Ali was a great man, and everyone here will miss him. He was
one of my closest friends. I met him in college, where he was screaming at the
Dean of Studies. I was waiting next in line, to get her to sign something. I
think he was fighting either about Affirmative Action or letting the Kung Fu
Movie Club back into the campus theatre. As soon as Ali stormed out, I ran in
and got her to sign the form, and then hustled after him. I bought him dinner
at the crappy campus café, just to talk to him and learn how you could have balls
of that size. By the end of our nachos, he was screaming at the bar tender for
his taste in music. It’s not a big surprise that a heart attack killed him.
So next week, I imagine, Ali will cure heart attacks. It
will likely be the first medical innovation based on offensive medicine.
Attacking hearts, probably. That’ll be why no one thought of it before.
By the end of the year, he’ll have used his fame to found
the world’s largest television network devoted to martial arts movies. It will
spur a renaissance in the genre, and he will probably star in one where he
fights social injustice with compassion and Capoeira.
Having both won the Nobel Prize for curing heart attacks and
won the hearts of the world with his digitally enhanced fists, Ali will ride
superstardom to political office. There, he will do what he told us all he’d do
for the last twenty years: get those Washington
assholes to listen to reason. I’ve had hundreds of political discussions with
Ali and I’m still not entirely sure what that means, but I know that as soon as
he gets into a room with those Senators that he hated, he will fix the entire
system overnight.
His newfound axis of social policy will change the world we
live in. He will revitalize our space program. He will, I think, make both Israel and Iran extremely unhappy, and pride
himself on it. Surely in Year One of Ali’s reign, he will force Axl Rose to
stop ruining Guns ‘N Roses. Given how many impossible problems Ali believed
could be solved by people ceasing to be stupid, I imagine he’ll have fixed the
world before the midterm elections. We’ll all be so grateful that he’s still
with us.
That’s what I’m going to imagine Ali’s future is like tonight.
I invite you to join me in a well-earned delusion for a dear friend. It’s not
fair that he’s gone, and I think the least we can do is lie about what could
have been for a while. Let Ali have his way tonight.
I'm afraid I've known too many of these "passionate, iconoclastic advocates" to feel much sympathy for one's departure from this world.
ReplyDeleteI think in his second term of being in charge of all and everything he would have discovered a way to make any paper product instantly refil itself when you get down to the cardboard tube.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry for your loss John. *hugs you*
And so he lives on in fiction, and now in the minds of a few people who never met him. Condolences for a lost friend.
ReplyDeleteI like that as a way of eulogizing someone departed too soon. Imagine the future they wanted. *thumbs up*
ReplyDeleteBrilliant eulogy - and I am sorry for your loss. I lost a friend of mine a little while ago (also a heart attack) and was amazed at just how much it hurt. And hurts.
ReplyDelete