Have
you heard about the word, memento mori? It’s quite familiar to most of you. It came
from the Latin word meaning ‘remember the death.’ There is a story for this
saying: in ancient Rome, there a Roman general parading through the streets
during a victory triumph and behind him was his slave. The slave warned him
although the general is at his peak today, tomorrow he could fall.
"Respice
post te! Hominem te esse memento! Memento mori!":
"Look behind you! Remember that you are a man!
Remember that you'll die!"
It kind
of connects with Carpe Diem, it points out that humans have limited life so
that we need to seize the day. In Korea, there is a similar saying: ‘Today is
the day that somebody (who died yesterday) desired.’ You cannot guarantee
anybody’s life or even yours. So we must be gratitude for still living. Moreover,
I want to add another meaning of ‘memento mori’: Remember the death of those
who sacrificed for us and for the nation. We should always be grateful for our
lives because if it wasn’t them, we wouldn’t be living now.
Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memento_mori
Our lives are so beautiful but short, I still remember Se-Wol Ho, I know, they had left us and never come back again. Love your parents, your friends, your life. Love our peaceful world!
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