I’ve known for a long time that the people who played the crew of the starship Enterprise when I was a small child are getting old, but it still caught me by surprise Monday night to see a picture of a very old-looking Leonard Nimoy with the news that he has been hospitalized for severe chest pain.
When the celebrities of our youth grow old and start dying, we feel pangs of something. Is it regret? sadness? or something else? I’m not sure what to call it, but the feelings are ultimately about ourselves, not about the people who are dying.
James Doohan (Scotty) and DeForest Kelley (Dr. McCoy) are already gone. Nimoy (Spock) and William Shatner (Capt. Kirk) are old men. What does this say about me?
I know it sounds selfish to interpret someone else’s problems this way, but isn’t that natural? I didn’t know any of these people except as actors whose faces and voices were burned into my child brain. They only have meaning as reminders of the little boy who wanted to join them in space — away from the reality that seemed so unhappy down here.

Get over it: There’s no media conspiracy against your beliefs
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Our contradictory beliefs lead to irrational views, foolish decisions
NYC cop’s profanity-laden threats secretly caught on videotape
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Third parties aren’t any better than two parties if they anoint rulers
Slow death of painful past leaves me trapped in fog of depression
Without empathy and persistence, high IQ is just a cheap parlor trick
Giving up politics left me flat broke; it’s time to earn some money again