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In another incident today, 10 people died in a terrible automobile crash.
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There was a huge fireball—
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After days of torrential rain, the landslide completely buried the house, killing the inhabitants, 32-year-old—
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Shortly after take-off, the plane's left-hand jet blew up; passengers reported hearing a bang before—
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when the giant crocodile rushed to him and ate his leg in one bite—
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We all love watching news of disasters.
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It's embarrassing, but true.
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We like hearing about car crashes.
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We really love plane crashes.
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We're fascinated by landslides.
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We quite enjoy train dropping incidents.
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We're fascinated by deadly scorpions that bite holiday-makers, and we're really pretty gripped by crocodiles.
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It all looks like the lowest distraction.
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What monsters we are, rubbernecking the scenes of tragedy on the worst day of other people's lives.
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But it isn't all trivial.
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We're trying to get at something important by looking at tragedy.
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We're trying, somehow, to keep in mind that life is fragile for all of us.
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It might not be a plane crash that finishes us off, or a fierce crocodile;
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it might just be a slow cancer or the gradual wearing away of time, but it will happen.
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And yet our lives go wrong because we don't keep death in mind enough.
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Death is the most terrible thing, but we can evoke the thought of death to evoke what life should be about.
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It's this powerful fact that may be at the back of our minds when we rush to check up on the latest disaster.
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We're not being ghoulish.
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We're searching for the meaning of life.
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We're reminding ourselves to do our hopes and talents justice in the time that remains.
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The thought of death has the power not only to stir our fears,
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but also to strengthen our resolve to appreciate more fully and use more wisely the present moment,
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to reform our priorities, and to be kind, grateful, and serious,
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in case tomorrow never comes.