in a dance group that performs at carnival sessions, we went today to see her appearance, not knowing that it took place in a home for mentally handicapped people.
The hall wasn’t that big, maybe room for one hundred people, but it was crowded. Almost everybody was costumed, even the physically disabled in their wheelchairs. Next to the inhabitants of the home there were relatives and nursing personnel. The mood was gushy and every performance (mostly given by young girls and boys) earned big applause and here and there a yelling.
For me it was the first time to meet with mentally handicapped people since I’ve abandoned every concept of God or any kind of a supreme being.
Earlier such encounters gave me uneasy feelings because I wasn’t able to understand why God permits this kind of suffering. Almost immediately my compassion vanished and was replaced by a self-referential struggle with my own beliefs. And all my emotions and actions towards handicapped people were dictated by the thought, what God wanted me to do and to feel.
Today it was totally different. I watched the handicapped ones, most of them enjoying the afternoon and the performance, but some were rather uncomfortable and uneasy, some very ecstatic, some just sitting in their wheelchair not showing any kind of emotion. I saw relatives who shared the joy, but also some, who couldn’t get rid of the pressure they experience by having a loved one in such a challenging condition. Even some of the nursing personnel seemed to be more irritated by the event.
I was touched very deeply by all I observed, but there was no inner fight, no searching for an answer that can’t be given. As I accepted this situation as it is, and the condition of this people as also natural and not a twist in a fathomless master plan, I draw as close to this people as never before. There was no barrier anymore and I could percept this emanation of life just as it is – one of the many ways life can exist.
In some occasions I reached out my hand, could speak to some of these very special people, at the same time some of them scared me by their behavior or just the way they looked. I felt compassion but also bewilderment. I allowed both feelings to dwell in my breast and enjoyed the freedom to face this situation without prefabricated concepts – even it was sometimes hurting.
I can’t remember a moment when I was happier to be an atheist as this afternoon.